The Building of Elizabethan and Jacobean England Maurice Howard

Series:
Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art
Format:
Hardback
Publication date:
11 Jan 2008
ISBN:
9780300135435
Dimensions:
256 pages: 275 x 245 x 21mm
Illustrations:
50 b&w illustrations + 50 colour images

Categories:

The dissolution of the monasteries ravaged England in the 1530s and resulted in the greatest destruction of the built fabric of the country. It was also, however, a time in which many new initiatives emerged. In the following century, former monasteries were adapted to a variety of uses in both public and private buildings: royal palaces and country houses, town halls and schools, almshouses and re-fashioned parish churches. No new towns were built in England, but the urban environment changed rapidly to reflect the needs of both national and local government. Patrons of buildings spent sometimes wisely, sometimes extravagantly, in managing a balance between their own domestic projects and sponsoring civic buildings that promoted their charitable image in post-Reformation society. In this beautiful and elegantly argued book, Maurice Howard reveals that changes of style in architecture emerged from the practical needs of construction and the self-image of major patrons in the revolutionary century between Reformation and Civil War, and he shows how the transformation of the country's stock of buildings was accompanied by a new language both of word and of vision, as building accounts, government regulation and theoretical writing on the one hand, and pictorial representation on the other, directed new ways of documenting the changed appearance of the buildings in which people lived, worshipped and worked.

Maurice Howard is Professor of Art History at the University of Sussex.

"Thanks to Howard's lucid and accessible prose and the book's lavish and delightful illustrations, the modern reader, whether scholarly or not, will be delighted. The old guard could well feel challenged." -;i>Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians", 68, No. 1
--Robert Tittler"Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians, 68 No. 1" (03/01/2009)