English:
Identifier: introductiontost00park_0 (find matches)
Title: An introduction to the study of Gothic architecture
Year: 1877 (1870s)
Authors: Parker, John Henry, 1806-1884
Subjects: Architecture, Gothic
Publisher: Oxford: J. Parker and Co.
Contributing Library: Getty Research Institute
Digitizing Sponsor: Getty Research Institute
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ghts, with a quatrefoil opening over eachlight, enclosed under the dripstones, which are carriedover each light separately, though the moulding iscontinued from one to the other. At Cotterstock,Northamptonshire, is a two-light lancet window witha pierced quatrefoil in the head, enriched with ele-gant cusps. In the Kings Hall at Winchester (97) the windowsare each of two lights, with an open quatrefoil in thehead; and there are sunk panels on each side of thewindows, to fill up the blank space between them andthe buttresses. The Hall of the Eishops Palace atWells (98), built by Bishop Jocelyne between 1225 and1239, also has windows with foliated circles in the o For these three examples I am indebted to Mr. Freemans work on the*Origin and Development of Window Tracery in England, 8vo., Oxford,1851, which contains some hundreds of examples arranged systematically. PROGRESS OF TRACERY, heads of quite as advanced a character. In the tran-sept of Salisbury Cathedral, built between 1220 and
Text Appearing After Image:
96. ¥11111)01116 Minster, Dorset, c. 1220.Shewing an early stage of plate-tracery. 1250, is a good example of a window of four lancet-lights, with dripstone mouldings connecting them intoone window of two divisions, each of two lights, withan open quatrefoil in the head, and a larger foliated PROORESS OF TRACERY,
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