Dublin in 50 Buildings
Title | Dublin in 50 Buildings PDF eBook |
Author | Pat Dargan |
Publisher | Amberley Publishing Limited |
Pages | 176 |
Release | 2017-11-15 |
Genre | Architecture |
ISBN | 1445677741 |
Explore the rich history of Dublin in this guided tour through its most fascinating historic and modern buildings.
Bath in 50 Buildings
Title | Bath in 50 Buildings PDF eBook |
Author | Pat Dargan |
Publisher | Amberley Publishing Limited |
Pages | 151 |
Release | 2018-09-15 |
Genre | Architecture |
ISBN | 1445659646 |
Explores the rich and fascinating history of the city of Bath through an examination of some of its greatest architectural treasures.
The Museum Building of Trinity College Dublin
Title | The Museum Building of Trinity College Dublin PDF eBook |
Author | Christine Casey |
Publisher | |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2019 |
Genre | Architecture |
ISBN | 9781846827891 |
This volume addresses the most influential Victorian building in the city of Dublin and explores the new standard which it set in the use of Irish decorative stone, the employment of native craftsmen and the unprecedented eclecticism of its design. The geology, quarrying, building, carving and architectural design which created this spectacular structure are explored in a series of papers by established scholars and experts in the field. The book is richly illustrated in full colour to capture the sumptuous polychromy of the building and the profuse detail of its carved ornament.
Limerick in 50 Buildings
Title | Limerick in 50 Buildings PDF eBook |
Author | Pat Dargan |
Publisher | Amberley Publishing Limited |
Pages | 157 |
Release | 2019-05-15 |
Genre | Architecture |
ISBN | 1445691248 |
Explore the rich history of Limerick in this guided tour through its most fascinating historic and modern buildings.
Whitehaven in 50 Buildings
Title | Whitehaven in 50 Buildings PDF eBook |
Author | Pat Dargan |
Publisher | Amberley Publishing Limited |
Pages | 168 |
Release | 2021-04-15 |
Genre | Architecture |
ISBN | 1445699230 |
Explore the rich history of the Cumbrian town of Whitehaven in this guided tour through its most fascinating historic and modern buildings.
Monadnock Summer
Title | Monadnock Summer PDF eBook |
Author | William Morgan |
Publisher | David R. Godine Publisher |
Pages | 162 |
Release | 2011 |
Genre | Architecture |
ISBN | 1567924220 |
A fascinating look into a special corner of New England summer home architecture: the many styles of homes in Dublin, New Hampshire. The small, high, mountain town of Dublin, New Hampshire was known as an artistic and literary retreat in the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Less well known, but equally fascinating, is Dublin's claim as home to just about every architectural style and several major domestic architects of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. On its slopes, overlooking deep, spring-fed Dublin Lake and the looming Mount Monadnock, we find a virtual encyclopedia of building styles, ranging from the plain and unadorned to the most ornate and ambitious. A list of the architects who plied their trade in this small town would include Charles A. Platt, Peabody & Stearns, Rotch & Tilden, Henry Vaughan, and Lois Lilley Howe. In this immensely readable and enjoyable survey, veteran architectural historian William Morgan takes the reader on a verbally vivid and visually varied tour of the terrain, concentrating not only on the traditional and expected examples that crop up in Dublin as often as elsewhere, but also on the eccentric, unusual, and often unique extravaganzas that pepper its slopes. For Dublin was a place which for a century had both the money and the taste to indulge architects of all stripes and styles, and to give them commissions to design among the most beautiful and original examples their talents could produce.
Dublin
Title | Dublin PDF eBook |
Author | David Dickson |
Publisher | Harvard University Press |
Pages | 753 |
Release | 2014-11-24 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0674745043 |
Dublin has experienced great—and often astonishing—change in its 1,400 year history. It has been the largest urban center on a deeply contested island since towns first appeared west of the Irish Sea. There have been other contested cities in the European and Mediterranean world, but almost no European capital city, David Dickson maintains, has seen sharper discontinuities and reversals in its history—and these have left their mark on Dublin and its inhabitants. Dublin occupies a unique place in Irish history and the Irish imagination. To chronicle its vast and varied history is to tell the story of Ireland. David Dickson’s magisterial history brings Dublin vividly to life beginning with its medieval incarnation and progressing through the neoclassical eighteenth century, when for some it was the “Naples of the North,” to the Easter Rising that convulsed a war-weary city in 1916, to the bloody civil war that followed the handover of power by Britain, to the urban renewal efforts at the end of the millennium. He illuminates the fate of Dubliners through the centuries—clergymen and officials, merchants and land speculators, publishers and writers, and countless others—who have been shaped by, and who have helped to shape, their city. He reassesses 120 years of Anglo-Irish Union, during which Dublin remained a place where rival creeds and politics struggled for supremacy. A book as rich and diverse as its subject, Dublin reveals the intriguing story behind the making of a capital city.