The development of mediæval architecture in England from the departure of the Romans till the sixteenth century, has a more complete sequence of style than in other countries. It is usually divided into periods having special characteristics and known as Anglo-Saxon, Norman, Early English, Decorated, Perpendicular, and Tudor. — Banister Fletcher, p. 283
General
Stages of English Gothic and other Medieval Styles
The Evolution of Gothic Vaulting
Open Timber Roofs of the Middle Ages
The Gothic Buttress
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The Evolution of Gothic Spires in England
- Broach Spire (St. Peter Raunds, Northamptonshire)
- Broach Spire (St. John Keystone, Huntingdonshire)
- Parapet Angle Turrets & Crockets (St. Wulfram Grantham, Linconshire)
- Parapet Angle Turrets & Crockets (Salisbury Cathedral, Wiltshire)
- Spire on Octagonal Tower; Diagonal Buttresses (St. St. Mary Bloxam, Oxfordshire
- Castellated Angle Turrets & Parapet (St. Peter Kettering, Northamptonshire
- Angle Turrets & Flying Butresses (St. James, Louth, Linconshire)
- Angle Turrets & Flying Butresses (St. Michael, Coventry, Warwickshire)
Gothic Doorways and Windows
Carved foliage and other Ornamentation
Miscellaneous
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References
Fletcher, Banister, and Banister F. Fletcher. A History of Architecture on the Comparative Method for the Student, Craftsman, and Amateur. 5th ed. London: B. T. Batsford, 1905.
Last modified 29 August 2007