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List of architectural styles

An architectural style is characterized by the features that make a building or other structure notable and historically identifiable. A style may include such elements as form, method of construction, building materials, and regional character. Most architecture can be classified as a chronology of styles which change over time reflecting changing fashions, beliefs and religions, or the emergence of new ideas, technology, or materials which make new styles possible.

Frederick C. Robie House, an example of Prairie School architecture

Styles therefore emerge from the history of a society and are documented in the subject of architectural history. At any time several styles may be fashionable, and when a style changes it usually does so gradually, as architects learn and adapt to new ideas. Styles often spread to other places, so that the style at its source continues to develop in new ways while other countries follow with their own twist. A style may also spread through colonialism, either by foreign colonies learning from their home country, or by settlers moving to a new land. After a style has gone out of fashion, there are often revivals and re-interpretations. For instance, classicism has been revived many times and found new life as neoclassicism. Each time it is revived, it is different.

Vernacular architecture works slightly differently and is listed separately. It is the native method of construction used by local people, usually using labour-intensive methods and local materials, and usually for small structures such as rural cottages. It varies from region to region even within a country, and takes little account of national styles or technology. As western society has developed, vernacular styles have mostly become outmoded by new technology and national building standards.

Chronology of styles edit

Prehistoric edit

Early civilizations developed, often independently, in scattered locations around the globe. The architecture was often a mixture of styles in timber cut from local forests and stone hewn from local rocks. Most of the timber has gone, although the earthworks remain. Impressively, massive stone structures have survived for years.

Ancient Americas edit

Mediterranean and Middle-East civilizations edit

Ancient Asian edit

Classical Antiquity edit

The architecture of Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome, derived from the ancient Mediterranean civilizations such as at Knossos on Crete. They developed highly refined systems for proportions and style, using mathematics and geometry.

Middle Ages edit

The European Early Middle Ages are generally taken to run from the end of the Roman Empire, around 400 AD, to around 1000 AD. During this period, Christianity made a significant impact on European culture.

Early Medieval Europe edit

Medieval Europe edit

The dominance of the Church over everyday life was expressed in grand spiritual designs which emphasized piety and sobriety. The Romanesque style was simple and austere. The Gothic style heightened the effect with heavenly spires, pointed arches and religious carvings.[2]

Asian architecture contemporary with the Dark Ages and medieval Europe edit

Islamic Architecture 620–1918 edit

  • Central Styles (Multi-Regional)
  • Regional Styles
    • Egypt
    • North Africa (Maghrib)
      • The Umayyads (705–750)
      • The Abbasid Era (750–909)
      • The Fatimids (909–1048)
      • The Amazigh Dynasties (1048–1550)
        • Zirids 1048–1148 (Middle Maghreb)
        • Almoravids 1040–1147 (Far Maghreb)
        • Almohads 1121–1269 (Far Maghreb)
        • Hafsids 1229–1574 (Near and Middle Maghreb)
        • Marinids 1244–1465 (Middle and Far Maghreb)
        • Zayyanids 1235–1550 (Middle Maghreb)
      • Ottoman Rule 1550–1830 (Near and Middle Maghreb)
      • Local Dynasties 1549–present (Far Maghreb)
    • Islamic Spain
      • Umayyad architecture (756–1031)
      • Taifa Kingdoms-1 (1031–1090)
      • Almoravid architecture (1090–1147)
      • Taifa Kingdoms-2 (1140–1203)
      • Almohad architecture (1147–1238),
      • Taifa Kingdoms-3 (1232–1492)
        • Granada architecture (1287–1492)
    • Persia and Central Asia
      • Khurasani architecture (Late 7th–10th century)
      • Razi Style (10th–13th century)
        • Samanid Period (10th c.)
        • Ghaznawid Period (11th c.)
        • Saljuk Period (11th–12th c.)
        • Mongol Period (13th c.)
      • Timurid Style (14th–16th c.)
      • Isfahani Style (17th–19th c.)
    • Indian subcontinent
    • Turkey

Pre-Columbian Indigenous American Styles edit

Early Modern Period and European Colonialism edit

1425–1660. The Renaissance began in Italy and spread through Europe, rebelling against the all-powerful Church, by placing Man at the centre of his world instead of God.[5] The Gothic spires and pointed arches were replaced by classical domes and rounded arches, with comfortable spaces and entertaining details, in a celebration of humanity. The Baroque style was a florid development of this 200 years later, largely by the Catholic Church to restate its religious values.[6]

Asian architecture contemporary with Renaissance and post-Renaissance Europe edit

Japanese edit
Indian edit

Late Modern Period and the Industrial Revolution edit

Neoclassicism edit

1720–1837 and onward. A time often depicted as a rural idyll by the great painters, but in fact was a hive of early industrial activity, with small kilns and workshops springing up wherever materials could be mined or manufactured. After the Renaissance, neoclassical forms were developed and refined into new styles for public buildings and the gentry.

New Cooperism

Neoclassical edit

Revivalism and Orientalism edit

Late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Victorian Era was a time of giant leaps forward in technology and society, such as iron bridges, aqueducts, sewer systems, roads, canals, trains, and factories. As engineers, inventors, and businessmen they reshaped much of the British Empire, including the UK, India, Australia, South Africa, and Canada, and influenced Europe and the United States. Architecturally, they were revivalists who modified old styles to suit new purposes.

Rural styles edit

Reactions to the Industrial Revolution edit

Industrial edit

Modernism and other styles contemporary with modernism edit

1880 onwards. The Industrial Revolution had brought steel, plate glass, and mass-produced components. These enabled a brave new world of bold structural frames, with clean lines and plain or shiny surfaces. In the early stages, a popular motto was "decoration is a crime". In the Eastern Bloc the Communists rejected the Western Bloc's 'decadent' ways, and modernism developed in a markedly more bureaucratic, sombre, and monumental fashion.

Postmodernism and early 21st century styles edit

Fortified styles edit

Vernacular styles edit

Generic methods edit

European edit

North American edit

Native American edit

South American edit

African edit

  • Central and South African countries – Rondavel, Xhosa and Zulu Architecture, Zimbabwean Architecture, Sotho-Tswana Architecture, Zulu and Nguni Architecture, and Madagascan Architecture
  • Dutch Colonial, Cape Dutch

Asian edit

Australasian edit

  • Australia, New Zealand – slab hut
  • Australia – Aborigine humpy

Alphabetical listing edit

–1990s

Examples of styles edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hans Erich Kubach. Architektur der Romanik, 1973/1974, 3-7630-1705-7, p. 63–144 Die erste Romanische Kunst – Frühromanische Architektur
  2. ^ Robert Stuart (1854), Cyclopedia of architecture: historical, descriptive, typographical, decorative, theoretical and mechanical, alphabetically arranged, familiarly explained, and adapted to the comprehension of workmen, A. S. Barnes & Co, p. 75
  3. ^ a b Gebaut, Burgundische Romanik – Pontigny – Zisterziensergotik
  4. ^ a b Really, Mudéjar style had phases according to the general European styles, there was Romanesque Mudéjar, Gothic Mudéjar and even Renaissance Mudéjar.
  5. ^ Gerald Leinwand, The pageant of world history, Prentice-Hall, 1990, page 330
  6. ^ Jackson J. Spielvogel (2010), Western Civilization: A Brief History. Cengage Learning. page 333 ISBN 0495571474
  • White, Norval; Elliott Willensky (2000). AIA Guide to New York (4th ed.). New York: Random House. ISBN 0-8129-3107-6.
  • Lewis, Philippa; Gillian Darley (1986). Dictionary of Ornament, NY: Pantheon
  • Baker, John Milnes, AIA (1994) American House Styles, NY: Norton

Further reading edit

  • Hamlin Alfred Dwight Foster, History of Architectural Styles, BiblioBazaar, 2009
  • Carson Dunlop, Architectural Styles, Dearborn Real Estate, 2003
  • Herbert Pothorn, A guide to architectural styles, Phaidon, 1983

External links edit

  • Victoria & Albert Museum Microsite on Introduction to Architectural Styles

list, architectural, styles, this, article, need, rewritten, comply, with, wikipedia, quality, standards, help, talk, page, contain, suggestions, july, 2023, architectural, style, characterized, features, that, make, building, other, structure, notable, histor. This article may need to be rewritten to comply with Wikipedia s quality standards You can help The talk page may contain suggestions July 2023 An architectural style is characterized by the features that make a building or other structure notable and historically identifiable A style may include such elements as form method of construction building materials and regional character Most architecture can be classified as a chronology of styles which change over time reflecting changing fashions beliefs and religions or the emergence of new ideas technology or materials which make new styles possible Frederick C Robie House an example of Prairie School architectureStyles therefore emerge from the history of a society and are documented in the subject of architectural history At any time several styles may be fashionable and when a style changes it usually does so gradually as architects learn and adapt to new ideas Styles often spread to other places so that the style at its source continues to develop in new ways while other countries follow with their own twist A style may also spread through colonialism either by foreign colonies learning from their home country or by settlers moving to a new land After a style has gone out of fashion there are often revivals and re interpretations For instance classicism has been revived many times and found new life as neoclassicism Each time it is revived it is different Vernacular architecture works slightly differently and is listed separately It is the native method of construction used by local people usually using labour intensive methods and local materials and usually for small structures such as rural cottages It varies from region to region even within a country and takes little account of national styles or technology As western society has developed vernacular styles have mostly become outmoded by new technology and national building standards Contents 1 Chronology of styles 1 1 Prehistoric 1 1 1 Ancient Americas 1 1 2 Mediterranean and Middle East civilizations 1 1 3 Ancient Near East and Mesopotamia 1 1 4 Iranian Persian 1 1 5 Ancient Asian 1 1 6 Indic 1 1 7 Historic temple styles 1 1 8 East Asian 1 1 9 Also 1 2 Classical Antiquity 1 3 Middle Ages 1 3 1 Early Medieval Europe 1 3 2 Medieval Europe 1 3 2 1 Byzantine 1 3 2 2 Romanesque 1 3 2 3 Timber styles 1 3 2 4 Gothic 1 3 3 Asian architecture contemporary with the Dark Ages and medieval Europe 1 3 3 1 Japanese 1 3 3 2 Chinese 1 3 3 3 Korean 1 3 3 4 Dravidian and Vesara temple styles India 1 3 3 5 Other Indian styles 1 3 4 Islamic Architecture 620 1918 1 3 5 Pre Columbian Indigenous American Styles 1 4 Early Modern Period and European Colonialism 1 4 1 France 1 4 2 United Kingdom 1 4 3 Spain and Portugal 1 4 4 Colonial 1 4 5 Baroque 1 4 6 Asian architecture contemporary with Renaissance and post Renaissance Europe 1 4 6 1 Japanese 1 4 6 2 Indian 1 5 Late Modern Period and the Industrial Revolution 1 5 1 Neoclassicism 1 5 1 1 Neoclassical 1 5 2 Revivalism and Orientalism 1 5 2 1 Revivals started before the Victorian Era 1 5 2 2 Victorian revivals 1 5 2 3 Orientalism 1 5 2 4 Revivals in North America 1 5 3 Other late 19th century styles 1 5 4 Rural styles 1 5 5 Reactions to the Industrial Revolution 1 5 5 1 Industrial 1 5 5 2 Arts and Crafts in Europe 1 5 5 3 Arts and Crafts in the US 1 6 Modernism and other styles contemporary with modernism 1 6 1 Modernism under communism 1 6 2 Fascist Nazi 1 6 3 Pre Second World War 1 6 3 1 Other 20th century styles 1 6 4 Postmodernism and early 21st century styles 1 7 Fortified styles 1 8 Vernacular styles 1 8 1 Generic methods 1 8 2 European 1 8 3 North American 1 8 4 Native American 1 8 5 South American 1 8 6 African 1 8 7 Asian 1 8 8 Australasian 2 Alphabetical listing 3 Examples of styles 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksChronology of styles editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items March 2011 Prehistoric edit Early civilizations developed often independently in scattered locations around the globe The architecture was often a mixture of styles in timber cut from local forests and stone hewn from local rocks Most of the timber has gone although the earthworks remain Impressively massive stone structures have survived for years Neolithic 10 000 3000 BCAncient Americas edit Mesoamerican Mezcala Talud tablero Western Native AmericansMediterranean and Middle East civilizations edit Phoenician 3000 500 BC Ancient Egyptian 3000 BC 373 BC Minoan 3000 BC Crete Knossos Crete Mycenaean 1600 1100 BC Greece Ancient Near East and Mesopotamia edit Sumerian 5300 2000 BC Iranian Persian edit Ancient Persian Achaemenid Sassanid Iranian c 8th century Iran Persian Garden Style Iran Classical Style Hayat Formal Style Meidan public or Charbagh private Casual Style Park public or Bagh private Paradise garden Ancient Asian edit Indic edit Bengalese Indian Indian rock cut architecture Karnataka Tamil Nadu Pakistani Mauryan 321 185 BC All India Khmer Indonesian Myanmar architectureHistoric temple styles edit Buddhist Temple Hindu Temple Dravidian Architecture South Indian temple style 610 to present Bengal temple architecture 1400 to present Nagara Style Maru Gurjara architecture 900 to present Rajasthan and Gujarat Vesara Style hybrid form of Indian temple architecture with South Indian plan and a shape that features North Indian details Badami Chalukya architecture East Asian edit Ancient Chinese Japanese KoreanAlso edit Harappan 3300 1600 BC Sikh Classical Antiquity edit The architecture of Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome derived from the ancient Mediterranean civilizations such as at Knossos on Crete They developed highly refined systems for proportions and style using mathematics and geometry Ancient Greek 776 265 BC Roman 753 BC 663 AD Etruscan 700 200 BC Classical 600 BC 323 AD Herodian 37 4 BC Judea Early Christian 100 500 Byzantine 527 1520Middle Ages edit The European Early Middle Ages are generally taken to run from the end of the Roman Empire around 400 AD to around 1000 AD During this period Christianity made a significant impact on European culture Early Medieval Europe edit Latin Armenian 4th 16th centuries Anglo Saxon 450s 1066 England Bulgarian from 681 First Bulgarian Empire 681 1018 Pre Romanesque c 700 1000 Merovingian and Carolingian empires Iberian pre Romanesque Merovingian 5th 8th centuries France Germany Italy and neighbouring locations Visigothic 5th 8th centuries Spain and Portugal Asturian 711 910 North Spain North Portugal Carolingian 780s 9th century mostly France Germany Ottonian 950s 1050s mostly Germany also considered Early Romanesque 1 Repoblacion 880s 11th century Spain Medieval Europe edit The dominance of the Church over everyday life was expressed in grand spiritual designs which emphasized piety and sobriety The Romanesque style was simple and austere The Gothic style heightened the effect with heavenly spires pointed arches and religious carvings 2 MedievalByzantine edit Late Byzantine architecture before 1520 see above Kievan Rus architecture 988 1237 Tarnovo Artistic School 12th 14th century Bulgaria Rashka School 12th 15th centuries Serbian principalities Morava School Serbian principalities Bulgaria Romanesque edit Pre Romanesque see above First Romanesque 1000 France Italy Spain including Lombard Romanesque in Italy Romanesque 1000 1300 Norman 1074 1250 Normandy UK Ireland South Italy and Sicily Norman Arab Byzantine 1071 1200 Sicily Malta South Italy Cistercian Romanesque style c 1120 c 1240 Europe 3 Timber styles edit Stave churches oldest 845 d in England in Norway one 11th century several 12th century some with Romanesque elements Timber frame styles mostly Gothic or later UK France Germany the Netherlands Gothic edit 1135 40 1520 Gothic Cistercian Gothic 1138 15th century 3 various European countries Angevin Gothic or Plantagenet Style since 1148 western France Early English Period c 1190 c 1250 Gotico Angioiano since 1266 southern Italy Decorated Period c 1290 c 1350 Perpendicular Period c 1350 c 1550 Rayonnant Gothic 1240 c 1350 France Germany Central Europe Venetian Gothic 14th 15th centuries Venice in Italy Spanish Gothic Mudejar Style c 1200 1700 Spain Portugal Latin America 4 Aragonese Mudejar c 1200 1700 Aragon in Spain 4 Isabelline Gothic 1474 1505 reign Spain Plateresque 1490 1560 Spain amp colonies bridging Gothic and Renaissance styles Brick Gothic mid 13th to 16th century Germany Netherlands Flanders Poland northern Europe Brabantine Gothic Belgium and Netherlands 14th century Flamboyant Gothic 1400 1500 Spain France Portugal Manueline 1495 1521 Portugal and colonies Asian architecture contemporary with the Dark Ages and medieval Europe edit Japanese edit Shinden zukuri Heian Period Japan Chinese edit Songnic architectureKorean edit HanokDravidian and Vesara temple styles India edit Badami Chalukya aka Central Indian temple style or Deccan architecture 450 700 Rashtrakuta 750 983 Central and South India Western Chalukya aka Gadag 1050 1200 Karnataka Hoysala 900 1300 Karnataka Vijayanagara 1336 1565 South India Other Indian styles edit Kalinga Architecture Orissa and N Andhra Pradesh Rekha Deula Pidha Deula Khakhara Deula Hemadpanthi 1200 Maharashtra Sikh architecture Islamic Architecture 620 1918 edit Central Styles Multi Regional Prophetic Era based in Medina c 620 630 Rashidi Period based in Medina c 630 660 Umayyad architecture based in Damascus c 660 750 Abbasid architecture based in Baghdad c 750 1256 Mamluk architecture based in Cairo c 1256 1517 Ottoman architecture based in Istanbul c 1517 1918 Regional Styles Egypt Early Islamic architecture Rashidi Umayyad 641 750 Abbasid architecture 750 954 Fatimid architecture 954 1170 Ayyubid architecture 1174 1250 Mamluk architecture 1254 1517 Ottoman architecture 1517 1820 North Africa Maghrib The Umayyads 705 750 The Abbasid Era 750 909 The Fatimids 909 1048 The Amazigh Dynasties 1048 1550 Zirids 1048 1148 Middle Maghreb Almoravids 1040 1147 Far Maghreb Almohads 1121 1269 Far Maghreb Hafsids 1229 1574 Near and Middle Maghreb Marinids 1244 1465 Middle and Far Maghreb Zayyanids 1235 1550 Middle Maghreb Ottoman Rule 1550 1830 Near and Middle Maghreb Local Dynasties 1549 present Far Maghreb Islamic Spain Umayyad architecture 756 1031 Taifa Kingdoms 1 1031 1090 Almoravid architecture 1090 1147 Taifa Kingdoms 2 1140 1203 Almohad architecture 1147 1238 Taifa Kingdoms 3 1232 1492 Granada architecture 1287 1492 Persia and Central Asia Khurasani architecture Late 7th 10th century Razi Style 10th 13th century Samanid Period 10th c Ghaznawid Period 11th c Saljuk Period 11th 12th c Mongol Period 13th c Timurid Style 14th 16th c Isfahani Style 17th 19th c Indian subcontinent Indo Islamic architecture 1204 1857 Mughal architecture 1526 1707 Turkey Seljuk architecture 1071 1299 Ottoman architecture 1299 1922 First national architectural movement 1908 1940 Pre Columbian Indigenous American Styles edit Main article Indigenous architecture Aztec ca 14th century 1521 Maya Pueblo PuucEarly Modern Period and European Colonialism edit 1425 1660 The Renaissance began in Italy and spread through Europe rebelling against the all powerful Church by placing Man at the centre of his world instead of God 5 The Gothic spires and pointed arches were replaced by classical domes and rounded arches with comfortable spaces and entertaining details in a celebration of humanity The Baroque style was a florid development of this 200 years later largely by the Catholic Church to restate its religious values 6 Renaissance c 1425 1600 Europe American colonies Central European Renaissance Polish Renaissance French Renaissance Eastern European Renaissance Palladian 1516 1580 Venezia Italy revived in UK Mannerism 1520 1600 Polish Mannerism 1550 1650 Brancovenesc style late 17th and early 18th centuries Eastern Orthodox Church 1400 Southeast and Eastern Europe France edit Henry II 1530 1590 Louis XIII 1601 1643United Kingdom edit Tudor 1485 1603 Elizabethan 1480 1620 Jacobean 1580 1660Spain and Portugal edit Asturian pre romanesque 711 910 Kingdom of Asturias Mudejar Art 13th and 16th centuries Spanish Renaissance 15th and 16th centuries Plateresque continued from Spanish Gothic 1560 Spain amp colonies Low Countries Herrerian 1550 1650 Spain amp colonies primarily in Castille and the surroundings of Madrid Barroque Churrigueresque 17th 1750 Hispanic countries primarily in Spain and Mexico Modernisme 1880s 1910s Primarily Catalonia but also in Valencian Community Majorca Island and Melilla Portuguese Renaissance Portuguese Plain style 1580 1640 Portugal amp colonies Colonial edit Portuguese Colonial c 1480 1820 Brazil India Macao Africa East Timor Spanish Colonial 1520s c 1820s New World East Indies other colonies Cape Dutch 1652 1802 Cape Colony South Africa Netherlands Indies 1609 1949 Old Indies 18th century 19th century Indies Empire mid 18th century late 19th century New Indies late 19th century 20th century mixed architecture Dutch Colonial 1615 1674 Treaty of Westminster New England Chilotan 1600 Chiloe and southern Chile First Period 1625 1725 pre American vernacular Architecture of the California missions 1769 1823 California US French Colonial Colonial Georgian architecture Baroque edit 1600 1800 up to 1900 Andean Baroque 1680 1780 Viceroyalty of Peru Baroque c 1600 1750 Europe the Americas English Baroque 1666 Great Fire 1713 Treaty of Utrecht Spanish Baroque c 1600 1760 Churrigueresque 1660s 1750s Spain amp New World revival 1915 southwest US Hawaii Earthquake Baroque 17th 18th centuries Philippines Maltese Baroque c 1635 1798 New Spanish Baroque mid 17th early 18th centuries New Spain French Baroque c 1650 1789 Dutch Baroque c 1650 1700 Sicilian Baroque 1693 earthquake c 1745 Portuguese Joanine baroque c 1700 1750 Russian Baroque c 1680 1750 Naryshkin Baroque c 1690 1720 Moscow Russian Empire Petrine Baroque c 1700 1745 Saint Petersburg Russian Empire Elizabethan Baroque 1736 1762 Russian Empire Ukrainian Baroque late 17th 18th centuries Ukrainian lands Rococo c 1720 1789 France Germany Austria Italy Russia Spain Asian architecture contemporary with Renaissance and post Renaissance Europe edit Japanese edit Shoin zukuri 1560s 1860s Sukiya zukuri 1530s present Minka Japanese commoner or folk architecture Gassho zukuri Edo period and later Honmune zukuri Edo period and later Imperial Crown Style 1919 1945 Giyōfu architecture 1800s Indian edit Indo Islamic Mughal 1540 India Pakistan Bangladesh Akbari Mughal Garden Style Sharqi aka Janpur StyleLate Modern Period and the Industrial Revolution edit Neoclassicism edit 1720 1837 and onward A time often depicted as a rural idyll by the great painters but in fact was a hive of early industrial activity with small kilns and workshops springing up wherever materials could be mined or manufactured After the Renaissance neoclassical forms were developed and refined into new styles for public buildings and the gentry New Cooperism Neoclassical edit Neoclassical c 1715 1820 Beaux Arts 1670 France and 1880 US Georgian 1720 1840s UK US Jamaican Georgian architecture c 1750 c 1850 Jamaica American Colonial 1720 1780s US Pombaline style 1755 c 1860 Lisbon in Portugal Josephinischer Stil 1760 1780 90 Austria Adam style 1760 1795 England Scotland Russia US Federal 1780 1830 US Empire 1804 1830 revival 1870 Europe US Regency 1811 1830 UK Antebellum 1812 1861 Southern United States Palazzo Style 1814 1930 Europe Australia US Neo Palladian Jeffersonian 1790s 1830s Virginia in US American Empire 1810 Greek Revival architecture Rundbogenstil 1835 1900 Germany Neo Grec 1845 65 UK US France Nordic Classicism 1910 30 Norway Sweden Denmark amp Finland Polish Neoclassicism Poland New Classical architecture 20th 21st century global Temple 1832 global Revivalism and Orientalism edit Late 19th and early 20th centuries The Victorian Era was a time of giant leaps forward in technology and society such as iron bridges aqueducts sewer systems roads canals trains and factories As engineers inventors and businessmen they reshaped much of the British Empire including the UK India Australia South Africa and Canada and influenced Europe and the United States Architecturally they were revivalists who modified old styles to suit new purposes Revivalism Resort architecture Germany Victorian 1837 1901 UK See also San Francisco architecture Edwardian 1901 1910 UK Revivals started before the Victorian Era edit Gothic Revival 1740s UK US Europe Scots Baronial UK Italianate 1802 1890 UK Europe US Egyptian Revival 1809 1820s 1840s 1920s Europe US Biedermeier 1815 1848 Central Europe Russian Revival 1826 1917 Russian Empire Germany Middle Asia Russo Byzantine style 1861 1917 Russian Empire Balkans Russian neoclassical revival 1900 1920 Russian Empire Victorian revivals edit Renaissance Revival 1840 1890 UK Timber frame revivals in various styles Europe Black and white Revival 1811 UK especially Chester Jacobethan 1830 1870 UK Tudorbethan aka Mock Tudor 1835 1885 UK Baroque Revival aka Neo Baroque 1840 Bristol Byzantine 1850 1880 Edwardian Baroque 1901 1922 UK amp British Empire Second Empire 1855 1880 France UK US Canada Australia Napoleon III style 1852 1870 Paris France Queen Anne Style 1870 1910s UK US Romanian Revival 1884 1940s Romania Orientalism edit Orientalism Neo Mudejar 1880s 1920s Spain Portugal Bosnia California Moorish Revival US Europe Egyptian Revival 1920s Europe US see above Mayan Revival 1920 1930s US Indo Saracenic Revival aka Hindu Style Indo Gothic Mughal Gothic Neo Mughal Hindu Gothic late 19th century British India aka The Raj Revivals in North America edit Romanesque Revival 1840 1930s US Gothic Revival see above Carpenter Gothic 1870 US High Victorian Gothic English speaking world Collegiate Gothic 1910 1960 US Stick Style 1860 1890 US Queen Anne Style architecture United States 1880 1910s US Eastlake Style 1879 1905 US Richardsonian Romanesque 1880s 1905 US Shingle Style 1879 1905 Neo Byzantine 1882 1920s US Renaissance Revival American Renaissance Chateauesque 1887 1930s Canada US Hungary Canadian Chateau 1880s 1920s Canada Mediterranean Revival 1890s US Latin America Europe Mission Revival 1894 1936 California southwest US Pueblo Revival 1898 1930 southwest US Colonial Revival 1890s Dutch Colonial Revival c 1900 New England Spanish Colonial Revival 1915 Mexico California Hawaii Florida southwest US Beaux Arts Revival 1880 US Canada 1920 Australia City Beautiful 1890 20th century US Territorial Revival architecture 1930 Other late 19th century styles edit Australian styles Queenslander 1840s 1960s Australian Federation 1890 1920 Australian Heimatstil 1870 1900 Austria Germany Switzerland Neoclasico Isabelino 1843 1897 Ponce Puerto Rico Neo Manueline 1840s 1910s Portugal Brazil Portuguese colonies Dragestil 1880s 1910s Norway Palazzo style architecture Neo Plateresque and Monterrey Style 19th early 20th centuries Spain Mexico Rural styles edit Swiss chalet style 1840s 1920s Scandinavia Austria Germany later global Adirondack 1850s New York US National Park Service rustic aka Parkitecture 1903 US Western false front Western United States Reactions to the Industrial Revolution edit Industrial edit Industrial 1760 present worldwide Arts and Crafts in Europe edit Arts and Crafts 1880 1910 UK Art Nouveau aka Jugendstil 1885 1910 Modernisme 1888 1911 Catalan Art Nouveau Glasgow Style 1890 1910 Glasgow Scotland Vienna Secession 1897 1905 Austrian Art Nouveau National Romantic style 1900 1923 Norway Sweden Denmark amp Finland Arts and Crafts in the US edit American Craftsman aka American Arts and Crafts 1890s 1930 US Prairie Style 1900 1917 US American Foursquare mid 1890s late 1930s US California Bungalow 1910 1939 US Australia then global Modernism and other styles contemporary with modernism edit 1880 onwards The Industrial Revolution had brought steel plate glass and mass produced components These enabled a brave new world of bold structural frames with clean lines and plain or shiny surfaces In the early stages a popular motto was decoration is a crime In the Eastern Bloc the Communists rejected the Western Bloc s decadent ways and modernism developed in a markedly more bureaucratic sombre and monumental fashion Avant garde Parametricism 2008 Russian avant garde 1890 1930 Russian Empire Soviet Union Chicago School 1880 1920 1940s 1960s US Functionalism c 1900 1930s Europe US Futurism 1909 Europe Expressionism 1910 c 1924 Amsterdam School 1912 1924 Netherlands Organic architecture New Objectivity 1920 1939 Italy Germany Holland Budapest Rationalism 1920s 1930s Italy Bauhaus 1919 1930 Germany Northern Europe De Stijl 1920s Holland Europe Moderne 1925 global Art Deco 1925 1940s global List of Art Deco architecture Streamline Moderne 1930 1937 Modernism 1927 1960s International Style 1930 Europe US Usonian 1936 1940s US Modernism under communism edit Constructivism 1925 1932 USSR Postconstructivism 1932 1941 USSR Stalinist 1933 1955 USSR Fascist Nazi edit Fascist architecture Nazi 1933 1944 Germany Pre Second World War edit 1945 Modernism continued International Style continued New towns 1946 1968 UK global Mid century modern 1950s California etc Googie 1950s US Brutalism 1950s 1970s Structuralism 1950s 1970s Megastructures 1960s Metabolist 1959 Japan Danish Functionalism 1960s Denmark Structural Expressionism aka Hi Tech 1980s Other 20th century styles edit Heimatschutz Architecture 1900 1940 Austria Germany Ponce Creole 1895 1920 Ponce in Puerto Rico Heliopolis style 1905 c 1935 Egypt Mar del Plata style 1935 1950 Mar del Plata Argentina Minimal Traditional 1930s 1940s US Soft Portuguese 1940 1955 Portugal amp colonies Ranch style 1940s 1970s US Jengki style Indonesia Postmodernism and early 21st century styles edit Postmodernism 1945 US UK Bowellism Shed Style Arcology 1970s Europe Deconstructivism 1982 Europe US Far East Critical regionalism 1983 Blobitecture 2003 High tech 1970s Interactive architecture 2000 Sustainable architecture 2000 Earthship 1980 Started in US now global Green building 2000 Natural building 2000 Neo Andean 2005 Neo futurism late 1960s early 21st century New Classical Architecture 1980 New London Vernacular 2009 Berlin Style 1990s Mass timber 2010s Fortified styles edit Fortification 6800 BC Ringfort 800 BC 400 AD Dzong 17th century Star fort 1530 1800 Polygonal fort 1850 Vernacular styles edit This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items March 2011 Vernacular architectureGeneric methods edit Natural building Ice Igloo quinzhee Earth Cob house sod house adobe mudbrick house rammed earth Timber Log cabin log house Carpenter Gothic roundhouse stilt house Nomadic structures Yaranga bender tent Temporary structures Quonset hut Nissen hut prefabricated home Underground Underground living rock cut architecture monolithic church pit house Modern low energy systems Straw bale construction earthbag construction rice hull bagwall construction earthship earth house Various styles Longhouse European edit European Arctic North Norway and Sweden Finland North Russia Sami lavvu Sami goahti Northwest Europe Norway Sweden Fresia Jutland Denmark North Poland UK Iceland Norse architecture heathen hofs Viking ring fortress fogou souterrain Grubenhaus also known as Grubhouse or Grubhut Central and Eastern Europe Burdei zemlyanka Bulgaria Rock hewn Churches of Ivanovo Estonia Germany Black Forest house Swiss chalet style Gulf house aka East Frisian house Geestharden house aka Cimbrian house Schleswig house Haubarg Low German house aka Low Saxon house Middle German house Reed house Seaside resort house Standerhaus Uthland Frisian house Holland Frisian farmhouse Old Frisian longhouse Bildts farmhouse Iceland Turf houses Ireland Clochan Crannog Italy Trullo Lithuania Kaunas modernism Lithuanian folk architecture Polish Lithuanian wooden synagogues Norway Architecture of Norway Post church Palisade church Stave church Norwegian Turf house Vernacular architecture in Norway Rorbu Dragestil also National Romantic style Swiss chalet style and Nordic Classicism buildings Poland Zakopane Polish Lithuanian wooden synagogues wooden churches of Southern Lesser Poland Upper Lusatian house Romania Carpathian vernacular wooden churches of Maramureș Russia Dacha Scotland Medieval turf building in Cronberry blackhouses Slovakia Wooden churches of the Slovak Carpathians Spain Asturian teito Asturian horreo Gallician palloza Ukraine Wooden churches United Kingdom Dartmoor longhouse Neolithic long house palisade church mid 20th century system built houses Scotland Broch Atlantic roundhouse crannog dun North American edit Shotgun house US Florida Cracker c 1800 Florida US Tidewater US Sibley tent US Sod house US Cape Cod New England US Saltbox New England US Farmhouse US Brownstone US Native American edit Navajo hogan Pacific northwest plank house Plains nations tipi and earth lodge Wigwam Northeast nations wetu Pueblo kiva Colombian plateau nations quiggly hole Southwest nations jacal Southwestern cliff dwellings Seminole chickee Sweat lodge temazcal Amerindian longhouses South American edit Argentina Mar del Plata style Chile Chilotan architecture Venezuela and Chile PalafitoAfrican edit Central and South African countries Rondavel Xhosa and Zulu Architecture Zimbabwean Architecture Sotho Tswana Architecture Zulu and Nguni Architecture and Madagascan Architecture Dutch Colonial Cape DutchAsian edit China Yaodong Siheyuan Tulou Shanxi Hokkien Cantonese Hui Hakka Jiangxi Sichuan Pang uk Architecture of Hong Kong India Rock cut Toda hut Indonesia Uma longhouse attap dwelling Iran Turkey Caravanserai Iran Yakhchal Israel Rock cut tombs Japan Minka Mongolia Yurt Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea stilt house Philippines Bahay kubo Jin jin Torogan Bale Russia Siberian chum Thailand Thai stilt house Myanmar Shwenandaw MonasteryAustralasian edit Australia New Zealand slab hut Australia Aborigine humpyAlphabetical listing editAdam style 1770 England Adirondack Architecture 1850s New York US Anglo Saxon architecture 450s 1066 England and Wales American colonial architecture 1720 1780s US American Craftsman 1890s 1930 US California amp east American Empire 1810 American Foursquare mid 1890s late 1930s US Amsterdam School 1912 1924 Netherlands Ancient Egyptian architecture 3000 BC 373 AD Ancient Greek architecture 776 BC 265 BC Angevin Gothic since 1148 western France Arcology 1970s AD present Art Deco 1925 1940s Europe amp US Art Nouveau c 1885 1910 1880s 1920s UK California US Australian architectural styles Baroque architecture Bauhaus Berlin style 1990s Biedermeier 1815 1848 Blobitecture 2003 present Bowellism 1957 present Brick Gothic c 1350 c 15th century Bristol Byzantine 1850 1880 Brownstone Brutalist architecture 1950s 1970s Buddhist architecture 1st century BC Byzantine architecture 527 AD Sofia 1520 Cape Cod 17th century Carolingian architecture 780s 9th century France and Germany Carpenter Gothic US and Canada 1840s on Chicago school 1880s and 1890 US Chilotan architecture 1600 present Chiloe and southern Chile Churrigueresque 1660s 1750s Spain and the New World City Beautiful movement 1890 20th century US Classical architecture 600 BC 323 AD Colonial Revival architecture Constructivist architecture Danish Functionalism 1960s AD Denmark Deconstructivism 1982 present Decorated Period c 1290 c 1350 Dragestil 1880s 1910s Norway Dutch Colonial 1615 1674 Treaty of Westminster New England Dutch Colonial Revival c 1900 New England Dzong Architecture Tibet and Bhutan Early English Period c 1190 c 1250 Ephemeral architecture Eastlake Style 1879 1905 New England Egyptian Revival architecture 1809 1820s 1840s 1920s Elizabethan architecture 1533 1603 Empire 1804 1814 1870 revival English Baroque 1666 Great Fire 1713 Treaty of Utrecht Expressionist architecture 1910 c 1924 Farmhouse Federal architecture 1780 1830 US Federation architecture 1890 1915 Australia Florida cracker architecture c 1800 present Florida US Florida modern 1950s or Tropical Modernism Functionalism c 1900 1930s Europe amp US Futurist architecture 1909 Europe Georgian architecture 1720 1840s UK amp US Googie architecture 1950s US and Canada Gothic architecture Gothic Revival architecture 1760s 1840s Gotico Angioiano since 1266 southern Italy Greek Revival architecture Green building 2000 present Heliopolis style 1905 c 1935 Egypt Indian architecture India Interactive architecture 2000 present International style 1930 present Isabelline Gothic 1474 1505 reign Spain Islamic Architecture 691 present Italianate architecture 1802 Jacobean architecture 1580 1660 Jacobethan 1838 Jeffersonian architecture 1790s 1830s Virginia US Jengki style 1950s Indonesia Jugendstil c 1885 1910 German term for Art Nouveau Manueline 1495 1521 reign Portugal and colonies Mediterranean Revival Style 1890s present US Latin America Europe Memphis Group 1981 1988 Merovingian architecture 5th 8th centuries France and Germany Metabolist Movement 1959 Japan Mid century modern 1950s 1960s California US Latin America Mission Revival Style architecture 1894 1936 California US Modern movement 1927 1960s Modernisme 1888 1911 Catalan Art Nouveau National Park Service Rustic 1872 present US Natural building 2000 Nazi architecture 1933 1944 Germany Neo Byzantine architecture 1882 1920s American Neoclassical architecture Neo Grec 1848 1865 Neo gothic architecture Neolithic architecture 10 000 3000 BC Neo Manueline 1840s 1910s AD Portugal and Brazil New towns 1946 1968 United Kingdom Norman architecture 1074 1250 Organic architecture Ottonian architecture 950s 1050s Germany Palladian architecture 1616 1680 Jones Perpendicular Period c 1350 c 1550 Plantagenet Style since 1148 western France Southern plantation architecture Ponce Creole 1895 1920 Ponce Puerto Rico Pombaline style 1755 earthquake c 1860 Portugal Postmodern architecture 1980s Polish Cathedral Style 1870 1930 Polite architecture Prairie Style 1900 1917 US Pueblo style 1898EkUR 1990s Shingle Style 1879 1905 New England Queen Anne Style architecture 1870 1910s UK and US Queenslander 1840s 1960s Ranch style 1940s 1970s US Repoblacion architecture 880s 11th century Spain Regency architecture Richardsonian Romanesque 1880s US Rococo Roman architecture 753 BC 663 AD Romanesque architecture 1050 1100 Romanesque Revival architecture 1840 1900 US Russian architecture 989 18th century Russian Revival 1826 1917 1990s present Saltbox San Francisco architecture Scottish Baronial Second Empire 1865 1880 Serbo Byzantine revival Interwar period Sicilian Baroque 1693 earthquake c 1745 Soft Portuguese style 1940 1955 Portugal amp colonies Spanish Colonial Revival style 1915 present California Hawaii Florida Southwest US Spanish Colonial style 1520s c 1820s New World East Indies other colonies c 1900 present California Florida US Latin America Spain Stalinist architecture 1933 1955 USSR Stave churches oldest 845 d in England Norway one 11th century several 12th century Stick Style 1860 1890s Storybook 1920s Streamline Moderne 1930 1937 Structural Expressionism 1980s present Structuralism 1950 1975 Sumerian architecture 5300 2000 BC Sustainable architecture 2000 present Swiss chalet style 1840s 1920s Scandinavia and Germany Tidewater architecture 19th century Tudor architecture 1485 1603 Tudorbethan architecture 1835 1885 Ukrainian Baroque late 1600 19th century Usonian 1936 1940s US Victorian architecture 1837 1901 UK Vienna Secession 1897 c 1905 Austrian Art NouveauExamples of styles edit nbsp Ancient Roman architecture Colosseum an amphitheater in Rome Italy 1st century AD nbsp Persian Islamic architecture from the 7th to 9th century period the Shah Mosque Naqsh i Jahan Square Iran nbsp Late Byzantine architecture of the Tarnovo school in Bulgaria nbsp Gothic architecture St Vitus Cathedral in Prague Czech Republic nbsp Weser Renaissance style Juleum in Helmstedt Germany nbsp Baroque architecture Melk Abbey Austria nbsp Neoclassical architecture Cathedral of Vilnius in Lithuania nbsp Historicism Resort architecture in Binz on Rugia Island a specific style common in German seaside resorts nbsp Secession Tenement house in Sopot Poland built 1904 nbsp Early modern architecture Bauhaus University in Weimar Germany built 1911 nbsp Postmodern architecture Wells Fargo Center in Minneapolis Minnesota U S completed 1988 nbsp A stylised facade in Giyōfu architecture Kaichi School Museum Japan 1800s nbsp Beaux Arts architecture in a bank s building facade in Puerto Rico nbsp Art Deco architecture in a city marketplace buildingSee also editNational Register of Historic Places architectural style categories Architectural design values Feminism and modern architecture List of house styles Sacred architecture Architecture of cathedrals and great churches Synagogue architecture Timeline of architecture Timeline of architectural styles ParametricismReferences edit Hans Erich Kubach Architektur der Romanik 1973 1974 3 7630 1705 7 p 63 144 Die erste Romanische Kunst Fruhromanische Architektur Robert Stuart 1854 Cyclopedia of architecture historical descriptive typographical decorative theoretical and mechanical alphabetically arranged familiarly explained and adapted to the comprehension of workmen A S Barnes amp Co p 75 a b Gebaut Burgundische Romanik Pontigny Zisterziensergotik a b Really Mudejar style had phases according to the general European styles there was Romanesque Mudejar Gothic Mudejar and even Renaissance Mudejar Gerald Leinwand The pageant of world history Prentice Hall 1990 page 330 Jackson J Spielvogel 2010 Western Civilization A Brief History Cengage Learning page 333 ISBN 0495571474 White Norval Elliott Willensky 2000 AIA Guide to New York 4th ed New York Random House ISBN 0 8129 3107 6 Lewis Philippa Gillian Darley 1986 Dictionary of Ornament NY Pantheon Baker John Milnes AIA 1994 American House Styles NY NortonFurther reading editHamlin Alfred Dwight Foster History of Architectural Styles BiblioBazaar 2009 Carson Dunlop Architectural Styles Dearborn Real Estate 2003 Herbert Pothorn A guide to architectural styles Phaidon 1983External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Architecture by style Victoria amp Albert Museum Microsite on Introduction to Architectural Styles Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of architectural styles amp oldid 1205859558, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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