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Scottish baronial architecture

Scottish baronial or Scots baronial is an architectural style of 19th-century Gothic Revival which revived the forms and ornaments of historical architecture of Scotland in the Late Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period. Reminiscent of Scottish castles, buildings in the Scots baronial style are characterised by elaborate rooflines embellished with conical roofs, tourelles, and battlements with machicolations, often with an asymmetric plan. Popular during the fashion for Romanticism and the Picturesque, Scots baronial architecture was equivalent to the Jacobethan Revival of 19th-century England, and likewise revived the Late Gothic appearance of the fortified domestic architecture of the elites in the Late Middle Ages and the architecture of the Jacobean era.

The sheriff court in Greenock (1869) is a typical Scottish Baronial building with crow-stepped gables and corbelled corner turrets.

Among architects of the Scots baronial style in the Victorian era were William Burn and David Bryce. Romanticism in Scotland coincided with a Scottish national identity during the 19th century, and some of the most emblematic country residences of 19th-century Scotland were built in this style, including Queen Victoria's Balmoral Castle and Walter Scott's Abbotsford, while in urban settings Cockburn Street, Edinburgh was built wholly in baronial style. Baronial style buildings were typically of stone, whether ashlar or masonry.

Following Robert William Billings's Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland, architectural historians identified the stylistic features characteristic of the baronial castles built from the latter 16th century as Scots baronial style, which as a revived idiom architects continued to employ up until 1930s. Scottish baronial was core influence on Charles Rennie Mackintosh's Modern Style architecture.[1] The style was considered a British national idiom emblematic of Scotland, and was widely used for public buildings, country houses, residences and follies throughout the British Empire. The Scottish National War Memorial was the last significant monument of the baronial style, built 1920 in Edinburgh Castle after World War I.[2]

Revival and name edit

 
Scrabo Tower, a folly in Newtownards, County Down, by architects Lanyon and Lynn (1858)

The Scottish baronial style is also called Scotch baronial,[3][4] Scots baronial or just baronial style.[5] The name was invented in the 19th century and may come from Robert William Billings's book Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland, published in 1852.[6] Before, the style does not seem to have had a name. The buildings produced by the Scottish baronial revival by far outnumber those of the original Scottish "baronial" castles of the Early Modern Period.

Predecessors edit

 
Claypotts Castle consists of a rectangular central block with two round towers crowned by square garret chambers. The corners of these chambers or cap-houses are strongly corbelled out over the round form and have crow-stepped gables.

Scottish baronial style drew upon the buildings of the Scottish Renaissance. The style of elite residences built by barons in Scotland developed under the influence of French architecture and the architecture of the County of Flanders in the 16th century and was abandoned by about 1660.[5][4] The style kept many of the features of the high-rising medieval Gothic castles and introduced Renaissance features. The high and relatively thin-walled medieval fortifications had been made obsolete by gunpowder weapons but were associated with chivalry and landed nobility. High roofs, towers and turrets were kept for status reasons. Renaissance elements were introduced. This concerned mainly the windows that became bigger, had straight lintels or round bows and typically lacked mullions. The style drew on tower houses and peel towers,[4] retaining many of their external features. French Renaissance also kept the steep roofs of medieval castles as can be seen for example at Azay-le-Rideau (1518), and the original Scottish baronial style might have been influenced by French masons brought to Scotland to work on royal palaces.

The style was quite limited in scope: a style for lesser Scottish landlords. The walls usually are rubble work and only quoins, window dressings and copings are in ashlar. Sculpted ornaments are sparsely used. In most cases the windows lack pediments. The style often uses corbelled turrets sometimes called tourelles, bartizans or pepperpot turrets. The corbels supporting the turret typically are roll-moulded. Their roofs were conical. Gables are often crow-stepped. Round towers supporting square garret chambers corbelled out over the cylinder of their main bodies are particular the Scottish baronial style. They can be seen at Claypotts, Monea, Colliston, Thirlestane, Auchans, Balvenie, and Fiddes.

Such castles or tower houses are typically built on asymmetric plans. Often this is a Z-plan as at Claypotts Castle (1569–1588), or on an L-plan as at Colliston. Roof lines are uneven and irregular.

The Scottish baronial style coexisted even in Scotland with Northern Renaissance architecture, which was preferred by the wealthier clients. William Wallace's work at the North Range of Linlithgow Palace (1618–1622) and at Heriot's Hospital (1628–1633) are examples of a contemporaneous Scottish Renaissance architecture. Wallace worked for the Countess of Home at Moray House on Edinburgh's Canongate, an Anglo-Scottish client who employed the English master mason Nicholas Stone at her London house in Aldersgate.[7]

The baronial style as well as the Scottish Renaissance style finally gave way to the grander English forms associated with Inigo Jones in the later part of the seventeenth century.[4]

Scottish baronial edit

European architecture of the 19th century was dominated by revivals of various historic styles. This current took off in the middle of the 18th century with the Gothic Revival in Britain. The Gothic Revival in architecture has been seen as an expression of romanticism and according to Alvin Jackson, the Scots baronial style was "a Caledonian reading of the gothic".[8] Some of the earliest evidence of a revival in Gothic architecture is from Scotland. Inveraray Castle, built starting from 1746 with design input from William Adam, incorporates turrets. These were largely conventional Palladian style houses that incorporated some external features of the Scots baronial style. William Adam's son's, Robert and James continued their father's approach, with houses such as Mellerstain and Wedderburn in Berwickshire and Seton House in East Lothian, but most clearly at Culzean Castle, Ayrshire, remodelled by Robert from 1777.[9]

Large windows of plate glass are not uncommon. Bay windows often have their individual roofs adorned by pinnacles and crenulations. Porches, porticos and porte-cocheres, are often given the castle treatment. An imitation portcullis on the larger houses would occasionally be suspended above a front door, flanked by heraldic beasts and other medieval architectural motifs.[citation needed]

Important for the adoption of the style in the early nineteenth century was Abbotsford House,[10] the residence of the novelist and poet Sir Walter Scott. Rebuilt for him from 1816, it became a model for the Scottish baronial Revival style. Common features borrowed from 16th- and 17th-century houses included battlemented gateways, crow-stepped gables, spiral stairs, pointed turrets and machicolations.[11] Orchardton Castle near Auchencairn, Scotland is a superb example dating from the 1880s.[12]

Important for the dissemination of the style was Robert Billings's (1813–1874) four-volume work Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland (1848–1852).[13] It was applied to many relatively modest dwellings by architects such as William Burn (1789–1870), David Bryce (1803–76),[11] Edward Blore (1787–1879), Edward Calvert (c. 1847–1914) and Robert Stodart Lorimer (1864–1929) and in urban contexts, including the building of Cockburn Street in Edinburgh (from the 1850s) as well as the National Wallace Monument at Stirling (1859–1869).[14] Dall House (1855) and Helen's Tower (1848) have square-corbelled-on-round towers or turrets. The rebuilding of Balmoral Castle as a baronial palace and its adoption as a royal retreat from 1855 to 1858 by Queen Victoria confirmed the popularity of the style.[15]

This architectural style was often employed for public buildings, such as Aberdeen Grammar School (about 1860). However, it was by no means confined to Scotland and is a fusion of the Gothic revival castle architecture first employed by Horace Walpole for Strawberry Hill and the ancient Scottish defensive tower houses. In the 19th century it became fashionable for private houses to be built with small turrets. Such buildings were dubbed "in Scottish baronial style". In fact the architecture often had little in common with tower houses, which retained their defensive functions and were deficient with respect to 19th-century ideas of comfort.[citation needed] The revival often adapted the style to the needs and technical abilities of a later time.

In Ireland, a young English architect of the York School of Architecture, George Fowler Jones, designed Castle Oliver, a 110-room mansion of about 29,000 sq ft (2,700 m2), built in a pink sandstone similar to Belfast Castle. Castle Oliver had all the classic features of the style, including battlements, porte-cochère, crow-stepped gables, numerous turrets, arrow slits, spiral stone staircases, and conical roofs.[citation needed]

This form of architecture was popular in the dominions of the British Empire. In New Zealand it was advocated by the architect Robert Lawson, who designed frequently in this style, most notably at Larnach Castle in Dunedin. Other examples in New Zealand include works by Francis Petre. In Canada, Craigdarroch Castle, British Columbia, was built for Robert Dunsmuir, a Scottish coal baron, in 1890. In Toronto, E. J. Lennox designed Casa Loma in the Gothic Revival style for Sir Henry Pellatt, a prominent Canadian financier and industrialist. The mansion has battlements and towers, along with modern plumbing and other conveniences. Another Canadian example is the Banff Springs Hotel in the Banff National Park in Alberta, Canada. The style can also be seen outside the empire at Vorontsov Palace near the city of Yalta, Crimea.[citation needed]

Decline edit

 
Rear of the Scottish National War Memorial (1920) in Edinburgh Castle

The popularity of the baronial style peaked towards the end of the nineteenth century, and the building of large houses declined in importance in the twentieth century.[16] The baronial style continued to influence the construction of some estate houses, including Skibo Castle, which was rebuilt from 1899 to 1903 for industrialist Andrew Carnegie by Ross and Macbeth.[16][17] Isolated examples included the houses designed by Basil Spence, Broughton Place (1936) and Gribloch (1937–1939), which combined modern and baronial elements.[16]

The 20th-century Scottish baronial castles have the reputation of architectural follies. Among most patrons and architects the style became disfavoured along with the Gothic revival style during the early years of the 20th century.[citation needed]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Masterpieces of Art by Gordon Kerr. p. 8.
  2. ^ Glendinning, Miles; MacKechnie, Aonghus (2019). Scotch Baronial: Architecture and National Identity in Scotland. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-4742-8348-9.
  3. ^ MacKechnie, Aoughus; Glendinning, Miles (2019). Scotch Baronial – The Architecture of Scotland and Unionist Nationalism. London: Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-1474283472.
  4. ^ a b c d Summerson, J. (1993). Architecture in Britain, 1530 to 1830 (9th ed.). New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. pp. 502–511. ISBN 0300058861. Within the decade 1560–70, an unmistakable national style emerged—the style which the nineteenth century christened, affectionately, 'Scotch Baronial'. It continued to develop, and held its ground for about a hundred years...
  5. ^ a b Billings, Robert William (1852). The Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland, Volume 1 (1901 ed.). Edinburg: Oliver & Boyd. p. 6. Retrieved 8 October 2018. From the year 1500 to 1660 or therabouts, Scotland adopted the sterner features of French and Flemish residences, and so cleverly mingled their peculiarities with the castellated architecture of their own growth as to produce a baronial style peculiar to the country.
  6. ^ Billings, Robert William (1845). The Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland, Volume 1 (1901 ed.). Edinburg: Oliver & Boyd.
  7. ^ Nick Haynes & Clive B. Fenton, Building Knowledge, An Architectural History of the University of Edinburgh (Edinburgh, 2017), pp. 236–239, 237–238.
  8. ^ Jackson, Alvin (2011). The Two Unions: Ireland, Scotland, and the Survival of the United Kingdom, 1707–2007. Oxford University Press. p. 152. ISBN 978-0-19-959399-6.
  9. ^ I. D. Whyte and K. A. Whyte, The Changing Scottish Landscape, 1500–1800 (London: Taylor & Francis, 1991), ISBN 0-415-02992-9, p. 100.
  10. ^ Dunbar, John G. (1978). The Architecture of Scotland (2nd ed.). London: Batsford. p. 124. ISBN 07134-11422. Abbotsford (...), with its angle-turrets and crowsteps, foreshadows the early Victorian revival of the Scottish Baronial style ...
  11. ^ a b L. Hull, Britain's Medieval Castles (London: Greenwood, 2006), ISBN 0-275-98414-1, p. 154.
  12. ^ Paterson, George B. L. (1983). Orchardton House, Auchencairn, by Castle Douglas. University of Glasgow, Mackintosh School of Architecture: University of Glasgow. pp. 17, 21, 30, 38, 56–57.
  13. ^ T. M. Devine, "In Bed with an Elephant: Almost Three Hundred Years of the Anglo-Scottish Union", Scottish Affairs, 57, Autumn 2006, doi:10.3366/scot.2006.0049, p. 11.
  14. ^ M. Glendinning, R. MacInnes and A. MacKechnie, A History of Scottish Architecture: From the Renaissance to the Present Day (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2002), ISBN 978-0-7486-0849-2, pp. 276–285.
  15. ^ H.-R. Hitchcock, Architecture: Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries (New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, 4th edn., 1989), ISBN 0-300-05320-7, p. 146.
  16. ^ a b c D. Mays, "Housing: 4 Country seat, c. 1600–Present", in M. Lynch, ed., Oxford Companion to Scottish History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011), ISBN 0-19-969305-6, pp. 326–328.
  17. ^ "New hotel is Scotland's first castle of the 21st century". Sourcewire. 10 August 2007.

External links edit

  • : The Scottish baronial: an introduction and illustrations of five notable examples.
  • Craigends.org.uk, a detailed study of "David Bryce's lost masterpiece", demolished in 1971.
  • Castle-oliver.com, photographs and history of a recently restored Scottish baronial masterpiece.

scottish, baronial, architecture, scottish, baronial, scots, baronial, architectural, style, 19th, century, gothic, revival, which, revived, forms, ornaments, historical, architecture, scotland, late, middle, ages, early, modern, period, reminiscent, scottish,. Scottish baronial or Scots baronial is an architectural style of 19th century Gothic Revival which revived the forms and ornaments of historical architecture of Scotland in the Late Middle Ages and the Early Modern Period Reminiscent of Scottish castles buildings in the Scots baronial style are characterised by elaborate rooflines embellished with conical roofs tourelles and battlements with machicolations often with an asymmetric plan Popular during the fashion for Romanticism and the Picturesque Scots baronial architecture was equivalent to the Jacobethan Revival of 19th century England and likewise revived the Late Gothic appearance of the fortified domestic architecture of the elites in the Late Middle Ages and the architecture of the Jacobean era The sheriff court in Greenock 1869 is a typical Scottish Baronial building with crow stepped gables and corbelled corner turrets Among architects of the Scots baronial style in the Victorian era were William Burn and David Bryce Romanticism in Scotland coincided with a Scottish national identity during the 19th century and some of the most emblematic country residences of 19th century Scotland were built in this style including Queen Victoria s Balmoral Castle and Walter Scott s Abbotsford while in urban settings Cockburn Street Edinburgh was built wholly in baronial style Baronial style buildings were typically of stone whether ashlar or masonry Following Robert William Billings s Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland architectural historians identified the stylistic features characteristic of the baronial castles built from the latter 16th century as Scots baronial style which as a revived idiom architects continued to employ up until 1930s Scottish baronial was core influence on Charles Rennie Mackintosh s Modern Style architecture 1 The style was considered a British national idiom emblematic of Scotland and was widely used for public buildings country houses residences and follies throughout the British Empire The Scottish National War Memorial was the last significant monument of the baronial style built 1920 in Edinburgh Castle after World War I 2 Contents 1 Revival and name 2 Predecessors 3 Scottish baronial 4 Decline 5 See also 6 Notes 7 External linksRevival and name edit nbsp Scrabo Tower a folly in Newtownards County Down by architects Lanyon and Lynn 1858 The Scottish baronial style is also called Scotch baronial 3 4 Scots baronial or just baronial style 5 The name was invented in the 19th century and may come from Robert William Billings s book Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland published in 1852 6 Before the style does not seem to have had a name The buildings produced by the Scottish baronial revival by far outnumber those of the original Scottish baronial castles of the Early Modern Period Predecessors editSee also Renaissance in Scotland Architecture nbsp Claypotts Castle consists of a rectangular central block with two round towers crowned by square garret chambers The corners of these chambers or cap houses are strongly corbelled out over the round form and have crow stepped gables Scottish baronial style drew upon the buildings of the Scottish Renaissance The style of elite residences built by barons in Scotland developed under the influence of French architecture and the architecture of the County of Flanders in the 16th century and was abandoned by about 1660 5 4 The style kept many of the features of the high rising medieval Gothic castles and introduced Renaissance features The high and relatively thin walled medieval fortifications had been made obsolete by gunpowder weapons but were associated with chivalry and landed nobility High roofs towers and turrets were kept for status reasons Renaissance elements were introduced This concerned mainly the windows that became bigger had straight lintels or round bows and typically lacked mullions The style drew on tower houses and peel towers 4 retaining many of their external features French Renaissance also kept the steep roofs of medieval castles as can be seen for example at Azay le Rideau 1518 and the original Scottish baronial style might have been influenced by French masons brought to Scotland to work on royal palaces The style was quite limited in scope a style for lesser Scottish landlords The walls usually are rubble work and only quoins window dressings and copings are in ashlar Sculpted ornaments are sparsely used In most cases the windows lack pediments The style often uses corbelled turrets sometimes called tourelles bartizans or pepperpot turrets The corbels supporting the turret typically are roll moulded Their roofs were conical Gables are often crow stepped Round towers supporting square garret chambers corbelled out over the cylinder of their main bodies are particular the Scottish baronial style They can be seen at Claypotts Monea Colliston Thirlestane Auchans Balvenie and Fiddes Such castles or tower houses are typically built on asymmetric plans Often this is a Z plan as at Claypotts Castle 1569 1588 or on an L plan as at Colliston Roof lines are uneven and irregular The Scottish baronial style coexisted even in Scotland with Northern Renaissance architecture which was preferred by the wealthier clients William Wallace s work at the North Range of Linlithgow Palace 1618 1622 and at Heriot s Hospital 1628 1633 are examples of a contemporaneous Scottish Renaissance architecture Wallace worked for the Countess of Home at Moray House on Edinburgh s Canongate an Anglo Scottish client who employed the English master mason Nicholas Stone at her London house in Aldersgate 7 The baronial style as well as the Scottish Renaissance style finally gave way to the grander English forms associated with Inigo Jones in the later part of the seventeenth century 4 Scottish baronial editEuropean architecture of the 19th century was dominated by revivals of various historic styles This current took off in the middle of the 18th century with the Gothic Revival in Britain The Gothic Revival in architecture has been seen as an expression of romanticism and according to Alvin Jackson the Scots baronial style was a Caledonian reading of the gothic 8 Some of the earliest evidence of a revival in Gothic architecture is from Scotland Inveraray Castle built starting from 1746 with design input from William Adam incorporates turrets These were largely conventional Palladian style houses that incorporated some external features of the Scots baronial style William Adam s son s Robert and James continued their father s approach with houses such as Mellerstain and Wedderburn in Berwickshire and Seton House in East Lothian but most clearly at Culzean Castle Ayrshire remodelled by Robert from 1777 9 Large windows of plate glass are not uncommon Bay windows often have their individual roofs adorned by pinnacles and crenulations Porches porticos and porte cocheres are often given the castle treatment An imitation portcullis on the larger houses would occasionally be suspended above a front door flanked by heraldic beasts and other medieval architectural motifs citation needed Important for the adoption of the style in the early nineteenth century was Abbotsford House 10 the residence of the novelist and poet Sir Walter Scott Rebuilt for him from 1816 it became a model for the Scottish baronial Revival style Common features borrowed from 16th and 17th century houses included battlemented gateways crow stepped gables spiral stairs pointed turrets and machicolations 11 Orchardton Castle near Auchencairn Scotland is a superb example dating from the 1880s 12 Important for the dissemination of the style was Robert Billings s 1813 1874 four volume work Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland 1848 1852 13 It was applied to many relatively modest dwellings by architects such as William Burn 1789 1870 David Bryce 1803 76 11 Edward Blore 1787 1879 Edward Calvert c 1847 1914 and Robert Stodart Lorimer 1864 1929 and in urban contexts including the building of Cockburn Street in Edinburgh from the 1850s as well as the National Wallace Monument at Stirling 1859 1869 14 Dall House 1855 and Helen s Tower 1848 have square corbelled on round towers or turrets The rebuilding of Balmoral Castle as a baronial palace and its adoption as a royal retreat from 1855 to 1858 by Queen Victoria confirmed the popularity of the style 15 This architectural style was often employed for public buildings such as Aberdeen Grammar School about 1860 However it was by no means confined to Scotland and is a fusion of the Gothic revival castle architecture first employed by Horace Walpole for Strawberry Hill and the ancient Scottish defensive tower houses In the 19th century it became fashionable for private houses to be built with small turrets Such buildings were dubbed in Scottish baronial style In fact the architecture often had little in common with tower houses which retained their defensive functions and were deficient with respect to 19th century ideas of comfort citation needed The revival often adapted the style to the needs and technical abilities of a later time In Ireland a young English architect of the York School of Architecture George Fowler Jones designed Castle Oliver a 110 room mansion of about 29 000 sq ft 2 700 m2 built in a pink sandstone similar to Belfast Castle Castle Oliver had all the classic features of the style including battlements porte cochere crow stepped gables numerous turrets arrow slits spiral stone staircases and conical roofs citation needed This form of architecture was popular in the dominions of the British Empire In New Zealand it was advocated by the architect Robert Lawson who designed frequently in this style most notably at Larnach Castle in Dunedin Other examples in New Zealand include works by Francis Petre In Canada Craigdarroch Castle British Columbia was built for Robert Dunsmuir a Scottish coal baron in 1890 In Toronto E J Lennox designed Casa Loma in the Gothic Revival style for Sir Henry Pellatt a prominent Canadian financier and industrialist The mansion has battlements and towers along with modern plumbing and other conveniences Another Canadian example is the Banff Springs Hotel in the Banff National Park in Alberta Canada The style can also be seen outside the empire at Vorontsov Palace near the city of Yalta Crimea citation needed nbsp Dunrobin Castle is largely the work of Sir Charles Barry and similar to the ornate conical turrets foundations and windows of contemporary restorations such as Josselin Castle in Brittany nbsp Scots Baronial style turrets on Victorian tenements in Edinburgh nbsp Scots baronial turret above entrance to The Kirna an 1867 Ballantyne property in Walkerburn Scottish Borders nbsp Balmoral Castle shows the final Victorian embodiment of the style A principal keep reminiscent of Craigievar is the middle of the castle while a large turreted country house is attached nbsp Balmoral Castle Royal Deeside Aberdeenshire nbsp Allahabad Public Library in Prayagraj IndiaDecline edit nbsp Rear of the Scottish National War Memorial 1920 in Edinburgh CastleThe popularity of the baronial style peaked towards the end of the nineteenth century and the building of large houses declined in importance in the twentieth century 16 The baronial style continued to influence the construction of some estate houses including Skibo Castle which was rebuilt from 1899 to 1903 for industrialist Andrew Carnegie by Ross and Macbeth 16 17 Isolated examples included the houses designed by Basil Spence Broughton Place 1936 and Gribloch 1937 1939 which combined modern and baronial elements 16 The 20th century Scottish baronial castles have the reputation of architectural follies Among most patrons and architects the style became disfavoured along with the Gothic revival style during the early years of the 20th century citation needed See also edit nbsp Architecture portalList of Gothic Revival architecture List of Gothic Revival architects Prospect 100 best modern Scottish buildingsNotes edit Charles Rennie Mackintosh Masterpieces of Art by Gordon Kerr p 8 Glendinning Miles MacKechnie Aonghus 2019 Scotch Baronial Architecture and National Identity in Scotland London Bloomsbury Publishing p 4 ISBN 978 1 4742 8348 9 MacKechnie Aoughus Glendinning Miles 2019 Scotch Baronial The Architecture of Scotland and Unionist Nationalism London Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1474283472 a b c d Summerson J 1993 Architecture in Britain 1530 to 1830 9th ed New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press pp 502 511 ISBN 0300058861 Within the decade 1560 70 an unmistakable national style emerged the style which the nineteenth century christened affectionately Scotch Baronial It continued to develop and held its ground for about a hundred years a b Billings Robert William 1852 The Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland Volume 1 1901 ed Edinburg Oliver amp Boyd p 6 Retrieved 8 October 2018 From the year 1500 to 1660 or therabouts Scotland adopted the sterner features of French and Flemish residences and so cleverly mingled their peculiarities with the castellated architecture of their own growth as to produce a baronial style peculiar to the country Billings Robert William 1845 The Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland Volume 1 1901 ed Edinburg Oliver amp Boyd Nick Haynes amp Clive B Fenton Building Knowledge An Architectural History of the University of Edinburgh Edinburgh 2017 pp 236 239 237 238 Jackson Alvin 2011 The Two Unions Ireland Scotland and the Survival of the United Kingdom 1707 2007 Oxford University Press p 152 ISBN 978 0 19 959399 6 I D Whyte and K A Whyte The Changing Scottish Landscape 1500 1800 London Taylor amp Francis 1991 ISBN 0 415 02992 9 p 100 Dunbar John G 1978 The Architecture of Scotland 2nd ed London Batsford p 124 ISBN 07134 11422 Abbotsford with its angle turrets and crowsteps foreshadows the early Victorian revival of the Scottish Baronial style a b L Hull Britain s Medieval Castles London Greenwood 2006 ISBN 0 275 98414 1 p 154 Paterson George B L 1983 Orchardton House Auchencairn by Castle Douglas University of Glasgow Mackintosh School of Architecture University of Glasgow pp 17 21 30 38 56 57 T M Devine In Bed with an Elephant Almost Three Hundred Years of the Anglo Scottish Union Scottish Affairs 57 Autumn 2006 doi 10 3366 scot 2006 0049 p 11 M Glendinning R MacInnes and A MacKechnie A History of Scottish Architecture From the Renaissance to the Present Day Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 7486 0849 2 pp 276 285 H R Hitchcock Architecture Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press 4th edn 1989 ISBN 0 300 05320 7 p 146 a b c D Mays Housing 4 Country seat c 1600 Present in M Lynch ed Oxford Companion to Scottish History Oxford Oxford University Press 2011 ISBN 0 19 969305 6 pp 326 328 New hotel is Scotland s first castle of the 21st century Sourcewire 10 August 2007 External links editFreewebs com The Scottish baronial an introduction and illustrations of five notable examples Craigends org uk a detailed study of David Bryce s lost masterpiece demolished in 1971 Castle oliver com photographs and history of a recently restored Scottish baronial masterpiece Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scottish baronial architecture amp oldid 1181027832, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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