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italianate+style

  • 1 Italianate

    Ital·ian·ate
    [ɪˈtæliəneɪt, AM jənɪt]
    adj inv italianisiert
    * * *
    [I'tljəneɪt]
    adj
    nach italienischer Art
    * * *
    A adj [-neıt; -nət] italianisiert
    B v/t [-neıt] italianisieren

    English-german dictionary > Italianate

  • 2 built in the Italianate-Byzantine style

    Универсальный англо-русский словарь > built in the Italianate-Byzantine style

  • 3 italianisant

    A adj [art] Italianate.
    B nm,f Italian scholar.
    ( féminin italianisante) [italjanizɑ̃, ɑ̃t] adjectif
    [style] Italianate
    ————————
    , italianisante [italjanizɑ̃, ɑ̃t] nom masculin, nom féminin

    Dictionnaire Français-Anglais > italianisant

  • 4 построенный в итальянско-византийском стиле

    Универсальный русско-английский словарь > построенный в итальянско-византийском стиле

  • 5 Bunning, James Bunstone

    [br]
    b. 1802 London, England
    d. 1863 London (?), England
    [br]
    English surveyor responsible for some impressive structures in London.
    [br]
    For the last twenty years of his life Bunning served as architect to the Corporation of London. During this time he was especially noted for three large buildings: Holloway Prison (1849–52), built in stone in a bold, castellated style; Caledonian Market (1855); and, most important and original, the Coal Exchange (1847–9).
    Bunning's larger replacement for an earlier building in Lower Thames Street was a ferrovitreous triumph. The exterior was of fashionable Italianate design, but inside it contained an elegant 60 ft (18 m) diameter rotunda of cast iron intended for the meeting of merchants. Galleries made entirely of iron and supported on brackets encircled the walls at three levels, and above was a glazed dome of ground plate glass rising to over 74 ft (22.5 m) from ground level, supported by thirty-two iron ribs. For decoration there were twenty-four painted panels depicting plants and fossils found in coal seams, and eight smaller compartments showing coal implements. The demolition of this outstanding structure in 1962 so that the road could be widened, served as a trigger to public concern over the then-increasing rate of demolition of notable nineteenth-century structures. During excavation for this building, a structure which cost £40,000, a Roman hypocaust system was found beneath and preserved.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    G.Godwin, 1850, "Buildings and Monuments: Modern and Medieval", The Builder.
    DY

    Biographical history of technology > Bunning, James Bunstone

  • 6 Salt, Sir Titus

    [br]
    b. 20 September 1803 Morley, Yorkshire, England
    d. 29 December 1876 Saltaire, Yorkshire, England
    [br]
    English industrialist, social reformer and entrepreneur who made his fortune by overcoming the problems of utilizing alpaca wool in the production of worsted, and established the early model town at Saltaire.
    [br]
    Titus Salt arrived in Bradford with his father, who was a wool merchant in the town, in 1822. He soon set up his own company and it was there that he experimented with the textile worsted. Alpaca wool comes from an animal of the camel family that resembles the llama, and flocks of domesticated breeds of the animal had been raised in the high Andes since the days of the Incas. The wool was introduced into Europe via Spain and, later, Germany and France. The first attempts to spin and weave the yarn in England were made in 1808, but despite experimentation over the years the material was difficult to work. It was in 1836 that Salt evolved his method of utilizing a cotton warp with part alpaca weft. The method proved a great success and Bradford gained a reputation as a manufacturing centre for alpaca wool, exporting both yarn and cloth in quantity, especially to the USA. By 1850 Salt, who owned six mills, was Bradford's biggest employer and was certainly its richest citizen. He decided to move out of the city and built a new mill works, the architects of which were Lockwood and Mawson, on the banks of the River Aire a few miles from the city. Around the works, between 1851 and 1871, he built houses, a hospital, library, church, institute and almshouses for his workers. The buildings were solid, good-standard structures of local stone and the houses were pleasantly situated, with their amenities making them seem palaces compared to the slums in which other Bradford textile workers lived at the time. The collection of buildings was the first example in Britain of a "model new town", and was, indeed still is, a remarkable prototype of its kind. Apart from being a philanthropist and social reformer, Salt was also concerned with taking advantage of the technical developments of his time. His mill works, which eventually covered ten acres of land, was of fashionably Italianate architectural style (its chimney even a copy of the campanile of the Church of Santa Maria Gloriosa in Venice), although its structure was of iron framing. The weaving shed held 1,200 looms and had capacity for 3,000 workers, who produced 30,000 yards of cloth per day. Water from the river was used to produce steam to power the matchinery used in the manufacturing processes of scouring, dyeing and finishing. For the export of goods, the nearby Leeds-Liverpool Canal linked the works to Britain's chief ports, and the Midland Railway (an extension of the LeedsBradford line which opened in 1846) was of great use for the same purpose.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Created Baronet 1869.
    Further Reading
    Dictionary of National Biography.
    Visitors Guide to Salt aire, Bradford City Council.
    DY

    Biographical history of technology > Salt, Sir Titus

См. также в других словарях:

  • ITALIANATE STYLE —    See ROMANTIC ARCHITECTURE …   Historical Dictionary of Architecture

  • Italianate architecture — In the course of the history of Classical architecture, an Italianate style of architecture was a distinct nineteenth century phase, in which Italian sixteenth century models and architectural vocabulary, which had served as inspiration for both… …   Wikipedia

  • Italianate-Stil — Wohnhaus im Italianate Stil in San Jose, Kalifornien. Erbaut 1870. Der Italianate Stil (Aussprache: [ɪˈtæljəneɪt]; deutsch: „Italienisierender Stil“) ist ein klassizistisch geprägter Architekturstil, der als Erscheinungsform der frühen Vi …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Italianate — 1. adjective Italian in style or character This was a residence designed for living on a grand scale, with gilt chandeliers dangling overhead, rich oil paintings adorning walls, and Italianate marble fireplaces in every room. <! Fancy old… …   Wiktionary

  • Italianate — I|tal|i|a|nate [ıˈtæliəneıt] adj with an Italian style or appearance ▪ an Italianate villa …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • Italianate — Italianately, adv. Italianation, n. adj. /i tal yeuh nayt , nit/; v. /i tal yeuh nayt /, adj., v., Italianated, Italianating. adj. 1. Italianized; conforming to the Italian type or style or to Italian customs, manners, etc. 2. Art. in the style… …   Universalium

  • Italianate painters — ▪ Dutch painting  group of 17th century northern European painters, principally Dutch, who traveled in Italy and, consciously adopting the style of landscape painting that they found there, incorporated Italian models and motifs into their own… …   Universalium

  • Italianate — I|tal|ian|ate [ ı tæljə,neıt ] adjective done or made in a style typical of Italy …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • Italianate — I tal·ian·ate || neɪt adj. Italianized; made in an Italian style; Italian in appearance …   English contemporary dictionary

  • Italianate — adjective literary with an Italian style or appearance …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

  • Italianate — UK [ɪˈtæljəneɪt] / US [ɪˈtæljəˌneɪt] adjective done or made in a style typical of Italy …   English dictionary

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