The city of Norwich possesses thirty-two parish church porches. Collectively, they offer an opportunity to consider the scope of architectural forms applied to a single type of structure built across an extended chronological period but within close proximity. This paper is an attempt to define architecturally what a parish church porch could be and demonstrates how until c.1400 little consistent definition is possible. In the 15th century a greater sense of uniformity can be observed, and it is here argued that the repeated use of elements in particular ways, namely facades and stone vaults, constitute something akin to a Norwich church porch type
Few roof structures remain unscathed from the 12th and early 13th centuries. The relatively large am...
Windows are the product of a conscious choice of material and technique, related in an empirical way...
The extensive survival of late medieval bosses in the roofs of many parish churches in Devon has lon...
This thesis examines the architecture of Leicestershire churches within a period of c.1260 to c.1350...
The "hall churches" of East Anglia, which number fewer than two dozen, were among the most distincti...
Our Old Church Por...
This thesis examines the architecture of Leicestershire churches within a period of c.1260 to c.1350...
This thesis examined the architectural design and exterior display in gentry houses in fourteenth- a...
The importance of Norwich as the second city of England for 500 years is explored in this volume in ...
Medieval Norwich had more parishes than any English city outside London. Their churches ranged in si...
This paper examines the form of parish church naves in the 12th and 13th centuries in Cambridgeshire...
The purpose with this report is to illuminate the construction solutions and the deformations that c...
This thesis aims to provide the first comprehensive review of church building and restoration in an ...
Churches in Sweden began to be built when Christianity was introduced at about the end of the first ...
The primary objective of; this thesis is to catalogue the salient elements of the Anglo-Saxon parish...
Few roof structures remain unscathed from the 12th and early 13th centuries. The relatively large am...
Windows are the product of a conscious choice of material and technique, related in an empirical way...
The extensive survival of late medieval bosses in the roofs of many parish churches in Devon has lon...
This thesis examines the architecture of Leicestershire churches within a period of c.1260 to c.1350...
The "hall churches" of East Anglia, which number fewer than two dozen, were among the most distincti...
Our Old Church Por...
This thesis examines the architecture of Leicestershire churches within a period of c.1260 to c.1350...
This thesis examined the architectural design and exterior display in gentry houses in fourteenth- a...
The importance of Norwich as the second city of England for 500 years is explored in this volume in ...
Medieval Norwich had more parishes than any English city outside London. Their churches ranged in si...
This paper examines the form of parish church naves in the 12th and 13th centuries in Cambridgeshire...
The purpose with this report is to illuminate the construction solutions and the deformations that c...
This thesis aims to provide the first comprehensive review of church building and restoration in an ...
Churches in Sweden began to be built when Christianity was introduced at about the end of the first ...
The primary objective of; this thesis is to catalogue the salient elements of the Anglo-Saxon parish...
Few roof structures remain unscathed from the 12th and early 13th centuries. The relatively large am...
Windows are the product of a conscious choice of material and technique, related in an empirical way...
The extensive survival of late medieval bosses in the roofs of many parish churches in Devon has lon...