The story of architecture

Title
  1. The story of architecture / Jonathan Glancey ; [foreword by Norman Foster].
Published by
  1. New York : Dorling Kindersley, 2003.
  2. ©2000
Author
  1. Glancey, Jonathan

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StatusFormatTextAccessUse in libraryCall numberNA200 .G527 2003Item locationOff-site

Details

Additional authors
  1. Foster, Norman
Description
  1. 240 pages : color illustrations; 29 cm
Summary
  1. In this history of world architecture, commentator Jonathan Glancey conducts an odyssey through 5000 years of buildings, from ancient Sumeria to the glass-and-steel towers of today's cityscapes.
Subject
  1. Architecture > History
  2. Architecture > Histoire
  3. Architecture
Genre/Form
  1. History.
Contents
  1. In the beginning: Growth of cities -- Ancient Egypt -- Early Africa -- Classical world: Ancient Greece -- Ancient Rome -- From darkness to light: Byzantine architecture -- Monasteries -- Romanesque -- Islam -- North Africa -- Gothic: Gothic world -- Castles -- Late Gothic -- Renaissance: Renaissance Italy -- High Renaissance -- Andrea Palladio -- Italian baroque -- Baroque beyond Italy --Absolutism -- Rococo -- Low countries -- Americas: Ancient Mesoamerica -- Colonial Americas -- China and Japan: Classical China -- Japan -- Asia: India -- Southeast Asia.
  2. Neo-classical: Neo-classical -- Classical landscape -- American classical -- French Revolution -- Greek revival -- Karl Friedrich Schinkel -- Imperial Russia -- Industrial society: Industrial revolution -- Railways -- Industrial cities -- Augustus Pugin -- Gothic revival -- Monumental decadence -- Free style -- Morality & architecture -- Machine age: Machines for working in -- Reach for the sky -- Frank Lloyd Wright -- Arts & crafts -- Art nouveau & secession -- Antoni Gaudi -- Brave new world: Revolutionary Russia -- Bauhaus -- Mass European housing -- Ludwig Mies van der Rohe -- Fascist architecture -- Le Corbusier.
  3. Mid-century modern -- Modernism & freedom -- New cities -- Oscar Niemeyer -- Brutalism -- Every which way: Corporatism -- Postmodernism -- Extremes -- High-tech -- Architects' engineering -- Japanese metabolists -- Classical revival -- Futures: Organic architecture -- Reuse of buildings -- Deconstructivism -- Computer -- Enjoyable cities.
Owning institution
  1. Princeton University Library
Note
  1. Includes index.