[Este documento está disponible en traducción española]

It is long since you built a great cathedral; and how you would laugh at me if I proposed building a cathedral on the top of one of these hills of yours, to make it an Acropolis! But your railroad mounds, vaster than the walls of Babylon, your railroad stations, vaster than the temple of Ephesus, and innumerable; your chimneys, how much more mighty and costly than cathedral spires! your harbour-piers; your warehouses; your exchanges! — all these are built to your great Goddess of "Getting-on;" and she has formed, and will continue to form, your architecture, as long as you worship her; and it is quite vain to ask me to tell you how to build to her; you know far better than I. — John Ruskin, "Traffic"

General

  • Architectural Trades and Professions
  • Victorian Doubt and Victorian Architecture
  • The Architect and the Decorative Arts
  • Changing Patrons of Victorian Architecture
  • London buildings
  • Victorian Cambridge
  • Oxford — Victorian and Earlier Buildings
  • Industrial Architecture
  • Building Types

  • Churches with Victorian Interest
  • Housing for Rich and Poor
  • Legal London
  • Museums
  • Post Offices
  • Pubs
  • Retail Shops, Markets, and Arcades
  • Factories and Warehouses
  • Railway Stations
  • Theaters
  • Workhouses
  • Fountains
  • Gothic Revival

  • The Gothic Revival (sitemap)
  • Gilbert Scott's Albert Memorial
  • Gilbert Scott's St. Pancras Station
  • Augustus Welby Pugin's Gothic Revivalism
  • G. E. Street's lawcourts and St. Paul's, Rome
  • Techno-Gothick: Woodward and Deane's Oxford Natural History Museum
  • William Butterfield's Rogue Gothic
  • Alfted Waterhouse's Natural History Museum
  • St Albans Cathedral and Abbey Church: A Case History in Victorian Restoration
  • Medieval English Gothic Architecture — Backgrounds to the Gothic Revival
  • Victorian Classicism

  • Victorian Classicism(s): A Sampling
  • Royal Albert Hall
  • Architecture in the Colonies: the Imperial Style

  • India
  • Southern Africa
  • Singapore
  • Penang, Malaysia
  • Architecture at home and in the Colonies: the Moorish Style

  • Moorish, Northern Indian, and Islamic, Styles
  • In the U. K.: The Great Exhibition and Moorish Architecture and Design in Great Britain
  • In the Malay States: The Moghul Style (also known as Moorish or Indian Muslim style)

    Materials

  • Iron and Glass in Victorian Architecture
  • Combining Utilitarianism with Aesthetics
  • Turner and Burton's Hot House at Kew Gardens
  • The Crystal Palace and Iron in Architecture
  • Mixing iron and stone in the Victorian Railway Station
  • Architects and Architect-Designers

  • Thomas Allom
  • George Audsley
  • Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott
  • William J. Barre
  • Sir John Wolfe Barry
  • Sir Charles Barry
  • E.M. Barry
  • George Basevi
  • E. Bates
  • William Hamilton Beattie
  • Samuel Beazley
  • John Francis Bentley
  • Sir Arthur Blomfield
  • Edward Blore
  • George Frederick Bodley
  • Albert J. Bolton
  • Cuthbert Brodrick
  • Jack McMullen Brooks
  • David Bryce
  • William Burges
  • Decimus Burton
  • William Butterfield
  • Charles Buxton
  • W. D. Caroe
  • T. Chatfield Clarke
  • P. J. Cockerell
  • Thomas Edward Collcutt
  • John Ninian Comper
  • John Corry
  • G. L. Crickmay
  • William Henry Crossland
  • Lewis Cubitt
  • Thomas Cubitt
  • Henry Astley Darbishire
  • John Dobson
  • C. Fitzroy Doll
  • Harvey Lonsdale Elmes
  • Sir William Emerson
  • Benjamin Ferrey
  • H. L. Florence
  • Francis Fowke
  • Charles Fowler
  • William Frame
  • Emmanuel Galizia
  • Sir Ernest George
  • James Glen Sivewright Gibson
  • George Goldie
  • Herbert Gribble
  • E. T. and E. S. Hall
  • Philip Hardwick
  • Philip Charles Hardwick
  • Thomas Hardwick, Senior
  • Thomas Hardwick, Junior
  • John Harper
  • William Haywood
  • A. B. Higham
  • P. Hoffman
  • H.R. Houchin
  • A. B. Hubbuck
  • A. J. Humbert
  • Henry Hutchinson
  • Henry Irwin
  • Lewis Isaacs
  • Thomas Graham Jackson
  • Henry Jarvis
  • J. J.Joass
  • John Johnson (d. 1878)
  • John Johnson (d. 1920)
  • Architects (cont.)

  • Sir Horace Jones
  • Delissa Joseph
  • Ralph Knott
  • J.T. Knowles
  • Edward Buckton Lamb
  • Charles Lanyon
  • William Leiper
  • Henry Francis Lockwood
  • Charles W. Long
  • John Lowe
  • Sir Edward Lutyens
  • Alexander Beith MacDonald
  • Charles Rennie Mackintosh
  • Arthur Heygote Mackmurdo
  • J. Herbert MacNair
  • Frank Matcham
  • Alfred Meeson
  • C.H. Mileham
  • R. H. Moore
  • Edward William Mountford
  • John Nash
  • W. E. Nesfield
  • Ernest Newton
  • Anthony Norman
  • Thomas Page
  • Charles Parker
  • C.J. Chirney Pawley
  • Joseph Paxton
  • J. L. Pearson
  • Sir James Pennethorne
  • Harold Ainsworth Peto
  • William Henry Playfair
  • W. H. Powell
  • John Prichard
  • Augustus Welby Pugin
  • Edward Welby Pugin
  • A. E. Purdie
  • John Rennie
  • Thomas Rickman
  • Percy Robinson
  • P. J. Robinson
  • E. R. Robson
  • Richard Reynolds Rowe
  • W. Porden
  • Anthony Salvin
  • James Savage
  • William Scamp
  • Joseph John Scoles
  • Sir George Gilbert Scott
  • John Dando Sedding
  • Edwin Seward
  • John Shaw, Senior
  • John Shaw, Junior
  • Richard Norman Shaw
  • George Shirley
  • Frank Smee
  • Sir Robert Smirke
  • Sydney Smirke
  • James Trant Smith
  • T. Tayler Smith
  • J.J. Stevenson
  • George Edmund Street
  • Samuel Sanders Teulon
  • Charles Harrison Townsend
  • J.E. Trollope
  • Thomas Verity
  • C. F. A. Voysey
  • Lewis Vulliamy
  • Alfred Waterhouse
  • Philip Speakman Webb
  • Sir Aston Webb
  • William Wilkins
  • J.T. Wimperis
  • W. White
  • Walter Seckham Witherington
  • Woodward and Deane (Techno-Gothick Oxford Museum)
  • T. H. Wyatt
  • Sir Jeffry Wyattville
  • Bibliographies and Web Resources

  • Victorian Architectural Books, and Professional and Trade Journals
  • The Survey of London
  • Bibliography of Contemporary Victorian Sources
  • Bibliography of Secondary Materials
  • The Country House in Great Britain — A Bibliography
  • Indian and Moorish Style: Selected Bibliography
  • Related Web Materials

  • Victorian Web Homepage Visual Arts

    Last modified 6 February 2012