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Tudor architecture

The Tudor architectural style is the final development of medieval architecture in England and Wales, during the Tudor period (1485–1603) and even beyond, and also the tentative introduction of Renaissance architecture to Britain. It followed the Late Gothic Perpendicular style and, gradually, it evolved into an aesthetic more consistent with trends already in motion on the continent, evidenced by other nations already having the Northern Renaissance underway Italy, and especially France already well into its revolution in art, architecture, and thought. A subtype of Tudor architecture is Elizabethan architecture, from about 1560 to 1600, which has continuity with the subsequent Jacobean architecture in the early Stuart period.

For the 19th- and 20th century style inspired by Tudor architecture, see Tudor Revival architecture.

In the much more slow-moving styles of vernacular architecture, "Tudor" has become a designation for half-timbered buildings, although there are cruck and frame houses with half-timbering that considerably predate 1485 and others well after 1603; an expert examination is required to determine the building's age. In many regions stone architecture, which presents no exposed timber on the facade, was the norm for good houses, while everywhere the poorest lived in single-storey houses using wood frames and wattle and daub, too flimsy for any to have survived four centuries. In this form, the Tudor style long retained its hold on English taste.[1] Nevertheless, "Tudor style" is an awkward style-designation, with its implied suggestions of continuity through the period of the Tudor dynasty and the misleading impression that there was a style break at the accession of James I in 1603, first of the House of Stuart. A better diagnostic is the "perpendicular" arrangement of rectangular vertically oriented leaded windows framed by structural transoms and mullions and often featuring a "hooded" surround usually in stone or timber such as oak.


The low multi-centred Tudor arch was another defining feature and the period sees the first introduction of brick architecture imported from the Low Countries. Some of the most remarkable oriel windows belong to this period.[1] Mouldings are more spread out and the foliage becomes more naturalistic. During the reigns of Henry VIII and Edward VI, many Italian artists arrived in England; their decorative features can be seen at Hampton Court Palace, Layer Marney Tower, Sutton Place, and elsewhere. However, in the following reign of Elizabeth I, the influence of Northern Mannerism, mainly derived from books, was greater. Courtiers and other wealthy Elizabethans competed to build prodigy houses that proclaimed their status.


The Dissolution of the Monasteries redistributed large amounts of land to the wealthy, resulting in a secular building boom, as well as a source of stone.[2] The building of churches had already slowed somewhat before the English Reformation, after a great boom in the previous century, but was brought to a nearly complete stop by the Reformation. Civic and university buildings became steadily more numerous in the period, which saw general increasing prosperity. Brick was something of an exotic and expensive rarity at the beginning of the period, but during it became very widely used in many parts of England, even for modest buildings, gradually restricting traditional methods such as wood framed, daub and wattle and half-timbering to the lower classes by the end of the period.


Scotland was a different country throughout the period and is not covered here, but early Renaissance architecture in Scotland was influenced by close contacts between the French and Scottish courts, and there are a number of buildings from before 1560 that show a more thorough adoption of continental Renaissance styles than their English equivalents.

Development[edit]

The reign of Henry VII[edit]

Tudor style buildings have several features that separate them from Medieval and later 17th-century design. The earliest signs of the Renaissance appear under Henry VII; whereas most of his building projects are no longer standing, it is actually under him and not his son that the Renaissance began to flower in England, evidenced by ample records of what was built and where, materials used, new features in gardening that did not at all fit the pattern of the earlier medieval walled garden, letters from the king expressing his desires and those of his wife's in the case of Greenwich Palace, as well as his own expressed interest in the New Learning.


Prior to 1485, many wealthy and noble landowners lived in homes that were not necessarily comfortable but built to withstand sieges, though manor houses that were only lightly fortified, if at all, had been increasingly built. Castles and smaller manor houses often had moats, portcullises and crenelations designed for archers to stand guard and pick off approaching enemies.

Hallmarks of Tudor architecture[edit]

Upper classes[edit]

Buildings constructed by the wealthy or royal had these common characteristics:

The final stages of (1446–1515)

King's College Chapel, Cambridge

Suffolk (1485–1525)

St Peter and St Paul's Church, Lavenham

King's Lynn, Norfolk (c. 1485–1533)

Red Mount Chapel

Windsor Castle (1475–1528)

St. George's Chapel

Holywell, Flintshire, Wales (1490)

St Winefride's Well

The central tower and of Canterbury Cathedral, Kent (1493–97)

strainer arches

The at Peterborough Cathedral, Cambs. (1496-1508)

retrochoir

The at Rochester Cathedral, Kent (1500–12)

Lady Chapel

Somerset (1501–39)[22]

Bath Abbey

Suffolk (1503)

St Edmundsbury Cathedral

The nave of , N. Yorks. (1502–22)

Ripon Cathedral

at Westminster Abbey, London (1503–1509)[1]

Henry VII Lady Chapel

Glos. (1508–30)

Church of St. John the Baptist, Cirencester

The cloister at (c. 1515–26)

Bristol Cathedral

Oxford (1520–21; "The Octagon", Hertford College)

Chapel of St. Mary at Smith Gate

London churches of , St. Andrew Undershaft, Savoy Chapel, and St. Augustine's, Hackney

St. Peter ad Vincula

Gunn, S. (2016). The making of Tudor England. In S. Gunn (Ed.), Henry VII’s New Men and the Making of Tudor England (p. 0). Oxford University Press.

https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199659838.003.0018

Tudor Architecture. (n.d.). English Heritage. Retrieved April 19, 2024, from

https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/learn/story-of-england/tudors/architecture/

Airs, Malcolm, The Buildings of Britain, A Guide and Gazetteer, Tudor and Jacobean, 1982, Barrie & Jenkins (London),  0091478316

ISBN

Airs, Malcolm, The Tudor and Jacobean Country House: A Building History, 1998, Bramley,  1858338336, 978-1858338330

ISBN

Garner, Thomas and Arthur James Stratton, . London: B.T. Batsford, 1908–1911.

Domestic Architecture of England during the Tudor Period

Henderson, Paula, The Tudor House and Garden: Architecture and Landscape in the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries, 2005, Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art/ Yale University Press,  0300106874, 978-0300106879

ISBN

Howard, Maurice, The Early Tudor Country House: Architecture and Politics 1490–1550, 1987, Hamlyn,  0540011193, 978-0540011193

ISBN

www.tudor-buildings.co.uk