Endlich, freut sich Gottfried Knapp, stellt mal einer heraus, dass Karl Friedrich Schinkel mehr war als ein Klassizist. Auf diesen Stil wollen ihn ...
Continue Reading →Alexander von Humboldt, sometimes called ‘the last man who knew everything’, was an extraordinary polymath of the late 18th and early 19th centuries. ...
Continue Reading →Garden Cities of To-morrow is a book by the British urban planner Ebenezer Howard. When it was published in 1898, the book was ...
Continue Reading →The 19th-century German architect and artist, Karl Friedrich Schinkel, was among the great personalities in the world of architecture. Classicism and Romanticism moved ...
Continue Reading →During the last half of the twentieth century in France, Maurice Blanchot was a key figure in exploring the relation between literature and ...
Continue Reading →A gypsy girl’s beauty and charm captivate a priest, a vagabond, a soldier, and a deformed bell-ringer, in a gripping tale that culminates ...
Continue Reading →For over sixty years Sir Nikolaus Pevsner’s study of European architecture has been regarded as a seminal work which has inspired countless students ...
Continue Reading →Having been one the most successful boomtowns of the early twentieth century, Atlanta saw a transition from a town known for its Southern ...
Continue Reading →When Heinrich Hübsch published In What Style Should We Build? in 1828, German Neoclassicism―like its counterpart in France―was in rapid descent, thereby opening ...
Continue Reading →Following the invention of the daguerreotype and calotype processes in 1839, views of ruins, classical statuary, and the antiquities of the Mediterranean and ...
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