Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The City Wall of Nanjing is completed. The south gate of the wall, known as the Gate of China, is considered to be the city gate with the most complex structure in the world. (approximate date) Upper storeys of Qutb Minar in Delhi Sultanate are damaged in an earthquake and replaced. 1388 – Nilüfer Hatun Imareti hospice in İznik (Ottoman ...
14th-century fortifications (2 C, 25 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures completed in the 14th century" The following 159 pages are in this category, out of 159 total.
Also from the Norman period is the circular chapter house of 1120, made octagonal on the outside when the walls were reinforced in the 14th century. The nave was built and rebuilt piecemeal and in different styles by several different architects over a period of 200 years, some bays being a unique and decorative transition between Norman and ...
Mostly 14th century. Venetian Gothic is the particular form of Italian Gothic architecture typical of Venice, originating in local building requirements, with some influence from Byzantine architecture, and some from Islamic architecture, reflecting Venice's trading network. Very unusually for medieval architecture, the style is at its most ...
Often, in secular architecture, only the shape of the heads of windows indicate a late 13th- or 14th-century date rather than 12th or early 13th century. Many of Italy's finest Romanesque buildings, such as the Palazzo della Ragione, Mantua (begun 1250), were constructed many years after the Gothic style was already well established.
While the old city walls' construction are largely unknown, the youngest city walls are now relatively well documented. In Stockholm, there have been two medieval city walls: an older internal one built at the end of the 13th and early 14th century; and a more recent ones built during the 15th to 16th centuries.
The late 14th century and the early 15th century was furthermore a period of political and cultural interaction between the Ottoman state, the other Anatolian Beyliks, the Mamluk Sultanate, and the Timurid Empire. [17] Some of the Anatolian dynasties employed Syrian architects in this period.
14th-century religious buildings and structures by country (6 C) Pages in category "14th-century architecture" The following 30 pages are in this category, out of 30 total.