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  2. List of works by Christopher Wren - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_works_by...

    Sir Christopher Wren was one of the most highly acclaimed English architects in history, as well as an anatomist, astronomer, geometer, and mathematician-physicist. [1] He was accorded responsibility for rebuilding 52 churches in the City of London after the Great Fire in 1666, including what is regarded as his masterpiece, St Paul's Cathedral, on Ludgate Hill, completed in 1710.

  3. Winslow Hall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winslow_Hall

    Winslow Hall is a country house, now in the centre of the small town of Winslow, Buckinghamshire, England.Built in 1700, it was sited in the centre of the town, with a public front facing the highway and a garden front that still commanded 22 acres (89,000 m 2) in 2007, due to William Lowndes' gradual purchase of a block of adjacent houses and gardens from 1693 onwards.

  4. King's House, Winchester - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King's_House,_Winchester

    The King's House in Winchester was a late 17th-century planned royal palace in the English county of Hampshire. Winchester had been the capital of Wessex and England in Anglo-Saxon times, but became a backwater after the Norman Conquest of England .

  5. List of British royal residences - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_British_royal...

    His aide-de-camp, General Sir Frederick Augustus Wetherall, bought the house to rescue the Duchess from creditors following the Duke of Kent's death. The house was demolished in 1845 by General Sir George Augustus Wetherall. Chelsea Manor: Chelsea: Princess Elizabeth; Anne of Cleves (1536–1547, c. 1547–1557) Chesterfield House: Westminster

  6. English Baroque architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/English_Baroque_architecture

    English Baroque is a term used to refer to modes of English architecture that paralleled Baroque architecture in continental Europe between the Great Fire of London (1666) and roughly 1720, when the flamboyant and dramatic qualities of Baroque art were abandoned in favour of the more chaste, rule-based Neo-classical forms espoused by the proponents of Palladianism.

  7. Wren house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wren_house

    Wren house may refer to a wren house, see nest box; Wren House at Kensington Palace; See also. Wren Building, Williamsburg, Virginia, United States;

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