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  2. Finial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finial

    There are two guldastas, or finials, per facade at Humayun's Tomb. [11] Finials are decorative elements in a variety of American domestic architectural styles, including French colonial, Georgian, Victorian, and Romanesque Revival. [12] Roof finials can be made from a variety of materials including clay, metal, or wood.

  3. Sōrin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sōrin

    The most important stone pagoda having a finial is the hōkyōintō. Usually made in stone and occasionally metal or wood, hōkyōintō started to be made in their present form during the Kamakura period. Like a gorintō, they are divided in five main sections, of which the sōrin is the uppermost. [12] Its components are, from the top down ...

  4. Chigi (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chigi_(architecture)

    Bargeboard chigi at Ise Shrine. Chigi may be built directly into the roof as part of the structure, or simply attached and crossed over the gable as an ornament. The former method is believed to closer resemble its original design, and is still used in older building methods such as shinmei-zukuri, kasuga-zukuri, and taisha-zukuri.

  5. Kalasha (finial) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalasha_(finial)

    A kalasha (Sanskrit: कलश, romanized: kalaśa) is a finial, generally in the form of metal or stone spire, used to top the domes of Hindu temples. [2] Kalashas as architectural feature has been used at least before the first millennium BCE and were made of terracotta and wood during this early period.

  6. Shinto architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinto_architecture

    Irimoya-zukuri (入母屋造, lit. hip and gable roof style) is a honden style having a hip [note 4]-and-gable [note 5] structure, that is, a gabled roof with one or two hips, and is used for example in Kitano Tenman-gū's honden. [29] The style is of Chinese origin and arrived in Japan together with Buddhism in the 6th century.

  7. Flèche faîtière - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flèche_faîtière

    Fragment of a roof finial of a large clan house, a sculpture of the Kanak people made of Houp wood, 18th century A flèche faîtière on a Kanak house at the Jean-Marie Tjibaou Cultural Centre, Nouméa, New Caledonia.

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