Georgian$31406$ - translation to dutch
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Georgian$31406$ - translation to dutch

SET OF ARCHITECTURAL STYLES CURRENT BETWEEN 1720 AND 1840
Georgian (architecture); Georgian style; Georgian Style; Colonial Georgian; Georgian Architecture; Georgian-style; Georgian Revival; Georgian Revival architecture; Georgian revival; Georgian houses; Georgian Colonial; Georgian Revival style; Georgian architectural style; Neo-Georgian style (Great Britain); Neo-Georgian architecture; Georgian manor; Mock-Georgian; Mock Georgian; Colonial Georgian architecture
  • Middle-class house in [[Salisbury]] [[cathedral close]], England, with minimal classical detail.
  • Georgian townhouses on [[Baggot Street]], Dublin
  • Hyde Park Barracks]] (1819), Georgian architecture in [[Sydney]]
  • Massachusetts Hall]] at [[Harvard University]], 1718-20
  • [[St Martin-in-the-Fields]], London (1720), [[James Gibbs]]
  • Neoclassical]] grandeur; [[Stowe House]] 1770-79 by [[Robert Adam]] modified in execution by Thomas Pitt
  • Neoclassical]] interior by [[Robert Adam]], [[Syon House]], London
  • The courtyard of [[Somerset House]], from the North Wing entrance. Built for government offices.
  • [[Westover Plantation]] - Georgian country house on a James River plantation in Virginia
  • townhouse]]

Georgian      
adj. Georgiaans (van koning George); van of met betrekking tot het land Georgië in Azië of diens bevolking; van of met betrekking tot de staat Georgia (V.S.); met betrekking tot de literaire beweging van begin van de twintigste eeuwse dichtkunst die traditionele stijl prefereerde

Definition

Georgian
Georgian means belonging to or connected with Britain in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, during the reigns of King George I to King George IV.
...the restoration of his Georgian house.
ADJ

Wikipedia

Georgian architecture

Georgian architecture is the name given in most English-speaking countries to the set of architectural styles current between 1714 and 1830. It is named after the first four British monarchs of the House of Hanover—George I, George II, George III, and George IV—who reigned in continuous succession from August 1714 to June 1830. The so-called great Georgian cities of the British Isles were Edinburgh, Bath, pre-independence Dublin, and London, and to a lesser extent York and Bristol. The style was revived in the late 19th century in the United States as Colonial Revival architecture and in the early 20th century in Great Britain as Neo-Georgian architecture; in both it is also called Georgian Revival architecture. In the United States the term "Georgian" is generally used to describe all buildings from the period, regardless of style; in Britain it is generally restricted to buildings that are "architectural in intention", and have stylistic characteristics that are typical of the period, though that covers a wide range.

The Georgian style is highly variable, but marked by symmetry and proportion based on the classical architecture of Greece and Rome, as revived in Renaissance architecture. Ornament is also normally in the classical tradition, but typically restrained, and sometimes almost completely absent on the exterior. The period brought the vocabulary of classical architecture to smaller and more modest buildings than had been the case before, replacing English vernacular architecture (or becoming the new vernacular style) for almost all new middle-class homes and public buildings by the end of the period.

Georgian architecture is characterized by its proportion and balance; simple mathematical ratios were used to determine the height of a window in relation to its width or the shape of a room as a double cube. Regularity, as with ashlar (uniformly cut) stonework, was strongly approved, imbuing symmetry and adherence to classical rules: the lack of symmetry, where Georgian additions were added to earlier structures remaining visible, was deeply felt as a flaw, at least before John Nash began to introduce it in a variety of styles. Regularity of housefronts along a street was a desirable feature of Georgian town planning. Until the start of the Gothic Revival in the early 19th century, Georgian designs usually lay within the Classical orders of architecture and employed a decorative vocabulary derived from ancient Rome or Greece.