| Thomas Warton, James Bentham - 1802 - عدد الصفحات: 260
...tower (the only confiderable part now remaining), the fiyle of its architecture is, in many refpects, fo different from that of the towers erected in the...in the reign of Edward II. (when pointed arches had long been introduced, and were efteemed the moft elegant of any), that I cannot but think the building... | |
| Thomas Warton, James Bentham, Francis Grose, John Milner - 1802 - عدد الصفحات: 240
...powerful lords ; yet as to the keep, or mailer tower (the only conlidcrable part now remaining), the ftyle of its architecture is, in many refpe&s, fo different...erected in the reigns of William Rufus, and Henry I. and IL and the ornaments are fo different from thofe which were in ufe in the reign of Edward II. (when... | |
| Thomas Warton, James Bentham, Francis Grose, John Milner - 1808 - عدد الصفحات: 250
...(the only considerable part now remaining), the style of its architecture is, in many respects, so different from that of the towers erected in the reigns...Rufus, and Henry I. and II. and the ornaments are so different from those which were in use in the reign of Edward II. (when pointed arches had long... | |
| John Stacy - 1831 - عدد الصفحات: 314
...(the only considerable part now remaining,) the style of its architecture is, in many respects, so different from that of the towers erected in the reigns...Rufus, and Henry I. and II. and the ornaments are so different from those which were in use in the reign of Edward II. (when pointed. arches had been... | |
| John Milner - 1835 - عدد الصفحات: 504
...(the only considerable part now remaining), the style of its architecture is, in many respects, so different from that of the towers erected in the reigns...Rufus, and Henry I. and II. and the ornaments are so different from those which w ere in use in the reign of Edward II. (when pointed arches had long... | |
| Robert Stuart - 1854 - عدد الصفحات: 1272
...considerable part now remaining, it may be said, that the style of its architecture is so different from the towers erected in the reigns of William Rufus, and Henry I. and II., and the ornaments so different from those which were in use in the reign of Edward II., that we car.not but conclude... | |
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