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Prehistoric Architecture Timeline

British History and Architecture Timeline

Timeline[edit]

Historic eras are visible in the present day through their architectural remains. We experience the layers of history when we stand in a prehistoric stone circle in the Cotswolds and look over to our car parked on the nearby road. The Cotswolds have been settled since Prehistoric times and all the historic eras have left something for us to see.

Many guidebooks describe a time period as "Georgian" or a church as "Norman with a Perpendicular tower" assuming the reader knows these terms for historical periods and architecture. The main periods of history and architecture in Britain are listed here. (I know that we all know this, but I still get confused by the term "century". For example, the 17th century refers to the years from 1600 - 1699.)

So you are asking about sided bay window curtain pole.

Timelines Through British History and Architecture

  • Prehistoric, up to 42 AD: Includes the Neolithic and Bronze Ages and the Iron Age (700 BC to 42 AD). There are prehistoric sights in the Cotswolds and nearby - stone circles (Stonehenge, Avebury, Rollright Stones), long barrows (Belas Knap), hill drawings (Wiltshire), hill forts.
  • Roman, AD 43 - 410: The Roman era started when Emperor Claudius ordered the invasion of Britain and lasted for nearly four hundred years until the Romans removed their troops to fight in other parts of the empire. Cirencester and Bath were large Roman centers and have Roman remains (Roman Baths in Bath, Corinium Museum in Cirencester, Chedworth Roman Villa).
  • Anglo-Saxons, 410 - 1065: After the Romans left the Anglo-Saxons and Vikings invaded. There are only a few Anglo-Saxon remains in and near the Cotswolds (Holy Rood in Daglingworth, Saxon carving in Notgrove).
  • Normans, 1066 - 1154: After the Battle of Hastings in 1066, won by the Duke of Normandy (France), four Norman kings ruled the country - William I and II, Henry I, Stephen. The Domesday Book, a record of English land-holding, was published in 1086. Many Cotswolds churches have Norman origins and some of these parts remain (St John in Elkstone, Malmesbury Abbey, St Peter in Windrush). Norman architecture is also called Romanesque.
  • Middle Ages (Medieval), 1154 - 1485: The Middle Ages were ruled by Plantagenets, starting with Henry II and ending with Richard II, then by the House of Lancaster (Henry IV, V, VI) and the House of York (Edward IV, V, Richard III). Medieval castles, abbeys and tithe barns remain (Sudley Castle and Hailes Abbey near Winchcombe, Great Coxwell Barn near Faringdon, Bradford-on-Avon Tithe Barn). The style of Gothic Architecture started in the Middle Ages and went into the Tudor era (1180 - 1520). It is broken down into three eras: Early English 1180 - 1275, Decorated 1275 - 1380 and Perpendicular 1380 - 1520. Many of the Cotswold Wool Churches are in the Perpendicular style (Cirencester, Chipping Campden).
  • Tudors, 1485 - 1603: The Tudor Kings and Queens are Henry VII, his son Henry VIII and his three children Edward VI, Mary I and Elizabeth I. Jane Grey ruled for a brief time after Edward VI. Tudor architecture shows in the distinctive black and white timber/plaster houses built during the reign of Henry VIII. There are good examples of these in Herefordshire, with a few remaining in the Cotswolds. The Elizabethan period is the end of the Tudor era, during the reign of Elizabeth I (1558-1603).
  • Stuarts, 1603 - 1714: There were several monarchs from the Stuart family: James I, Charles I and II, James II, William III, Mary II and Anne. The first part of this era is sometimes call Jacobean, when Kings James I ruled from 1603 - 1625. The Stuart era was interrupted from 1649 - 1659, when Britain was a commonwealth. The time when William III and Mary II ruled is referred to as the William and Mary period. Shakespeare lived during this time (1564 - 1616). The King James version of the bible was written in 1611. The great fire of London was in 1666. Badminton House was built during the late 1600s.
  • Georgians, 1714 - 1836: The Georgian era kings were George I, II, III and IV and George IV's son, William IV. The Regency Period, from 1811 to 1820, started when George the III's son, the Regent, took over when his father was ill. Jane Austen lived during this time (1775 - 1817). Georgian Bath was built in the mid 1700s. Much of the Cotswolds was built during the 18th and 19th centuries when the cloth industry was flourishing. The old Cloth Mills in the river valleys near Stroud and Nailsworth are now shops, offices and apartments. The Cotswold Canal was built during this time.
  • Victorian, 1837 - 1901: The reign of Queen Victoria brought the Industrial Age and the railways. Towns, like Burford, that were popular coaching towns, became less prominent when the railway lines did not pass through them. The Arts and Crafts was started by William...




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