Tudor architecture

E302772

Tudor architecture is a distinctive late medieval English style marked by half-timbered houses, steeply pitched gable roofs, elaborate chimneys, and ornate brickwork that bridged the Gothic and early Renaissance periods.

All labels observed (3)

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (87)

Predicate Object
instanceOf architectural style
historical architecture
architecturalStyleOf collegiate buildings
domestic buildings
manor houses
palaces
some churches
countryOfOrigin England
developedDuringReignOf Elizabeth I of England
Henry VII of England
Henry VIII of England
endTime early 17th century
follows Perpendicular Gothic
surface form: Perpendicular Gothic architecture
geographicDistribution England
English colonies
Ireland
Scotland
Wales
hasCharacteristic Tudor arch
asymmetrical facades
brick nogging
carved bargeboards
close-studded timbering
courtyard house plans
decorative chimney pots
diaper brickwork patterns
elaborate chimneys
exposed rafters
exposed timber framing
four-centered arches
gatehouses
half-hipped roofs
half-timbering
hood moulds
jettied upper stories
label mouldings over windows
large brick chimneys
large fireplaces
leadlight windows
long galleries
massive brick gate towers
massive roof chimneys
massive wooden doors
mullioned windows
multiple gables
oriel windows
ornate brickwork
pargeting
plastered exterior panels
polygonal bay windows
steeply pitched gable roofs
tall narrow windows
timber door surrounds
timber-framed halls
wattle and daub infill
hasNotableExample Christ Church, Oxford
Compton Wynyates
Hampton Court Palace
Hardwick Hall
Hever Castle
King's College, Cambridge gatehouse
Layer Marney Tower
Little Moreton Hall
Oxburgh Hall
St James's Palace, London
surface form: St James's Palace

Sutton Place estate
surface form: Sutton Place

Trinity College, Cambridge NERFINISHED
hasStyleVariant collegiate Tudor architecture
court Tudor architecture
vernacular Tudor architecture
influenced Jacobean architecture
surface form: Jacobethan architecture

Tudor Revival architecture
namedAfter Tudor dynasty
partOf Renaissance architecture
surface form: English Renaissance architecture
precedes Elizabethan architecture
sharesFeatureWith Gothic architecture
Renaissance architecture
startTime late 15th century
stylePeriod Tudor period
typicalMaterial brick
plaster
stone
thatch
tile
timber
usedInPeriod early Renaissance period
late medieval period

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (10)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Perpendicular Gothic influenced Tudor architecture
Richmond Palace architecturalStyle Tudor architecture
Grimsthorpe Castle architecturalStyle Tudor architecture
Base Court architecturalStyle Tudor architecture
this entity surface form: TudorArchitecture
Wolsey Gate architecturalStyle Tudor architecture
Cardinal College architecturalStyle Tudor architecture
Oxburgh Hall architecturalStyle Tudor architecture
Wythenshawe Hall architecturalStyle Tudor architecture
Wulfhall, Wiltshire, England hasArchitecturalStyle Tudor architecture
this entity surface form: Tudor (historic phases)