1680s in architecture
| |||
---|---|---|---|
| |||
Buildings and structures
|
1670s . 1680s in architecture . 1690s |
Architecture timeline |
Buildings and structures
Buildings
- 1680
- St Clement Danes, London, designed by Christopher Wren, is completed.
- Church of San Lorenzo, Turin, designed by Guarino Guarini, is substantially completed.
- 1681
- Basilica of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice, designed by Baldassare Longhena in 1631, is dedicated.
- Sobieski Royal Chapel in Gdańsk, designed by Tylman van Gameren, is completed.
- Old Ship Church Puritan meeting house in Hingham, Massachusetts, which will become the oldest church building in continuous ecclesiastical use in the United States, is erected.
- Basilica of Our Lady of the Pillar in Zaragoza, Aragon, is begun to the design of Francisco Herrera the Younger (completed 1754).
- 1682
- Abingdon County Hall in Oxfordshire, England, designed by Christopher Kempster, is completed.
- Tom Tower at Christ Church, Oxford, England, designed by Christopher Wren, is completed.
- College of Matrons in Salisbury, England, probably designed by Christopher Wren, is built.
- Khan al-Wazir in Aleppo is completed.

Château de Dampierre in France
- 1683
- The Old Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, probably designed by the mason Thomas Wood, is opened, the first purpose-built university museum (the modern day Museum of the History of Science).[1]
- Ragley Hall in Warwickshire, England, designed by Robert Hooke, is completed.
- Château de Dampierre in France, designed by Jules Hardouin Mansart, is completed.
- Église Saint-Thomas-d'Aquin (Paris), designed by Pierre Bullet, is consecrated.
- 1684
- The Royal Hospital Kilmainham in Dublin, Ireland, designed by William Robinson, is completed as a home for retired soldiers.
- The Hall of Mirrors at the Palace of Versailles in France, designed by Jules Hardouin Mansart, is completed.
- The Château de Marly in the Marly-le-Roi commune is completed for Louis XIV.
- The Canal de l'Eure with its notable aqueduct, designed by the military engineer Lieutenant Général Vauban to serve Versailles for Louis XIV, is begun; work is abandoned about 1690.
- Middle Temple gateway, Fleet Street, London, designed by Roger North, is completed.
- The original Kaohsiung Confucius Temple is built.
- 1685
- Ishak Pasha Palace in eastern Anatolia is begun.
- 1686
- The Het Loo Palace at Apeldoorn in the Netherlands, designed by Jacob Roman and Johan van Swieten and begun in 1684, is completed; the garden is designed by Claude Desgotz.

Chatsworth House in Derbyshire, England
- 1687
- Neanderkirche in Düsseldorf (begun 1683) is completed.
- The rebuilding of Chatsworth House in Derbyshire, England, begins under William Talman.
- The Parthenon in Athens is extensively damaged in the Morean War.
- 1688
- Friends meeting house at Jordans, Buckinghamshire, England.
- 1689
- Windsor Guildhall in Berkshire, England, designed by Sir Thomas Fitz (or Fiddes), is completed by Christopher Wren.[2]
- Bieliński Palace in Otwock Wielki, Poland, designed by Tylman van Gameren, is completed.
- Lubomirski bathing pavilion at Łazienki Palace, Warsaw, Poland, designed by Tylman van Gameren, is completed.
Events
- 1682: October 27 – The city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania is founded by William Penn, laid out on a grid pattern.
- 1689: May – William Talman appointed Comptroller of the King's Works in England.
Births
- 1682
- William Benson, English amateur architect and politician (died 1754)
- December 23 – James Gibbs, Scottish-born architect (died 1754)
- 1683 – Thomas Ripley, English architect (died 1758)
- c. 1685 – William Kent, English architect and designer (died 1745)
- 1686
- September 29 – Cosmas Damian Asam, German Baroque architect and painter (died 1739)
- Giacomo Leoni, Venetian-born architect (died 1746)
- 1687: January 27? – Balthasar Neumann, German architect (died 1753)
- 1689: October – William Adam, Scottish architect (died 1748)
Deaths
- 1680: November 28 – Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Italian sculptor and architect (born 1598)
- 1682: February 18 – Baldassare Longhena, Venetian Baroque architect (born 1598)
- 1684
- February 20 – Roger Pratt, English gentleman architect (born 1620)
- February 21 – Hugh May, English architect (born 1620)
- 1688: October 9 – Claude Perrault, French architect (born 1613)
gollark: Wrong. The ISA is old, but the microarchitectures of high-performant x86 CPUs are absolutely not ancient. They internally do a ton of optimization tricks to pretend to execute code in order with flat undifferentiated memory as fast as possible, even though the CPU is executing things out of order and aggressively caching and prefetching.
gollark: However, you can just not use it and will probably save a lot of time and segfaults.
gollark: Performant because it contorted the design of all modern CPUs to fit its model, useful because all the low-level APIs use it.
gollark: You will spend too much time on annoying memory things.
gollark: Not C or C++. Do NOT use C derivatives.
References
- Pevsner, Nikolaus (1974). Oxfordshire. The Buildings of England. Harmondsworth: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-071045-0.
- "The Town Hall at Windsor". The Royal Windsor Web Site. Retrieved 2010-09-13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.