Victor Rabu
Víctor Rabu (1834 – 24 March 1907) was a French architect.
Víctor Rabu | |
---|---|
Born | 1834 Agen, Lot-et-Garonne |
Died | 24 March 1907 72–73) | (aged
Occupation | French architect |
Career
He was an exponent of eclectical historicism.[1] He built a notable number of churches in Uruguay, for that reason he was known as "The Lord of the Churches":[2]
- Iglesia de los Conventuales (1867)
- Capilla Jackson (1870)
- Iglesia San Francisco (1870)
- Iglesia de los Vascos (1870)
Some important public buildings were of his authorship, such as the side wings of the Solís Theatre, or the Dámaso Larrañaga Asylum. He also built several private buildings for wealthy families.
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gollark: Much more convenient than multiplying by powers of 10.
gollark: I use imperial because I just *love* memorizing tables of incomprehensible unit conversions!
gollark: Randomly delayed *wrongly*, then.
gollark: Just assume government responses will randomly be delayed, too limited in scope, or cancelled after not being around for long! Although this is more <#689911928411521099>.
References
- César J. Loustau (1995-01-01). Influencia de Francia en la arquitectura de Uruguay (in Spanish). Ediciones Trilce. pp. 40ff. ISBN 9974-32-116-6.
- "Historicist fervor". EL PAIS. 13 April 2003.
Further reading
- Giuria, Juan (1955). La arquitectura en el Uruguay (in Spanish). Montevideo: Imprenta Universal.
- Lucchini, Aurelio (1986). El Concepto de Arquitectura y su traducción a formas en el territorio que hoy pertenece a Uruguay (in Spanish). Montevideo: Universidad de la República.
- Lucchini, Aurelio (1986). El Concepto de Arquitectura y su traducción a formas en el territorio que hoy pertenece a Uruguay (in Spanish). Montevideo: Universidad de la República.
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