Romanesque Revival Architecture in the United Kingdom

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Romanesque Revival architecture, Norman Revival architecture or Neo-Norman styles of building were inspired by the Romanesque Architecture of the 11th and 12th centuries A.D.

Wilton Church, Wiltshire. By T.H.Wyatt 1841-4

In the United Kingdom it started to appear as an architectural style in the 18th. century but reached its greatest popularity in the mid to latter years of the 19th. century. The style can be viewed as a strand of Gothic Revival architecture and part of the Historicist or Historismus styles of architecture that became popular in both Europe and Britain during the 19th. century. Early examples of the style in Germany of the 1820s and 1830s are referred to as Rundbogenstil or round arched style.[1] In Britain the style was introduced by architects and their patrons, who had been on tours in Europe and it appears that the German and British styles of Romanesque developed largely independently. Initially in Britain the style was used for church building, but as the 19th. century progressed it was adapted for public buildings, museums, schools and commercial buildings, but rarely for domestic buildings. By the start of the 20th. century it had gone out of fashion and only occasionally were examples of the style built.

File:Aubourn Church - geograph.org.uk - 863629.jpg
Aubourn Church, Lincolnshire 1862-3

The origins of the Romanesque Revival or Norman Revival in the United Kingdom

Culzean Castle by Robert Adam, 1771
File:St. Nicholas, Kenilworth, west door.jpg
St. Nicholas, Kenilworth, west door 1570
File:Front entrance to Eastnor Castle - geograph.org.uk - 1468597.jpg
Front entrance to Eastnor Castle, Herefordshire, combining Romanesque and Gothic features

The development of the Norman revival style or Neo-Norman took place over a long time in the British Isles starting with Inigo Jones‘s re-fenestration of the White Tower of the Tower of London in 1637-8 and work at Windsor Castle by Hugh May for Charles II, but this was little more than restoration work. More surprising is the west door of Kenilworth Church, inserted in the tower in 1570 probably at the time of a visit of Queen Elizabeth. This appears to have been historic arch, sourced possibly from an unknown monastic building,[2]

File:St Martin's Church, Allerton Mauleverer. - geograph.org.uk - 419918.jpg
St Martin's Church, Allerton Mauleverer. - by John Vardy, 1745

In the 18th century the use of round arched windows was thought of as being Saxon rather than Norman and examples of buildings with round arched windows include Shirburn Castle in Oxfordshire, Wentworth in Yorkshire and Enmore Castle in Somerset. At Allerton Mauleverer in Yorkshire St Martin’s Church was re-built for Richard Arundell in 1745. The church has been described as a proto-Neo-Norman. While it gives the impression of a Romanesque revival church, with a massive crossing tower and round headed windows, yet it also has windows with gothic tracery and a hammerbeam nave roof. The architect is thought to have been John Vardy surveyor to the Office of Works.[3] In Scotland the style started to emerge with the Duke of Argyl’s castle at Inverary, started in 1744, and castles by Robert Adam at Culzean (1771), Oxenfoord (1780-2), Dalquharran (1782-5), and Seton Palace (1792). In England James Wyatt used round arched windows at Sandleford Priory, Berkshire in 1780-9 and the Duke of Norfolk started to rebuild Arundel Castle, while Eastnor Castle in Herefordshire was built by Robert Smirke between 1812 and 1820. At Eastnor Smirke combines a rugged Romanesque with more subtle Gothic window tracery.[4]

The Development of Archaeologically Correct Romanesque.[5]

GosfordCastle, Armagh by Thomas Hopper
Penrhyn Castle - by Thomas Hopper 1820-1837

It was at this point that the Norman Revival became a recognisable architectural style. In 1817 Thomas Rickman published his An Attempt to Discriminate the Styles of English Architecture from the Conquest to the Reformation. It was now realised that round-arch architecture was largely Romanesque in the British Isles and came to be described as Norman rather than Saxon. This distinction was finally recognised when Rickman’s article in Archaeologia (1832/3), was published by the Society of Antiquaries.[6] The start of an archaeologically correct Norman Revival can be recognised in the architecture of Thomas Hopper. His first attempt at this style was at Gosford Castle in Armagh in Ireland, but far more successful was his Penrhyn Castle near Bangor in North Wales. This was built for the Pennant family, between 1820 and 1837. The style did not catch on for domestic buildings, though many country houses and mock castles were built in the Castle Gothic or Castellated style during the Victorian period, which were mixed Gothic styles.[7]

Church Architecture and the Romanesque Revival

St Agatha, Llanymynech. Romanesque Tower by Penson 1845
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Rhosllanerchrugog Church, 1852
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Christ Church, Welshpool. Chancel arcade in apse behind altar

However, the Norman Revival did catch on for church architecture. It was Thomas Penson, a Welsh architect, who would have been familiar with Hopper’s work at Penrhyn, who developed Romanesque Revival church architecture. Penson was influenced by French and Belgian Romanesque architecture, and particularly the earlier Romanesque phase of German Brick Gothic. At St David’s Newtown, 1843–47 and St Agatha’s Llanymynech, 1845, he copies the tower of St. Salvator's Cathedral, Bruges. Other examples of Romanesque revival by Penson are Christ Church, Welshpool, 1839–1844, and the porch to Langedwyn Church. He was an innovator in the use of Terracotta to produce decorative Romanesque mouldings, saving on the expense of stonework.[8] Penson’s last church in the Romanesque Revival style was Rhosllannerchrugog, Wrexham of 1852[9]

Sarah Losh and Wreay Church

A most remarkable example of Romanesque church building was St Mary’s Church at Wreay, near Carlisle.[10] This was designed by Sarah Losh and built between 1841 and 1842. Losh had travelled widely on the Continent and particularly in Italy and drew inspiration from Romanesque sources. Losh is known to have read Thomas Hope's Historical Study of Architecture (1815), which uses the term Lombardic for the style brought into Italy from the early Christian churches of Constantinople, and she described St Mary's as being an unpolished mode of building that most approximates to early Saxon or modified Lombard [11] This statement suggests that at the time of its design Losh was not aware of Thomas Rickman’s re-classification of Saxon and Norman architecture. While the appearance and layout of the church may be considered as Romaneque, her free interpretation of the decoration on the woodwork and the arched stone windows and doors is anticipating the styles of the Arts and Crafts movement, while the arcading of the apse certainly has a Byzantine feel to it.[12]

Sarah Losh Gallery

Other Early Victorian Architects working in the Romanesque revival style

The early years of the 1840s saw a considerable upsurge of interest in the developing Romanesque revival style by some of the leading architects of the period. During the 19th century the architecture selected for Anglican churches depended on the churchmanship of particular congregations. Whereas high churches and Anglo-Catholic, which were influenced by the Oxford Movement, were built in Gothic Revival architecture; low churches and Broad churchbroad churches of the period were often built in the Romanesque Revival style.[13] The architects specialising in Romanesque revival took their designs from different local styles of the European Romanesque.

Edmund Sharpe

Another architect who popularised the Romanesque revival style was Edmund Sharpe, who set up his practice at Lancaster in 1835. At Cambridge he had been a great friend of William Whewell and presumably of the polymath and architectural historian Professor Robert Willis. He was awarded a travelling scholarship to study the early architecture of Germany and Southern France and supplied Thomas Rickman with information.[14][15] However, Sharpe despite being an architectural historian of some note, built churches that were much freer interpretations of the Romanesque and German Brick Gothic and might be considered less archaeologically correct.

St Mark's Church, Whitton, Blackburn

Four of Sharpe's earliest churches – St Saviour, Bamber Bridge (1836–37);[16] St Mark, Witton (1836–38); and St Paul, Farington, near Leyland (1839–40)[17] – were in the Romanesque style, which he chose because "no style can be worked so cheap as the Romanesque". They "turned out to be little more than rectangular 'preaching boxes'... with no frills and little ornamentation; and many of them were later enlarged". The only subsequent churches in which Sharpe used Romanesque elements St Mary's Church, Conistone in Wharfedale (1846); and St Paul, Scotforth in south Lancaster (1874-6). Sharpe's final essay in the Romanesque Revival style St Paul's Church, Scotforth, was described by Nikolaus Pevsner as a "strange building" and "an anachronism, almost beyond belief".[18] Sharpe had retired from his architectural practice in 1851 He then pursued a career in railway engineering.[19] In 1874, when he was aged 68, he returned to architecture and designed this church which was opened in 1876.[20][21] The church had used terracotta in a similar fashion to his earliest churches and it can only be assumed that its anachronistic appearance was that he had used a design that he had prepared at least twenty years earlier.[22]

Romanesque by Sharpe

Benjamin Ferrey

File:Morpeth, Northumberland, The Church of St James The Great - geograph.org.uk - 223562.jpg
Morpeth, Northumberland, The Church of St James The Great, 1844-1846

The work of Benjamin Ferrey can be considered to be similar to that of Thomas Penson, based on the English and French Romanesque traditions. An early example is his church of St Nicholas at East Grafton in Wiltshire, built in 1842-44.[23] Here the chancel terminates in an apse and the west has overlapping arcading and chevron decoration over the entrance door. Central crossing tower and arcaded windows on the west frontis approached through a stone Romanesque Lych gate.

A more important work by Ferrey is the Church of St. James the Great at Morpeth, Northumberland. The church, which is supposed to be modelled on the cathedral of Monreale in Sicily,[24] was built between 1844 and 1846. The unusual arched gate is acceptably Sicilian in inspiration and is similar to the portico at the cathedral at Monreale, but the rest of the composition has much more in common with French and Belgian Romanesque. A further church in this style is Christ Church in Melplash in Dorset of 1845-6. This has a heavy crossing tower and in many respects resembles the Church of St. James the Great at Morpeth.

Romanesque by Ferrey

Romanesque Gallery

Chapel Architecture

Baptist Church, Mint Street, Lincoln
File:Potters Bar Old Baptist Church.jpg
Potters Bar Old Baptist Church

In the 1860s Romanesque architecture became a popular style of architecture for Dissenting chapels. Possibly this was intended to give the impression that they were churches similar to Anglican churches and they are often referred to as churches rather than chapels. This form of architecture was often chosen by the Baptists. This architecture is an adapted and debased form of Italianate Romanesque as seen at the Potter's Bar Old Baptist Church in Hertfordshire in 1859.[25] The Baptist Church in Brown Street Salisbury of the 1880s is similar in bright red brick and was built in the 1880s. It is noticeably more archaeologically correct in its use of arched windows and the entrance door. A Baptist Chapel of 1870 by the Lincoln architects Drury and Mortimer, the Mint Lane Baptist Chapel in Lincoln is in a debased Italianate Romanesque revival style but has a suprising tower in the castellated Gothic style.[26]

Jewish Synagogues

The Romanesque revival was also a style of architecture that appealed to Jewish communities and there are examples of Synagogues in this style. One of these is the synagogue built adjacent to the docks at Grimsby in Lincolnshire.

Later Romanesque Revival Churches in Scotland

File:West Kirk (geograph 1866764).jpg
West Kirk, Sandgate Ayr. By William Gale 1844-5

The earliest example of Romanesque revival architecture in Scotland is the West Kirk, Sandgate, Ayr. By the architect William Gale for the Prebyterian Free Church and built in 1844-5. The columns used for the windows are very similar to those used by Edmund Sharpe at Scotford church. In Scotland the Presbyterians occasionally built in the Romanesque revival style, but only later in the 19th century. St Conan’s Kirk Lochawe, Agyll and Bute is an extraordinary early 20th century church on the shore of Loch Awe, built by Walter Douglas Campbell, brother of the 1st Lord Blythswood, was started in 1881, but not copleted until 1930. The kirk is largely Romanesque in style, but is also mixed with other completely unrelated styles.[27] Another church is Cranshaws in Berwickshire. Here the 1739 church was rebuilt in 1899 by architect George Fortune in Romanesque Revival style.

Sir Alfred Waterhouse and developed Romanesque Architecture

Natural History Museum 001
Ukrainian Catholic Cathedral of the Holy Family in Exile, London

Interest in Romanesque Revival Architecture was renewed by Sir Alfred Waterhouse's Natural History Museum in Kensington, which was built between 1873 and 1881.[28] It was built in shades of buff coloured terracotta and opened the way for the Romanesque style to be used for other buildings, apart from churches. Waterhouse tended to mix the architectural styles, often using decorative Romanesque arches to provide impressive entrances for his buildings, and popularised the deep red terracotta produced by manufacturer's in the Wrexham and Ruabon area of North-East Wales. This included parts of the Prudential Insurance building in London and the entrance to Strangeways Prison.

Buildings by Sir Alfred Waterhouse

Later 19th and 20th Century Romanesque Revival

Christ's Hospital Girl's School - geograph.org.uk - 653888
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Silver Street, Lincoln

Waterhouse inspired other architects to build using terracotta and this material was used by William Watkins a Lincoln architect, who very successfully used a deep red Ruabon terracotta for the Lincoln Christ's Hospital Girl's School of 1893.[29] Another building of about the same period, in Silver Street, Lincoln uses artificial stone for Romanesque columns and arches to embellish a shopfront.[30]

St Aidan's Church, Leeds

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St AidansChurch, Leeds
File:St Aidans Font Leeds.jpg
St Aidans Font Leeds
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St Aidans Leeds

St Aidan’s church, Roundhill, Leeds is a massive basilica church, built in the tradition of Waterhouse, using red terracotta brickwork. The design was won by competition in 1889 and the church was built between 1891 and 19 94 by the Newcastle architects R.J. Johnson and A Crawford Hick. The style is a hybrid of Italian, French and German Romaneque and the Corbel table or moulded stringcourse below the eaves was based on that of Lund Cathedral in Sweden. The inside is sumptuously decorated with mosaic decoration by Sir Frank Brangwyn in the apse and a multi-coloured marble font with Romanesque arcading. The interior columns of the basilica have ornamental capitals in the Byzantine style.[31]

20th Century

Former church of All Saints, Petersham
File:St Francis' Church, Linden Road, Bournville - geograph.org.uk - 315175.jpg
St Francis' Church, Linden Road, Bournville - geograph.org.uk - 315175

In the 20th.century the use of the Romanesque revival style in church architecture appears to be restricted to brick built churches and often these churches have similarities with churches built in the Byzantine revival style, which became more popular in the early years of the 20th century. Churches in the Romanesque revival style include All Saints, Bute Avenue, Petersham, Richmond-upon-Thames. This Romanesque revival church was designed by J Kelly and completed in 1908.

An even later example of the style is St Francis, Linden Road, Bournville, consecrated in 1925. This church was designed by Harvey and Wicks, the architects of the Bournville Estate

Further reading

  • Brandwood G. (2012) Sharpe, Paley and Austin English Heritage. ISBN 978-1-84802-049-8
  • Clark (Sir) K. (1962) The Gothic Revival, 3rd. ed. John Murray, ISBN 0719502330.
  • Stratton M.(1993). The Terracotta Revival: Building Innovation and the Industrial City in Britain and Northern America Gollancz, London

External links

  • Victorian Web [3]

References

  1. "Stratton" (1993), 54-56
  2. Country Life, Jan. 12th.2016
  3. Leach P. and Pevsner N. (2009), ‘Buildings of England: Yorkshire West Riding; Leeds, Bradford and the North, Yale ISBN 9780300126655
  4. Mowl, Timothy (1981), The Norman Revival in British Architecture 1790-1870’’. PhD, Thesis, Oxford University.
  5. The idea of the archaeological correctness was popularised by Nikolaus Pevsner in his many writings and he was using the term by 1950 in his Broadcast Talks (pg. 190) to describe architecture and designs based closely on illustrations of actual buildings or objects.[1]
  6. Archaeologia Vol xxv, pp159-185, esp. 166
  7. Mowl, Timothy (1991) ‘‘Penrhryn and the Norman Revival’’ in "National Trust Guide", Penrhryn Castle, Gwynedd. pp.89-90.
  8. Stratton M The Terracotta Revival: Building Innovation and the Industrial City in Britain and Northern America Gollancz, London 1993, pg 13.
  9. Hubbard E, The Buildings of Wales: Clwyd, Penguin/ Yale 1986, 264
  10. Jacqueline Banerjee. St Mary's Church, Wreay,, The Victorian Web
  11. Uglow, J. (2012). The Pinecone: The Story of Sarah Losh, Forgotten Romantic Heroine — Antiquarian, Architect and Visionary. London: Faber, pg 231.
  12. ’’Banerjee.’’
  13. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found., and also Cambridge Camden Society (1841),A Few Words to Church-builders[2].
  14. O'Donoghue, F. M. (1897), rev. Geoffrey K. Brandwood (2004) Sharpe, Edmund (1809–1877), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Retrieved on 18 February 2012 ((subscription or UK public library membership required))
  15. Brandwood et al. 2012, pp. 12–15
  16. Hughes 2010, p. 116.
  17. Hughes 2010, p. 125.
  18. Pevsner 2002, p. 224.
  19. O'Donoghue, F. M., rev. Geoffrey K. Brandwood, (2004) Sharpe, Edmund (1809–1877), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press , Retrieved on 18 August 2009 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  20. Hartwell & Pevsner 2009, p. 401.
  21. Brandwood et al. 2012, p. 47.
  22. "Stratton" (1993) 50-52for a discussion of the early use of terracotta in the pot churches of Sharpe and Penson.
  23. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  24. Marilyn N Tweddle "A Historical Guide to the Church of St James the Great’
  25. Potters Bar Baptist Church
  26. Antram N (revised), Pevsner N & Harris J, (1989), The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire, Yale University Press.pg 521-2.
  27. Britain Express
  28. "Stratton", (1993), 70-77
  29. Antram N (revised), Pevsner N & Harris J, (1989), The Buildings of England: Lincolnshire, Yale University Press. pg 509
  30. Unknown architect, possibly William Mortimer
  31. Leach P. & Pevsner N (2009) Buildingsof England: Yorkshire West Riding, pp 525-527.