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| 1805 |
| | With advice from Thomas Daniell, Samuel Pepys Cockerell builds himself a house, Sezincote, with a roof line of fanciful Indian domes | |
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| 1815 |
| | English architect John Nash designs the exotic Royal Pavilion in Brighton for the Prince Regent | |
| | Royal Pavilion, Brighton Fotofile CG
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| 1822 |
| | Walter Scott begins to transform Abbotsford into a romantic house that he refers to as his 'conundrum castle' | |
| | Abbotsford House Fotofile CG
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| c. 1835 |
| | English architect and designer Augustus Welby Pugin plays a major part in the second stage of the Gothic Revival | |
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| 1836 |
| | Charles Barry wins the competition to design the new Houses of Parliament | |
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| 1836 |
| | Pugin publishes his most famous book, Contrasts, a polemical comparison showing the 'present decay of taste' compared to medieval architecture | |
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| 1837 |
| | Work begins on Charles Barry's spectacular design for London's new Houses of Parliament | |
| | Houses of Parliament, c.1851 Guildhall Library
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| 1837 |
| | Pugin begins work on his first contribution to country house architecture, adding extensive Gothic details to Scarisbrick Hall in Lancashire | |
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| 1841 |
| | Pugin publishes The True Principles of Pointed or Christian Architecture | |
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| 1843 |
| | The frontispiece to Pugin's Revival of Christian Architecture displays three cathedrals and twenty-two other religious buildings designed by him | |
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