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Architecture Timeline

Ancient Egypt
3,050 BC to 900 BC In ancient Egypt, powerful rulers constructed monumental pyramids,
temples, and shrines.

Classical
850 BC to 476 AD From the rise of ancient Greece until the fall of the Roman empire, great
buildings were constructed according to precise rules.

Early Christian and Medieval


373 to 500 AD. European architecture moved from the rectangular basilica forms to the
classically inspired Byzantine style.

Romanesque
500 to 1200 AD As Rome spread across Europe, heavier, stocky Romanesque architecture with
rounded arches emerged.

Gothic Architecture
1100 to 1450 AD Innovative builders created the great cathedrals of Europe.

Renaissance Architecture
1400 to 1600 AD A return to classical ideas ushered an "age of "awakening" in Italy, France,
and England.

Baroque Architecture
1600 to 1830 AD In Italy, the Baroque style is reflected in opulent and dramatic churches with
irregular shapes and extravagant ornamentation. In France, the highly ornamented Baroque
style combines with Classical restraint. Russian aristorcrats were impressed by Versailles in
France, and incorporated Baroque ideas in the building of St. Petersburg. Elements of the
elaborate Baroque style are found throughout Europe.

Rococo Architecture
1650 to 1790 AD During the last phase of the Baroque period, builders constructed graceful
white buildings with sweeping curves.

American Colonial Architecture


1600 to 1780 AD European settlers in the New World borrowed ideas from their homelands to
create their own breed of architecture.

Georgian Architecture
1720 to 1800 AD Georgian was a stately, symmetrical style that dominated in Great Britain
and Ireland and influenced building styles in the American colonies.
Neoclassical / Federalist / Idealist
1730 to 1925 AD A renewed interest in ideas of Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio
inspired a return of classical shapes in Europe, Great Britain and the United States.

Greek Revival Architecture


1790 to 1850 AD These classical buildings and homes often feature columns, pediments and
other details inspired by Greek forms. Antebellum homes in the American south were often
built in the Greek Revival style.

Victorian Architecture
1840 to 1900 AD Industrialization brought many innovations in architecture. Victorian styles
include Gothic Revival, Italianate, Stick, Eastlake, Queen Anne, Romanesque and Second
Empire.

Arts and Crafts Movement in Architecture


1860 to 1900 AD Arts and Crafts was a late 19th-century backlash against the forces of
industrialization. The Arts and Crafts movement revived an interest in handicrafts and sought a
spiritual connection with the surrounding environment, both natural and manmade. The
Craftsman Bungalow evolved from the Arts and Crafts movement.

Art Nouveau Architecture


1890 to 1914 AD Known as the New Style, Art Nouveau was first expressed in fabrics and
graphic design. The style spread to architecture and furniture in the 1890s. Art Nouveau
buildings often have asymmetrical shapes, arches and decorative surfaces with curved, plant-
like designs.

Beaux Arts Architecture


1895 to 1925 AD Also known as Beaux Arts Classicism, Academic Classicism, or Classical
Revival, Beaux Arts architecture is characterized by order, symmetry, formal design,
grandiosity, and elaborate ornamentation.

Neo-Gothic Architecture
1905 to 1930 AD In the early twentieth century, medieval Gothic ideas were applied to modern
skyscrapers.

Art Deco Architecture


1925 to 1937 AD Zigzag patterns and vertical lines create dramatic effect on jazz-age, Art
Deco buildings.

20th Century Trends in Architecture


1900 to Present. The century has seen dramatic changes and astonishing diversity.

Twentieth century trends include Art Moderne and the Bauhaus school coined by Walter
Gropius, Deconstructivism, Formalism, Modernism, Structuralism, and Postmodernism.

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