| Henry Gally Knight - 1838 - 372 стор.
...; a perfect gem of its kind, and a most singular and interesting specimen of that mixture of style which is only to be found, and could only be found, in Sicily. " Vide Plate 16. It has all the features of a large church ; a nave, side aisles, and three apses.... | |
| Henry Gally Knight - 1838 - 390 стор.
...; a perfect gem of its kind, and a most singular and interesting specimen of that mixture of style which is only to be found, and could only be found, in Sicily. ft has all the features of a large church ; a nave, side aisles, and three apses. It is built in the... | |
| George Newenham Wright - 1840 - 332 стор.
...to be " a perfect gem of its kind, a most singular and interesting specimen of that mixture of style which is only to be found, and could only be found, in Sicily." The ground-plan, or general design, is that of a long Latin cross, the intersection of the nave and transepts... | |
| George Newenham Wright - 1840 - 396 стор.
...to be " a perfect gem of its kind, a most singular and interesting specimen of that mixture of style which is only to be found, and could only be found, in Sicily." The ground-plan, or general design, is that of a long Latin cross, the intersection of the nave and transepts... | |
| John Henry Parker - 1846 - 328 стор.
...; a perfect gem of its kind, and a most singular and interesting specimen of that mixture of style, which is only to be found, and could only be found, in Sicily. It is built in the long Latin form, not on the square Greek plan ; but it has a Greek cupola at the... | |
| John Henry Parker - 1849 - 254 стор.
...as in the crypt at Canterbury, built by the Norman count, afterwards King, Roger, between 1129 and 1140 ; these afford very curious examples of the mixture...the pointed arch into northern Europe, and there is much probability in the theory, on account of the frequent intercourse between the Normans in Sicily... | |
| John Henry Parker - 1849 - 260 стор.
...Canterbury, built "by the Norman count, afterwards King, Roger, between 1129 and 1HO; these afl'ord very curious examples of the mixture of Norman and...the pointed arch into northern Europe, and there is much probability in the theory, on account of the frequent intercourse between the Normans in Sicily... | |
| 1851 - 478 стор.
...to be " a perfect gem of its kind, a most singular and interesting specimen of that mixture of style which is only to be found, and could only be found, in Sicily." The ground-plan or general design, is that of a long Latin cross, the intersection of the nave and transepts... | |
| George Dennis, John Murray (Firm) - 1864 - 664 стор.
...; a jxjrfect gem of its kind, and a most singular and interesting specimen of that mixture of style which is only to be found, and could only be found, in Sicily. Perhaps there is no remnant of antiquity which, considered with reference to the history or the state... | |
| John Henry Parker - 1877 - 380 стор.
...engravings of the churches in Sicily, built by the Norman Count, afterwards King, Roger, between 1129 and 1140 : these afford very curious examples of the mixture...Saracenic work, which is only to be found, and could only he found, in Sicily. The arches are pointed, and Mr. Gaily Knight considered that this was the origin... | |
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