ARC 111 Chapter Notes - Chapter 13: Hendrick De Keyser, Jacob Van Campen, Menno Van Coehoorn

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13. 1 protestant europe: an architecture of essentials architectural projects. By 1700, the facades of wealthy dutch merchant were modest but often concealed luxuriously appointed interiors: martin luther rallied against the great expense lavished on st. peter"s and other catholic. This shift to a neutral, inconspicuous: the anglican church assumed a different attitude, nearly identical to that of the roman catholic. The church of england continued to use great cathedrals. Wren borrowed heavily from architecture reflected the protestant agenda for a secular society that treated religion and private life as personal matters of conscience. The cutch republic: an alternative to the grand manner: the 1700, europe stood roughly divided into catholic and protestant. Most reformed churches focused on individuality and downplayed collective ceremonies. Most protestant sects purged their churches of imaged of saints: holland"s embrace of republicanism derived from its large class of shopping entrepreneurs. Canals for transporting goods in barges to warehouses laced the important trading cities.

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