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1670s in architecture

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Buildings and structures

Buildings

  • 1670
    • Báo Quốc Pagoda, Huế, Vietnam, is built.
    • Saint George Palace, Rennes, France, has its foundation stones laid.
  • 1671 – Weston Park, Shropshire, England, is built for Elizabeth Wilbraham.
  • 1672
    • Buildings by Christopher Wren in England:
      • Temple Bar, London rebuilt.
      • Williamson Building at The Queen's College, Oxford, completed.
    • Church of Monastery of Serra do Pilar in Gaia, Portugal, consecrated.
    • Construction of Castillo de San Marcos at St. Augustine, Florida, designed by Ignacio Daza, begins.
  • 1673
    • April – Badshahi Masjid in Lahore, Punjab, built for Aurangzeb, is completed.
    • October 3 – Kintai Bridge in Iwakuni, Suō Province (modern-day Yamaguchi Prefecture), Japan, is officially completed.
    • The White Horse Tavern in Newport, Rhode Island (estimated completion date)
    • St Mary-le-Bow church in London, designed by Christopher Wren, rebuilding completed.
    • Monastery of San Francisco, Lima, Peru, is consecrated (completed 1774).
    • Berkeley House, London, designed by Hugh May and begun in 1665, is completed.
  • 1675
    • June – Work on the new St Paul's Cathedral in London, designed by Christopher Wren, begins.
    • June 11 – Theatine Church, Munich, consecrated in form as left by Agostino Barelli.
    • August 2 – Portuguese Synagogue (Amsterdam), designed by Elias Bouwman and begun in 1671, is completed.
    • Bethlem Royal Hospital in London, designed by Robert Hooke.
    • Briggflatts Meeting House near Sedbergh in north-west England built.
  • 1676
    • The Royal Greenwich Observatory in London, designed by Christopher Wren is completed.
    • Wren Library, Cambridge, the library of Trinity College, England, is designed by Christopher Wren (completed 1695).
    • Main courtyards of Les Invalides in Paris, designed by Libéral Bruant, are completed.
    • Skokloster Castle in Sweden, designed by Caspar Vogel with Jean de la Vallée and Nicodemus Tessin the Elder, is completed.
    • St. Peter and St. Paul's Church, Vilnius is completed.
The [[Emmanuel College, Cambridge
  • 1677
    • The Monument to the Great Fire of London, designed by Christopher Wren and Robert Hooke is completed.
    • Chapel of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, designed by Christopher Wren.
    • Remodelling of Cornbury House in Oxfordshire, England, designed by Hugh May and begun about 1663, is completed.
  • 1679
    • Chapel (Église Saint-Louis des Invalides) at Les Invalides, Paris, is completed to the design of Libéral Bruant.
    • Černín Palace in Prague, designed by Francesco Caratti, is completed.
    • Montagu House, Bloomsbury, London, designed by Robert Hooke, is completed.

Events

  • 1671: December 30 – The Académie royale d'architecture is founded by Louis XIV of France in Paris, the world's first school of architecture.

Births

  • 1672 – Francis Smith of Warwick, English architect (died 1738)
  • 1673 – Johann Friedrich Ludwig, German-born architect working in Portugal (died 1752)
  • c.1673 – John James, English architect (died 1746)
  • 1676: June 15 – Colen Campbell, Scottish-born Georgian architect (died 1729)
  • 1678: March 7 – Filippo Juvarra, Sicilian-born architect (died 1736)
  • 1679 – Francesco Zerafa, Maltese architect (died 1758)

Deaths

  • 1670: October 11 – Louis Le Vau French classical architect (born 1612)
  • 1672: October 24 – John Webb, English architect (born 1611)
  • 1677: June 26 – Francesco Buonamici, Italian Baroque architect, painter and engraver (born 1596)

References

References

  1. Kirkwood, Holly. (2014-08-17). "Queen’s College, Oxford". [[Country Life (magazine).
  2. "[Kintaikyo Bridge] Iwakuni city Homepage > Summary".
  3. Oechslin, Werner. (1972). "BUONAMICI, Francesco".
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