1793 in architecture explained
The year 1793 in architecture involved some significant architectural events and new buildings.
Events
- March 8 – The Bishop of Popayán, making a pastoral visit to Rionegro, Antioquia, Colombia, finds "evil spirits" in the church,[1] and arranges the construction of a new cathedral, the Concatedral de San Nicolás el Magno.
- August 8 – In Paris, France, the Académie royale d'architecture is suspended by the revolutionary National Convention, which decrees the abolition of the national academies.
- November 25 – The Prince Regent lays the foundation stone of the Chapel Royal, Brighton.[2]
- date unknown
Buildings and structures
Buildings
- Church of Pentecost, Vinkovci, Croatia.[4]
- Lansdown Crescent, Bath, England, designed by John Palmer.[5]
- George Washington's sixteen-sided barn (16 sides), the earliest recorded barn of this type.
- The West Boston Bridge, connecting Boston's West End to Cambridgeport: it spans 180 piers, and is 3,483 feet (1,100 m) long.
- Puente Nuevo, Ronda, Spain, spanning the Tajo gorge between the old and new sections of the town, designed by Martín de Aldehuela and begun in 1751.
- Fort Pincastle, Nassau, Bahamas, built of native limestone, in the shape of an old paddle-wheel steamer: Fort Pincastle serves as a lighthouse for a quarter century until the lighthouse on Hog Island starts operating in 1817.
Births
Deaths
Notes and References
- Book: Arteaga Valencia, Alvaro. 1989. La Parroquia de mi Pueblo. Publicaciones San Antonio, Rionegro.
- Web site: Images of England — detailed record, The Chapel Royal, North Street (north side), Brighton . historicengland.org.uk . . 2007 . 2008-08-08 .
- Web site: Frydenlund. Danish. Gyldendal. 2013-05-10.
- Web site: Novi hram na temeljima srušene svetinje . 2013-03-30 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20121120000641/http://pravoslavlje.spc.rs/broj/1000/tekst/novi-hram-na-temeljima-srusene-svetinje/print/lat . 2012-11-20 .
- Book: 1793. The People's Chronology. Everett, Jason M.. Thomson Gale. 2006.
- Karaman, Dujam Srećko (1890). Andrić D. Vicko. Split: Narod.