| 470 páginas
...restoration. The cathedral is a plain cruciform structure, chiefly in the decorated English style, with a low square embattled tower rising from the intersection of the nave and transepts, and presents comparatively few of those features which add to the interest of many cathedrals, there being... | |
| Edward Parry - 1843 - 244 páginas
...Montgomeryshire, amounting to £1,000 a year. The plan of the church is like most others, cruciform, with a square embattled tower rising from the intersection of the nave and transepts, surrounded by a cemetry kept in excellent order, and preserved from all improper intrusion by a neat... | |
| Joseph Hemingway, Wales - 1847 - 236 páginas
...Dean and Chapter, with funds which had been vested in their hands as trustees for that purpose. It is a cruciform structure, principally in the decorated...the arch of the west door is plainly moulded : the east end is ornamented with a window, which is said to be a fac-simile of the east window in Tintern... | |
| John Hicklin (of Chester.) - 1853 - 352 páginas
...the dean and chapter, with funds that had been vested in their hands as trustees for that purpose. It is a cruciform structure, principally in the decorated...the arch of the west door is plainly moulded; the east end is ornamented with a window, which is said to be a fac-simile of the east window in Tintern... | |
| George Bradshaw - 1858 - 574 páginas
...596, by St. Asaph, and rebuilt .in 1770. The plan of the church is like most others cruciform, with a square embattled tower rising from the intersection of the nave and transepts. The visitor on entering the sacred edifice will be struck with the solemnity which pervades the building;... | |
| William Cathrall - 1860 - 358 páginas
...barracks and stables for Cromwell's soldiers and horses, and the font was used as a watering-trough. The cathedral is a cruciform structure, principally...having at the north-east angle a staircase turret. The east window of the choir, rebuilt in 1744-5 and in 1780, is copied from that of Tintern Abbey ; it... | |
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