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The Pevsner Architectural Guides are four series of guide books to the architecture of the British Isles. The Buildings of England series was begun in 1945 by the art historian Sir Nikolaus Pevsner, with its forty-six original volumes published between 1951 and 1974. The fifteen volumes in The Buildings of Scotland series were completed between 1978 and 2016, and the ten in The Buildings of Wales series between 1979 and 2009. The volumes in all three series have been periodically revised by various authors; Scotland and Wales have been partially revised, and England has been fully revised and reorganised into fifty-six volumes. The Buildings of Ireland series was begun in 1979 and remains incomplete, with six of a planned eleven volumes published. A standalone volume covering the Isle of Man was published in 2023.
The series were published by Penguin Books until 2002, when they were sold to Yale University Press.
After moving to the United Kingdom from his native Germany as a refugee in the 1930s, Nikolaus Pevsner found that the study of architectural history had little status in academic circles, and that the amount of information available, especially to travellers wanting to inform themselves about the architecture of a particular district, was limited. To rectify this shortcoming, when he was invited to suggest ideas for future publications by Allen Lane, the founder of Penguin Books, he proposed a series of comprehensive architectural guides to the English counties.
Work on The Buildings of England began in 1945. Lane employed two part-time assistants, both German refugee art historians, who prepared notes for Pevsner from published sources. Pevsner, who held positions at Birkbeck College, University of London and the University of Cambridge, spent the academic holidays touring the country to make personal observations and to carry out local research, before writing up the finished volumes. The first of the original forty-six volumes, Cornwall, was published in 1951, and the last, Staffordshire, in 1974.
Pevsner wrote thirty-two volumes himself and ten with collaborators. A further four of the original series were written by other authors: the two Gloucestershire volumes by David Verey, and the two volumes on Kent by John Newman. The first volume of The Buildings of Scotland was published in 1978, and the first volumes in The Buildings of Wales and The Buildings of Ireland in 1979. Revisions to the original English series began in 1962, and continued after Pevsner's death in 1983. Several volumes are now in their third or fourth revisions, and the final unrevised first edition, Staffordshire, was superseded by an updated edition in 2024. [1]
The books are compact and intended to meet the needs of both specialists and the general reader. Each contains an extensive introduction to the architectural history and styles of the area, followed by a town-by-town –and in the case of larger settlements, street-by-street –account of individual buildings. These are often grouped under the heading "Perambulation", as Pevsner intended the books to be used as the reader was walking about the area. The guides offer both detailed coverage of the most notable buildings and notes on lesser-known and vernacular buildings; all building types are covered but there is a particular emphasis on churches and public buildings. Each volume has a central section with several dozen pages of photographs, originally in black and white, though colour illustrations have featured in revised volumes published by Yale University Press since 2003.
The volumes originally used the boundaries of the historic counties of England, which were current at the time of writing. [2] They largely continue to use the historic boundaries, but have been partially updated to reflect changes in London, Birmingham and the Black Country, and Cumbria. The volume on the historic county of Middlesex, for example, has been superseded by three of the six volumes covering the Greater London area, whereas Tyne and Wear, which was established from parts of County Durham and Northumberland in 1974, is covered in the volumes about those two counties.
Since 1962, the guides have undergone a gradual programme of updating to reflect architectural-history scholarship and to include significant new buildings. Pevsner left virtually all the revisions to others, acting as supervisor only. He ultimately revised only two of his original editions alone: London 1: The Cities of London and Westminster (1962) and Cambridgeshire (1970). Both were later revised again by others. The programme of revision of first editions was completed in 2024 with publication of the second edition of Staffordshire, replacing that published in 1974.
Until 1953, all volumes were published in paperback only, after which both hardback and paperback versions were issued. The revision of London: 1 in 1962 was the first volume to be issued in hardback alone, and no further paperbacks were issued after 1964. Until 1970 volumes bore a sequential BE reference number, with Cornwall being BE1. The last volume to be so numbered was Gloucestershire 2: The Vale and the Forest of Dean (BE41). Thereafter ISBNs identify each volume. Beginning in 1983, a larger format was introduced, and all subsequent new editions have been issued in this format (while, pending revisions, pre-1983 volumes continued to be reprinted in the original, smaller format). All editions are now published by Yale University Press.
The list below is of the volumes that are currently in print; for superseded volumes, see below. Where revisions were spread over more than one volume, the preceding edition remained in print until the whole area had been revised.
Title of current edition | First edition | Co-author(s) or [a] sole author | Second edition | Co-author(s) or [a] sole author | Third edition | Co-author(s) or [a] sole author | Current ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bedfordshire, Huntingdonshire and Peterborough [b] | 1968 | 2014 | Charles O'Brien | — | — | 978-0-300-20821-4 | |
Berkshire | 1966 | 2010 | Geoffrey Tyack, Simon Bradley | — | — | 978-0-300-12662-4 | |
Birmingham and the Black Country | 1966–1974 [c] | 2022 | Andy Foster | — | — | 978-0-300-22391-0 | |
Buckinghamshire | 1960 | 1994 | Elizabeth Williamson | — | — | 978-0-300-09584-5 | |
Cambridgeshire | 1954 | 1970 | 2015 | Simon Bradley | 978-0-300-20596-1 | ||
Cheshire | 1971 | Edward Hubbard | 2011 | Clare Hartwell, Matthew Hyde | — | — | 978-0-300-17043-6 |
Cornwall | 1951 | 1970 | Enid Radcliffe | 2014 | Peter Beacham | 978-0-300-12668-6 | |
County Durham | 1953 | 1983 | Elizabeth Williamson | 2021 | Martin Roberts | 978-0-300-22504-4 | |
Cumbria | 1967 [d] | 2010 | Matthew Hyde | — | — | 978-0-300-12663-1 | |
Derbyshire | 1953 | 1978 | Elizabeth Williamson | 2016 | Clare Hartwell | 978-0-300-21559-5 | |
Devon | 1952 [e] | 1991 | Bridget Cherry | — | — | 978-0-300-09596-8 | |
Dorset | 1972 | John Newman | 2018 | Michael Hill | — | — | 978-0-300-22478-8 |
Essex | 1954 | 1965 | Enid Radcliffe | 2007 | James Bettley | 978-0-300-11614-4 | |
Gloucestershire 1: The Cotswolds | 1970 [a] | David Verey | 1979 [a] | 1999 [a] | Alan Brooks | 978-0-300-09604-0 | |
Gloucestershire 2: The Vale and Forest of Dean | 1970 [a] | David Verey | 1976 [a] | 2002 [a] | Alan Brooks | 978-0-300-09733-7 | |
Hampshire: South | 1967 [f] | David W. Lloyd | 2018 | Charles O'Brien, Bruce Bailey | — | — | 978-0-300-22503-7 |
Hampshire: Winchester and The North | 1967 [g] | David W. Lloyd | 2010 | Michael Bullen, John Crook, Rodney Hubbuck | — | — | 978-0-300-12084-4 |
Herefordshire | 1963 | 2012 | Alan Brooks | — | — | 978-0-300-12575-7 | |
Hertfordshire | 1953 | 1977 | Bridget Cherry | 2019 | James Bettley | 978-0-300-09611-8 | |
Isle of Wight | 1967 [h] | David W. Lloyd | 2006 | David W. Lloyd | — | — | 978-0-300-10733-3 |
Kent: North East and East | 1969 [a] | John Newman | 1976 [a] | 1983 [a] 2013 (4th) [a] | 978-0-300-18506-5 | ||
Kent: West and the Weald | 1969 [a] | John Newman | 1976 [a] | 2012 [a] | 978-0-300-18509-6 | ||
Lancashire: Liverpool and the South West | 1969 [i] | 2006 | Richard Pollard | — | — | 978-0-300-10910-8 | |
Lancashire: Manchester and the South East | 1969 [i] | 2004 | Clare Hartwell, Matthew Hyde | — | — | 978-0-300-10583-4 | |
Lancashire: North | 1969 | 2009 | Clare Hartwell | — | — | 978-0-300-12667-9 | |
Leicestershire and Rutland | 1960 | 1984 | Elizabeth Williamson | — | — | 978-0-300-09618-7 | |
Lincolnshire | 1964 | John Harris | 1989 | Nicholas Antram | — | — | 978-0-300-09620-0 |
London 1: The City of London | 1957 [j] | 1962 [j] | 1973 [j] 1997 (4th) [k] | Bridget Cherry Simon Bradley | 978-0-300-09624-8 | ||
London 2: South | 1951–1976 [l] | 1983 | Bridget Cherry | — | — | 978-0-300-09651-4 | |
London 3: North West | 1951–1952 [m] | 1991 | Bridget Cherry | — | — | 978-0-300-09652-1 | |
London 4: North | 1951–1952 [m] | 1998 | Bridget Cherry | — | — | 978-0-300-09653-8 | |
London 5: East | 1952–1965 [n] | 1998 [o] | Elizabeth Williamson | 2005 | Bridget Cherry Charles O'Brien | 978-0-300-10701-2 | |
London 6: Westminster | 1957 [j] | 1962 [j] | 1973 [j] 2003 (4th) [k] | Bridget Cherry Simon Bradley | 978-0-300-09595-1 | ||
Norfolk 1: Norwich and North East | 1962 | 1997 | Bill Wilson | — | — | 978-0-300-09607-1 | |
Norfolk 2: North-west and South | 1962 | 1999 | Bill Wilson | — | — | 978-0-300-09657-6 | |
Northamptonshire | 1961 [p] | 1973 [q] | Bridget Cherry | 2013 | Bruce Bailey | 978-0-300-18507-2 | |
Northumberland | 1957 | (Ian A. Richmond) [r] | 1992 | John Grundy , Grace McCombie Peter Ryder, Humphrey Welfare | — | — | 978-0-300-09638-5 |
Nottinghamshire | 1951 | 1979 | Elizabeth Williamson | 2020 | Clare Hartwell | 978-0-300-24783-1 | |
Oxfordshire: North and West | 1974 [s] | Jennifer Sherwood | 2017 [a] | Alan Brooks | — | — | 978-0-300-20930-3 |
Oxfordshire: Oxford and the South East | 1974 [s] | Jennifer Sherwood | 2023 | Simon Bradley | — | — | 978-0-300-20929-7 |
Shropshire | 1958 | 2006 | John Newman | — | — | 978-0-300-12083-7 | |
Somerset: North and Bristol | 1958 | 2011 | Andrew Foyle | — | — | 978-0-300-12658-7 | |
Somerset: South and West | 1958 | 2014 | Julian Orbach | — | 978-0-300-20740-8 | ||
Staffordshire | 1974 | 2024 | Christopher Wakeling | — | — | 978-0-300-21835-0 | |
Suffolk: East | 1961 [t] | 1974 | Enid Radcliffe | 2015 | James Bettley | 978-0-300-19654-2 | |
Suffolk: West | 1961 [t] | 1974 | Enid Radcliffe | 2015 | James Bettley | 978-0-300-19655-9 | |
Surrey | 1962 | Ian Nairn | 1971 | Bridget Cherry | 2022 | Charles O'Brien | 978-0-300-23478-7 |
Sussex: East with Brighton and Hove | 1965 [u] | (Ian Nairn) [v] | 2013 | Nicholas Antram | — | — | 978-0-300-18473-0 |
Sussex: West | 1965 [w] | Ian Nairn | 2019 | Elizabeth Williamson, Tim Hudson, Jeremy Musson | — | — | 978-0-300-22521-1 |
Warwickshire | 1966 | Alexandra Wedgwood | 2016 [x] | Chris Pickford | — | — | 978-0-300-21560-1 |
Wiltshire | 1963 | 1975 | Bridget Cherry | 2021 | Julian Orbach | 978-0-300-25120-3 | |
Worcestershire | 1968 | 2007 | Alan Brooks | — | — | 978-0-300-11298-6 | |
Yorkshire: The North Riding | 1966 | 2023 | Jane Grenville | — | — | 978-0-300-25903-2 | |
Yorkshire: The West Riding: Leeds, Bradford and the North | 1959 [y] | 1967 [y] | Enid Radcliffe | 2009 | Peter Leach | 978-0-300-12665-5 | |
Yorkshire: The West Riding: Sheffield and the South | 1959 [y] | 1967 [y] | Enid Radcliffe | 2017 | Ruth Harman | 978-0300-22468-9 | |
Yorkshire: York and The East Riding | 1972 | 1995 | David Neave | — | — | 978-0-300-09593-7 |
The first of the paperback City Guides, covering Manchester, appeared in 2001. It featured a new format with integrated colour illustrations. In most cases the City Guides have preceded a revision of the volume on the county in which they are located, although they go into greater detail than the county volumes and have more illustrations. The Bristol guide, for example, superseded part of North Somerset and Bristol, which at that point was fifty years old, and provided material for Somerset: North and Bristol, published three years later. Two of the guides, one covering Hull and the other Newcastle and Gateshead, remain the most recent volumes on their areas of coverage, as the corresponding county volume has not been revised since their publication. This series appears to be on a hiatus, with no new volumes published since 2010 and none confirmed as in planning.
Title of current edition | First edition | Co-author(s) or sole author | Current ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
Bath | 2003 | Michael Forsyth | 978-0-300-10177-5 |
Birmingham | 2005 | Andy Foster | 978-0-300-10731-9 |
Brighton and Hove | 2002 | Nicholas Antram, Richard Morrice | 978-0-300-12661-7 |
Bristol | 2008 | Andrew Foyle | 978-0-300-10442-4 |
Hull | 2010 | David Neave, Susan Neave | 978-0-300-10702-9 |
Leeds | 2005 | Susan Wrathmell | 978-0-300-14172-6 |
Liverpool | 2003 | Joseph Sharples | 978-0-300-10258-1 |
Manchester | 2001 | Clare Hartwell | 978-0-300-09666-8 |
Newcastle and Gateshead | 2009 | Grace McCombie | 978-0-300-12664-8 |
Nottingham | 2008 | Elain Harwood | 978-0-300-12666-2 |
Sheffield | 2004 | Ruth Harman, John Minnis | 978-0-300-10585-8 |
Two supplementary works –thus far the only of their type –were published in 1998, one covering London's City Churches and the other the Docklands area (see London Docklands in Superseded and unpublished volumes below). Both were issued in the format of the main series rather than the City Guides. However, unlike the Docklands edition which represented preliminary work for an expanded main volume, the City Churches volume augmented the text in London 1: The City, published the previous year. The continued development of the Docklands area meant that the volume was superseded when London 5: East was published seven years later, but the City Churches volume remains current and was reissued by Yale in 2002.
The first volume of The Buildings of Scotland was Lothian, except Edinburgh, which was written by Colin McWilliam and published in 1978. Nikolaus Pevsner was enthusiastic about establishing a Scottish series, having responded warmly to an unrealised 1959 suggestion by the architectural historian Andor Gomme that the latter could produce it. A major contributor to the Scottish series is John Gifford, who before his death in 2013 authored five volumes and oversaw research on all but one of the remainder. [3] After Lothian, which was the only volume published in the original small format, a major task was producing Edinburgh (1984) and Glasgow (1990), which were ambitious in their scope of coverage of urban buildings. The remainder of Scotland was covered in the following decades, with the final volume, Lanarkshire and Renfrewshire, published in 2016. [3] A revision of Lothian was published in 2024, the first full revision of a Scottish volume. [4]
The series is organised using a mixture of Scotland's current council areas (e.g. Highland and Islands) and its historic shires (e.g. Fife and Lanarkshire and Renfrewshire). Some of the Scottish volumes are internally subdivided; for example,Argyll and Bute has separate gazetteers for mainland Argyll, its islands, and Bute. Unlike The Buildings of England, none of the Scottish volumes adopt a hierarchy of ecclesiastical buildings, instead grouping them together.
Title of current edition | First edition | Co-author(s) or sole author | Second edition | Co-author(s) or sole author | Current ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aberdeenshire: North and Moray | 2015 | David W. Walker, Matthew Woodworth | — | — | 978-0-300-20428-5 |
Aberdeenshire: South and Aberdeen | 2015 | Joseph Sharples, David W. Walker, Matthew Woodworth | — | — | 978-0-300-21555-7 |
Argyll and Bute | 2002 | Frank Arneil Walker | — | — | 978-0-300-09670-5 |
Ayrshire and Arran | 2012 | Rob Close, Anne Riches | — | — | 978-0-300-14170-2 |
Borders | 2006 | Kitty Cruft, John Dunbar, Richard Fawcett | — | — | 978-0-300-10702-9 |
Dumfries and Galloway | 1996 | John Gifford | — | — | 978-0-300-09671-2 |
Dundee and Angus | 2012 | John Gifford | — | — | 978-0-300-14171-9 |
Edinburgh | 1984 | John Gifford, Colin McWilliam, David Walker | — | — | 978-0-300-09672-9 |
Fife | 1988 | John Gifford | — | — | 978-0-300-09673-6 |
Glasgow | 1990 | Elizabeth Williamson, Anne Riches, Malcom Higgs | — | — | 978-0-300-09674-3 |
Highland and Islands | 1992 | John Gifford | — | — | 978-0-300-09625-5 |
Lanarkshire and Renfrewshire | 2016 | Rob Close, John Gifford, Frank Arneil Walker | — | — | 978-0-300-21558-8 |
Lothian [z] | 1978 | Colin McWilliam | 2024 | Jane Geddes, Ian Gow, Aonghus Mackechnie, Chris Tabraham | 978-0-300-09626-2 |
Perth and Kinross | 2007 | John Gifford | — | — | 978-0-300-10922-1 |
Stirling and Central Scotland | 2002 | John Gifford, Frank Arneil Walker | — | — | 978-0-300-09594-4 |
The series has also been extended to Wales, and was completed with the issue of Gwynedd in 2009. Only the first volume, Powys (1979), appeared in the original small format style; this volume has now been superseded by a revised large-format edition, published in 2013. The volumes of the series are organised using a combination of the current principal areas (e.g. Pembrokeshire), the preserved counties (e.g. Gwynedd), and the historic counties (e.g. Glamorgan).
Title of current edition | First edition | Co-author(s) or sole author | Second edition | Co-author(s) or sole author | Current ISBN |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Carmarthenshire and Ceredigion | 2006 | Thomas Lloyd, Julian Orbach, Robert Scourfield | — | — | 978-0-300-10179-9 |
Clwyd (Denbighshire and Flintshire) | 1986 | Edward Hubbard | 2003 | Edward Hubbard | 978-0-300-09627-9 |
Glamorgan | 1995 | John Newman | — | — | 978-0-300-09629-3 |
Gwent/Monmouthshire | 2000 | John Newman | — | — | 978-0-300-09630-9 |
Gwynedd | 2009 | Richard Haslam, Julian Orbach, Adam Voelcker | — | — | 978-0-300-14169-6 |
Pembrokeshire | 2004 | Thomas Lloyd, Julian Orbach, Robert Scourfield | — | — | 978-0-300-10178-2 |
Powys: Montgomeryshire, Radnorshire and Breconshire | 1979 | Richard Haslam | 2013 | Robert Scourfield and Richard Haslam | 978-0-300-18508-9 |
The Irish series is incomplete, with six volumes being published between 1979 and 2020. Research is underway some of the remaining five volumes: Belfast, Antrim, and County Down; Connacht/Connaught; Dublin: County; Munster, except Cork; and South Leinster [aa] . The series generally uses the traditional provinces and counties of Ireland as its boundaries and ignores the Irish border.
Title of current edition | First edition | Co-author(s) or sole author | Current ISBN |
---|---|---|---|
Belfast, Antrim and County Down | in preparation | — | — |
Connacht/Connaught | in preparation | — | — |
Cork: City and County | 2020 | Frank Keohane | 978-0-300-22487-0 |
Dublin | 2005 | Christine Casey | 978-0-300-10923-8 |
Dublin: County | in preparation | — | — |
Munster, except Cork | in preparation | — | — |
North West Ulster: The Counties of Londonderry, Donegal, Fermanagh and Tyrone | 1979 | Alistair Rowan | 978-0-300-09667-5 |
Central Leinster: Kildare, Laois and Offaly | 2019 | Andrew Tierney | 978-0-300-23204-2 |
North Leinster | 1988 | Alistair Rowan, Christine Casey | 978-0-300-09668-2 |
South Leinster | in preparation | — | — |
South Ulster: The Counties of Armagh, Cavan and Monaghan | 1992 | Kevin Mulligan | 978-0-300-18601-7 |
A standalone volume covering the island, authored by Jonathan Kewley, was published in early 2023. [5]
A number of bridges connect areas covered by different volumes. However, there is no single approach for which volume should include the structure in its main gazetteer. In some cases, one volume refers the reader to the other, and in other cases only a few lines appear in one volume and a fuller entry appears in the other. In a very few cases (listed below) a full entry appears in both volumes.
Bridge | Connection | Volume(s) of main entry |
---|---|---|
Coldstream Bridge | Berwickshire–Northumberland | Borders Northumberland |
Erskine Bridge | Renfrewshire–Dunbartonshire | Stirling and Central Scotland Lanarkshire and Renfrewshire |
Forth Bridge Forth Road Bridge | West Lothian–Fife | Lothian |
Humber Bridge | Lincolnshire–Yorkshire | Lincolnshire |
Kincardine Bridge | Stirlingshire–Fife | Fife |
Queen Elizabeth II Bridge | Essex–Kent | Essex Kent: West and the Weald |
Severn Bridge | Monmouthshire–Gloucestershire | Gloucestershire 2 |
Second Severn Crossing | Monmouthshire–Gloucestershire | Gwent/Monmouthshire |
Tamar Bridge | Devon–Cornwall | Cornwall |
Tay Bridge Tay Road Bridge | Dundee–Fife | Dundee and Angus |
The revision of the series has rendered some original volumes obsolete, usually as the area of coverage has changed. For example, the county of Cumbria was created after the publication of Cumberland and Westmorland and North Lancashire, leading to the merger of material from both volumes in a single-volume Cumbria, a revision with a new geographical focus. The following volumes have been wholly or partially superseded:
Original volume | publication date | Current volume(s) |
---|---|---|
Cumberland and Westmorland | 1967 | Cumbria |
Hampshire & the Isle of Wight | 1967 | Hampshire: South |
Hampshire: Winchester and the North | ||
Isle of Wight | ||
London: The Cities of London and Westminster | 1957 | London 1: The City of London |
London 6: Westminster | ||
London, except the Cities of London and Westminster | 1952 | London 2: South |
London 3: North-West | ||
London 4: West | ||
London 5: East | ||
London Docklands | 1998 | London 5: East |
Middlesex | 1951 | London 2: South |
London 3: North-West | ||
London 4: West | ||
Northamptonshire | 1961 | Bedfordshire, Huntingdonshire, and Peterborough |
Northamptonshire | ||
North Devon | 1952 | Devon |
South Devon | 1952 | |
Lancashire 2: The Rural North | 1969 | Cumbria |
Lancashire: North | ||
Lancashire 1: The Industrial and Commercial South | 1969 | Lancashire: Manchester and the South East |
Lancashire: Liverpool and the South West | ||
Suffolk | 1961 | Suffolk: East |
Suffolk: West | ||
Sussex | 1965 | Sussex: East |
Sussex: West | ||
Yorkshire: The West Riding | 1959 | Yorkshire: The West Riding: Bradford, Leeds, and the North |
Yorkshire: The West Riding: Sheffield and the South |
In some published volumes and in advance publicity, certain titles were announced which were ultimately never published. A number of factors accounted for this, including the readiness of parts of the text covering certain areas and the anticipated size of the volumes. Unpublished titles included:
In 1995 Penguin, in conjunction with English Heritage, released a publication based on the guides entitled Looking at Buildings. Focusing on the East Riding of Yorkshire volume, Pevsner's text was adapted as an introduction, with a greater number of illustrations than the main guides. No further print publications were issued, but the title survives as an introductory website to architectural terms and selected buildings which feature in the Pevsner guides. [6]
In 1995 a CD-ROM entitled A Compendium of Pevsner's Buildings of England was issued by Oxford University Press, designed as a searchable database of the volumes published for England only. A second edition was released in 2005. Bibliographies of the guides themselves were published in 1983, 1998 and 2012 by the Penguin Collectors Society.
In 2016, Yale University Press published three volumes, each serving as an introduction to some of the buildings and the architectural terms mentioned in the text of the guides. Published as Pevsner Architectural Guides: Introductions these are: an architectural glossary (also available as an app), a volume focusing on church buildings and another on dwelling houses (including vernacular architecture).
In 1986, Penguin published an anthology from Pevsner's volumes edited by Bridget Cherry and John Newman, The Best Buildings of England, ISBN 0-670-81283-8. It has an introduction by Newman assessing Pevsner's aims and methods. In 2001, the Penguin Collectors Society published The Buildings of England: a Celebration, edited by Simon Bradley and Bridget Cherry, fifty years after BE1 was published: it includes twelve essays and a selection of text from the series. [7] In 2012, Susie Harries, one of Pevsner's biographers, wrote The Buildings of England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales: A Sixtieth Anniversary Catalogue of the Pevsner Architectural Guides, which was published in a limited edition of 1,000 copies by the Penguin Collectors Society. [8]
In 1997, the BBC broadcast a series of documentaries [9] entitled Travels with Pevsner, in which six writers and broadcasters travelled through a county which had particular significance to them. They revisited buildings mentioned by Pevsner, critically examining his views on them. A further series was broadcast in 1998. John Grundy, who presented the programme on Northumberland, was one of the revisers of that county volume. Both series were accompanied by booklets published by the BBC, describing the buildings featured in the programmes and suggesting others to explore. The counties visited and the travellers were:
Series One
| Series Two
|
In both series, extracts from Pevsner's text were read by Benjamin Whitrow.
Sir Nikolaus Bernhard Leon Pevsner was a German-British art historian and architectural historian best known for his monumental 46-volume series of county-by-county guides, The Buildings of England (1951–74).
Penguin Books Limited is a British publishing house. It was co-founded in 1935 by Allen Lane with his brothers Richard and John, as a line of the publishers The Bodley Head, only becoming a separate company the following year. Penguin revolutionised publishing in the 1930s through its inexpensive paperbacks, sold through Woolworths and other stores for sixpence, bringing high-quality fiction and non-fiction to the mass market. Its success showed that large audiences existed for several books. It also affected modern British popular culture significantly through its books concerning politics, the arts, and science.
Tudor Revival architecture, also known as mock Tudor in the UK, first manifested in domestic architecture in the United Kingdom in the latter half of the 19th century. Based on revival of aspects that were perceived as Tudor architecture, in reality it usually took the style of English vernacular architecture of the Middle Ages that had survived into the Tudor period.
Ian Douglas Nairn was a British architectural critic who coined the word "Subtopia" to indicate drab suburbs that look identical through unimaginative town-planning. He published two strongly personalised critiques of London and Paris, and collaborated with Sir Nikolaus Pevsner, who considered his reports to be too subjective, but acknowledged him as the better writer.
The Survey of London is a research project to produce a comprehensive architectural survey of central London and its suburbs, or the area formerly administered by the London County Council. It was founded in 1894 by Charles Robert Ashbee, an Arts-and-Crafts designer, architect and social reformer and was motivated by a desire to record and preserve London's ancient monuments. The first volume was published in 1900, but the completion of the series remains far in the future.
Colin McWilliam (1928–1989) was a British architecture academic and author.
The Fortified House in Scotland is a five-volume book by the Scottish author Nigel Tranter.
The Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts, was a United Kingdom Royal Commission established in 1869 to survey and report on privately owned and privately held archival records of general historical interest. Its brief was "to make inquiry as to the places in which such Manuscripts and Papers were deposited", and to report on their contents. It remained in existence until 2003, when it merged with the Public Record Office to form The National Archives. Although it technically survives as a legal entity, its work is now entirely subsumed into that of The National Archives.
Edward Horton Hubbard was an English architectural historian who worked with Nikolaus Pevsner in compiling volumes of the Buildings of England. He also wrote the definitive biography of John Douglas, and played a part in the preservation of Albert Dock in Liverpool.
Charles Hodgson Fowler was a prolific English ecclesiastical architect who specialised in building and, especially, restoring churches.
John West Hugall was an English Gothic Revival architect from Yorkshire.
George Topham Forrest, F.R.I.B.A. FGS FRSE was a Scottish architect who became chief architect for the London County Council and was responsible for the design of many public housing estates, and also co-designed two bridges over the River Thames.
A revised edition of the statutes is an edition of the Revised Statutes in the United Kingdom. These editions are published by authority.
Bridget Cherry is a British architectural historian who was series editor of the Pevsner Architectural Guides from 1971 until 2002, and is the author or co-author of several volumes in the series.
The Church of St Peter, Clyffe Pypard, Wiltshire is a parish church of the Diocese of Salisbury, England. It dates from the 13th and 15th centuries, and was restored by William Butterfield in 1860 and 1873–1874. The churchyard contains the grave of Nikolaus Pevsner and his wife Lola. St Peter's is a Grade I listed building and remains an active parish church.
John Arthur Newman was an English architectural historian. He was the author of several of the Pevsner Architectural Guides and was the advisory editor to the series.
The Church of St Michael and all Angels, Garton on the Wolds, in the East Riding of Yorkshire is a church of medieval origins that was built c.1132 for the prior of Kirkham Abbey. Long connected to the Sykes family of Sledmere, Sir Tatton Sykes, 4th Baronet engaged John Loughborough Pearson to undertake a major reconstruction of the building in 1856–1857. Sykes son, the fifth baronet, employed George Edmund Street to design a series of murals for interior decoration, depicting a range of bible stories. The murals, "dirty and decaying" when Nikolaus Pevsner recorded the church in his 1972 East Yorkshire volume for the Buildings of England series, were restored in 1985–1991 in Pevsner's memory by the Pevsner Memorial Trust.
2, Wildwood Terrace, Hampstead, in the London Borough of Camden, is a 19th-century terraced house. It was the London home of Sir Nikolaus Pevsner, the architectural historian, from 1936 until his death in 1983. Pevsner is commemorated by a blue plaque on the building's exterior.