Gothic architecture in France, England, and Italy . Fig. 86. ^*S*i. LINCOLN Fig. 87. of support. Fig. 87 shows a later and more fully developedexample from the presbytery at Lincoln. This modelspread throughout the length and breadth of the land ;it is to be found from Lincoln to S. Davids, from Salis-bury, Winchester and Chichester to Westminster; toEly, where perhaps the strong springing line is rather ch. xn] EARLY ENGLISH 209 over-weighted by the pendant knots, and on to held its own throughout the Early Gothic period tillsuperseded by more natural foliage at the end of the13th cen


Gothic architecture in France, England, and Italy . Fig. 86. ^*S*i. LINCOLN Fig. 87. of support. Fig. 87 shows a later and more fully developedexample from the presbytery at Lincoln. This modelspread throughout the length and breadth of the land ;it is to be found from Lincoln to S. Davids, from Salis-bury, Winchester and Chichester to Westminster; toEly, where perhaps the strong springing line is rather ch. xn] EARLY ENGLISH 209 over-weighted by the pendant knots, and on to held its own throughout the Early Gothic period tillsuperseded by more natural foliage at the end of the13th century, and it stands to Early English work in thesame relation that the acanthus leaf does to Roman. If the plan of S. Hughs vanished apse at Lincoln has The Lin-been correctly recovered from the foundations (v. Fig. 81sup.) it bore very little resemblance to that of FrenchWilliam at Canterbury. It had two straight raking sidesof two bays each, leading to a square bay closing theeast end ; so forming a sort of irregular and elongatedhalf-hexagon, a plan unlike any


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Keywords: ., bookauthorjacksont, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1915