AFTER CHRIST. 327. WILLIAM HENRY PLAYFAIR of Scotland.-St. Stephen's Church; Royal Institution; National Gallery; Donaldson's Hospital; Free Church College; Surgeons' Hall; all at Edinburgh. 328. JOHN BRITTON of England.-Published the "Cathedral Antiquities," 14 volumes; "Architectural Antiquities," 5 vols.; "Edifices of London," 2 vols. ; and many others. Began the restoration of Redcliffe Church, Bristol. 329. LUIGI CANINA of Rome.-Published many works on the History of, and Discoveries connected with, Classic Architecture. 330. LOUIS TULLIUS JOACHIM VISCONTI of France.-Completed the Palace of the Louvre ; Monument of Molière in the Rue Richelieu; Fountain on site of the old Opera House, Place Louvois; Fountain in Place St. Sulpice; façade of the angle of two streets in the Rue Neuve des Petits Champs; tomb of the Emperor Napoleon I. at the Invalides, all at Paris. 331. THOMAS HAMILTON of Scotland.-The High Schools; College of Physicians; and some churches; Pavilion for the Grey Festival, 1834; all at Edinburgh. Monument to Burns, near Ayr. 332. ALPHONSE RICARD DE MONTFERRAND of France.-Column to the Emperor Alexander; and Church of St. Isaac, at St. Petersburg. Both published. 333. SIR CHARLES BARRY of London.-The Travellers' Club House (published); the Reform Club House; Bridgewater House; the Houses of Parliament; Privy Council Office; laid out Trafalgar Square; three churches at Ball's Pond, Cloudesley Square, and Holloway; all in London. The Grammar School at Birmingham, Clifden House, near Reading. Trentham Hall, Derbyshire. St. Peter's Church at Brighton. A church, the Athenæum, and the Royal Institution, at Manchester. 334. ERNST FRIEDRICH ZWIRNER of Prussia.-Restoration of Cologne Cathedral. Church at Remagen. 335. DAVID HAMILTON of Glasgow.-Hutcheson's Hospital; Nelson Monument; Royal Exchange; Western Club House, and other buildings, all at Glasgow. Castle Toward; Dunlop House; Airth or Kier Castle; Hamilton Palace; and Lennox Castle, all in Scotland. 336. ROBERT MILLS of Charleston, South Carolina. The Congregational Church at Charleston, with a dome 90 feet diam. inside, the first in that country. Several edifices at Philadelphia, including the Bank (the first building in the Gothic style), and the timber bridge over the Schuylkill, about 340 feet span. The Court House and other buildings at Richmond; Monument to Washington at Baltimore, and two churches there; Lunatic Asylum at Columbia; Penitentiary at New Orleans; and buildings at Charleston. The Bunker Hill monument. Many works for the Government at Washington. He largely introduced a fire-proof system into the construction of his buildings. 337. LEO VON KLENZE of Prussia.-The Glyptothek, and other public and private works at Munich. The Walhalla, near Ratisbon. Buildings at St. Petersburg. Designs published. 338. JAMES BUNSTONE BUNNING of England.-City of London School. Highgate and Nunhead Cemeteries; Bethnal Green Workhouse; Freemason's Orphan Schools, Brixton; the Coal Exchange; City Prison, Holloway; Billingsgate Market; Metropolitan Cattle Market, Islington; Alterations in Newgate Prison; Pauper Lunatic Asylum at Stone; with many improvements in the City of London. 339. LUDWIG FÖRSTER of Austria.-Published the Allgemeine Bauzeitung, 38 volumes (to 1873). Buildings in Vienna. 340. CHARLES ROBERT COCKERELL of London. - Philosophic Institution at Bristol. Hanover Chapel, Regent Street. St. David's College, Lampeter. National Monument, Calton Hill, Edinburgh. University Library and Museum, Cambridge. Westminster Life Office, Strand. Dividend Pay Office, and the Private Drawing Office, in the Bank of England; and Branch Banks at Manchester, Bristol, and Liverpool. Sun Fire Assurance Office. Taylor and Randolph Galleries and Library at Oxford. Liverpool and London Insurance Buildings at Liverpool. Completion of the Fitzwilliam Museum at Cambridge, commenced by G. BASEVI; and of St. George's Hall at Liverpool, commenced by H. L. ELMES. 341. JOSEPH GWILT of London. Compiler of the "Encyclopædia of Architecture." Memoir in Preface. 342. LUIGI CANONICA of Milan.-Anfiteatro Diurno for 30,000 spectators, for Napoleon I.; Teatro Carcano, Ré, and Fiando; the interior of Palazzo Orsino, and Casa Canonica, all at Milan. Theatres at Brescia, Mantua, and Parma. 343. LOUIS VON ZANTH of Würtemburg.-The Wilhelma near Stuttgardt, in a Moorish AFTER CHRIST. style; design for a large village and its buildings in Hungary; published "The 344. SIR JOSEPH PAXTON of Milton Bryant, Bedfordshire.-The Conservatory for the and elsewhere. building of the Industry of All Nations 1851. Village of Edensor near Chatsworth; Mentmore for Baron Mayer A. de Rothschild. Mansion at Ferrières in France for Baron James de Rothschild. Alterations at Lismore Castle, Ireland, for Duke of Devonshire. Laid out Parks at Liverpool, Birkenhead, Glasgow, 345. CAPT. FRANCIS FOWKE of Belfast, in Ireland.—Raglan Barracks, Devonport. Additions to South Kensington Museum; Picture Galleries for the Sheepshanks, Vernon, and Turner collections therein. Industrial Museum, Edinburgh. New buildings for South Kensington Museum. National Gallery, Dublin. Design for Gardens, Conservatory, and south arcades, Royal Horticultural Gardens; the building for 1862 Exhibition, and entrances to the Gardens. Design for Natural History Museum. Original design for the Royal Albert Hall. 346. JACQUES IGNACE HITTORFF of Cologne.--Practised at Paris, where, with Lecointe, he 348. PHILIP HARDWICK of London.-House and Warehouses at St. Katherine's Docks; 349. CHARLES TEXIER of Versailles, in France.--Restored Arch at Rheims. Published 350. SIR JAMES PENNETHORNE of Worcester.-Assisted Mr. J. Nash in carrying out in ment. 351. SIR THOMAS DEANE of Monkstown, near Dublin.—Banks, with other buildings, and the Court house with a fine portico, at Cork; Queen's College, Cork; Lunatic Asylum at Killarney; addition to Trinity College, Dublin, in the Venetian style; Museum at Oxford with his son Thomas and Mr. Woodward, AFTER CHRIST $52. EDWARD WALTERS of London.-Many large Warehouses in the Renaissance style at Manchester; and numerous houses in the suburbs; Free Trade Hall; Manchester and Salford Bank; Stations on the Midland Railway; Church in Cavendish Street; Fire Insurance Office, King Street; Warrington Public Hall, &c. 953. SIR WILLIAM TITE of London.-Restored, with David Laing, the church of St. Dunstan's-in-the-East. Designed the Scotch Church, Regent Square; the Royal Exchange; London and Westminster Bank, Lothbury, with R. A. Cockerell, R. A.; several railway stations, all in London. The termini and most of the stations on the Caledonian and Scottish Central Railways; and on the line from Havre to Paris. Memorial Church, Gerrard's Cross. Largely employed in the valuation, purchase, and sale of the enormous quantity of land acquired for the extensive railway and improvement works of his time. INDEX TO THE LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL ARCHITECTS. The numbers refer to figures which precede each name in the List. Callicrates, xiv Chambers, Sir W., 274 Chirosophus, vii Chryses, 18 Colechurch, P. of, 45 P. da, 155 Cyriades, 13 Cyrus, xxxix Dance, G., 264 Jun., G., 288 Daniel, 15 Helyas de E , D., 177 Ictinus, xii co di Giorgio, 109 of Byza eF345 Ixnard, M. File A 245 G. and B. 166 berti, G., 131 e 1,251 160 al de Hontanon, J., 159 F.di, 109 Keldermans, R., 139 ez de Mora, J., 233 Freire, San, 56 Landfridus, Lapo, A. di, INDEX TO THE LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL ARCHITECTS. Erwin von Steinbach, 68 Estienne de Bonneuill, 49 Falconetto, G. M., 162 Fitz-Odo, E., 47 Forment, D., 177 Formentone, T., 110 Francesco di Giorgio, 109 Fufitius or Fussitius, xlii Graham, J. G., 326 Hacket, D., 86 Hardwick, P., 348 Helyas de Berham, 46 Honecort, W. de, 60 Ictinus, xiii Isidorus of Miletus, 17 239 1137 Mascal, or Marshall, E., 174 Stephano, 68 Memno, ix Menesicles, xv Mercier, J. le, 222, 226 Merliano, G., 157 Merlini, D., 292 Messidius, xliii Montferrand, A. R. de, 332 Mormando, G. F., 128 Morrison, Sir R. and W. V., |