Looking at Buildings

, printed from the Looking at Buildings website on Thursday 28th March 2024

Religious Buildings

parish churches [1] for local communities, cathedrals [2], which each formed the seat of a bishop, the senior member of the clergy responsible for a larger region known as a diocese, and abbey churches [3] which served monasteries.

parish churches [4] and cathedrals were adapted for the Protestant Church of England, or Anglican church, which placed greater emphasis on preaching and participation by the laity.

Alternative forms of worship were at first suppressed, but by the later 17th century Nonconformists were building their own chapels and meeting houses [5], while Roman Catholics [6] who had not accepted Protestant reforms worshipped in private chapels until they were permitted to build their own churches after the Catholic Emancipation Act of 1829.

classicalGlossary Term [7] styles of architecture were employed for rebuilt and new churches [8], but the impact of many hundreds of surviving medieval churches has ensured that GothicGlossary Term [9] has remained widely associated with church building, a concept strengthened by the GothicGlossary Term [10] Revival of the 19th century [11], whose concepts remained influential into the 20th century [12]. For churches of the later 20th century there have been radical innovations in style, buildings materials and interior layout.

synagogues [13] date from the end of the 17th century, after Cromwell lifted the ban; many more were built in the later 19th century, after the arrival of refugee Ashkenazi Jews from Eastern Europe. 20th century immigration has led to the establishment of places of worship for other faiths [14], at first in converted buildings, but increasingly in purpose built complexes also serving as cultural centres and schools for their religious communities. Temples [15] for Hindus and Buddhists, and Mosques [16] for followers of Islam are now to be found in many large towns.

Last updated: Monday, 26th January 2009