Category
page 1Renaissance architecture
Renaissance architecture
architectural style
Italian Renaissance
cultural movement from the 14th to 17th century
Renaissance Revival architecture
branch of 19th-century architectural revival style

Plateresque
thumb|270px|New Cathedral of Salamanca (1513-1733) in the Plateresque made city of [[Salamanca, Castile and León, Spain]]
thumb|270px|Hostal dos Reis Católicos|Hospital of the Catholic Monarchs (1501-1511), in [[Santiago de Compostela, Galicia, Spain]]
Plateresque, meaning "in the manner of a silversmith" (plata being silver in Spanish), was an artistic movement, especially architectural, developed in Spain and its territories, which appeared between the late Gothic and early Renaissance in the late 15th century and spread over the next two centuries. It is a modification of Gothic spatial con
calvary
monumental stations of the cross built on the slopes of a hill
Weser Renaissance
Part of the Renaissance
Herrerian
architectural style in Renaissance Spain
diamond vault
Form of vault church architecture
De re aedificatoria
work by Leon Battista Alberti
buchetta shop
shop selling goods through a small hole in a wall
Agios Marcos
historical church in Heraklion, Greece
Branchwork
thumb|Branchwork on the baptismal font of Wormser Dom|Worms Cathedral
thumb|Branchwork tracery at [[Ulm Minster, c. 1475]]
thumb|Branchwork portal of the former monastery church of Chemnitz (1525)
Branchwork or branch tracery (, Dutch: Lofwerk of Loofwerk) is a type of architectural ornament often used in late Gothic architecture and the Northern Renaissance, consisting of knobbly, intertwined and leafless branches. Branchwork was particularly widespread in Central European art between 1480 and 1520 and can be found in all media. The intellectual origin of branchwork lies in theories in Renais
Mosan renaissance style
architectural style of 16th-18th centuries in Prince-Bishopric of Liège