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Architectural Hybrids? Building, Law and Architectural Design in the Early Modern Iberian World, In Special Issue 'Visual and Spatial Hybridity in the Early Modern Iberian World'

journal contribution
posted on 2023-10-19, 14:37 authored by Laura Fernandez-GonzalezLaura Fernandez-Gonzalez

This article examines the regulation of building practice, construction technology and architectural design in a number of cities in the early modern Iberian world. The influence of classical trends on architecture and urban design in the Iberian world has received extensive attention. Regulatory practice of the built environment during this period in a number of Iberian cities shows the gradual inclusion of Renaissance ideals of order and proportion. However, the contribution of the pre-existing and coeval architectural traditions of Iberia and the integration of indigenous building technologies in America or Asia deserves further scrutiny. This article examines aspects of the codification of the building trade, construction technology and architectural design as a suitable vehicle to explore acculturation and globalization processes. A comparison of the built environment of cities in both the peninsula and urban centres in the former Spanish and Portuguese imperial dominions shows an architectural landscape governed, at times, by similar processes of hybridization or amalgam. The development of urban regulations in cities in distant parts of the Iberian imperial system also challenges existing Eurocentric histories and theories of architecture and urbanism.

History

School affiliated with

  • College of Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities Executive Office (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Renaissance Studies

Volume

34

Issue

4

Pages/Article Number

550-571

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

0269-1213

eISSN

1477-4658

Date Accepted

2019-03-01

Date of First Publication

2019-08-09

Date of Final Publication

2020-09-01

Open Access Status

  • Not Open Access

ePrints ID

35268