Audiolibro: Seven Lamps of Architecture
- Download 00 - Preface and Introductory audio
- Download 01 - Chapter I: The Lamp of Sacrifice, part 1 audio
- Download 02 - Chapter I: The Lamp of Sacrifice, part 2 audio
- Download 03 - Chapter II: The Lamp of Truth, part 1 audio
- Download 04 - Chapter II: The Lamp of Truth, part 2 audio
- Download 05 - Chapter II: The Lamp of Truth, part 3 audio
- Download 06 - Chapter III: The Lamp of Power, part 1 audio
- Download 07 - Chapter III: The Lamp of Power, part 2 audio
- Download 08 - Chapter III: The Lamp of Power, part 3 audio
- Download 09 - Chapter IV: The Lamp of Beauty, part 1 audio
- Download 10 - Chapter IV: The Lamp of Beauty, part 2 audio
- Download 11 - Chapter IV: The Lamp of Beauty, part 3 audio
- Download 12 - Chapter IV: The Lamp of Beauty, part 4 audio
- Download 13 - Chapter V: The Lamp of Life, part 1 audio
- Download 14 - Chapter V: The Lamp of Life, part 2 audio
- Download 15 - Chapter V: The Lamp of Life, part 3 audio
- Download 16 - Chapter VI: The Lamp of Memory, part 1 audio
- Download 17 - Chapter VI: The Lamp of Memory, part 2 audio
- Download 18 - Chapter VII: The Lamp of Obedience, part 1 audio
- Download 19 - Chapter VII: The Lamp of Obedience, part 2 audio
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The Seven Lamps of Architecture, published in May 1849, is an extended essay written by the English art critic and theorist John Ruskin. The 'lamps' of the title are Ruskin's principles of architecture, which he later enlarged upon in the three-volume The Stones of Venice. To an extent, they codified some of the contemporary thinking behind the Gothic Revival. At the time of its publication A.W.N. Pugin and others had already advanced the ideas of the Revival and it was well under way in practice. Ruskin offered little new to the debate, but the book helped to capture and summarise the thoughts of the movement. The Seven Lamps also proved a great popular success, and received the approval of the ecclesiologists typified by the Cambridge Camden Society, who criticised in their publication The Ecclesiologist lapses committed by modern architects in ecclesiastical commissions. (Summary from Wikipedia)
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