Brâncovenesc style

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Kretzulescu Church, Bucharest.
Brâncoveanu Monastery, Braşov County.
Horezu Monastery, Vâlcea County.

The Brâncovenesc style, also known as Wallachian Renaissance and Romanian Renaissance, is an art and architectural style that evolved during the administration of Prince Constantin Brâncoveanu in the late 17th and early 18th centuries.[1] Brâncoveanu was an administrator of the Principality of Wallachia (c. 1400 - 1829) under Ottoman Empire overlords, an extremely wealthy aristocrat, and a builder of fine palaces and churches.[1][2]

Description

The design style developed in Wallachia, in present day southern Romania. Brâncovenesc style is synthesis between the Byzantine, Ottoman, late Renaissance, and Baroque architecture. It was also a unique hybrid of Romanian Orthodox Christian ediface styles working with the dominant Islamic architecture of the Ottoman Empire, of which the Principality of Wallachia was then, as a vassal state, an integral part.[2]

Neo-Brâncovenesc

The Brâncovenesc style inspired architect Ion Mincu and others to initiate the Neo-Brâncovenesc/Neo-Romanian architectural style in the latter 19th century.[1][2]

Examples

Examples of buildings in the Brâncovenesc style include:

In Bucharest examples include:

See also

References

External links



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