William Henry Leeds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

William Henry Leeds (1786, Norfolk - 1866) was an English architectural critic and journalist.[1]

Leeds was a frequent contributor to the in the 1830s,[2] writing for them on Russian literature as well as architecture.[3] In the 1840s he wrote for the Westminster Review.[4] From 1839 to 1854 he edited the Civil Engineer's and Architect's Journal, and from 1855 to 1856 edited Land and Building News.[5]

He translated Georg Moller's Memorials of German Gothic architecture and edited a revised edition of Decorative Part of Civil Architecture by William Chambers.

Works[]

  • (transl.) Moller's Memorials of German-Gothic Architecture; with additional notes and illustrations from Stirglitz, etc., London: John Weale, 1836
  • Illustrations of the public buildings of London: with descriptions of each edifice, 1838
  • 'an essay on the present state of architectural study and the revival of the Italian style', published with Charles Barry's The Travellers' Club House (1839)
  • Rudimentary architecture for the use of beginners and students. The orders, and their æsthetic principles, London, J. Weale, 1852
  • (ed.) Decorative Part of Civil Architecture by William Chambers, 1866

References[]

  1. ^ Macmillan encyclopedia of architecture, Vol. 2, 1982, p.654
  2. ^ Margaret Belcher, A.W.N. Pugin: an annotated critical bibliography, 1987, p.468
  3. ^ Slavonic and East European review, vol. 40, 1963, p.209
  4. ^ O. Boucher-Rivalain, 'William Henry Leeds (1786-1866), architectural critic, and his contribution to the Westminster Review in the 1840s ', Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens, 55, pp.33-41
  5. ^ S. A. Allibone, Critical Dictionary of English Literature and British and American Authors, 1908, vol. 1
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