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  1. Pugin was the son of the French draughtsman Auguste Pugin, who had immigrated to England as a result of the French Revolution and had married Catherine Welby of the Welby family of Denton, Lincolnshire, England. Pugin was born on 1 March 1812 at his parents' house in Bloomsbury, London, England.

    • Architect
  2. Pugin married Catherine Welby of the Lincolnshire Welby family of Denton and his developing interest in the Gothic was to be magnified in the career of their son Augustus Welby Pugin, an architect who was the leading advocate of Gothicism in 19th century England and the designer of the Palace of Westminster, home of the United ...

    • Catherine Welby
  3. 31 de mar. de 2020 · In 1802, Pugin Snr married Catherine Welby (1769-1833), of the wealthy Lincolnshire Welby family. By 1809, the couple were living at 39 Keppel Street (now Store Street) in Bloomsbury, where Pugin Snr also had an office. Their only son Augustus Welby Northmore Pugin (1812–1852) was born at the home in 1812.

  4. 10 de ago. de 2023 · Ce dernier avait immigré en Angleterre à la suite de la Révolution française avant d'épouser une anglaise du Lincolnshire, Catherine Welby. Big Ben fut le dernier projet de Pugin avant qu'il ne sombre dans la maladie mentale et ne meure en 1852.

  5. W. N. Pugin, hijo de un emigrante francés, Augustus Charles Pugin (ca. 1769-1832), y una inglesa protestante evangélica, Catherine Welby (1768-1833), nació en Londres el 1 de marzo 18121. No consta que estuviera matriculado en alguna escuela durante su niñez, pero tal y como él mismo relata en su auto- 1 Quisiera agradecer a la Dra.

  6. Hardman begins to manufacture metalwork to Pugin’s designs. 1839. Designs churches including St George, Southwark, St John’s Hospital, Alton, St Wilfrid, Hulme, and St Chad's in Birmingham, the first cathedral built in England since the Reformation. 1840.

  7. Pugin was the son of the architect Auguste Charles Pugin (1768/9-1832) and Catherine Welby (c.1772-1833). Though his father was nominally Roman Catholic, his mother was a fanatical protestant, who raised the boy in the tradition of the theologian Edward Irving (1792-1834), whose sermons they frequently attended in the 1820s.