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From Jackie Craven 1840 - 1885: ItalianatePicture Dictionary of House Styles in North America and Beyond Italiante became the most popular housing style in Victorian America. Italianate is also known as the Tuscan, the Lombard, or simply, the bracketed style.
![]() Photo © 2005 Jupiterimages Corporation Old World ideals are transplated to the United States in this Italianate style home, located in Cape May, New Jersey. Italianate houses have many of these features:
The Italianate style began in England with the picturesque movement of the 1840s. For the previous 200 years, English homes tended to be formal and classical in style. With the picturesque, movement, however, builders began to design fanciful recreations of Italian Renaissance villas. When the Italianate style moved to the United States, it was reinterpreted again to create a uniquely American style. By the late 1860s, Italianate was the most popular house style in the United States. Historians say that Italianate became the favored style for two reasons:
After the 1870s, architectural fashion turned toward late Victorian styles such as Queen Anne. Video: Learn More:
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