A style of English architecture that emerged between the late 1200s and late 1300s. It is considered to be the second of the three phases of English Gothic architecture – following the Early English and preceding the Perpendicular styles. It was a period of increasing prosperity in England, and the architecture of this period was characterised by more elaborate ornamentation and decoration
Examples at Canterbury, date from the time of Prior Henry Eastry (1285/1331) and include the parclose screen around the Choir stalls, the doorway and walls up to the level of the sills of the great windows in the Chapter House and the south window of St Anselm’s Chapel.
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