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Finely dressed stone and associated masonry
Ashlar (/ˈæʃlər/) is cut and dressed stone worked to achieve a specific form, typically rectangular; a structure built from such stones; and the look created
Ashlar
Historic house in Tennessee, United States
Ashlar Hall is a historic mock castle in Memphis, Tennessee. The two-story mansion was completed in 1896. It was designed as a mock castle. The mansion
Ashlar_Hall
1727777; -117.805 Ashlar Ridge is a ridge in Alberta, Canada. The ridge has the character of an ashlar wall, hence the name. "Ashlar Ridge". Geographical
Ashlar_Ridge
American software company
Vellum Investment Partners, LLC, dba Ashlar-Vellum, is an American software company that develops Computer-aided design (CAD) and 3D modeling software
Ashlar-Vellum
Uncut stone laid in place in a building
listel. A bossed ashlar, rusticated ashlar, or quarry-faced ashlar, used in bossed masonry or drafted margin masonry, is an ashlar worked in an ancient
Bossage
Type of building stone
faced with unit masonry such as brick or ashlar. Some medieval cathedral walls have outer shells of ashlar with an inner backfill of mortarless rubble
Rubble_masonry
Masonry blocks at the corner of a wall
brickwork in such a way as to give the appearance of generally uniformly cut ashlar blocks of stone larger than the bricks. Where quoins are decorative and
Quoin
Group of fraternal organizations
compasses, the level and plumb rule, the trowel, the rough and smooth ashlars, among others. Moral lessons are attributed to each of these tools, although
Freemasonry
Category B-listed bridge over the Overtoun Burn
Milner to design a bridge. The bridge, which is constructed from rough-faced ashlar, was completed in June 1895. It comprises three arches that span a steep
Overtoun_Bridge
The Most Worshipful Smooth Ashlar Grand Lodge F&AAYM is a subordinate Masonic Grand Lodge of the Most Worshipful National Grand Lodge of Free and Accepted
Smooth_Ashlar_Grand_Lodge
Country in the Horn of Africa
architectures in antiquity was begun during the Dʿmt period.[clarification needed] Ashlar masonry was an archetype of South Arabian architecture with the most architectural
Ethiopia
Creation of buildings, structures, and sculpture using stone
antonymous to ashlar masonry. Can be infill in an ashlar wall, used in cyclopean concrete, and other contexts. The term is antonymous to "ashlar". Dry stone
Stonemasonry
Series of supernatural horror novels by Anne Rice
Mona is the "ascendant character" of Taltos. The novel also introduces Ashlar, an ancient Taltos living in New York, whom Theroux described as a "mild
Lives_of_the_Mayfair_Witches
Type of sandstone, or U.S. townhouse built thereof
Old Queens (built 1809–1823) at Rutgers University was constructed from ashlar brownstone quarried near New Brunswick, New Jersey.
Brownstone
Masonry technique of texturing
finish texture that contrasts with smooth, squared-block masonry called ashlar. The visible face of each individual block is cut back around the edges
Rustication_(architecture)
Pre-Columbian architecture in South America
categories identified by Rowe: Cellular polygonal masonry: with small blocks Ashlar polygonal masonry: with very large stones Encased coursed masonry: in which
Inca_architecture
Grade I listed hotel in Newark and Sherwood, United Kingdom
time during their history. The hall is constructed of rock-faced ashlar with ashlar dressings. It is built in four storeys with a square floor plan surrounding
Thoresby_Hall
Decorative knob
decorative knob on a ceiling, wall or sculpture, or a prominence on an ashlar. Bosses can often be found in the ceilings of buildings, particularly at
Boss_(architecture)
Type of stonework
archaeologists today would classify as cyclopean, the fourth now is referred to as ashlar and is not considered cyclopean. There is a more detailed description of
Cyclopean_masonry
Structural support
strut: A piece similar to a crown post but not carrying a plate. Ashlar – or ashlar piece: Short post from a tie beam to a rafter near a masonry wall
Post_(structural)
Folly in UK, United Kingdom
Creech Grange, Denis Bond, in 1746, is built in the form of a triple arch of ashlar stone. The central archway is surmounted by battlements and flanked by stone
Grange_Arch
Town in Region of Southern Denmark, Denmark
Romanesque period of granit ashlar on granite foundations, and consists of a chancel and nave. The nave was extended in granite ashlar around the time of the
Sønder_Omme
German electro-industrial band
project by Disc jockey Ashlar von Megalon (DJ Ash) in 2004. Heimatærde was founded in 2004, as a studio project by German DJ Ashlar von Megalon. After the
Heimatærde
2010 animated film
tells them that Mallock terrorized the medieval planet Ashlar before being imprisoned. Ashlar's former king, Revet, sacrificed himself to protect the kingdom
Lego: The Adventures of Clutch Powers
Lego:_The_Adventures_of_Clutch_Powers
Concrete that has been imprinted
Concrete being stamped with an Ashlar Slate pattern
Stamped_concrete
Monument in Kingston Upon Hull, England
and abolitionist William Wilberforce in Kingston Upon Hull, England. The ashlar structure consists of a Doric column topped by a statue of Wilberforce.
Wilberforce_Monument
Courtyard in Ciudad de La Habana, Cuba
constructed of ashlar stone masonry, a finely dressed (cut, worked) stone, either an individual stone that was worked until squared. Ashlar is the finest
Palacio_de_Aldama
Country house in Lincolnshire, England
The house is constructed in '2½ storeys', featuring ashlar and dressed limestone rubble with ashlar dressings, and a slate hipped roof with a seven-bay
Leadenham_House
Girls' school in Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire, England
to complete the symbol. The Ashlar is the silver badge that RMS may achieve by the end of Year 11. The award of the Ashlar shows that a girl has been recognised
The Royal Masonic School for Girls
The_Royal_Masonic_School_for_Girls
Grade I listed building in Cheshire, England
squared buff sandstone rubble with sandstone dressings; the later work is in ashlar sandstone. The whole house has a roof of Welsh slates. The symmetrical north
Lyme_Park
Architectural style of Northern Europe
significant Brick Gothic church of the Baltic Sea region, have corners of granite ashlar. Many village churches in northern Germany and Poland have a Brick Gothic
Brick_Gothic
Mycenaean tholos tomb built c. 1450 BCE
of the oldest and later tholoi at Mycenae, such as the incorporation of ashlar masonry into the dromos and the use of a relieving triangle, though this
Tomb_of_Aegisthus
15th-century Inca citadel in Peru
an irregular, cave-like space between wedged boulders and contains fine ashlar masonry with several trapezoidal niches, in some places the natural rock
Machu_Picchu
Church in Buckinghamshire, England
was replaced. St Mary's in constructed in flint and chalk rubble, with ashlar dressings. Small fragments of flint have been inserted in the mortar; this
St Mary Magdalene's Church, Boveney
St_Mary_Magdalene's_Church,_Boveney
Wall building technique
Core-and-veneer, brick and rubble, wall and rubble, ashlar and rubble, and emplekton all refer to a building technique where two parallel walls are constructed
Core-and-veneer
Country house in Scotland, seat of the dukes of Argyll
Revival buildings, together with Strawberry Hill House. It was built of ashlar lapis ollaris. Originally, all the roofs were flat and crenellated. Later
Inveraray_Castle
Ancient type of tower common in Sardinia
to be of ashlar masonry); an inner layer, made of smaller stones (to form a corbelled dome of the bullet-shaped tholos type, and where ashlar masonry is
Nuraghe
3D computer graphics software
parametric way exemplified by programs like Pro/ENGINEER. A product of Ashlar-Vellum, Cobalt is Wireframe-based and history-driven with associativity
Cobalt_(CAD_program)
15th-century Ottoman-era mosque in Balıkesir, northwestern Turkey
the biggest mosque in Balıkesir. The square-plan mosque is constructed in ashlar masonry. It has one main dome surrounded by four side domes, which are separated
Zagan_Pasha_Mosque
Archaeological site in Peru
used ashlar masonry, building from the placement of similarly sized cuboid stones that they hand cut and shaped for this purpose. The use of ashlar masonry
Coricancha
English architect (1826–1882)
were completed in 1884, as a commercial, 3-storey terrace with a gritstone ashlar frontage, slate roof and bracketed eaves. Between the shops are Corinthian
John_Henry_Hirst
Archaeological site in Cyprus
height, was found in a pit dug in the third phase of a very large tripartite ashlar building, built in the Late Cypriot III period (early 12th century BC) over
Enkomi_(archaeological_site)
Motte-and-bailey castle in Shropshire, England
castle walls discovered while sewage pipes were being installed. Some of the ashlar masonry was later re-buried. King, D.J.C., (1983), Castellarium Anglicanum
Newcastle-under-Lyme_Castle
Building techniques in Ancient Rome
construction technique, or construction material. Opus africanum: A form of ashlar masonry, characterized by pillars of vertical blocks of stone alternating
Roman_masonry
Ancient monumental rock-cut tomb in Jerusalem
part, rising higher than the original bedrock, is built of neatly cut ashlars. The lower half is thus a solid, almost perfectly cubical monolithic block
Tomb_of_Absalom
River in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Alhausen, Istrup, and Riesel still have old mill digs. Some old bridges of ashlar are still preserved over the Aa. At the Josefmühle, an arched bridge (replaced
Aa_(Nethe)
Catalan architect (1852–1926)
Astorga was more visible. The porch has three large flared arches, built of ashlar and separated by sloping buttresses. The structure is supported by columns
Antoni_Gaudí
Oldest city wall of Paris, France
about three meters thick at the base. It was made from two walls of large ashlar-faced limestone blocks, reinforced with an infill of rough-hewn stone rubble
Wall_of_Philip_II_Augustus
Bridge over the River Liffey in Ireland
standing today, was constructed. The structure is a single 32-metre span ashlar masonry elliptical arch bridge and was originally named Sarah's Bridge after
Islandbridge
airmen, crash of 23 September 1943 (plaque) (3D eagle statue above) to ashlar stone wall in stone-made, brick and gravel-floored enclosure. Buckden Pike
List_of_Polish_war_cemeteries
Monolithic block of the Western Wall in Jerusalem
The Western Stone is a monolithic ashlar (worked stone block) forming part of the lower level of the Western Wall in Jerusalem. This largest stone in the
Western_Stone
Country house in North Yorkshire, England
miniseries Anne Boleyn. The house is built of coursed squared gritstone and ashlar with grey slate and stone slate roofs. A central two-storey block is flanked
Ripley_Castle
Church in Norfolk, England
mainly in flint with stone and brick dressings. The clerestory is faced with ashlar. The aisles are roofed with lead, and the rest of the church is slated.
St_John_Maddermarket
House in Corsham, United Kingdom
it from unauthorised development, in August 1986. The front range is in ashlar, using Cotswold stone, with a roof of stone tiles, and dates from the 18th
Middlewick_House
19th-century architectural style
baronial style. Baronial style buildings were typically of stone, whether ashlar or masonry. Following Robert William Billings's Baronial and Ecclesiastical
Scottish baronial architecture
Scottish_baronial_architecture
Orthodox monastery in Zvenigorod, Moscow Oblast, Russia
Alexis selected the Zvenigorod monastery as his suburban residence. An ashlar residence for the tsar and a smaller palace for his wife date from the early
Savvino-Storozhevsky Monastery
Savvino-Storozhevsky_Monastery
Country estate in Nottinghamshire, England
The house itself is constructed of rubble, brick, dressed stone and ashlar with ashlar dressings and plain tile roofs. The abbey itself was founded by Gilbert
Rufford_Abbey
Bryant Butler Brooks (1861–1944), seventh governor of Wyoming. Member of Ashlar Lodge No. 10 at Douglas, Wyoming, and later of Casper Lodge No. 15, Casper
List_of_Freemasons_(A–D)
Church in England, England
Victorian Gothic Years built 1849–50 Specifications Materials Sandstone ashlar Administration Province Birmingham Archdiocese Birmingham Parish Rugeley
St Joseph and St Etheldreda, Rugeley
St_Joseph_and_St_Etheldreda,_Rugeley
Church in East Finchley, London, England
Historic England. The church hall was later converted to flats known as Ashlar Court. Historic England. "East Finchley Baptist Church Hall (1359048)".
East_Finchley_Baptist_Church
Church in Suffolk, England
Chancellor to Henry VIII. The church is constructed in flint rubble with ashlar dressings. There is also some flushwork and red brick. Parts of the walls
St_Mary's_Church,_Redgrave
Village in Devon, England
within its churchyard. The parish church of St Michael is built of granite ashlar and stands on a hill. The wagon roofs of the nave, aisle and chancel are
Spreyton
Medieval Crusader castle in Lebanon
construction of the main castle structure and donjon, built with large embossed ashlar blocks similar to those used in the castle of Jbeil. The castle's internal
Castle_of_Smar_Jbeil
Town in Tanger-Tetouan-Al Hoceima, Morocco
unusual in medieval Moroccan town planning. It is built from brick and ashlar masonry and flanked by semi-circular masonry towers. There are three monumental
Ksar_es-Seghir
Castle in Germany
as a cistern or dungeon. On the remains of the eastern side, rusticated ashlar stonework is visible. The isolated eastern castle rock is accessible over
Altdahn_Castle
Grade I listed Jacobean country house in North Yorkshire, England
Howsham, North Yorkshire, England. It is built in two storeys of limestone ashlar to a U-shaped plan with a 7-bay frontage. In the early 16th century the
Howsham_Hall
Vertical structure, usually solid, that defines and sometimes protects an area
the scrawls of friends until it was replaced by the "timeline" feature. Ashlar Chemise (wall) Clay panel Climbing wall Crinkle crankle wall Fabric structure
Wall
Religious site in Jerusalem
far as the Eastern Wall. Ritmeyer identifies specific courses of visible ashlars located to the north and south of the Golden Gate as Judean Iron Age in
Temple_Mount
Roman province that encompassed most of modern-day Egypt
founder's tomb built in a monastery. Some of the White Monastery's limestone ashlars were spolia; the stones were likely taken from the pharaonic buildings
Roman_Egypt
Country house in Sheffield, England
used as their headquarters right up to 2023. The hall is constructed from ashlar with a hipped slate roofs in the Tudor Gothic style. The highlights of the
Banner_Cross_Hall
Village in Northumberland, England
church. C12, C13 and C14. Restored 1830 and later C19. Squared stone and ashlar; chancel and north transept have stone slate roofs; other roofs not visible
Bamburgh
Historic hotel in the US
a “rusticated fantasy appearance.” The building features brick, random ashlar stone, and rough-hewn wood, along with a wood-shake roof and brick-and-stone
El_Rancho_Hotel_&_Motel
Country house in Nottinghamshire, England
parkland. It is constructed in two storeys of red brick with ashlar dressings and standing on an ashlar plinth with a hipped slate roof. The frontage has five
Langford_Hall
Temple in Petra, Jordan
made of a rubble core retained by courses of ashlar masonry. The temple itself is also constructed of ashlar blocks. Access to the temple is provided by
Qasr_al-Bint
15th–16th-century European architectural style
constructed of brick, rendered, or faced with stone in highly finished ashlar masonry, laid in straight courses. The corners of buildings are often emphasized
Renaissance_architecture
Church
the main landmark for the village. The church is built in local gritstone ashlar in an Early English Gothic style and is surrounded by a small graveyard
St_Matthew's_Church,_Hayfield
Burial structure
Clytemnestra (both at Mycenae), all three parts were constructed of fine ashlar masonry. The chambers were built as corbelled vaults, with layers of stone
Beehive_tomb
Indo-European people in Ancient Southeast Europe
holding grapes. Dacians had developed the murus dacicus (double-skinned ashlar-masonry with rubble fill and tie beams) characteristic to their complexes
Dacians
Difference between cyclopean masonry, shown in the blue rectangle, and ashlar masonry, outside the rectangle.
Siegecraft_in_Ancient_Greece
Architectural styles current in the English-speaking world between c. 1714 and 1830
its width or the shape of a room as a double cube. Regularity, as with ashlar (uniformly cut) stonework, was strongly approved, imbuing symmetry and adherence
Georgian_architecture
Train station in Klamath Falls, Oregon, U.S.
1916 for the Southern Pacific Railroad. It is composed of dark grey random ashlar walls with staggered light stone trim highlighting the windows and doors
Klamath_Falls_station
Church in Greater Manchester, England
works in the community. St Peter's is constructed in rock-faced stone with ashlar dressings and has a slate roof. Its plan consists of a five-bay nave with
St_Peter's_Church,_Hindley
American computer scientist
He departed CADLINC to found the computer-aided design software company Ashlar in 1988. In 2007, Newell was elected a member of the National Academy of
Martin Newell (computer scientist)
Martin_Newell_(computer_scientist)
Mansion in Nottinghamshire, England
located 7 miles north-east of Worksop. It is constructed of red brick and ashlar with a hipped slate roof. It is built in two storeys with a nine bay frontage
Serlby_Hall
Office skyscraper in Manhattan, New York
contains either one or two windows on each story. The facade is made of ashlar granite, except for the details above the 23rd floor, which are made of
Manhattan_Municipal_Building
Grade I listed historic house museum in North East Derbyshire, United Kingdom
house was built in stages and has an irregular plan. It is constructed in ashlar and coursed rubble coal measures sandstone with crenellated parapets with
Renishaw_Hall
Knob left on stones by masons for levering or lifting
technology in Ancient Egypt. p. 193. Devolder, Maud; Kreimerman, Igor (2020). Ashlar: Exploring the Materiality of Cut-Stone Masonry in the Eastern Mediterranean
Lifting_boss
Ethnic group
Albania. The rectangular shape of a Kulla is produced with irregular stone ashlars, river pebbles and chestnut woods, however, the size and number of floors
Albanians
Triumphal arch in Paris, France
integral friezes but are treated as independent trophies applied to the vast ashlar masonry masses, not unlike the gilt-bronze appliqués on Empire furniture
Arc_de_Triomphe
Country house in Outer Hebrides, Scotland
a country house. It is built of imported freestone, stugged and snecked ashlar; rubbled masonry is used at the rear. The castellated four-storey main block
Amhuinnsuidhe_Castle
Renaissance palace in Florence, Italy
stone masonry, which includes architectural elements of rustication and ashlar. The tripartite elevation used here expresses the Renaissance spirit of
Palazzo_Medici_Riccardi
US staff college in Newport, Rhode Island
facing of the building is pink Milford granite, similar in appearance to the ashlar granite of Luce Hall, to which it is connected by two enclosed bridges.
Naval_War_College
of the Umm Al Nar culture is circular tombs, typically with well-fitted ashlar stones in the outer wall and multiple human remains within. The Umm Al Nar
History of the United Arab Emirates
History_of_the_United_Arab_Emirates
Monuments in Verona, Italy
during which the depiction of a river deity was placed on the keystone ashlar of the second left arch. Much more troubled was the life of the monument
Monuments_of_Verona
Historic church in Massachusetts, United States
Parish. The church foundation and exterior was built of fieldstone with ashlar cut limestone dressing, boulder walling, and patterned shingles. The interior
First Parish Church (Weston, Massachusetts)
First_Parish_Church_(Weston,_Massachusetts)
Church in West Sussex, England
Hubert Bennett. Tuxlith Chapel is constructed in plastered stone rubble with ashlar dressings and has a tiled roof. Its plan is L-shaped, consisting of a chancel
Tuxlith_Chapel
Ethnic group indigenous to North Africa
craftsmen, the tomb consists of a large tumulus constructed in well-cut ashlar masonry and featuring sixty Doric columns and an Egyptian-style cornice
Berbers
Railway terminal in Manhattan, New York
in 1926. Its walls and seven large transverse arches are made of coursed ashlar travertine, and the floor is terrazzo. The ceiling is composed of seven
Grand_Central_Terminal
Roman aqueduct in Segovia, Spain
water leakage from the upper viaduct, and pollution that caused the granite ashlar masonry to deteriorate and crack, the site was listed in the 2006 World
Aqueduct_of_Segovia
Mosque in Istanbul, Turkey
an octagonal courtyard and is the only building in the complex with an ashlar construction. The carved stone inscription over the entrance from the street
Haseki_Sultan_Complex
ASHLAR
ASHLAR
ASHLAR
ASHLAR
Girl/Female
French, German, Hebrew, Indian, Sindhi
Dear; Man; The Plain
Boy/Male
Hindu
Bowed down, Modest, To bow in a humble greeting
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Sanskrit
Heart; Light of God
Surname or Lastname
English
English : variant spelling of Whittle, found mainly in the Welsh Marches and West Midlands.
Boy/Male
Hindu
Father, Strong
Girl/Female
French American
Favor; grace.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Yamajith | யாமாஜீத
Another name of Lord Shiva
Boy/Male
Christian & English(British/American/Australian)
Residence Name
Boy/Male
Indian, Sanskrit
Wearing the Moon; The Peacock who has a Moonlike Eyes on Its Tail
Girl/Female
Muslim
Rareness
ASHLAR
ASHLAR
ASHLAR
ASHLAR
ASHLAR
n.
A kind of masonry in which the outer faces of the wall are ashlar, the space between being filled with broken stone and mortar. Cross layers of stone are interlaid as binders.
n.
Ashlar when in thin slabs and made to serve merely as a case to the body of the wall.
n.
Alt. of Ashler
n.
The act of bedding ashlar in mortar.
n.
Alt. of Ashlering
n.
The short upright pieces between the floor beams and rafters in garrets. See Ashlar, 2.