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Both show the four-centred arch with carved decoration above.
Four four-centred arches on granite pillars make up the arcade.
In the base, under a carved four-centred arch, is the king as in the earlier seal.
The four-centred arch typically opens on to a central courtyard or Sehan.
A fireplace was located in the north wall, with moulded four-centred arch and jambs.
The Depressed or four-centred arch is much wider than its height and gives the visual effect of having been flattened under pressure.
The north door, fitted with strap hinges, has a four-centred arch and wave moulding.
The four-centred arch is widely used in Islamic architecture, especially that of Persianate cultures.
The arcades each consist of six four-centred arches, supported on monolith granite pillars.
Tall lancet-like three-light windows with four-centred arches and Perp tracery.
Arcade of tall piers of Perp section carrying four-centred arches.
It has north and south aisles and arcades with characteristically late-Perpendicular four-centred arches.
Between the porch and the nave is a window on the southern wing, which has two openings covered by a "four-centred arch and hood mould."
The west door is perpendicular with a double hollow chamfered four-centred arch and fleurons and ball flower decoration.
It has a six-bay front, with four-centred arches, and a hipped roof with four polygonal shafts.
The front porch is entered through a four-centred arch above which is a three-storey bay-window protruding and supported by corbels.
A four-centred arch, also known as a depressed arch or Tudor arch, is a low, wide type of arch with a pointed apex.
It is built in brick and has some fine Tudor gateways in this material which have the flattened, four-centred arch, typical of the later Perpendicular period.
The arcades each have seven four-centred arches of granite, supported by monolith granite pillars with sculpted capitals of St Stephens porcelain stone.
The kitchen fireplace and two of the doorways have four-centred arches that date from about 1500, and the north wing has two square-headed windows from the later 16th century.
The doorway has a four-centred arch in a square head with traceried spandrels, and its outer mouldings are continuous with those of the window above, so that they form one composition.
West of the window, on the north side, is a four-centred arch of two moulded orders with attached shafts and moulded capitals and bases, leading into the north chapel.
Medieval architecture was completed with the 16th century Tudor style; the four-centred arch, now known as the Tudor arch, was a defining feature as were wattle and daub houses domestically.
The long schoolrooms are set back behind a one-storey 6-bay arcade of flat four-centred arches to slate lean-to roof, covering wide paired plank doors, and plank doors on returns, giving access to wings.
In the south wall is an early 14th-century window of two pointed lights with a trefoil above in a roundhead, and farther west is a doorway of about 1600, with a four-centred arch in a square head.