Wikipedia:Naming conventions (architecture)

This page is a complement to Wikipedia's naming conventions, not a replacement. Always consider Wikipedia:Naming conventions when naming a page.

Naming convention

edit

Common names should be used, plus the name of the settlement, administrative division or country in which the building is located where necessary.

Buildings

edit

Towers

edit

Tower articles should be titled after their common names (Leaning Tower of Pisa)

Places of worship (churches, monasteries, cathedrals, abbeys etc.)

edit

  • Articles on places of worship should be named using the most commonly known English name (e.g., Cathedral of St. John the Divine, formally known as the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine).
If there is no English name by which the church is commonly known (this is mostly regarding places of worship in non-English-speaking territories), then this order should be used:
  • The Saint's name(s) first, followed by the word monastery, church, cathedral, abbey, etc.St. Archangels Monastery rather than Monastery of Saint Archangels; St. John's Church rather than Church of St. John.
  • The words Church, Monastery, Cathedral, Abbey should be capitalised; St. John's Church rather than St. John's church
  • When the church or monastery name is also the name of a church saint, "St." rather than "Saint"St. Peter's Church, St. Peter's Cathedral, St. Peter's Abbey, etc.[1]
  • Use of full stop (period) (.) after "St"; St. Mary's Church versus St Mary's Church is a matter of WP:ENGVAR; refer to use in reliable sources and consistency within the nation.
  • In instances where multiple places of worship have the same name or dedication, use the name of the settlement or administrative division in which the building is located—St. Mark's Church, Belgrade; St. Mark's Church, Zagreb.
    • The name of the location of the building should be used without brackets and should be separated from the building's name with a comma—St. Mark's Church, Zagreb rather than St. Mark's Church (Belgrade).

Geographical placenames (towns, cities, etc.)

edit
  • For landmarks and geographical names in the US, the abbreviation "St." is commonly used with a full stop (period)—St. Augustine, Florida
  • For landmarks and geographical names in the UK, the abbreviation "St" is commonly used without a full stop (period)—St Albans.
  • For landmarks and geographical names in other territories, use the most-common, locally-used convention. If no local variety of English can be defined, the word "Saint" should not be abbreviated (e.g., Saint Petersburg for the Russian city). [2]

Mills

edit

Lighthouses

edit
  • An alternative convention is to use "light" or "Light" instead of "Lighthouse". There is no established preference of one format over the other, or variance on a case-by-case basis based on use in sources.

Landmarks

edit

Landmarks should follow the same conventions as all other buildings, written above.

Architects

edit

Wikipedia:Naming conventions (people) is useful as a guide to writing architects' names.

See also

edit

References

edit