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Ancient Architecture

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Title: Ancient Architecture


1
Ancient Architecture
  • Interior Design II

2
Egyptian 3000 BC to Roman period
  • Funerary Buildings
  • Created for Monarchs Nobles
  • Stepped Design
  • Granite, limestone, and sandstone - Both
    sun-dried and kiln-dried bricks were used
    extensively
  • Hieroglyphics were decoration as well as records
    of historic events.

3
Egyptian
  • Temples
  • Columns/Colonnades (post lintel)
  • First stone capital papyrus flower
  • Nile floods deposit fine clay, allowing ceramic
    arts to develop early
  • Sandstone, limestone, granite available for
    obelisks, sculpture, and decorative uses. 
  • Ramps build on the way up, decorate as its
    taken down

4
Mesopotamia Babylon, Assyria, Persia
  • Planned city building, cobblestone streets, and
    architecture itself have their beginnings here
  • Mud brick on a raised plinth (platform base)
  • Walls are ornamented on the outside with
    alternating pilasters and recesses
  • Flat roofs, supported on palm trunks, (assumed)

Ziggurat
5
Mesopotamia
Saddams Palace
Ishtar Gate
6
Greek
  • The temple is the best known form of Greek
    architecture.
  • These biggest and most beautiful buildings
    reflect the importance of religion.
  • The political purpose - to celebrate civic power
    and pride.
  • Beauty lies in ratios proportions The Golden
    Mean

7
The Greeks developed three architectural systems,
called orders, each with their own distinctive
proportions and detailing.
  • Doric

Ionic
Corinthian
The Doric style is sturdy and the capital is
plain. This style was used in mainland Greece and
the colonies in southern Italy and Sicily.
The Ionic style is thinner and more elegant. Its
capital is decorated with a scroll-like design (a
volute). This style was found in eastern Greece
and the islands.
The Corinthian style is seldom used in the Greek
world, but often seen on Roman temples. Its
capital is very elaborate and decorated with
acanthus leaves.
8
Greek
  • Buildings were usually a cube or a rectangle made
    from limestone which was cut into large blocks.
  • Marble was readily available. It was used mainly
    for sculptural decoration, only used as
    structural in the very grandest buildings of the
    Classical period.

9
Etruscans 700 B.C. 280 B.C. (Fall of Rome)
  • Palaces, public buildings, and early temples made
    of wood and brick, so nothing remains.
  • The Etruscans also built aqueducts, bridges, and
    sewers which were built so well they still exist
    today.

10
Etruscan
  • Etruscans are credited with the true stone arch
  • Etruscan architecture was really the beginning of
    Roman architecture.

11
Roman
  • Roman art and architecture shaped by extensive
    borrowing, first from Etruscans, then from
    Greece.
  • One architectural technique that came into use by
    experimentation was the arch and vault.

12
Roman
  • To support the tremendous weight of the arches,
    it was necessary to transmit the force of gravity
    from the top of massive piers to the foundation
    of the arch. The Romans achieved this feat
    through the use of the Keystone block.

13
Roman
  • Circular structures were common as well,
    exemplified by the Temple of Vesta, the Pantheon
    and the Castel Sant'Angelo.

14
Roman
  • The word "arena" is Latin for sand. Sand was
    spread across the amphitheater fighting floor to
    soak up blood.

15
Early Christian
  • Early Christian builders adapted structures that
    had long been used in the Hellenistic and Roman
    worlds. (recycled buildings)
  • Adistinct emphasis was placed on the centralized
    plan, which was of round, polygonal, or cruciform
    shape.

16
Early Christian
  • Developed from Roman secular basilica
  • Rectangular space separated by two rows of
    columns making a nave and two side aisles
  • Separated clergy from congregation

17
Byzantine
  • A continuation of Roman and early Christian
    architecture.
  • Eventually combined architecture of the near
    east, with the Greek cross plan for the churches.

18
Byzantine
  • Brick replaced stone, mosaics replaced carved
    decoration, and complex domes were erected.

19
Ancient America - Mayan
  • Monumental construction
  • Buildings erected on platforms
  • Upper walls decorated with continuous frieze
  • Lime stucco painted vivid colors

20
Mayan
  • Every day dwellings were rectangular
  • Two doorways were placed directly opposite each
    other to allow for the free flow of air.

21
Romanesque
  • Romanesque is characterized by a use of round or
    slightly pointed arches, barrel vaults, cruciform
    piers supporting vaults, and groin vaults.
  • The great carved portals and church facades
  • Stone sculpture seems reborn in the Romanesque.

22
Romanesque
  • Romanesque seems to have been the first
    pan-European style since Roman Imperial
    Architecture and examples are found in every part
    of the continent. Merchants, nobles, knights,
    artisans, and peasants crossed Europe and the
    Mediterranean world for business, war, and
    religious pilgrimages, carrying their knowledge
    of what buildings in different places looked
    like.

23
Gothic
  • Originating in northern France (Denis) in the
    twelfth century, Gothic spread rapidly across the
    continent and England, then invaded Scandinavia,
    confronted the Byzantine provinces.
  • Made appearances, under the aegis of crusader and
    explorer in the Near East and the Americas.
  • By 1400 it had subsumed many types of structures.

24
Gothic
  • There is no fixed set of proportions in the
    parts, and no standard relationship between solid
    and void. The result is a distortion.

25
Gothic
  • Light, open and aerial.
  • Emphasizes verticality
  • Features almost skeletal stone structures
  • Great expanses of glass (stained)
  • Sharply pointed spires
  • Flying butresses
  • Ribbed vaults
  • Pointed arches
  • Inventive sculptural detail

26
Renaissance
  • Rebirth of classical art and learning
  • Classical orders, round arches, and symmetrical
    composition
  • The golden mean

27
Renaissance
  • The ideals of art and architecture became unified
    in the acceptance of classical antiquity and in
    the belief that humanity was a measure of the
    universe.
  • The rebirth of classical architecture, which took
    place in Italy in the 15th century and spread in
    the following century through Western Europe,
    terminated the supremacy of the Gothic style.

28
Chinese
  • Simple, rectangular, low-silhouetted buildings
  • Stone and brick for permanent structures
  • Wooden frameworks on platforms with nonbearing
    screen walls

29
India
  • All surviving architecture is stone
  • Post and lintel, brackets and corbels
  • Rhythmical multiplication of pilasters, cornices,
    moldings, roofs, and finials
  • Overgrowth of sculpture decoration

30
Japanese
  • Exclusively timber
  • Strong Chinese influence
  • Pavilion structures with nonbearing walls
  • Tiled, hipped roofs are widely projecting and
    upward turning.
  • Garden

31
References
  • http//architecture.about.com/library/bl-babylon.h
    tm
  • http//archnet.org/library/sites/
  • www.earchinfo.com/architecture/egyptian.htm
  • http//encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761554529/Rena
    issance_Art_and_Architecture.html
  • http//www.faculty.fairfield.edu/jmac/meso/meso.ht
    m
  • http//www.greatbuildings.com/
  • http//www.historyforkids.org/learn/romans/archite
    cture/etruscans.htm
  • http//www.historylink101.com/lessons/art_history_
    lessons/greek_architecture.htm
  • http//www.lookeducation.com/ancient-architecture-
    mesopotamia.html
  • http//www.museum.upenn.edu/new/worlds_intertwined
    /etruscan/architecture.shtml
  • http//web.kyoto-inet.or.jp/org/orion/eng/hst/hist
    .html
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greek_architecture

32
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