Archaeology Journal 2017-2018 | Issue 6
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Parthenon 1 Parthenon
Parthenon 1 Parthenon Parthenon Παρθενών (Greek) The Parthenon Location within Greece Athens central General information Type Greek Temple Architectural style Classical Location Athens, Greece Coordinates 37°58′12.9″N 23°43′20.89″E Current tenants Museum [1] [2] Construction started 447 BC [1] [2] Completed 432 BC Height 13.72 m (45.0 ft) Technical details Size 69.5 by 30.9 m (228 by 101 ft) Other dimensions Cella: 29.8 by 19.2 m (98 by 63 ft) Design and construction Owner Greek government Architect Iktinos, Kallikrates Other designers Phidias (sculptor) The Parthenon (Ancient Greek: Παρθενών) is a temple on the Athenian Acropolis, Greece, dedicated to the Greek goddess Athena, whom the people of Athens considered their patron. Its construction began in 447 BC and was completed in 438 BC, although decorations of the Parthenon continued until 432 BC. It is the most important surviving building of Classical Greece, generally considered to be the culmination of the development of the Doric order. Its decorative sculptures are considered some of the high points of Greek art. The Parthenon is regarded as an Parthenon 2 enduring symbol of Ancient Greece and of Athenian democracy and one of the world's greatest cultural monuments. The Greek Ministry of Culture is currently carrying out a program of selective restoration and reconstruction to ensure the stability of the partially ruined structure.[3] The Parthenon itself replaced an older temple of Athena, which historians call the Pre-Parthenon or Older Parthenon, that was destroyed in the Persian invasion of 480 BC. Like most Greek temples, the Parthenon was used as a treasury. -
The Garter Room at Stowe House’, the Georgian Group Journal, Vol
Michael Bevington, ‘The Garter Room at Stowe House’, The Georgian Group Journal, Vol. XV, 2006, pp. 140–158 TEXT © THE AUTHORS 2006 THE GARTER ROOM AT STOWE HOUSE MICHAEL BEVINGTON he Garter Room at Stowe House was described as the Ball Room and subsequently as the large Tby Michael Gibbon as ‘following, or rather Library, which led to a three-room apartment, which blazing, the Neo-classical trail’. This article will show Lady Newdigate noted as all ‘newly built’ in July that its shell was built by Lord Cobham, perhaps to . On the western side the answering gallery was the design of Capability Brown, before , and that known as the State Gallery and subsequently as the the plan itself was unique. It was completed for Earl State Dining Room. Next west was the State Temple, mainly in , to a design by John Hobcraft, Dressing Room, and the State Bedchamber was at perhaps advised by Giovanni-Battista Borra. Its the western end of the main enfilade. In Lady detailed decoration, however, was taken from newly Newdigate was told by ‘the person who shewd the documented Hellenistic buildings in the near east, house’ that this room was to be ‘a prodigious large especially the Temple of the Sun at Palmyra. Borra’s bedchamber … in which the bed is to be raised drawings of this building were published in the first upon steps’, intended ‘for any of the Royal Family, if of Robert Wood’s two famous books, The Ruins of ever they should do my Lord the honour of a visit.’ Palmyra otherwise Tedmor in the Desart , in . -
Tine Statue of Athena in the Parthenon
REMARKS UPON THE COLOSSALCHRYSELEPHAN- TINE STATUE OF ATHENA IN THE PARTHENON INTRODUCTION IT is not to be expectedthat even fragmentsof the gold and ivory colossal statue of Athena in the Parthenon should have survived the ravages of time. However, a good deal is known about the statue from small copies in the round and from coins, plaques, gems and the like; also, the famous statue is mentioned by ancient writers, sometimes at considerable length. Consequently we have a fairly good idea of her appearance. And when we come to consider the pedestal on which the statue stood, we find that there are data which can be studied to advantage. Obviously the importance of the statue called for a carefully designed pedestal. Thus it is desirable that all existing data concerning the pedestal be recorded. Let us, then, make a few remarks not only about the colossal statue, but also about the pedestal on which the statue stood. I ATHENA PARTHENOS, THE CLIMAX OF THE PANATHENEA Figure 1 shows the position of the colossal statue (often referred to as the Parthenos) in the east cella of the temple. The blocks which give the position of the statue are toward the west end of the nave and on the axis of the temple. They are poros blocks of the type used for foundations. They are flush with the marble pave- ment of the nave, and they are in situ. The poros blocks, thirty in number, cover an area so extensive that they at once tell us that the statue which stood above them was of colossal size (Figs. -
Ancient Greek Architecture
Greek Art in Sicily Greek ancient temples in Sicily Temple plans Doric order 1. Tympanum, 2. Acroterium, 3. Sima 4. Cornice 5. Mutules 7. Freize 8. Triglyph 9. Metope 10. Regula 11. Gutta 12. Taenia 13. Architrave 14. Capital 15. Abacus 16. Echinus 17. Column 18. Fluting 19. Stylobate Ionic order Ionic order: 1 - entablature, 2 - column, 3 - cornice, 4 - frieze, 5 - architrave or epistyle, 6 - capital (composed of abacus and volutes), 7 - shaft, 8 - base, 9 - stylobate, 10 - krepis. Corinthian order Valley of the Temples • The Valle dei Templi is an archaeological site in Agrigento (ancient Greek Akragas), Sicily, southern Italy. It is one of the most outstanding examples of Greater Greece art and architecture, and is one of the main attractions of Sicily as well as a national momument of Italy. The area was included in the UNESCO Heritage Site list in 1997. Much of the excavation and restoration of the temples was due to the efforts of archaeologist Domenico Antonio Lo Faso Pietrasanta (1783– 1863), who was the Duke of Serradifalco from 1809 through 1812. • The Valley includes remains of seven temples, all in Doric style. The temples are: • Temple of Juno, built in the 5th century BC and burnt in 406 BC by the Carthaginians. It was usually used for the celebration of weddings. • Temple of Concordia, whose name comes from a Latin inscription found nearby, and which was also built in the 5th century BC. Turned into a church in the 6th century AD, it is now one of the best preserved in the Valley. -
Temples with Transverse Cellae in Republican and Early Imperial Italy
BABesch 82 (2007, 333-346. doi: 10.2143/BAB.82.2.2020781) Forms of Cult? Temples with transverse cellae in Republican and early Imperial Italy Benjamin D. Rous Abstract This article presents an analysis of a particular temple type that first appeared during the Late Republic, the temple with transverse cella. In the past this particular cella-form has been interpreted as a solution to spatial constraints. In more recent times it has been argued that the cult associated with the temple was the decisive factor in the adoption of the transverse cella. Neither theory, when considered in isolation, can fully and con- vincingly explain the particular forms of both Republican and Imperial temples. Rather, it can be argued that a combination of pragmatic and above all aesthetic considerations has played a major role in the particular archi- tecture of these temples.* INTRODUCTION archaeological evidence, even though the remains of the building itself have never been excavated. In the fourth book of his famous treatise on archi- Furthermore, this is one of the temples actually tecture, Vitruvius mentions a specific temple-type, mentioned by Vitruvius in his treatise. In yet an- whose basic characteristic is that all the features other case, the temple of Aesculapius in the Latin normally found on the short side of the temple colony of Fregellae, although construction activi- have been transferred to the long side. What this ties have destroyed virtually the entire temple basically means is that the pronaos still constitutes building, a reconstruction of a transverse cella the front part of the temple, but instead of being nevertheless seems likely on the basis of the scant longitudinally developed, the cella is rotated 90º remains we do have. -
Art Concepts
ANCIENT ART - Greece Acropolis Greek, “high city.” In ancient Greece, usually the site of the city’s most important temple(s). Amphora A two-handled jar used for general storage purposes, usually to hold wine or oil. Archaic Smile In Archaic Greek sculpture, the smile sculptors represented on faces as a way of indicating that the person portrayed is alive. Atlant (Atlas) A male figure that functions as a supporting column. Black-Figure In early Greek pottery, the silhouetting of dark Painting figures against a light background of natural, reddish clay, with linear details incised through the silhouettes. Capital The uppermost member of a column, serving as a transition from the shaft to the lintel. In classical architecture, the form of the capital varies with the order. Caryatid A female figure that functions as a supporting column. Cella The chamber at the center of an ancient temple; in a classical temple, the room (Greek, naos) in which the cult statue usually stood. ANCIENT ART - Greece Centaur In ancient Greek mythology, a fantastical creature, with the front or top half of a human and the back or bottom half of a horse. Contrapposto The disposition of the human figure in which one part is turned in opposition to another part (usually hips and legs one way, shoulders and chest another), creating a counterpositioning of the body about its central axis. Sometimes called “weight shift” because the weight of the body tends to be thrown to one foot, creating tension on one side and relaxation on the other. Corinthian Corinthian columns are the latest of the three Greek styles and show the influence of Egyptian columns in their capitals, which are shaped like inverted bells. -
Greek Art – Architecture
APAH: Greek Art – Architecture Temples Evolution from shrines to temples Evolution from wood/mud-brick construction to marble Availability of marble Housed cult statues Public ritual – not private Face outward – Altar at front of temple Building as sculpture Exterior more important than interior Monuments not just buildings Built without mortise – extreme precision Reflects Greek principles: symmetry, harmony, balance, order Ideal forms Contrast to other civilizations Mathematical order – Rationality Development – complexity Temple Orders Order = Platform – Column – Entablature Doric, Ionic, Corinthian Platform – Podium Stylobate Stereobate Column (2 or 3 part) – Base, Shaft, Capital No base on Doric columns Fluting – vertical channels Doric-sharp Ionic-flat Entasis – Gradual curving (tapering) toward column top Drum – Column segment Entablature Architrave Frieze – Decorated band b/w architrave and cornice Doric Triglyphs, Metopes Ionic Open Used for reliefs Cornice – projecting crown of entablature Pediment – triangular space at the end of a building Temple Forms Elevation – drawing of building profile Cella – room Naos – room for cult statue Portico – porch Colonnade – walkway w/ columns Prostyle – in front Amphiprostyle – along ends Peripteral – around Dipteral – around twice Early Architecture Plan of Temple A (c. 625 BC) Prinias, Greece (Crete) Simple megaron Sculptural decoration Archaic Architecture Temple of Hera I (c. 550 BC) Paestum, Italy Doric order Unusual central column row Lack of central space Forced canonical break Odd -
Archaic and Classical Cult Statues in Greece
ARCHAIC AND CLASSICAL CULT STATUES IN GREECE THE SETTING AND DISPLAY OF CULT IMAGES IN THE ARCHAIC AND CLASSICAL PERIODS IN GREECE By SHERR! DAWSON, B.A. A Thesis Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies In Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements For the Degree Master of Arts McMaster Uni versity © Copyright by Sherri Dawson, June 2002 MASTER OF ARTS (2002) McMaster University (Classical Studies) Hamilton, Ontario TITLE: The Setting and Display of Cult Images in the Archaic and Classical Peri ods in Greece. AUTHOR: Sherri Dawson, B. A. (Uni versity of Alberta) SUPERVISOR: Dr. Gretchen Umholtz NUMBER OF PAGES: xii, 257. 11 ABSTRACT The focus of this thesis is on ancient archaic and classical Greek cult statues and how their placement reflects both the role of the statues themselves and the continuity in worship. Greek sanctuaries generally exhibited a strong continuity of cult in terms of building successive temples directly on top of the remains of their predecessors. The sanctuary of Hera on Samos and the sanctuary of Apollo at Didyma are two such sanctuaries in Asia Minor that exhibit this type of continuity even though their early temples were replaced by large superstructures. The temple of Athena Nike in Athens is another example of continuity, since the larger Classical temple was built on the same site as the archaic one. The Athenian Parthenon, the temple of Zeus at Olympia, the Classical Heraion at Argos and the Classical temple of Dionysos on the south slope in Athens, however, were not built on the same site as the archaic temples. -
1 Preprint of Marconi, C. 2019. "New Evidence for Early Greek Settlement on the Acropolis of Selinunte."
Preprint of Marconi, C. 2019. "New Evidence for Early Greek Settlement on the Acropolis of Selinunte." In Listening to the Stones: Essays on Architecture and Function in Ancient Greek Sanctuaries in Honour of Richard Alan Tomlinson, eds. Elena C. Partida and Barbara Schmidt-Dounas, 252–261. Gloucester: Archaeopress. New Evidence for Early Greek Settlement on the Acropolis of Selinunte Clemente Marconi, Institute of Fine Arts–NYU1 In 2006, the Institute of Fine Arts at New York University started a new project of topographical, architectural, and archaeological investigation of the main urban sanctuary on the so-called Acropolis of Selinunte. In our first ten years of work, we have been focusing on the southern sector of the sanctuary, including Temple B and its altar, Temple R, the southern portion of Temple C, the peribolos wall, and the South Building [Figure 1].2 This new investigation has included the systematic documentation of the structures in the area, their block- by-block analysis, and the excavation of a series of trenches, mainly in correspondence of their foundations. The southern sector of the main urban sanctuary was repeatedly investigated and excavated between the nineteenth and twentieth centuries (especially by the Commissione di Antichità e Belle Arti in Sicily in the early nineteenth century, by Francesco Saverio Cavallari in 1876, and by Ettore Gàbrici in the early 1920s), and we did not expect to find much stratigraphy left, since the buildings had been excavated down to the level of their foundations. However, our excavations have shown that the foundations of Temple B, its altar, and the South Building were laid not on the bedrock but on layers of earth and sand, for various possible reasons, including antiseismic considerations. -
The Archaic and Classical Greek Temple Callie Williams University of Arkansas, Fayetteville
Inquiry: The University of Arkansas Undergraduate Research Journal Volume 7 Article 4 Fall 2006 Development of Gendered Space: The Archaic and Classical Greek Temple Callie Williams University of Arkansas, Fayetteville Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.uark.edu/inquiry Part of the Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance and Baroque Art and Architecture Commons Recommended Citation Williams, Callie (2006) "Development of Gendered Space: The Archaic and Classical Greek Temple," Inquiry: The University of Arkansas Undergraduate Research Journal: Vol. 7 , Article 4. Available at: http://scholarworks.uark.edu/inquiry/vol7/iss1/4 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UARK. It has been accepted for inclusion in Inquiry: The nivU ersity of Arkansas Undergraduate Research Journal by an authorized editor of ScholarWorks@UARK. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Williams: Development of Gendered Space: The Archaic and Classical Greek Te 4 INQUIRY Volume 7 2006 DEVELOPMENT OF GENDERED SPACE: THE ARCHAIC AND CLASSICAL GREEK TEMPLE By Callie Williams . Program in Architectural Studtes Faculty Mentor: Dr. Kim Sexton Department of Architecture view specific forms of architectural space through the Greek Abstract: ideals of gender hierarchy .. Initially, the function and occu~~ncy Throughout the ancient Greek world, temples marked the ofcertain typical spaces created structures with inherentcondiU?ns landscape as a sign of Greek civilization. Although Greek of internal and external space. Greek ideals oflived space- I.e., temples hare been examined, described, and catalogued space lived directly through associated images an~ symbols - scientifically since archaeology came ofage in the 18'h century, would have influenced the design of both domestic (e.g., the the question oftlzeircultural significance in their original Greek Greek house or oikos) and public venues\e.g., the agora).' The context has vet to be fully answered. -
Athena Parthenos in Nashville and Athens
�������������������������������������� Athena Parthenos in Nashville and Athens The Parthenon on the acropolis in Athens was an architectural and sculptural masterpiece, with soaring columns, a spacious cella, figured metopes, friezes and pedimental sculptures. Unfortunately, what remains on the acropolis now, after the passage of over 2400 years (with consequent erosion and pollution damage), conversion to a church, a mosque and, most disastrously, an ammunition dump, and dispersion of much of the art to world museums, is a pale image of what once was. The only positive gain as a result of the deterioration of the marble (mainly from the rusting of iron reinforcing rods) is that archaeologists working on restorations have had to take the temple apart block by block and have often discovered new facts about the building - e.g., evidence for some windows, a stairway inside to the second level, a small shrine in one of the colonnades. One of the striking features of the temple was the huge (40 foot plus 2 foot base) statue of Athena Parthenos in the cella, the height of which space was made possible by imposing a second row of Doric columns above a ground-level Pi-shaped row. The second level was needed to reach that height because single Doric columns that tall (because of the height to diameter relation of a Doric column) would have made bases so big there would have been no room left in cella for people. For those who cannot get to Athens or who want to see what the Parthenon building and the Athena statue would have looked like in 5th century BC, an option now exists: the Parthenon reconstructed in Nashville. -
Pergamon-Bergama
6 Hafta: Pergamon, Priene Bergama: -Carl Human, 1878-1886, -Alexander Conze, 1901-1910, -Wilhelm Dörpfeld‘in (1853-1940). -Theodor Wiegand ,1927-1932 -Eric Boehringer, 1957-1968 -Wolfgang Radt, -Felix Pirson Pergamon-Bergama -Pergamon Architecture and Its Sculpture Effects -- Assos, Aigai -Architecture and Sculptural Influences and Propaganda: - Stoas of Attalos and market buildings, baroque sculptor Pergamon Philetairos 281-263 BC Eumenes I, 263-241 BC Attalos I 241-197 BC II. Eumenes 197-159 BC II. Attalos BC 159-138 III. Attalos 138-133 BC Aristonicus Main Gate II. Eumenes, Palace - First half of 2nd century BC, peristyl house I. Attalos, Palace - First half of 2nd century BC, peristyl house From the area where the parking lot is located today, a modern ramp leads to the main gate on the Acropolis walls. Walls and door II. It is from the Eumenes period. A large hellenistic house is reached by passing through the area where the house of the guard of the door next to it is located and by passing the military storage rooms. This Peristyl house, dated to the first half of the 2nd century BC, is probably II. Eumenes' palace. Mosaic remains by an artist named Hephaistion are found in the north east and north west hall of the Altar room. The next residential space is another house with peristyle, perhaps the palace of Attalos I. The area in the far north east was turned into a kaserna for palace guardianship in the 2nd century BC. Only the foundations of these structures can be seen today. Arsenal Behind another partition wall in the northernmost part of the castle is the arsenal structure built a little deep.