Evolution of Architecture: Man Civilisa Ons, Se - Lements and Broad Characteris Cs
Evolution of Architecture: Man Civilisa Ons, Se - Lements and Broad Characteris Cs
Evolution of Architecture: Man Civilisa Ons, Se - Lements and Broad Characteris Cs
STRUCTURE OF PRESENTATION
HOW
IT
STARTED
SETTLEMENTS
EVOLUTION
HISTORICAL
PERIODS
THE
TRIO
MESOPOTAMIA,EGYPT,INDUS
VALLEY
CIVILIZATION
HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE
HOW
IT
STARTED
WE
HAVE
HAD
A
HISTORY
OF
HAVES
AND
HAVE
NOTS
IN
HISTORY
WE
MAY
REFER
TO
EVOLUTION
OF
EVERYTHING
STARTING
FROM
THE
UNIVERSE
TO
THE
OLD
CITY
IN
A
PRESENT
DAY
METROPOLITAN.
CIVILISATION
HAS
ORIGINATED
FROM
civitas
MEAN
ING
SETTLEMENTS
IN
LATIN.
POLITICS
MAN
ECONOMICS
NATURAL
RESOURCES
RELIGION
WATER
FOOD
SAFE
PLACE
HOW IT STARTED
MAN
POLITICS
NATURAL
RESOURCES
RELIGION
WATER
FOOD
SAFE
PLACE
ECONOMICS
SETTLEMENTS
STONE
AGE
The
term
"Stone
Age"
was
used
by
archaeologists
to
designate
this
vast
pre-metallurgic
period
whose
stone
tools
survived
far
more
widely
than
tools
made
from
other
(soZer)
materials.
The
subdivision
into
the
Palaeolithic,
Mesolithic
and
Neolithic
periods.
These
three
periods
are
further
subdivided.
In
reality,
the
succession
of
phases
varies
enormously
from
one
region
(and
culture)
to
another,
indeed,
humanity
con[nued
to
expand
into
new
areas
even
during
the
metal
ages.
PALEOLITHIC PERIOD
WOOD
FIRE
Hun[ng
and
collec[ng
vegetables.
ECONOMY
Food
gathering
WINDBREAK
(CORE
HUT
BLADE TOOLS
A
structure
with
a
roof
supported
with
[mber,
discovered
in
Dolni
Vestonice,
The
Czech
Republic,
dates
to
around
23,000
BC.
The
walls
were
made
of
packed
clay
blocks
&
stones.
Many
huts
made
of
mammoth
bones
were
found
in
Eastern
Europe
and
Siberia.
The
people
who
made
these
huts
were
expert
mammoth
hunters.
Examples
have
been
found
along
the
Dniepr
river
valley
of
Ukraine,
including
near
Chernihiv,
in
Moravia,
Czech
Republic
and
in
southern
Poland.
An
animal
hide
tent
dated
to
around
15000
to
10000
BC,
in
the
Magdalenian,
was
discovered
at
Plateau
Parain,
France.
Accumula[on
of
possessions.
Elec[on
and
sa[sfac[on
of
new
needs.
Leisure
for
inven[on
and
specula[on
Growth
of
large
seilements
,communi[es
and
ci[es.
STONEHENGE
STONE HENGE
CHALCOLITHIC
PERIOD
Begin
using
Copper
but
stone
s[ll
principal
implement
Village
transform
into
towns
Cul[va[on
to
oxen
and
plough
farming
Development
of
Art
of
Copper
Metallurgy
4500
-3500BC
in
Ancient
Near
East
Around
2500
BC
in
Europe
BRONZE AGE
IRON
AGE
Iron
replacing
Bronze
as
principal
element
for
implements
and
weapons
Rare
eg.
Of
early
ornaments
made
of
ferrous
origin
known
Beginning
of
this
age
coincides
with
Chris[an
Era
and
Birth
of
Mohammed
The
Iron
Age
in
each
area
ends
with
the
beginning
of
the
historical
period,
i.e.
the
local
produc[on
of
ample
wriien
sources.
Thus,
for
instance,
the
Bri[sh
Iron
Age
ends
with
the
Roman
Conquest
EVOLUTION
OF
ARCHITECTURE
Endeavour
of
man
to
protect
from
rough
weather/changing
seasons
~
Mother
of
Architecture.
VITRUVIUS - Imitate nests of birds & lairs (den) of beasts , commencing with
arbour
of
twigs
covered
with
mud
then
huts
formed
of
branches
of
trees
covered
with
turf.
OTHER
HISTORIANS
Three
types
of
primi[ve
dwellings
Caves/rocks
occupied
for
hun[ng
,
shing
Hut
for
the
agriculturist
and
Tent
for
those
leading
a
nomadic
life.
EVOLUTION
OF
SETTLEMENTS
Some
of
the
essen[als
for
upcoming
of
a
civilisa[on
are:
WATER
TOPOGRAPHY
AGRICULTURE
/
FOOD
ORIENTATION
SURPLUS
GRAINS
CATTLE
MONEY
MANPOWER
EVOLUTION
THE
VARIOUS
ERAS
GENERALLY
REFER
TO
THE
MATERIAL
USED
(Generally
the
kind
of
material
used
Money
/Barter
System)
THE
HUMAN
EVOLUTION
WAS
DONE
BY
8000
BC.
BY
THEN,
THE
FUNDAMENTAL
UNIT-FAMILY
HAD
EMERGED.
PALEOLITHIC
AGE
8000 BC
NEOLITHIC
AGE
BRONZE AGE
3000 BC
IRON AGE
1500
1000
BC
BC
PLASTIC AGE
1000
AD
HISTORICAL
PERIODS
Ancient
history
CIVILISATION
A
civiliza*on
is
a
society
or
culture
group
normally
dened
as
a
complex
society
characterized
by
the
prac[ce
of
agriculture
and
seilement
in
towns
and
ci[es.
Compared
with
other
cultures,
members
of
a
civiliza[on
are
commonly
organized
into
a
diverse
division
of
labor
and
an
intricate
social
hierarchy.
"Civiliza[on"
is
oZen
used
as
a
synonym
for
the
broader
term
"culture"
in
both
popular
and
academic
circles.
Every
human
being
par[cipates
in
a
culture,
dened
as
"the
arts,
customs,
habits...
beliefs,
values,
behavior
and
material
habits
that
cons[tute
a
people's
way
of
life
Every
society,
civiliza[on
or
not,
has
a
specic
set
of
ideas
and
customs,
and
a
certain
set
of
items
and
arts,
that
make
it
unique.
Civiliza[ons
have
even
more
intricate
cultures,
including
literature,
professional
art,
architecture,
organized
religion,
and
complex
customs
associated
with
the
elite.
PRODUCTS
OF
CIVILISATIONS
The
civiliza[ons
beliefs,
moral
standards,
social
interac[on,
antudes,
values
and
social
consciousness.
ART
CULTURE
ARCHITECTURE
THE
TRIO
The
three
large
alluvial
systems
of
the
Tigris-Euphrates,
the
Nile
and
the
Indus
supported
three
great
ancient
civiliza[ons
which
formed
a
part
of
a
unied
economic
system
The
cradle
of
civiliza*on
is
any
of
the
possible
loca[ons
for
the
emergence
of
civiliza[on.
It
is
usually
applied
to
the
Ancient
Near
Eastern
Chalcolithic
(Ubaid
period,
Naqada
culture),
especially
in
the
Fer*le
MESOPOTAMIA
Of
the
three
great
civiliza[ons,
that
of
Mesopotamia
(rst
the
Sumerian
and
later
the
Babylonian
and
Assyrian)
is
both
the
earliest
in
origin
and
in
many
ways
the
best
4,000
years,
the
inheritance
of
ancient
Sumer
can
s[ll
be
recognized
in
today's
tradi[ons.
Since
many
of
the
prac[ces
and
beliefs
of
Sumer
were
passed
on
to
the
MESOPOTAMIAN
-EGYPTIAN
In
Sumer
there
were
15-20
large
ci[es,
each
surrounded
by
smaller
towns,
villages
and
hamlets.
Urban
conglomera[ons
of
popula[ons,
monumental
architecture
and
wri[ng
were
all
in
existence
by
3500
BC
In
Egypt
we
do
not
know
of
any
ci[es
of
the
early
period,
but
the
later
paiern
was
one
of
a
few
major
ci[es
and
both
medium-sized
and
small
seilements
in
between,
arranged
in
this
case
in
a
linear
paiern
(imposed
by
the
nature
of
seilement
along
the
single
valley
of
the
Nile,
in
contrast
to
the
paiern
arising
in
the
dual
river
system
of
Mesopotamia
or
the
mul[-river
system
of
the
Indus
area)
Mesopotamian
ci[es,
with
their
winding
lanes
and
their
appearance
of
having
grown
up
as
circumstances
required,
without
benet
of
a
preconceived
town
plan
SIMILARITIES
There
were
contacts
between
Mesopotamia
and
the
other
two
areas
but
these
had
no
more
than
peripheral
inuence,
aec[ng
some
aspect
of
the
style
of
the
developing
civiliza[ons.
What
similari[es
exist
are
all
on
the
conceptual
level:
the
prac[ce
of
irriga[on
agriculture,
the
existence
of
ci[es,
of
monumental
art
and
architecture,
of
wri[ng,
the
use
of
mud-brick
and
so
on