Pre-History
Pre-History
Pre-History
MODULE-1
PRE-HISTORY
HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE
DEFINITIONS
History of Architecture
• "It is a record of man's effort to build beautifully. It traces the origin,
growth and decline of architectural styles which have prevailed lands and
ages."
Egyptian Byzantine
• BRONZE AGE
• IRON AGE
INFLUENCES
• The success of the human race was largely due to the • Before 9000 BC, nomadic life of hunting & food gathering
development of tools – made of stone, wood, bone • By 9000 BC, farming and agriculture was practiced
• Fertile soil and plentiful food
• Animal domestication for work, milk, wool
ARCHITECTURAL CHARACTER
• People wanted to settle down, live in communities
• First villages in the Middle East, South America, Cent ral
MATERIALS
• Animal skins, wooden frames, animal bones America, India and China
CONSTRUCTION SYSTEM
• Existing or excavated caves
• Megalithic, most evident in France, England and Ireland
RELIGION
• No organized religion
DECORATION
• Caves paintings in Africa, France and Spain • The dead are treated with respect - burial rituals and
monuments
• Sculpture
Stone Age divided into 3 periods:
1. Paleolithic (Old Stone) 45,000/50,000 BC
2. Mesolithic (Middle Stone) 8,000-4,000 BC
3. Neolithic (New Stone) 6,000/4,000 BC
PALEOLITHIC AGE
• Ice Age
• Cro-Magnon nomadic hunters and
gatherers
• Lived communally, simple social
organization
• Built shelters at cave entrances and
under rock overhangs
• Animal skin tents, mud huts, fire for heat
• No writing, but symbolic marks (maybe
to keep time)
• Used simple tools
• Ritual burial practices
CAVES
• The oldest and most common types of dwellings.
• Natural underground spaces, large enough for a human.
• Example: Rock shelters, Grottos, Sea caves.
MEZHIRICH
• Consisted of foundation wall of mammoth jaws
and long bones, capped with skulls.
• Roofed with tree branches, overlaid by tusks.
PIT HOUSES
More common in eastern Europe with severely low
temperatures.
Oval trapezoidal, pear shaped size(5m-8m x2.5m-3.5m).
Central post holes indicating existence of roof.
Constructed by making shallow depressions in the
ground surrounded by a ring of mammoth bones and
tusks.
LEAN TOS
Stone Age divided into 3 periods: • Erected against one wall of cave.
1. Paleolithic (Old Stone) 45,000/50,000 BC • Defined at base by stones(12m x 4m).
2. Mesolithic (Middle Stone) 8,000-4,000 BC • Skin curtain and roof draped over posts.
3. Neolithic (New Stone) 6,000/4,000 BC • May have two compartments, each having an
entrance on the longer side.
• MESOLITHIC AGE
• Transition period; Ice Age over
• Some overlap with Paleolithic period
• Important cultural and environmental changes
• Animals disappeared; people left the caves and
gathered around water bodies
• Fishing became a major source of food
• Settling into agricultural communities
• Crude farming tools
• Villages arranged systematically.
• Houses aligned in rows.
• More regular plans.
• Artefacts came into existence.
• Settlements began around water bodies.
• Cultivation of cereals and vegetables began.
• Animals were domesticated, farming tools were
developed.
• Dwellings were more durable as compared to that in
the Palaeolithic age.
PIT HOUSES
• Shallow oval pits 6m-9m long and 2-5m wide.
• Roofs were made of timber.
• Stone hearths were used as working slabs.
Lepinski vir
CORBELLING
• Solid roof for space in between.
• Dome like ceiling
• Weight on the top will get equally distributed on
both the sides
NOTE
• Quarrying (Cutting of stone) by crudely splitting the logs
• Transporting by barge and sleds pulled by large crews over
rollers
• Lifting through leverage over inclined masses of earth
• Abundance of Labor, endurance of effort, limitless time frame.
UTILITARIAN ARCHITECTURE
FUNCTIONS
1. Sun worshipping
➢ Slaughter stone
➢ Track sun movement
2. Astronomy
➢ Winter solstice and summer solstice
➢ Told when to perform ceremonies and when to change priests
➢ Could predict eclipses
For the first time, people no longer lived in a nomadic way of life.
They started a settled way of life. This led to the beginning of
civilizations. First was Mesopotamian civilization, which was
situated between the rivers Tigris and Euphrates.. Significant
change was the ability to store surplus food. Pottery was needed
for the storage of crops . Over a period of time people started to
grow surplus food i.e. more than what was required. This led to
the new professions and started the barter system.
LAKE DWELLINGS:
Consisted of wooden huts built on piles in the water for protection against attack
QUESTIONS TO KEEP IN
MIND:
• How did geography impact the
first civilizations?
• How did changes in the Neolithic
Revolution lead to the
development of River Valley
Civilizations?
REFERENCES