Greek Architecture Report
Greek Architecture Report
Greek Architecture Report
548 - 510
TEMPLE C
AT SELINUS/
SELINUNTE,
550 – 530
SIPHNIAN
TREASURY
AT DELPHI
530 – 545
500 – 400
ATHENIAN
TREASURY
AT DELPHI
490–485
TEMPLE OF
ZEUS AT
OLYMPIA
470–457
TEMPLE OF
HERA II AT
POSEIDONI
A/PAESTUM
460
PARTHENON
AT ATHENS
447–432
TEMPLE OF
CONCORD AT
AKRAGAS/
AGRIGENTO
440–430
ERECHTHEION
AT
ATHENS
431–405
400 – 300
TEMPLE OF
ASKLEPIOS
AT
EPIDAURUS
375-370
THYMELE
AT
EPIDAURU
S
360-330
TEMPLE OF
APOLLO AT
DELPHI
373/2-327/6
300 – 200
TEMPLE OF
APOLLO AT
DIDYMA
BEGUN 300
(UNFINISHED)
200 – 100
GREAT
ALTAR OF
ZEUS AT
PERGAMON
180-150
ASKLEPIEION
AT KOS
160
SANCTUARIES
Reconstructi
on drawing
of the
sanctuary
at Olympia
SANCTUARIES
• Exist in a variety of locations and
sizes, but all can be said to be places
that are set apart from ordinary life
in which humans can connect
• In Greece, interactions may take
place both by group and individual
level.
SANCTUARIES
• Where communal acts are done
• Communal acts:
• Processions
• Performances
• Sacrifices of animals and harvest
followed by communal feasting
• Dedication of gifts
• Competitions (athletics, arts, music,
poetry, drama, and dance)
SANCTUARIES
• Handles both small and large groups
of people in activities that may take
both short and long periods of time
to complete
• Stores and keep safe the gifts
dedicated to the gods
• Communal activities took place in
open air
SANCTUARIES
• Sanctuary or Temenos usually
defined by walls or boundary
markers to distinguish the sacred
space clearly
• Limited entrance to regulate flow of
traffic
SANCTUARIES
• TREASURY
• A small building housing
dedications, usually rectangular
in plan with naos and pronaos
with columns in antis
• STADION
• A racecourse in a sanctuary, with
banked sides for spectators
A MINI-HISTORY
OF THE GREEK
TEMPLE
L AT E
BRONZE
AGE
• Palaces in this age
are consists of
Pronaos (entrance
hall) and a
rectangular naos
(temple) with four
columns and a
hearth (fire place).
LEFKANDI
• The earliest house in
Lefkandi is much larger
and more complex for a
house or a
heroon/heroum.
o Heroon - hero’s shrine
• This helps to distinguish
a temple and a house
by its size.
H E K AT O M P E D O
N
• ‘hundred – footer’
• Temples are bigger, a
symbolism that
temples are
important and sacred.
• Seen in the Temple of
Hera in Samos.
7 TH
C E N T U RY
• Earliest temples
of Polis have
similar
conception/for
m with the
houses.
6th
C E N T U RY
• FIRST HALF
o Stone is a prominent
building material.
o Two orders are
mainly used
throughout their
architecture
- DORIC ORDER -
- IONIC ORDER
DORIC ORDER IONIC ORDER
- simplest of the orders - distinguished by slender,
- characterized by short, fluted pillars with a large
faceted
base and two
- heavy columns with plain,
opposed scrolls.
round capitals (tops) and
no base.
• Colonnades are
added in the
exterior of each
temple during
this time.
o Colonnade –
series of
columns
5TH
C E N T U RY
• Number of optical
refinements were introduced.
o Curvature of the stylobate
o Adjustments of
Intercolumniation
Dimension
- Intercolumniation – spacing
of columns.
o Columns leaning in slightly.
• Examples:
o The Parthenon
• Later temples showed some
changes from this century’s
standard proportions.
TEMPLE OF
APOLLO in
BASSAE
• Located in
Peloponnesos
• Earliest building to
use the Corinthian
Order.
4 T H C E N T U RY
• Corinthian order is
the most prominent
feature.
• Corinthian Order
- featured columns that
were carved
- decorated by vertical
lines cut into the surface
- capitals that were
decorated with a
design of unfurled
acanthus leaves
HELLENISTIC
• Siting continues to
be a major
consideration in this
era.
• Siting - the position
or location of a town,
building, etc.
• Temple of Asklepios
at Kos
TEMPLE OF
ASKLEPIOS
AT K O S
• Modest in scale.
• Gained visual
prominence as it
shows a view of the
nearby city.
2ND
C E N T U RY
• Corinthian order
was first used for an
exterior of the temple
in the Temple of
Olympian Zeus in
Athens
TEMPLES
• Most distinctive
building type
developed by the
Greeks.
• Visual mark of their
identity.
• Earliest structures
built.
THE 3 ORDERS OF
ARCHITECTURE
• Doric, Ionic and Corinthian Order.
• Provided a system for their design and
construction.
• Only one can be adapted or varied in every
temple to make it distinctive.
THE
ARCHITECTURAL
ORDERS
CLASSICAL
ORDERS
DORIC ORDER
• simplest of the orders
• characterized by short, faceted
• heavy columns with plain,
round capitals (tops) and no base.
Usually a criminal, slave or an
excessively ugly or deformed
man was chosen as pharmakos, a
cast-off from society. After being
chosen by the society as the
scapegoats, they were beaten with
green twigs, torture them and
eventually kill them with stones.