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ARCHITECTURE

1. ARCH— a structure, consisting of a curved top on two supports, that holds the weight of
something above it.

2. FULCRUM-- the point at which a bar, or something that is balancing, is supported or


balances:

A seesaw balances at its fulcrum.

3. SKELETON FRAME
4. CANTILEVER— a long bar that is fixed at only one end to a vertical support and is used to
hold a structure such as an arch, bridge, or shelf in position:

a cantilever bridge
5. POSTAND LINTEL—SIMILAR TO POST AND BEAM
6. POST IS VERTICAL
7. HORIZONTAL BEAM— IS THE LINTEL
8. TENSILE STRENGTH—THE ABILITY OF A MATERIAL TO WITHSTAND BENDING.
9. IONIC- of or copying a style of ancient Greek building that has only a small amount of
decoration:
10. DORIC- of or copying the simplest of the classical styles of ancient Greek building:
Such as in a Doric column.
11. CORITHIAN— of or copying the most decorated of the three styles of ancient Greek
building:
Such as in a Corinthian columns.
12. STONEHENGE IS THAT PRIMITIVE EXAMPLE OF POST AND LINTEL STRUCTURE WHICH IS
AN ANCIENT AND MYSTERIOUS AND RELIGIOUS CONFIGURATION OF GIANT STONES IN
GREAT BRITAIN
13. COLUMNS
14. CAPITALS
15. PARTHENON—The Greek refinement of post-and lintel structure forms which is now a
prototype for buildings throughout the world and across the centuries.
Take note:
The Ionic column is always more slender than the Doric; therefore, it always has a base: Ionic
columns are eight and nine column-diameters tall, and even more in the Antebellum
colonnades of late American Greek Revival plantation houses. Ionic columns are most often
fluted.
A Doric column can be described as seven diameters high, an Ionic column as eight diameters
high, and a Corinthian column nine diameters high, although the actual ratios used vary
considerably in both ancient and revived examples, but keeping to the trend of increasing
slimness between the orders.

The 3 Orders of Ancient Greek Architecture

Ancient Greek architecture was the first to introduce a standardized set of


architectural rules that went on to influence Roman architecture and, as a result,
architecture to this day. At the start of what is now known as the Classical period of
architecture, ancient Greek architecture developed into three distinct orders: the Doric,
Ionic, and Corinthian orders. Each of the orders displayed distinct features in their
columns, a staple for formal, public buildings such as libraries and gymnasiums,
stadiums, theaters, and civic buildings.

The Doric Order of Greek architecture


The Doric order of Greek architecture was first seen towards the beginning of the 7th
century BCE, causing many to think of it as the oldest order, as well as the simplest
and most massive. Doric columns were stouter than those of the Ionic or Corinthian
orders. Their smooth, round capitals are simple and plain compared to the other two
Greek orders.
Doric columns were stouter than those of the Ionic or Corinthian orders. Image source

Doric-style columns were typically placed close together, often without bases, with
concave curves sculpted into the shafts. Doric column capitals were plain with a
rounded section at the bottom (the echinus) and a square at the top (abacus). The
echinus appears flat and splayed in early examples and rises from the top of the
column like a circular cushion to the abacus which supports the lintels.

Examples of Doric columns in Greek architecture


The Parthenon

The Parthenon features Doric columns. Image source

The most iconic example of Doric columns is the Parthenon, which was built in the
5th century BCE to honor the Greek goddess Athena. The Parthenon is what is known
as a peripheral Doric temple in that columns are located not only in the front of the
structure but along the sides as well.
The Parthenon spans 228 x 101.4 feet with exterior Doric columns that are 6.2 feet in
diameter and 34.1 feet tall.

The Temple of Hephaestus

The Temple of Hephaestus is the most complete example of Doric column. Image source

The Temple of Hephaestus is the most complete example of Doric columns having
been built almost entirely of marble during the years 449 to 415 BCE.
The Temple of the Delians

The unfinished Temple of Delians features Doric columns that sit directly on the floor. Image source
The Temple of the Delians is an unfinished temple located on the island of Delos. A
key difference for this structure is that its columns are not fluted and sit directly on the
floor without the benefit of a base.

The Ionic Order of Greek architecture


The Ionic Order originated in Ionia, a coastal region of what is now called Turkey,
which is where it gets its name. It is characterized mainly by the scroll-like ornaments
that appear on Ionic column capitals known as volutes, as well as the column base
supports that are not featured on Doric columns.

Scroll-like ornaments known as volutes appear on Ionic column capitals. Image source

Developed during a similar period as the Doric Order in the mid-sixth century BCE,
Ionic columns made their way to mainland Greece the following century with many of
the country’s landmarks built in the Ionic style.
Examples of Ionic columns in Greek architecture
The Heraion of Samos

A single Ionic column remains standing in the Heraion of Samos. Image source

Built to honour the goddess Hera, the Heraion of Samos was a monumental temple
designed by the architect Rhoikos c. 570-560 BCE. It was one of the first great Ionic
buildings that was ultimately destroyed by an earthquake, leaving a single Ionic
column still standing.
The Temple of Artemis at Ephesus

This model of the Temple of Artemis, at Miniatürk Park, Istanbul, Turkey, attempts to recreate the appearance
of the first temple. Image source 

Once classed as one of the Seven Wonders of the World, the Temple of Artemis at
Ephesus was an Ionic design. The temple was built by Croesus, King of Lydia, in 550
BCE. Also known as Artemesium, the temple was famous not only for its size,
sprawling over 350 feet by 180 feet, but for the magnificent works of art that adorned
it. The temple was eventually destroyed by invading Goths in 262 CE.

The Corinthian Order of Greek architecture


Unlike the Doric and Ionic orders, the Corinthian Order does not have its origin in
wooden architecture, having grown directly out of the Ionic Order in the mid-5th
century BCE. Taking its name from the city of Corinth, the Corinthian Order can be
distinguished from the Ionic Order by its more ornate capitals carved with stylized
acanthus leaves.
On the Corinthian entablature, the frieze was usually decorated with continual
sculptural reliefs, where the figures were raised from the surface but not completely
freestanding.

Examples of Corinthian columns in Greek architecture


The Temple of Olympian Zeus

This photograph of 1865 by Constantinou Dimitrios shows above the last two columns of the main group, a
small stone structure in which had lived an ascetic or Stylite. Image source

Also known as the Olympieion, the Temple of Olympian Zeus was an enormous
temple built over several centuries, starting in 174 BCE and finally completed by
Roman emperor Hadrian in 131 CE. Its unusually tall columns and ambitious layout
made the temple one of the largest ever built in the ancient world.
The temple’s Corinthian columns measured 17.25 meters high with a diameter of 1.7
meters each with 20 flutes. Originally featuring 104 columns in total, each was capped
with highly decorative Corinthian capitals carved from two massive blocks of marble.

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