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Aegean and ancient greek architecture
L 5-6
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troy
Was situated in northwest Anatolia in what is now Turkey, The layers of ruins in the citadel at Hisarlık are numbered Troy I – Troy IX, with various subdivisions: Troy I 3000–2600 BC (Western Anatolian EB 1) Troy II 2600–2250 BC (Western Anatolian EB 2) Troy III 2250–2100 BC (Western Anatolian EB 3 [early]) Troy IV 2100–1950 BC (Western Anatolian EB 3 [middle]) Troy V: 20th–18th centuries BC (Western Anatolian EB 3 [late]) Troy VI: 17th–15th centuries BC Troy VIh: late Bronze Age, 14th century BC Troy VIIa: c. 1300–1190 BC, most likely setting for Homer's story[26][full citation needed] Troy VIIb1: 12th century BC Troy VIIb2: 11th century BC Troy VIIb3: until c. 950 BC Troy VIII: c. 700–85 BC Troy IX: 85 BC–c. AD 500 The archaeological site of Troy was added to the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1998
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Aegean architecture
The Minoan period (3650-1450 BCE) The Minoan culture had spread from its origins at Knossos, Crete to include the wider Aegean. Other cities: Malia, Phaistos, Zakros The Mycenaean period (XV-XIII BC) Major Mycenaean centres included Mycenae (traditional home of Agamemnon), Tiryns (perhaps the oldest centre), Pylos (traditional home of Nestor), Thebes, Midea, Gla, Orchomenos, Argos, Sparta, Nichoria and probably Athens.
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The Minoan cities (3650-1100 BCE)
Were connected with stone-paved roads, formed from blocks cut with bronze saws. Streets were drained and water and sewer facilities were available to the upper class, through clay pipes. Minoan buildings often had flat tiled roofs; plaster, wood, or flagstone floors, and stood two to three storeys high. Typically the lower walls were constructed of stone and rubble, and the upper walls of mudbrick. Ceiling timbers held up the roofs. The materials used in constructing the villas and palaces varied, and could include sandstone, gypsum, or limestone. Equally, building techniques could also vary between different constructions; some palaces used ashlar masonry while others used roughly hewn megalithic blocks.
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Knossos palace
Knossos was undeniably the capital of Minoan Crete. It is grander, more complex, and more flamboyant than any of the other palaces known to us, and it is located about twenty minutes south of the modern port town of Iraklio.
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Knossos palace
The Greek myth associated with the palace about Theseus and the Minotaur is fascinating. The first palace on the low hill beside the Krairatos river was built around 1900 BC on the ruins of previous settlements. It was destroyed for the first time along with the other Protopalatial palaces around Crete at 1700 BC
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Knossos palace
According to Greek mythology, the palace was designed by famed architect Dedalos with such complexity that no one placed in it could ever find its exit. King Minos who commissioned the palace then kept the architect prisoner to ensure that he would not reveal the palace plan to anyone
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Columns of the cnossos
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The palace of Phaistos
(Faestos, Phaestos, Faistos) commands the Messara plain from its location on a low hill, and it is the second largest palace of Crete after Knossos. PhaistoswasthehomeofRadamanthis, thebrotherofthelegendarykingofMinos
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The builders of Phaistos took great care to create a functional as well as an aesthetically pleasing environment, which accommodated the spectacular views from the hill.
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The architecture of Phaistos is more simplified compared with Knossos, and it is built in an orderly arrangement that refers to a single architect. Thebuildingsofthepalacewereconstructedinsuch a waythattheopenareaswerealwaysenclosedononesideby a palacewall, andontheothersideby a majormountainmass.
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Mycenaean archiTecture
Mycenae was a fortified late Bronze Age city located between two hills on the Argolid plain of the Peloponnese, Greece. The acropolis today dates from between the 14th and 13th century BCE Situated on a rocky hill (40-50m high) commanding the surrounding plain as far as the sea 15km away, the site of Mycenae covered 30,000 square metres
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Mycenaean house - megaron
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the Treasury of Atreus
From the 14th century BCE the first large-scale palace complex is built (on three artificial terraces), as is the celebrated tholos tomb, the Treasury of Atreus, a monumental circular building with corbelled roof reaching a height of 13.5m and 14.6m in diameter and approached by a long walled and unroofed corridor 36m long and 6m wide. Fortification walls, of large roughly worked stone blocks, surrounding the acropolis (of which the north wall is still visible today), flood management structures such as damns, roads, Linear B tablets and an increase in pottery imports (fitting well with theories of contemporary Mycenaean expansion in the Aegean) illustrate the culture was at its zenith.
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Greek house - oikos
structures of two rooms, with an open porch or "pronaos" above which rose a low pitched gable or pediment
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Ancient greek architecture
Historical development: 1) Homer period - ХII BCE -750 BC 2) Archaic period - 750-480 BC 3) Classic period - 480-400 BC 4) Intermediate period - (400-323 BC) 5) Hellenistic period - (323 BC– I c.AD)
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Types of the ancient greek temples
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