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You are here : AllRefer.com > Reference > Encyclopedia > Architecture > Greek architecture
By Alphabet : Encyclopedia A-Z > G

Greek architecture, Architecture

Related Category: Architecture

Palaces of the Minoan civilization remain at Knossos and Phaestus on Crete. Of the later Mycenaean civilization, surviving examples are the Lion's Gate at Mycenae and palaces at Mycenae and Tiryns. When the Dorians migrated into Greece (before 1000 B.C.) true Hellenic culture began, and the architecture that eventually developed seems to have borrowed little from the preceding civilizations.

In Greece the Dorians developed their building forms with such rapidity that between the 10th and the 6th cent. B.C. a definite system of construction was established. However, prior to the creation of the great marble temples of the 5th cent. B.C., there were undoubtedly evolutionary stages in which walls were made of sun-dried bricks and roofs, columns, and uprights of wood. The Heraeum at Olympia, considered one of the most ancient temples yet discovered, represents such a stage; in its later alterations (7th cent. B.C.), it is illustrative of the beginnings of the Doric temple of stone.



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Topics that might be of interest to you:

acropolis
agora
Callicrates
choragic monuments
Corinthian order
Doric order
Erechtheum
Greece
Hellenism
Hellenistic civilization
Hippodamus
Ictinus
Ionic order
Minoan civilization
Mnesicles
Mycenaean civilization
orders of architecture
Parthenon
stadium
stoa
temple, edifice of worship

Related Categories:

Literature and the Arts > Art and Architecture
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