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  2. Ancient Greek architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Greek_architecture

    Ancient Greek architecture came from the Greeks, or Hellenes, whose culture flourished on the Greek mainland, the Peloponnese, the Aegean Islands, and in colonies in Anatolia and Italy for a period from about 900 BC until the 1st century AD, with the earliest remaining architectural works dating from around 600 BC.

  3. List of Ancient Greek temples - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Ancient_Greek_temples

    The Temple of Olympian Zeus, Athens, (174 BC–132 AD), with the Parthenon (447–432 BC) in the background. This list of ancient Greek temples covers temples built by the Hellenic people from the 6th century BC until the 2nd century AD on mainland Greece and in Hellenic towns in the Aegean Islands, Asia Minor, Sicily and Italy ("Magna Graecia"), wherever there were Greek colonies, and the ...

  4. Corinthian order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corinthian_order

    The Corinthian order (Greek: Κορινθιακὸς ῥυθμός, Korinthiakós rythmós; Latin: Ordo Corinthius) is the last developed and most ornate of the three principal classical orders of Ancient Greek architecture and Roman architecture. The other two are the Doric order, which was the earliest, followed by the Ionic order. In Ancient ...

  5. Classical order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classical_order

    Classical Architecture: An Introduction to Its Vocabulary and Essentials, With a Select Glossary of Terms. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0-393-73119-4. John Newenham Summerson (1963). The Classical Language of Architecture. The MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-69012-6. Tzonis, Alexander; Lefaivre, Liane (1986). Classical architecture: the poetics ...

  6. Doric order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doric_order

    In their original Greek version, Doric columns stood directly on the flat pavement (the stylobate) of a temple without a base. With a height only four to eight times their diameter, the columns were the most squat of all the classical orders; their vertical shafts were fluted with 20 parallel concave grooves, each rising to a sharp edge called an arris.

  7. Ionic order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ionic_order

    The 16th-century Renaissance architect and theorist Vincenzo Scamozzi designed a version of such a perfectly four-sided Ionic capital that it became standard; when a Greek Ionic order was eventually reintroduced in the later 18th century Greek Revival, it conveyed an air of archaic freshness and primitive, perhaps even republican, vitality. [4]

  8. List of ancient Greek and Roman roofs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ancient_Greek_and...

    The list of ancient roofs comprises roof constructions from Greek and Roman architecture, ordered by clear span. Roof constructions increased in clear span as Greek and Roman engineering improved. Most buildings in classical Greece were covered by traditional prop-and-lintel constructions, which often required interior colonnades for support.

  9. Category:Ancient Greek architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Ancient_Greek...

    Greek Revival architecture (8 C, 8 P) Gymnasiums (ancient Greece) (5 P) H. Hellenistic architecture (2 C, 49 P) M. Mycenaean architecture (1 C, 6 P) S.