HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE
DEFINITIONS
History of Architecture
It is a record of man's effort to build beautifully. It traces the origin, growth and decline of architectural
styles which have prevailed lands and ages."
Historic Styles of Architecture
The particular method, the characteristics, manner of design which prevails at a certain place and time.
( Kevin Espina )
EGYPTIAN ARCHITECTURE
HISTORY
Egypt is a wealthy country despite the desert - every year, Nile would overflow, leaving the land
fertile for growing crops. It consists of two kingdoms, Lower and Upper Egypt, combined by
King Menes in 3100 BC
ARCHITECTURAL CHARACTER
Stone was abundant in variety and quantity, other materials, metals and timber were imported .
They were used for monuments and religious buildings. Durability of stone is why monuments
still exist to this day.
PYRAMIDS
They are massive funerary structure of stone or brick. They are raised and enclosed causeway
leading to west
Other building types that characterize Egyptian architecture are: obelisks,pylons, fortresses and
rock-cut or rock-hewn tombs
GREEK ARCHITECTURE
HISTORY
Civilizations on Crete and Greek mainland from 1900 to 1100 BC. Knossos was the largest city,
had a magnificent palace
Aegean
The structures were rough and massive
Hellenic Period (800 to 323 BC)
City-states developed on the plains between mountains Sparta and Athens were most important.
Mostly religious architecture. carpentry in marble - timber forms imitated in stone with
remarkable exactness
Hellenistic Period (323 to 30 BC)
Hellenistic Empire established Greek civilization. It provided inspiration for Roman building
types
ARCHITECTURAL CHARACTER
HOUSES
On islands:
Flat roofing drawn together in blocks,two to four storeys high,light admitted through light wells
On mainland:
Single-storeyed house with deep plan, columned entrance porch with central doorway
METHODS OF NATURAL LIGHTING
There were no windows but clerestory - situated between roof and upper portion of
wall. skylight is made of thin, translucent marble. Presence of temple door, oriented towards the
east
ROMAN ARCHITECTURE
HISTORY
It involved many city-states on the Italian peninsula from 800 -300 BC, among all cities in Italy,
Rome became the most powerful . It consisted of two major periods: Etuscan or Etruscan (750
BC to 146 BC) and Roman (146 BC to 365 AD)
CONSTRUCTION SYSTEM
It adopted columnar and trabeated style of Greeks. Arch and vault system started by Etruscans
combined use of column, beam and arch (arctuated). they were able to cover large spaces without
the aid of intermediate support . Other structures that characterize this style of architecture
include:
THEATERS and AMPHITHEATERS
Gladiators trained to fight each other at organized contests for the entertainment of the
townspeople
AQUEDUCTS
It carried water in pipes from the country to the heart of the city
BYZANTINE ARCHITECTURE
HISTORY
Fierce barbaric tribes such as the Goths and Vandals attacked from outside the empire.In 285
293 AD, the empire had split into two an Eastern and Western empire. Constantine, a converted
Christian, changed the capital of the Empire from Rome to Constantinople in 330 AD. The
western empire based in Rome finally collapsed in 476 AD. Eastern empire lasted another
thousand years and was known as the Byzantine empire.
DESCRIPTION
First buildings constructed were churches. Dumped Early Christian style for new domical
Byzantine style. Byzantine is still official style for Orthodox church
CONSTRUCTION SYSTEM
Fusion of domical construction with classical columnar style. Domes of various types placed
over square compartments using pendentives. Semi-circular arches rest directly on columns, with
capitals able to support springing of arches
ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE
HISTORY
The Roman Empire was halved into East and West,those outside the Empire were called
barbarians -German tribes such as the Franks, Saxons, Vandals, Goths; Asian tribes such as the
Huns. 4th century, Huns invaded Europe forcing the Goths and Vandals to seek shelter inside the
Roman Empire.Rome agreed to let them stay in exchange for help against the Huns. In 410 AD,
Alaric the Goth seized Rome, settled in Spain
CATHEDRALS
Mostly Basilican in plan, Rib and Panel vaulting - framework of ribs support thin stone panels
BAPTISTERIES
Large, separate buildings usually octagonal in plan and
connected to the cathedral by the atrium.it was used 3 times a year: Easter, Pentecost, Epiphany
CAMPANILES
They are straight towers shafts, generally standing alone which served as civic monuments,
symbols of power, watch towers
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE
HISTORY
12th 13th centuries: Holy Roman Empire was reduced to the area of Germany. Only 3 great
kingdoms were left: France, England and Castile in Spain. Prosperous years in terms of
agriculture - warm weather and invention of the windmill and water-mill increased the
amount of food produced.Most Europeans were Catholics. Church under the Pope brought
Christians together and the entire Christianity was united against Muslims. The rulers, the church
and townspeople spent wealth on building more castles, cathedrals and monasteries. Towns
competed with each other to produce the best architecture
"Gothic" is a term used in reproach to this style. It can be identified by the general use of
pointed arch. it is also called Medieval Architecture
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE
HISTORY
In 1450, series of voyages and explorations by sea led by Spain and Portugal. Warfare was
changed by the invention of gunpowder. This brought about the need for a new building type
FLORENCE
Cities of Florence, Genoa, Milan - central, chief powers of Italy. Renaissance had its birth in
Florence .With the development of gunpowder, palace-type building evolved, taking the place of
fortified castles. Large windows unnecessary and unsuitable. Low pitched roof covered by a
balustrade, parapet or boldly protruding roof cornices
BAROQUE ARCHITECTURE
Architects worked with freedom and firmly-acquired knowledge.The true nature of Renaissance
as a distinctive style began to emerge. Baroque saw architecture, painting, sculpture and the
minor arts being used in harmony to produce the unified whole.
Part of its charactersistics are small Roman circular temple with Doric columns,4.5 m internal
diameter. Site where S. Peter was martyred was designed by Donato Bramante. Dome on drum
pierced with alternating windows and shell-headed niches
ROCOCO ARCHITECTURE
It is a style which is primarily French in origin. Rock-like forms, fantastic scrolls, and crimped
shells.They were profuse, often semi-abstract ornamentation. They are light in color and weight
HISTORICISM AND INDUSTRIAL ARCHITECTURE
The buildings that line the Ringstrasse were designed in the Historicist style, that is to say they
were modelled on idealized versions of historical architectural styles but adapted to the
technological and functional demands of the time in which they were built. The style chosen for
each building was that which was held to best express its function Theophil Hansen (1813
1891) designed the Parliament building in the Hellenistic style, in the belief that the form of
government in classical Athens had given birth to the truest form of democracy. The neo-Gothic
City Hall by Friedrich Schmidt (18251891) reflected the civic autonomy of the cities in landers.
Ferstel (18281883) was built in the French Gothic style, while in his designs for the university
Ferstel took as his model the Italian Renaissance, the period when art and science flowered in
Europe.
MODERN ARCHITECTURE
There were more innovations including Curtain wall, Steel and plate-glass, Folded slab by
Eugene Freyssinet, Flat slab by Robert Maillart and Laminated timber
FAMOUS ARCHITECTS
Marcel Breuer
Best known for the design of tubular steel Wassily Chair. He Studied at the Bauhaus - become
director of the school's furniture department in 1924 . He designed a series of noted structures
including innovative houses and the Whitney Museum of Art
Oscar Niemeyer
Worked with city planner Lucio Costa to conceive and build Brasilia, Brazil's capital in a record
time of just four years. Functionality and the use of pre-stressed concrete dominate his designs.
He also designed the cathedral, the national theater and the presidential palace
Buckminster Fuller
He Created the Dymaxion House, the first machine for living - a portable home inside from
metal alloys and plastics He designed all necessary mechanical systems and devices in the center
of the building, with living spaces around it, open to the arrangement tastes of the owner
POSTMODERN ARCHITECTURE
Postmodern architecture began as an international style the first examples of which are
generally cited as being from the 1950s, but did not become a style until the late 1970s and
continues to influence present-day architecture. Postmodernity in architecture is said to be
heralded by the return of "wit, ornament and reference" to architecture in response to the
formalism of the International Style of modernism. As with many cultural fashions, some of
Postmodernism's most pronounced and visible ideas can be seen in architecture. The functional
and formalized shapes and spaces of the modernist style are replaced by diverse aesthetics: styles
collide, form is adopted for its own sake, and new ways of viewing familiar styles and space
abound. Perhaps most obviously, architects rediscovered the expressive and symbolic value of
architectural elements and forms that had evolved through centuries of building which had been
abandoned by the modern style
Gare do Oriente (Lisbon, Portugal), designed by the Spanish
architect Santiago Calatrava.
REFERENCES
Ching, Francis D.K., A Visual Dictionary of Architecture
Fletcher, Bannister, A History of Architecture 20th Ed.
Heinrich Klotz History of Post-Modern Architecture., Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1998.
Kevin Espina History of Architecture
Mercado, Jose L., The Architectural Reviewer Volume III: History & Theory of Architecture
Salvan, George S., Architectural Character & the History of Architecture
Robert Venturi Learning from Las Vegas: The Forgotten Symbolism of Architectural Form.,
Cambridge
The Childrens Atlas of World History
The World Atlas of Architecture