A World History of ArchitectureMcGraw-Hill, 2004 - 592 من الصفحات Publisher Description. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-3 من 64
الصفحة 57
... extended empire of Alexander and his successors , including the Seleucids , who ruled the area stretching from Anatolia to the Indus , and the Ptolomies , who ruled in Egypt . Hellenistic architecture differs from that of the Classi ...
... extended empire of Alexander and his successors , including the Seleucids , who ruled the area stretching from Anatolia to the Indus , and the Ptolomies , who ruled in Egypt . Hellenistic architecture differs from that of the Classi ...
الصفحة 333
... extended structure enabled him to make farm buildings monumental . He was the first Renaissance architect to use the temple front extensively on domestic buildings . full depth of the building . One of the barrel vaults in the arms of ...
... extended structure enabled him to make farm buildings monumental . He was the first Renaissance architect to use the temple front extensively on domestic buildings . full depth of the building . One of the barrel vaults in the arms of ...
الصفحة 372
... extended by means of a square apse terminating in a semi- circle . While the Baroque love of curvilinear geometries is not extinguished completely - the exterior walls gyrate as concave planes , and the clerestory windows assume irreg ...
... extended by means of a square apse terminating in a semi- circle . While the Baroque love of curvilinear geometries is not extinguished completely - the exterior walls gyrate as concave planes , and the clerestory windows assume irreg ...
المحتوى
THE BEGINNINGS OF ARCHITECTURE | 9 |
CHAPTER | 14 |
CHAPTER | 16 |
حقوق النشر | |
38 من الأقسام الأخرى غير ظاهرة
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
aisles ancient appear arches architects architecture axis basilica bays became begun building built carved Cathedral central century chapels choir Christian church classical columns completed construction contained continued court courtyard covered created crossing culture detail developed dome early east elaborate elements entrance established extended exterior façade feet figures floor four frame front galleries garden gate Gothic Greek hall important influence interior Italy known later light living located major masonry materials medieval monumental mosque nave original ornament painted palace period placed practice pyramid reflected remains Renaissance rising river Roman Rome roof rooms seen served shows shrine side space square stone street structure style surrounding temple tion tomb tower town traditional vaults Villa wall wooden