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Greek Architecture

Record 26 to 50 of 193

Clipart illustrations of ancient Greek architecture. Greek architecture is most noted for their use of columns and for being the first civilization that constructed for art as well as functionality.


Atreus Treasury
The Treasury of Atreus or Tomb of Agamemnon is an impressive "tholos" tomb at Mycenae, Greece (on the Panagitsa Hill) constructed around 1250 BCE. The lintel stone above the doorway weighs 120 tons. T...
Atreus Treasury Doorway
The Treasury of Atreus or Tomb of Agamemnon is an impressive "tholos" tomb at Mycenae, Greece (on the Panagitsa Hill) constructed around 1250 BCE. The lintel stone above the doorway weighs 120 tons. T...
Atreus, Tomb of
The Tomb of Atreus also known as the Treasury of Atreus is a tomb located in Mycenae, Greece built between 1250 and 1300 B.C. The face of the tomb consists of columns and has a triangle above the door...
Basilica
"A building which served as a court of law and an exchange, or place of meeting for merchants and men of business. The word was adopted from the Athenians, whose second archon was styled, and the trib...
Basilica
"A building which served as a court of law and an exchange, or place of meeting for merchants and men of business. The word was adopted from the Athenians, whose second archon was styled, and the trib...
Bema_Pnyx
"The Bema on the Pnyx" — Morey, 1903...
Bridge
"Ancient bridge in Laconia." — Smith, 1882...
Capital
Capital from Eleusis....
Capital
Greek Corinthian volutes....
Capital
Corinthian capital from the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates, restored....
Capital from the Temple of Minerva Polias at Athens, Ionic Antae
The capital of the antæ and pilasters is without volutes, as is seen here. The shaft has no flutings; the base, on the other hand, is the same as in the columns, and is continued round the walls...
Capital from the Temple of Minerva Polias at Athens, Ionic Antae (Plan)
The capital of the antæ and pilasters is without volutes, as is seen here. The shaft has no flutings; the base, on the other hand, is the same as in the columns, and is continued round the walls...
Capital, Doric
Capital of a Doric column....
Capital, Early Greek
An illustration of an early Greek capital. In several traditions of architecture including Classical architecture, the capital (from the Latin caput, 'head') forms the crowning member of a column or ...
Capital, Grecian Doric
"The Doric Order is, in architecture, the second of the five orders, being that between the Tuscan and Ionic."—(Charles Leonard-Stuart, 1911)...
Capital, Grecian Doric
"The Doric Order is, in architecture, the second of the five orders, being that between the Tuscan and Ionic."—(Charles Leonard-Stuart, 1911)...
Capital, Grecian Doric
"The Doric Order is, in architecture, the second of the five orders, being that between the Tuscan and Ionic."—(Charles Leonard-Stuart, 1911)...
Capital, Ionic
Capital of a Ionic column....
Capital, Proto Ionic
A primitively ionic column....
Capital, Volute of the Corinthian
"A kind of spiral scroll used in Ionic, Corinthian, and Composite capitals, of which it is a principal ornament. The number of volutes in the Ionic order is four. In the Corinthian and Composite order...
Capital, Volute of the Ionic
"A kind of spiral scroll used in Ionic, Corinthian, and Composite capitals, of which it is a principal ornament. The number of volutes in the Ionic order is four. In the Corinthian and Composite order...
Caryatic Order
An order of architecture wherein the entablature is supported by female figures clothed in long garments, instead of columns. The temple of Polias-Minerva at Priene, Greece....
Caryatides
Figures of women dressed in long robes, serving to support entablatures....
Caryatides
"Caryae was a city in Arcadia, near the Laconian border, the inhabitants of which joined the Persians after the battle of Thermopylae. On the defeat of the Persians the allied Greeks destroyed the tow...
Caryatis from the Erechtheum at Athens
Caryatides are a blending of architecture and sculpture, but they are not of frequent occurrence. These Caryatides are human figures which serve as supports instead of a column, and a similar purpose ...
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