Philippides dimitri editor (1 resultados)
Editorial: "Melissa" Publishing House, Athens, Greece 1983
- Tapa dura
- Primera edición
Librería: Ground Zero Books, Ltd., Silver Spring, MD, Estados Unidos de AmericaGround Zero Books, Ltd.
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Usado
EUR 88,77
Envío por EUR 4,31Se envía dentro de Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
Hardcover. Presumed First Edition, First printing. 313, [1] pages. Text is in English. Decoration on the front cover. Illustrated endpapers. Illustrations (drawings and photographs, some in color). Index of Names and Terms. No dust jacket present. A 2 inch by 1.25 inch rectangle has been cut out from the title and Contents page,… resulting in a small lost of material from the map on the verso of the contents page, and from the index and rep (resulting in a small loss of index text). Spine label has been removed. Presumably an institutional stamp or identification has also been cut out. Dimitri Philippides holds two degrees, one from Athens University and another from Cambridge University. He has spent his professional life in academia and industry. Contributors include Angeliki Kharitonidou, Aristeidis Romanos, K. Kouroupakis, E. Savvaris, M. Stathakis, Spilopoulou, V. Tsamtsouis, Maro Philippas, Apostolou, Anastasia Tzakou. Anastasios Kartas, R Kloutsiniotis, N. Farakla, and N. Alexandrou. Greek Traditional Architecture unites medieval and modern Greece (15th to 20th century), and is a valuable point of reference in the quest for modern Greek identity. The objective of this publication is the collection of relevant scattered material and the presentation of unpublished one, so as to give a complete picture of traditional architecture, and thus to contribute to the understanding, appreciation and preservation of the architectural wealth of Greece. Color photographs of exteriors and interiors, original drawings of traditional neighborhoods and houses reflect the wealth of architecture all over Greece. This volume covers Andros, Mykonos, Naxos, Paros, Santorini, Sifnos, Syros, Tzia (Kea) and Tinos. Greek architecture is concerned with simplicity, proportion, perspective, and harmony in buildings. Greek architecture includes some of the finest and most distinctive buildings ever built. Examples of Greek architecture include temples, theaters, and stadia, all of which become common features of towns and cities from antiquity onwards. Greek architects would go on to greatly influence architects in the Hellenistic period and in the Roman world, providing the foundation for the classical architectural orders which would dominate the western world from the Renaissance to the present day. There are five orders of classical architecture - Doric, Ionic, Corinthian, Tuscan, and Composite - all named as such in later Roman times. Greek architects created the first three and hugely influenced the latter two which were composites rather than genuine innovations. An order, properly speaking, is a combination of a certain style of column with or without a base and an entablature (what the column supports: the architrave, frieze, and cornice). The earlier use of wooden pillars eventually evolved into the Doric column in stone. This was a vertical fluted column shaft, thinner at its top, with no base and a simple capital below a square abacus. The entablature frieze carried alternating triglyphs and metopes. The Ionic order, with origins in mid-6th century BCE Asia Minor, added a base and volute, or scroll capital, to a slimmer, straighter column. The Ionic entablature often carries a frieze with richly carved sculpture. The Corinthian column, invented in Athens in the 5th century BCE, is similar to the Ionic but topped by a more decorative capital of stylized acanthus and fern leaves. These orders became the basic grammar of western architecture and it is difficult to walk in any modern city and not see examples of them in one form or another. Considering more modest structures, there were fountain houses (from the 6th century BCE) in many Greek cities where people could easily collect water and perhaps, as black-figure pottery scenes suggest, socialize. Regarding private homes, these were usually constructed with mud brick, had packed earth floors, and were built to no particular design. One- or two-storied houses were the norm. Later, from the 5th century BCE, better houses were built in stone.