Concepedia

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The Arch and the Vault in Greek Architecture

68

Citations

0

References

1978

Year

TLDR

The true arch, though long recognized in Greek architecture, has been understudied, and its emergence coincided with the introduction of barrel‑vaulted tombs in Macedonia. The study aims to determine when and how the true arch entered Greek architecture, proposing that Macedonian military engineers introduced it after learning the form in Mesopotamia during Alexander’s campaigns. The authors analyze structural and decorative details of the arch and barrel‑vault, comparing extant monuments and exploring Greek developments such as groin‑vaulting. Evidence shows no securely dated true arch in Greece before the late fourth century B.C., and Macedonian political and military influence is evident at all early arched sites.

Abstract

Though long recognized as a structural form utilized in Greek architecture, the true arch has never been studied in sufficient detail. An issue of fundamental importance is to determine the date and circumstances of the introduction of the arch into the Greek world. An examination of the archaeological and historical evidence indicates that there are no examples of the true arch in the Greek world which can be dated with certainty to a period earlier than the late fourth century B.C. At that time a new type of burial chamber was introduced in Macedonia, the barrel-vaulted tomb. It can be demonstrated that Macedonian political and military influence was present at each of the sites where the early examples of arched construction occur. It is proposed that Macedonian military engineers were instrumental in introducing the true arch into Greek architecture, and furthermore that these engineers learned of this structural form in Mesopotamia, where the arch and the vault had been known for at least two preceding millennia, during and after the campaigns of Alexander the Great. Structural details of the arch and its related form, the barrel-vault, are examined in the light of extant monuments and remains, as are the variants in configuration from the simple true arch. Both structural and decorative applications of the arch and the vault are assessed, and attention is paid also to the development by Greek builders of more sophisticated forms such as groin-vaulting.