Visitwallpapers.com


Login
Gallery : www.visitwallpapers.com Keyword Album: architecture temple_398
Advanced Search
View Slideshow

Keyword Album: architecture

1. worldcup_20... ... 3066. temple_397 3067. Aerial_view... 3068. France_538 3069. temple_398 3070. temple_399 3071. Aerial_view... 3072. France_540 ... 5694. sunrise_537
View Slideshow

Keyword Album: architecture

1. worldcup_20... ... 3066. temple_397 3067. Aerial_view... 3068. France_538 3069. temple_398 3070. temple_399 3071. Aerial_view... 3072. France_540 ... 5694. sunrise_537

temple_398

Tholos at the sanctuary of Athena Pronaia, Delphi, Greece.

Tholos, also called beehive tomb, in ancient Greek architecture, a circular building with a conical or vaulted roof and with or without a peristyle, or surrounding colonnade. In the Mycenaean period, tholoi were large ceremonial tombs, sometimes built into the sides of hills; they were beehive-shaped and covered by a corbeled arch. In classical Greece, the tholos at Delphi had a peristyle; the tholos in Athens, serving as a dining hall for the Athenian Senate, had no outside columns. The tholos at Epidaurus, designed by Polyclitus, was a circular chamber with a Doric colonnade outside and a Corinthian within; it contained exquisite carvings. The foundations were a series of concentric walls with doors and partitions that made a subterranean labyrinth. The tholos at Olympia, known as the Philippeum, was a round building of the Ionic order, with Corinthian half columns on the inside; it was erected by Philip II of Macedon to commemorate his victory over the Greeks at Chaeronea in 338 BC.

Date: 08/03/2022
Size:
Full size: 1920x1272
nexttemple_399lastsunrise_537
worldcup_2026_01first France_538previous
temple_398
nexttemple_399lastsunrise_537
worldcup_2026_01first France_538previous