INTEL Architectures
... architecture based processors. Almost 80% of the laptop computers and desktop computers use Intel microprocessors and thus is the market leader in microprocessors. As a policy they have adopted Moore’s law applied to silicon technology which states that the number of transistors that can be placed i ...
... architecture based processors. Almost 80% of the laptop computers and desktop computers use Intel microprocessors and thus is the market leader in microprocessors. As a policy they have adopted Moore’s law applied to silicon technology which states that the number of transistors that can be placed i ...
Introduction This course of lectures covers history of Russian
... All other art forms were not by any means as accessible for the man of the Middle Ages and, therefore, had not ability to exercise continuous influence over him. All this puts architecture, and, above all, church architecture, in the first place when it comes to the significance, the level of influ ...
... All other art forms were not by any means as accessible for the man of the Middle Ages and, therefore, had not ability to exercise continuous influence over him. All this puts architecture, and, above all, church architecture, in the first place when it comes to the significance, the level of influ ...
Paper title
... middle of the northern arcade in Tenkiz and Al-Kremy, an addition to that all the mosques had four entrances in the south, east and west typically as the Umayyad Mosque. The schools, which were no less important from the religious and politic aspects than the mosques in this era, were preferred to b ...
... middle of the northern arcade in Tenkiz and Al-Kremy, an addition to that all the mosques had four entrances in the south, east and west typically as the Umayyad Mosque. The schools, which were no less important from the religious and politic aspects than the mosques in this era, were preferred to b ...
MODULE 9: ARCHITECTURE This module explores architecture
... and styles of the architectural past. By assembling a framework of steel girders, architects and builders could suddenly create tall, slender buildings with a strong steel skeleton. The rest of the building's elements — the walls, floors, ceilings, and windows were suspended from the load-bearing st ...
... and styles of the architectural past. By assembling a framework of steel girders, architects and builders could suddenly create tall, slender buildings with a strong steel skeleton. The rest of the building's elements — the walls, floors, ceilings, and windows were suspended from the load-bearing st ...
Ottoman architecture
Ottoman architecture is the architecture of the Ottoman Empire which emerged in Bursa and Edirne in 14th and 15th centuries. The architecture of the empire developed from the earlier Seljuk architecture and was influenced by the Byzantine architecture, Iranian as well as Islamic Mamluk traditions after the conquest of Constantinople by the Ottomans. For almost 400 years Byzantine architectural artifacts such as the church of Hagia Sophia served as models for many of the Ottoman mosques. Overall, Ottoman architecture has been described as Byzantine architecture synthesized with architectural traditions of the Mediterranean and the Middle East.The Ottomans achieved the highest level architecture in their lands hence or since. They mastered the technique of building vast inner spaces confined by seemingly weightless yet massive domes, and achieving perfect harmony between inner and outer spaces, as well as articulated light and shadow. Islamic religious architecture which until then consisted of simple buildings with extensive decorations, was transformed by the Ottomans through a dynamic architectural vocabulary of vaults, domes, semi domes and columns. The mosque was transformed from being a cramped and dark chamber with arabesque-covered walls into a sanctuary of aesthetic and technical balance, refined elegance and a hint of heavenly transcendence.Today, one finds remnants of Ottoman architecture in certain parts of its former territories under decay.