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Download Egyptian Architecture: Archaic and Old Kingdom Architecture
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Ancient and Egyptian Architecture Architectural History ACT 322 Doris Kemp Topics              Egyptian Civilization Egyptian Architectural Characteristics Mastabas Saqqara Pyramid at Medum Khufu’s Pyramid at Giza Additional Giza Structures Characteristics Beni Hasan Mortuary Temples Middle Kingdom Mortuary Temples New Kingdom Mortuary Temples Egyptian Civil Architecture Egyptian Civilization    Egypt and Mesopotamia are the earliest known recorded civilizations Nile River was the driving force for ancient Egypt Egyptians were obsessed with the afterlife and the dead  These beliefs had a great impact on the culture and its architecture Egyptian Civilization  Ancient Egyptian Periods: Old Kingdom (c. 3200 – 2158 B.C.)  Middle Kingdom (c. 2134 – 1786 B.C.)  New Kingdom (c. 1570 – 1085 B.C.)   Landscape  Nile Valley cliffs provided a rich assortment of building stone  Varieties include sandstone, granite, and alluvial clay for bricks Egyptian Architectural Characteristics  Egyptians commonly imitated nature in their architecture In a historical sense, nature is a key element in architecture, no matter the culture  Only recently has this process been neglected  Old Kingdom Architecture: Mastabas  Mastabas First known Egyptian tombs  Bench-shaped masses rising above 30 ft.  Composed generally of sun-baked mud brick  Featured sloping walls and a flat roof  Burial chamber usually was surrounded by storage rooms   Used to store goods for the deceased to take along their journey in the afterlife Old Kingdom Architecture: Mastabas  Mastabas  Serdabs    State chambers that featured an effigy of the deceased False doors were included to allow for the soul of the deceased to escape the structure Mastabas served as a model for the later Egyptian pyramids Old Kingdom Architecture: Mastabas http://www2.gp4success.org.uk/egypt/ARTICLES/mastabas.htm Old Kingdom Architecture: Mastabas http://www.petrie.ucl.ac.uk/digital_egypt/3d/pictures/meydum5.jpg Old Kingdom Architecture: Saqqara  Saqqara Enormous funerary complex built by the Great King Zoser in 2750 B.C.  Key features:  Residence for the king in the afterlife (tomb)  Replica of the royal palace  Stage for the enactment for the rituals of kingship  Old Kingdom Architecture: Saqqara  Saqqara  Designed by Imhotep The first recorded architect in history  Would later be considered a god by the Egyptians   First conceived as a mastaba with huge stone blocks  Unlike earlier mastabas which used mud-bricks Old Kingdom Architecture: Saqqara  Saqqara  The complex was repeatedly enlarged over time   Layers were added in an upward fashion These additions by Imhotep eventually created the first Egyptian pyramid  Step pyramid   Differs from the geometrically perfect pyramids (i.e. the Great Pyramids) Successive layers of smaller structure added upwards Old Kingdom Architecture: Saqqara  Saqqara Stands 204 ft. , present day  Surrounded by a 33 ft. high wall  Entrance Hall  Columns are used to imitate the bundles of reeds found along the Nile  Real reeds were commonly used to construct residential structures during this time  Old Kingdom Architecture: Saqqara Photo: Sullivan Old Kingdom Architecture: Saqqara Photo: Sullivan Old Kingdom Architecture: Pyramid at Medum  Pyramid at Medum   c. 2704 – 2656 B.C. Demonstrates Egyptian attempts at building a steeped, rather than stepped pyramid    Geometrically perfect pyramid Requires at least a 52° angle from the horizontal Outer layers were insufficiently supported  Gave way to the immense pressure Old Kingdom Architecture: Pyramid at Medum Photo: Sullivan Old Kingdom Architecture: Khufu’s Pyramid at Giza  Pyramid at Giza The first successful steep pyramid  Created by the great pharaoh Khufu (Cheops in Greek)  Also known as the Great Pyramid  Originally 482 ft. high on a plan of 760 ft.  Modern scientists remain puzzled on its construction  Old Kingdom Architecture: Khufu’s Pyramid at Giza Photo: Sullivan Old Kingdom Architecture: Khufu’s Pyramid at Giza  Khufu’s Pyramid at Giza   Many scientists theorize its massive stone blocks were quarried and transported by large sleds and barges Blocks were then lifted atop ramps to be placed at higher levels Photo: Sullivan Old Kingdom Architecture: Khufu’s Pyramid at Giza  Khufu’s Pyramid at Giza  Queen’s Chamber The original burial place  Located underground, beneath the Great Pyramid   King’s Chamber Replaced the original chamber  Constructed within the pyramid itself  Considered one of the finest examples of megalithic architecture in existence  Old Kingdom Architecture: Khufu’s Pyramid at Giza  Khufu’s Pyramid at Giza  Grand Gallery Grandiose passage leading from the entrance to the King’s Chamber  Originally intended to be used only once, for the king’s burial  Old Kingdom Architecture: Additional Giza Structures  Chefren  Followed the Great Pyramid in construction    c. 2530 B.C. Built for the pharaoh Chefren Smaller than the Great Pyramid Photo: Sullivan Old Kingdom Architecture: Additional Giza Structures  Mycerinus    Built after Chefren’s Pyramid c. 2500 B.C. The last of the large Egyptian steep pyramids Photo: Sullivan Middle and New Kingdom: Characteristics  Egyptian tombs return to below the ground   Many tombs begin to appear in the cliffs of the Nile Valley Builders decide to sacrifice the monumentality of tombs for security from grave robbers  Shaft tombs Long, underground corridors and chambers hollowed out of Nile Valley cliffs  Little architectural significance  Middle and New Kingdom: Beni Hasan  Beni Hasan 125 miles upstream from Giza on the East bank of the Nile River  Hollowed out of the Nile Valley cliffs  Features:  Colonnaded portico for public worship  Combined chapel and effigy chamber  Middle and New Kingdom: Beni Hasan Photo: Sullivan Middle and New Kingdom: Mortuary Temples  Mortuary Temples Followed the decline of the pyramids and the concealment of burial chambers  Developed into Egypt’s most important monumental form  Funerary complexes set before the Old Kingdom pyramids are some of the most striking mortuary temples  Middle and New Kingdom: Mortuary Temples  Mortuary Temples  Usually comprised of three interconnected parts: A temple near the Nile where the king’s body was embalmed  A mortuary temple where rituals were performed  A long, narrow causeway between thick walls connecting the two temples  Middle and New Kingdom: Mortuary Temples  Temple Complex of Khafre  One of the most impressive preserved temple complex’s Photo: Sullivan Middle and New Kingdom: Middle Kingdom Mortuary Temples  The Sphinx   Represented the god ReHarakthe on guard over the king’s tomb Contained an intricately constructed set of interiors Photo: Sullivan Middle and New Kingdom: Middle Kingdom Mortuary Temples  Mortuary Complex of Mentuhotep II Located at the base of the cliff at Dier el Bahari  The first monumental structure against the Nile Valley cliffs in Egyptian architecture  Huge complex developed some 500 years after the decline of the pyramids  Middle and New Kingdom: Middle Kingdom Mortuary Temples Photo: Sullivan Middle and New Kingdom: Middle Kingdom Mortuary Temples  Mortuary Temple of Queen Hatshepsut Dedicated to the sun god Amon-Ra  Located next to the Mortuary Complex of Mentuhotep II    Built some 500 years later Considered the “least Egyptian” of the Egyptian monuments  Closest Egyptians ever came to the architecture of Classical Greece Middle and New Kingdom: Middle Kingdom Mortuary Temples Photo: Sullivan Middle and New Kingdom: New Kingdom Mortuary Temples  Thebes Originally built in two locations on the East bank of the Nile River  Known today as Karnak and Luxor  Connected by great avenues of Sphinxes  Middle and New Kingdom: New Kingdom Mortuary Temples Photo: Sullivan Middle and New Kingdom: New Kingdom Mortuary Temples  Thebes  Temple of Khons   Erected around 1100 B.C. Original temple that other structures would be modeled after in the construction of Thebes Photo: Sullivan Middle and New Kingdom: New Kingdom Mortuary Temples  Thebes  Temple of Amun  Features two giant obelisks that were created for visual accent to the structure   Obelisks tested Egyptian builders to the full  Great complexity, detail, and sheer size Created from two giant stones Middle and New Kingdom: Egyptian Civil Architecture  Evidence shows that life in Egypt was somewhat secular  Evidence of country houses and cities where trade flourished Middle and New Kingdom: Egyptian Civil Architecture  Town of Tell el Amarna Early example of Egyptian urban planning  Lies between Luxor and Cairo  Features:  Large estates for the wealthy  Smaller houses for middle class  Shows signs of slum areas  Middle and New Kingdom: Egyptian Civil Architecture Photo: Sullivan References     Sullivan, Mary; http://www.bluffton.edu/~sullivanm/ http://www.brynmawr.edu/Acads/Cities/wld/wdpt1.html Trachtenburg/Hyman; Architecture: From Prehistory to Postmodernity Wodehouse/Moffett; A History of Western Architecture Ancient and Egyptian Architecture Architectural History ACT 322 Doris Kemp
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            