History of Architecture: Pre-historic Architecture
Post and lintel
A horizontal member, supported on its two ends by columns.
Stone Row
A linear arrangement of upright, parallel megalithic standing stones set at intervals along a common axis or series of axes.
Tumulus
A prehistoric burial mound
History of Architecture
A record of man's effort to build beautifully
Aubrey Hole
A ring of fifty-six Chalk pits at Stonehenge, named after John Aubrey.
Menhir
A simple, large, upright monolith that serves a religious purpose
Heel Stone
A single large block of sarsen stone standing within the Avenue outside the entrance of the Stonehenge earthwork.
Paleolithic Period
c. 35,000-9000/8000 BCE -Small hunter-gatherer societies -clans/family groups -small, organic, seasonal structures -Use of stone tools
Neolithic Period
c. 9000/8000-3000 BCE -agriculture, domestication of animals, settled village life -Used ground stone tools, like millstones, indicating that they ate grains. -Domesticated animals, developed agriculture -Permanent Dwellings
Wigwan
An American Indian dwelling usually of round or oval shape. Formed of poles overlaid with bark, rush mats, or animal skins
Newgrange passage grave, County Meath, Ireland - 3100 BCE
An earthen mound and passage grave. Had decorative boulders that surrounded the perimeter. Aligned with the solstices.
Mortise-&-Tenon Joint
Knob and socket system used to join pieces of wood or stone together.
Mesolithic Period
Known as the Middle Stone Age
Neolithic Period
Known as the New Stone Age
Paleolithic Period
Known as the Old Stone Age
Passage grave, British Isles
Neolithic Era. Burial grave for people of prestige. Had a passage way to the burial chamber and created a series of dolmens in the passage way. At the end of the passage way there is a domed vault.
Fresco
Painting painted into the plaster as it was wet.
Sympathetic Magic
Paleolithic Era. Idea that you could go into a sacred space and recreate the image of the animal and recreate its spirit. Prehistoric people would also throw rocks and arrowheads at the animal paintings to recreate the hunt.
Hall of the Bulls, Caves at Lascaux, France, c. 15000 - 13000 BCE
Paleolithic cave paintings. Paintings inside of the cave was made from minerals that were cut out of rock and then crushed into a powder and then was mixed with animal fat.
Tent
Pre-historic dwelling made of animal hides
Alignment, Carnac, France, c. 4250 - 3750 BCE
Several rows of stone alignments. 2 miles long and made up of menhirs.
Mastaba
Single-storey trapezoidal structures considered to be the precursor to the pyramids
Skara Brae, Orkney Islands, Scotland, c. 3100 - 2500 BCE
This site used to contain a series of Paleolithic camp sites before the village. Shelters were made of midden and thatch.
Twine
Twisted dried grass that is then braided and was used to tie things together.
Jericho and Catal Huyuk
Two earliest known urban communities
Bucrania
Bulls head made from plaster, horns, and skulls.
Intramural Burial
Graves within a settlement, ie, under the floors of houses.
Cliff Dwelling
Homes built into cliff sides, such as those built by the Ancient Puebloans of the Southwest.
Purlins
Horizontal beams (tree branches) that were used with twine to form roofs.
Tipi
Identify the picture
Stonehenge, Salisbury Plain, England c. 2900 - 1400 BCE
Is a Cromlech. Made in 4 stages, and has a round ditch around it. The ditch was a perfect circle. 100 feet in diameter. Has a post and lintel system. Between the two cromlechs of post and lintels there was a circle of blue stones.
Megaliths
Large stone, often used in Neolithic Monuments.
Midden
Layers of domestic debris that forms into hills that can be used to be built into as shelter.
Mudbrick
Made from sun-dried clay, or clay-like earth
Paleolithic Hut
Were built with landscape materials. They were bind by tree branches with braided grass on top. They would also have stones surrounding the outside of the hut and the hut would have a circular or oval shape.
Dolmen (trilithon)
2 upright posts capped by a single lintel.
Thatch
Bundles of dry grass.
Cromlech
Circular pattern of stones.
Cromlech
Megalithic construction enclosures formed by huge stones planted on the ground in circular form
Longhouse
Multifamily buildings during the Neolithic Era, usually made out of timber wood. As early as 6000-5000 BCE. 20-30 people could live in them. Hearth was outside, and there is only one door. House divided in 3 sections - work, sleep/eat, and grain.
Catal Huyuk, Turkey c. 6500 - 5700 BCE
Neolithic City. Unfortified, dense with dwellings without streets. Entries into buildings were on the roof tops and there was high openings in the walls for ventilation. Dwellings were made of mud-brick walls and a post-&-lintel timber framework.
Palisade
Row of timber columns that are sharpened on the top and then used to fence in a Neolithic village to protect the residents.
Stone Alignment
Several rows of stones.
Menhir
Stone put in the landscape, vertically by humans. Ex: Carnac France
Tipi
Term used to describe a portable Indian Shelter
Rock Cave
The earliest form of dwelling developed by man
Cromlech
The famous Stonehenge in Wiltshire, England is a megalithic monument consisting of four concentric rings centered around and altar stone. It is also,arguably, the most famous example of:
Prehistoric Architecture
The roots of architecture. Refers to cultures who didn't record their own story. The ways in which prehistoric peoples used earth carving (ditches and circles) and stones to mark the land. These constructions required extraordinary work to make, and so although we don't know their use, we know that they were important, possibly sacred, constructions. Stone construction: Carnac, France and Stonehenge
Dolmen
Tomb of standing stones usually capped with a large horizontal slab
Trullo
Trapezoidal rendered stone dwelling in Apulia, Italy, square chambers that are roofed with conical vaulted roofs