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History of early and simple domes

Cultures from pre-history to modern times constructed domed dwellings using local materials. Although it is not known when or where the first dome was created, sporadic examples of early domed structures have been discovered. Brick domes from the ancient Near East and corbelled stone domes have been found from the Middle East to Western Europe. These may indicate a common source or multiple independent traditions. A variety of materials have been used, including wood, mudbrick, or fabric. Indigenous peoples around the world produce similar structures today.

Early domes edit

 
Photo of an Apache wigwam, by Edward S. Curtis, 1903.

The earliest domes were likely domed huts made from saplings, reeds, or timbers and covered with thatch, turf, or skins. Materials may have transitioned to rammed earth, mud-brick, or more durable stone as a result of local conditions.[1] The earliest discovered remains of domed constructions may be four small dwellings made of Mammoth tusks and bones. The first was found by a farmer in Mezhirich, Ukraine, in 1965 while he was digging in his cellar and archaeologists unearthed three more.[2] They date from 19,280–11,700 BC.[3]

More recently, semi-subterranean dwellings of the Thule people, ancestors of the Inuit who were established in the Canadian Arctic by 1300 AD, were made of whalebone frames lashed together with hide straps in a parabolic dome shape covered with hides and blocks of sod and snow.[4] The igloo, a shelter built from blocks of ice in a spiral, was used by the Inuit. The wigwam was made by Native Americans and covered with hides or bark.[5] A kind of corbelled dome using lengths of wood was used by the Anasazi to cover some kivas between 900 and 1250. A similar technique is used in Afghanistan.[6]

In developing countries, domes are often less expensive alternatives to flat or sloped-roofed construction because they use less material to enclose a given volume and provide a lower rate of heat transfer due to the reduced surface area. Domes made with loam are found in Europe, Asia, and Africa, almost always using mud-bricks or adobes. A way of building them without centering called the Persian dome technique has been used for centuries in Afghanistan.[7] Although descended from a longer tradition, the examples of clay brick beehive domes at Harran, Turkey, have been dated to the 19th century AD, as are the dry stone trulli of Italy.[8][9] The Efé people of central Africa construct similar structures, using leaves as shingles.[10] The Himba people of Namibia construct "desert igloos" of wattle and daub for use as temporary shelters at seasonal cattle camps, and as permanent homes by the poor.[11] Extraordinarily thin domes of sun-baked clay 20 feet in diameter, 30 feet high, and nearly parabolic in curve, are known from Cameroon.[12] Turkic and Mongolian nomads have used domed tents covered in felt for at least a thousand years in central Asia, and to the early 1900s they were used from Anatolia to Mongolia.[13]

The historical development from structures like these to more sophisticated domes is not well documented. That the dome was known to early Mesopotamia may explain the existence of domes in both China and the West in the first millennium BC.[14] Another explanation, however, is that the use of the dome shape in construction did not have a single point of origin and was common in virtually all cultures long before domes were constructed with enduring materials.[15]

Ancient Near East edit

 
Drawing of an Assyrian bas-relief from Nimrud.

Small domes in corbelled stone or brick over round-plan houses go back to the Neolithic period in the ancient Near East, and served as dwellings for poorer people throughout the prehistoric period, but domes did not play an important role in monumental architecture.[16] The discoveries of seal impressions in the ancient site of Chogha Mish (c. 6800 to 3000 BC), located in the Susiana plains of Iran, in the vicinity of the modern city of Dezful in Khuzestan province, show the extensive use of dome structures in mud-brick and adobe buildings, likely granaries.[17] Other examples of mud-brick buildings that also seemed to employ the "true" dome technique have been excavated at Tell Arpachiyah, a Mesopotamian site of the Halaf (c. 6100 to 5400 BC) and Ubaid (c. 5300 to 4000 BC) cultures.[18] Excavations at Tell al-Rimah have revealed pitched-brick domical vaults from about 2000 BC.[19]

At the Sumerian Royal Cemetery of Ur, a "complete rubble dome built over a timber centring" was found among the chambers of the tombs for Meskalamdug and Puabi, dating to around 2500 BC.[20] Set in mud mortar, it was a "true dome with pendentives rounding off the angles of the square chamber." Other small domes can be inferred from the remaining ground plans, such as one in the courtyard of Ur-Nammu's ziggurat, and in later shrines and temples of the 14th century BC.[21] Some monumental Mesopotamian buildings of the Kassite period are thought to have had brick domes, but the issue is unsettled due to insufficient evidence in what has survived of these structures.[16]

A Neo-Assyrian bas-relief from Kuyunjik depicts domed buildings, although remains of such a structure in that ancient city have yet to be identified, perhaps due to the impermanent nature of sun-dried mudbrick construction.[22][23] However, because the relief depicts the Assyrian overland transport of a carved stone statue, the background buildings most likely refer to a foreign village, such as those at the foothills of the Lebanese mountains. The relief dates to the 8th century BC, while the use of domical structures in the Syrian region may go back as far as the fourth millennium BC.[24] Likewise, domed houses at Shulaveri in Georgia and Khirokitia, Cyprus, date back to around 6000 BC.[citation needed]

Ancient Middle East and Mediterranean edit

 
Drawing of the so-called Treasury of Atreus in Mycenae, Greece.

Ancient stone corbelled domes have been found from the Middle East to Western Europe. Corbelled beehive domes were used as granaries in Ancient Egypt from the first dynasty, in mastaba tombs of the Old Kingdom, as pressure-relieving devices in private brick pyramids of the New Kingdom, and as kilns and cellars. They have been found in brick and in stone.[25] The mastaba tombs of Seneb and of Neferi are examples.[16] A model of a 10th dynasty house has also been found in Rifeh showing the tops of three domes just emerging through the terraced roof.[26]

In an area straddling the borders between Oman, UAE, and Bahrain, stone beehive tombs built above ground called "Hafit graves", or "Mezyat graves", date to the Hafit period between 3200 and 2700 BC.[27][28] Similar above-ground tombs made of corbelled stone domes have been found in the fourth cataract region of Nubia with dates beginning in the second millennium BC.[29] The "Nubian dome" technique of using a movable guide to lay courses of a spherical dome dates back thousands of years in Upper Egypt.[30]

 
The tholos tomb of the Sant-Antine nuraghe tower at Torralba, Sardinia

Examples on the Mediterranean island of Sardinia have been dated to 2500 BC.[31] The nuraghe built between the 17th century BC and the 5th century BC include stone corbelled domes, some of which were covered by a flat roof or terrace.[32] The largest, Nuraghe Is Paras from the 15th century BC, is 11.8 meters tall and spans 6.4 meters.[33]

Minoan free-standing tombs about 4 to 13 meters in diameter are partially preserved on the Messara Plain of Crete. Only the lowest 3 or 4 meters remain standing of structures that may have risen up to 12 meters, but they are generally agreed to have been domed and provide a developmental link between Neolithic round houses and the circular tombs of the Bronze Age. They are dated after the round houses of Chalcolithic western Cyprus and before the Mycenaean "tholoi".[34]

Underground tombs called "treasuries", a term used by Pausanias for the grave of a hero, flourished in Mycenaean Greece between 1500 BC and 1300 BC, increasing in diameter from about 8 meters to about 14 meters in that time.[35] The "Treasury of Atreus", a large Mycenaean tomb covered with a mound of earth, dates to around 1330 BC.[31] It is about 15 meters in diameter and one of several tholos tombs with corbelled domes.[36] Others include the "Treasury of Clytemnestra" and the "Treasury of Minyas".[35] Smaller scale examples from this time can also be found in other parts of southern and western Europe.[1]

Corbelled beehive tombs over square chambers appear in Thrace, the Crimea, and in Etruria in the first millennium BC. Corbelling in the corners created pendentives.[37] Built between the eighth century and the first century BC, particularly around Tarquinia and Cerveteri, thousands of examples of Etruscan domed tombs of Italy have been identified.[38] The Etruscan "Tomb of the Diavolino" at Vetulonia is an example.[39] Wooden domes were evidently used in Etruria on the Italian peninsula from the Archaic period. Reproductions were preserved as rock-cut Etruscan tombs produced until the Roman Imperial period, and paintings at Pompeii show examples of them in the third style and later.[40]

Wooden domes may also have been used in ancient Greece, over buildings such as the Tholos of Epidaurus, which is typically depicted with a shallow conical roof.[41] Evidence for such wooden domes over round buildings in ancient Greece, if they existed, has not survived and the issue is much debated.[42] The heroon at Stymphalos has been dated to the late Classical or early Hellenistic period and has a round room preceded by a long rectilinear porch. Its layout might have been copied from Mycenaean tholos tombs and, still in use in the Roman period, it has also been suggested as an inspiration or precedent for the Pantheon in Rome.[43][44]

Hellenistic and pre-Roman domes edit

Although they had palaces of brick and stone, the kings of Achaemenid Persia held audiences and festivals in domical tents derived from the nomadic traditions of central Asia. They were likely similar to the later tents of the Mongol Khans. Called "Heavens", the tents emphasized the cosmic significance of the divine ruler. They were adopted by Alexander the Great after his conquest of the empire, and the domed baldachin of Roman and Byzantine practice was presumably inspired by this association.[45]

Simple domical mausoleums existed in the Hellenistic period.[46] The possible use of domed ceilings in the architecture of Ptolemaic Egypt is suggested by rock-cut tombs in Alexandria and by a poem from a third century BC papyrus that references a fountain niche covered with a semi-dome.[47]

The earliest physical evidence of a Hellenistic dome is at the North Baths of Morgantina in Sicily, dated to the mid third century BC. The dome measured 5.75 metres in diameter over the circular hot room of the baths. It was made of terracotta tubes partially inserted into each other and arranged in parallel arches that were then completely covered with mortar. Iron pins were used to connect some of the tubes horizontally. It is also the earliest known example of this technique of tubular vault construction. A Hellenistic bathing complex in nearby Syracuse may also have used domes like these to cover its circular rooms. The domes are contemporaneous with Archimedes, and the technique of their construction may be related to his method of analyzing spheres as a series of parallel truncated cone segments. The ship Syracusia, built for Hiero II of Syracuse and construction of which was overseen by Archimedes, included a domed library.[48]

In the city of Pergamon, there are remains of stone apsidal semi-domes from the second century BC.[49] The earliest evidence for dressed stone domes with voussoirs comes from the first century BC in the region of Palestine, Syria, and southern Anatolia, the "heartland of Oriental Hellenism".[37] A stone pendentive dome is known from a first century BC bath in Petra.[50]

The Scythians built domed tombs, as did some Germanic tribes in a paraboloid shape.[38] In the Saar basin of the Germanic north of Europe, the domical shape was used in wooden construction over houses, tombs, temples, and city towers, and was translated into masonry construction only after the beginning of Roman rule.[41]

The remains of a large domed circular hall measuring 17 meters in diameter in the Parthian capital city of Nyssa has been dated to perhaps the first century AD. It "shows the existence of a monumental domical tradition in Central Asia that had hitherto been unknown and which seems to have preceded Roman Imperial monuments or at least to have grown independently from them."[51] It likely had a wooden dome.[52] The room "contained a portrait of Mithradates II and, along with other structures at the site, hosted some sort of cult activities connected to the memory of the kings of kings."[53] The Sun Temple at Hatra appears to indicate a transition from columned halls with trabeated roofing to vaulted and domed construction in the first century AD, at least in Mesopotamia. The domed sanctuary hall of the temple was preceded by a barrel vaulted iwan, a combination that would be used by the subsequent Persian Sasanian Empire.[54] An account of a Parthian domed palace hall from around 100 AD in the city of Babylon can be found in the Life of Apollonius of Tyana by Philostratus. The hall was used by the king for passing judgments and was decorated with a mosaic of blue stone to resemble the sky, with images of gods in gold.[55] A bulbous Parthian dome can be seen in the relief sculpture of the Arch of Septimius Severus in Rome, its shape apparently due to the use of a light tent-like framework.[56]

Ancient China edit

 
Model of the Lei Cheng Uk Han Tomb of Hong Kong, dated to the Eastern Han dynasty (25–220 AD).

In ancient Chinese architecture, the use of brick vaults and domes in aboveground structures is unknown,[57] while in later periods corbelled domes were built in some aboveground temples and tombs.[58] However, underground tombs dating to the Han dynasty (202 BC – 220 AD) have been discovered and often feature archways, vaulted chambers and domed ceilings.[59] These underground vaults and domes did not require buttress supports since they were held in place by earthen pits.[57] The continued use of domed ceilings in underground tomb architecture can be seen at sites such as the Baisha Tomb near Gongyi, Henan province, dated to the Song dynasty (960–1279 AD), which features two chambers with conical ceilings.[60]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Mainstone 2001, p. 116.
  2. ^ Hitchcock.
  3. ^ Palmer, Pettitt & Bahn 2005, p. 24.
  4. ^ Levy & Dawson 2009, p. 2298-9, 2301-2.
  5. ^ Hosey 2012, p. 138-139.
  6. ^ Salvadori 1987, pp. 233, 235.
  7. ^ Minke 2012, p. 119, 127.
  8. ^ Ӧzdeniz et al. 1998, p. 479.
  9. ^ Castex 2008, p. 191.
  10. ^ Wilkie & Morelli 2000.
  11. ^ Crandall 2000, p. 34-35.
  12. ^ Creswell 1915a, p. 155.
  13. ^ Andrews 1973, p. 93.
  14. ^ Hill 1996, p. 69.
  15. ^ Smith 1950, p. 6.
  16. ^ a b c Leick 2003, p. 64.
  17. ^ Delougaz & Kantor 1996, p. 131-132, 143.
  18. ^ Leick 2003, p. 202.
  19. ^ Kawami 1982, p. 63.
  20. ^ Chant & Goodman 1999, p. 23.
  21. ^ Kubba 1987, p. 114.
  22. ^ Smith 1950, p. 62.
  23. ^ Spiers 1911, p. 957.
  24. ^ Smith 1950, p. 61-62.
  25. ^ Arnold 2003.
  26. ^ Creswell 1915a, p. 147.
  27. ^ National 2010.
  28. ^ ADACH 2012.
  29. ^ Paner & Borcowski 2007, p. 2, 9.
  30. ^ Minke 2012, p. 128.
  31. ^ a b McNeil 2002, p. 883.
  32. ^ Sinopoli 2010, p. 21.
  33. ^ Martines 2015, p. 129.
  34. ^ Wright 2009, p. 13.
  35. ^ a b Wright 2009, p. 179.
  36. ^ Hourihane 2012, p. 303.
  37. ^ a b Wright 2009, p. 188.
  38. ^ a b Melaragno 1991, p. 9.
  39. ^ Mainstone 2001, p. 117.
  40. ^ Lehmann 1945, p. 248-249.
  41. ^ a b Smith 1950, p. 11.
  42. ^ Lehmann 1945, p. 248.
  43. ^ Williams 2005, p. 404.
  44. ^ Jones 2003, p. 180.
  45. ^ Smith 1950, p. 81-82.
  46. ^ Grabar 1963, p. 194.
  47. ^ Winter 2006, p. 169.
  48. ^ Lucore 2009, p. 43-53.
  49. ^ Dodge 1984, p. 285.
  50. ^ Bardill 2008, p. 340.
  51. ^ Grabar 1963, p. 192.
  52. ^ Ashkan & Ahmad 2009, p. 99.
  53. ^ Canepa 2013, p. 345.
  54. ^ Stronach 1976, p. 623.
  55. ^ Lehmann 1945, p. 250-251.
  56. ^ Smith 1950, p. 82.
  57. ^ a b Watson 2000, p. 108.
  58. ^ Qiyi, Liu; Sullivan, Michael; and Silbergeld, Jerome. "Chinese architecture". Encyclopedia Britannica, 28 Oct. 2021, https://www.britannica.com/art/Chinese-architecture. Accessed 5 January 2022.
  59. ^ Wang 1982, pp. 175–178.
  60. ^ Steinhardt 1993, p. 376.

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history, early, simple, domes, cultures, from, history, modern, times, constructed, domed, dwellings, using, local, materials, although, known, when, where, first, dome, created, sporadic, examples, early, domed, structures, have, been, discovered, brick, dome. Cultures from pre history to modern times constructed domed dwellings using local materials Although it is not known when or where the first dome was created sporadic examples of early domed structures have been discovered Brick domes from the ancient Near East and corbelled stone domes have been found from the Middle East to Western Europe These may indicate a common source or multiple independent traditions A variety of materials have been used including wood mudbrick or fabric Indigenous peoples around the world produce similar structures today Contents 1 Early domes 2 Ancient Near East 3 Ancient Middle East and Mediterranean 4 Hellenistic and pre Roman domes 5 Ancient China 6 See also 7 References 8 BibliographyEarly domes edit nbsp Photo of an Apache wigwam by Edward S Curtis 1903 The earliest domes were likely domed huts made from saplings reeds or timbers and covered with thatch turf or skins Materials may have transitioned to rammed earth mud brick or more durable stone as a result of local conditions 1 The earliest discovered remains of domed constructions may be four small dwellings made of Mammoth tusks and bones The first was found by a farmer in Mezhirich Ukraine in 1965 while he was digging in his cellar and archaeologists unearthed three more 2 They date from 19 280 11 700 BC 3 More recently semi subterranean dwellings of the Thule people ancestors of the Inuit who were established in the Canadian Arctic by 1300 AD were made of whalebone frames lashed together with hide straps in a parabolic dome shape covered with hides and blocks of sod and snow 4 The igloo a shelter built from blocks of ice in a spiral was used by the Inuit The wigwam was made by Native Americans and covered with hides or bark 5 A kind of corbelled dome using lengths of wood was used by the Anasazi to cover some kivas between 900 and 1250 A similar technique is used in Afghanistan 6 In developing countries domes are often less expensive alternatives to flat or sloped roofed construction because they use less material to enclose a given volume and provide a lower rate of heat transfer due to the reduced surface area Domes made with loam are found in Europe Asia and Africa almost always using mud bricks or adobes A way of building them without centering called the Persian dome technique has been used for centuries in Afghanistan 7 Although descended from a longer tradition the examples of clay brick beehive domes at Harran Turkey have been dated to the 19th century AD as are the dry stone trulli of Italy 8 9 The Efe people of central Africa construct similar structures using leaves as shingles 10 The Himba people of Namibia construct desert igloos of wattle and daub for use as temporary shelters at seasonal cattle camps and as permanent homes by the poor 11 Extraordinarily thin domes of sun baked clay 20 feet in diameter 30 feet high and nearly parabolic in curve are known from Cameroon 12 Turkic and Mongolian nomads have used domed tents covered in felt for at least a thousand years in central Asia and to the early 1900s they were used from Anatolia to Mongolia 13 The historical development from structures like these to more sophisticated domes is not well documented That the dome was known to early Mesopotamia may explain the existence of domes in both China and the West in the first millennium BC 14 Another explanation however is that the use of the dome shape in construction did not have a single point of origin and was common in virtually all cultures long before domes were constructed with enduring materials 15 Ancient Near East edit nbsp Drawing of an Assyrian bas relief from Nimrud Small domes in corbelled stone or brick over round plan houses go back to the Neolithic period in the ancient Near East and served as dwellings for poorer people throughout the prehistoric period but domes did not play an important role in monumental architecture 16 The discoveries of seal impressions in the ancient site of Chogha Mish c 6800 to 3000 BC located in the Susiana plains of Iran in the vicinity of the modern city of Dezful in Khuzestan province show the extensive use of dome structures in mud brick and adobe buildings likely granaries 17 Other examples of mud brick buildings that also seemed to employ the true dome technique have been excavated at Tell Arpachiyah a Mesopotamian site of the Halaf c 6100 to 5400 BC and Ubaid c 5300 to 4000 BC cultures 18 Excavations at Tell al Rimah have revealed pitched brick domical vaults from about 2000 BC 19 At the Sumerian Royal Cemetery of Ur a complete rubble dome built over a timber centring was found among the chambers of the tombs for Meskalamdug and Puabi dating to around 2500 BC 20 Set in mud mortar it was a true dome with pendentives rounding off the angles of the square chamber Other small domes can be inferred from the remaining ground plans such as one in the courtyard of Ur Nammu s ziggurat and in later shrines and temples of the 14th century BC 21 Some monumental Mesopotamian buildings of the Kassite period are thought to have had brick domes but the issue is unsettled due to insufficient evidence in what has survived of these structures 16 A Neo Assyrian bas relief from Kuyunjik depicts domed buildings although remains of such a structure in that ancient city have yet to be identified perhaps due to the impermanent nature of sun dried mudbrick construction 22 23 However because the relief depicts the Assyrian overland transport of a carved stone statue the background buildings most likely refer to a foreign village such as those at the foothills of the Lebanese mountains The relief dates to the 8th century BC while the use of domical structures in the Syrian region may go back as far as the fourth millennium BC 24 Likewise domed houses at Shulaveri in Georgia and Khirokitia Cyprus date back to around 6000 BC citation needed Ancient Middle East and Mediterranean edit nbsp Drawing of the so called Treasury of Atreus in Mycenae Greece Ancient stone corbelled domes have been found from the Middle East to Western Europe Corbelled beehive domes were used as granaries in Ancient Egypt from the first dynasty in mastaba tombs of the Old Kingdom as pressure relieving devices in private brick pyramids of the New Kingdom and as kilns and cellars They have been found in brick and in stone 25 The mastaba tombs of Seneb and of Neferi are examples 16 A model of a 10th dynasty house has also been found in Rifeh showing the tops of three domes just emerging through the terraced roof 26 In an area straddling the borders between Oman UAE and Bahrain stone beehive tombs built above ground called Hafit graves or Mezyat graves date to the Hafit period between 3200 and 2700 BC 27 28 Similar above ground tombs made of corbelled stone domes have been found in the fourth cataract region of Nubia with dates beginning in the second millennium BC 29 The Nubian dome technique of using a movable guide to lay courses of a spherical dome dates back thousands of years in Upper Egypt 30 nbsp The tholos tomb of the Sant Antine nuraghe tower at Torralba Sardinia Examples on the Mediterranean island of Sardinia have been dated to 2500 BC 31 The nuraghe built between the 17th century BC and the 5th century BC include stone corbelled domes some of which were covered by a flat roof or terrace 32 The largest Nuraghe Is Paras from the 15th century BC is 11 8 meters tall and spans 6 4 meters 33 Minoan free standing tombs about 4 to 13 meters in diameter are partially preserved on the Messara Plain of Crete Only the lowest 3 or 4 meters remain standing of structures that may have risen up to 12 meters but they are generally agreed to have been domed and provide a developmental link between Neolithic round houses and the circular tombs of the Bronze Age They are dated after the round houses of Chalcolithic western Cyprus and before the Mycenaean tholoi 34 Underground tombs called treasuries a term used by Pausanias for the grave of a hero flourished in Mycenaean Greece between 1500 BC and 1300 BC increasing in diameter from about 8 meters to about 14 meters in that time 35 The Treasury of Atreus a large Mycenaean tomb covered with a mound of earth dates to around 1330 BC 31 It is about 15 meters in diameter and one of several tholos tombs with corbelled domes 36 Others include the Treasury of Clytemnestra and the Treasury of Minyas 35 Smaller scale examples from this time can also be found in other parts of southern and western Europe 1 Corbelled beehive tombs over square chambers appear in Thrace the Crimea and in Etruria in the first millennium BC Corbelling in the corners created pendentives 37 Built between the eighth century and the first century BC particularly around Tarquinia and Cerveteri thousands of examples of Etruscan domed tombs of Italy have been identified 38 The Etruscan Tomb of the Diavolino at Vetulonia is an example 39 Wooden domes were evidently used in Etruria on the Italian peninsula from the Archaic period Reproductions were preserved as rock cut Etruscan tombs produced until the Roman Imperial period and paintings at Pompeii show examples of them in the third style and later 40 Wooden domes may also have been used in ancient Greece over buildings such as the Tholos of Epidaurus which is typically depicted with a shallow conical roof 41 Evidence for such wooden domes over round buildings in ancient Greece if they existed has not survived and the issue is much debated 42 The heroon at Stymphalos has been dated to the late Classical or early Hellenistic period and has a round room preceded by a long rectilinear porch Its layout might have been copied from Mycenaean tholos tombs and still in use in the Roman period it has also been suggested as an inspiration or precedent for the Pantheon in Rome 43 44 Hellenistic and pre Roman domes editAlthough they had palaces of brick and stone the kings of Achaemenid Persia held audiences and festivals in domical tents derived from the nomadic traditions of central Asia They were likely similar to the later tents of the Mongol Khans Called Heavens the tents emphasized the cosmic significance of the divine ruler They were adopted by Alexander the Great after his conquest of the empire and the domed baldachin of Roman and Byzantine practice was presumably inspired by this association 45 Simple domical mausoleums existed in the Hellenistic period 46 The possible use of domed ceilings in the architecture of Ptolemaic Egypt is suggested by rock cut tombs in Alexandria and by a poem from a third century BC papyrus that references a fountain niche covered with a semi dome 47 The earliest physical evidence of a Hellenistic dome is at the North Baths of Morgantina in Sicily dated to the mid third century BC The dome measured 5 75 metres in diameter over the circular hot room of the baths It was made of terracotta tubes partially inserted into each other and arranged in parallel arches that were then completely covered with mortar Iron pins were used to connect some of the tubes horizontally It is also the earliest known example of this technique of tubular vault construction A Hellenistic bathing complex in nearby Syracuse may also have used domes like these to cover its circular rooms The domes are contemporaneous with Archimedes and the technique of their construction may be related to his method of analyzing spheres as a series of parallel truncated cone segments The ship Syracusia built for Hiero II of Syracuse and construction of which was overseen by Archimedes included a domed library 48 In the city of Pergamon there are remains of stone apsidal semi domes from the second century BC 49 The earliest evidence for dressed stone domes with voussoirs comes from the first century BC in the region of Palestine Syria and southern Anatolia the heartland of Oriental Hellenism 37 A stone pendentive dome is known from a first century BC bath in Petra 50 The Scythians built domed tombs as did some Germanic tribes in a paraboloid shape 38 In the Saar basin of the Germanic north of Europe the domical shape was used in wooden construction over houses tombs temples and city towers and was translated into masonry construction only after the beginning of Roman rule 41 The remains of a large domed circular hall measuring 17 meters in diameter in the Parthian capital city of Nyssa has been dated to perhaps the first century AD It shows the existence of a monumental domical tradition in Central Asia that had hitherto been unknown and which seems to have preceded Roman Imperial monuments or at least to have grown independently from them 51 It likely had a wooden dome 52 The room contained a portrait of Mithradates II and along with other structures at the site hosted some sort of cult activities connected to the memory of the kings of kings 53 The Sun Temple at Hatra appears to indicate a transition from columned halls with trabeated roofing to vaulted and domed construction in the first century AD at least in Mesopotamia The domed sanctuary hall of the temple was preceded by a barrel vaulted iwan a combination that would be used by the subsequent Persian Sasanian Empire 54 An account of a Parthian domed palace hall from around 100 AD in the city of Babylon can be found in the Life of Apollonius of Tyana by Philostratus The hall was used by the king for passing judgments and was decorated with a mosaic of blue stone to resemble the sky with images of gods in gold 55 A bulbous Parthian dome can be seen in the relief sculpture of the Arch of Septimius Severus in Rome its shape apparently due to the use of a light tent like framework 56 Ancient China edit nbsp Model of the Lei Cheng Uk Han Tomb of Hong Kong dated to the Eastern Han dynasty 25 220 AD Further information Han dynasty tomb architecture In ancient Chinese architecture the use of brick vaults and domes in aboveground structures is unknown 57 while in later periods corbelled domes were built in some aboveground temples and tombs 58 However underground tombs dating to the Han dynasty 202 BC 220 AD have been discovered and often feature archways vaulted chambers and domed ceilings 59 These underground vaults and domes did not require buttress supports since they were held in place by earthen pits 57 The continued use of domed ceilings in underground tomb architecture can be seen at sites such as the Baisha Tomb near Gongyi Henan province dated to the Song dynasty 960 1279 AD which features two chambers with conical ceilings 60 See also editHistory of early modern period domesReferences edit a b Mainstone 2001 p 116 Hitchcock Palmer Pettitt amp Bahn 2005 p 24 Levy amp Dawson 2009 p 2298 9 2301 2 Hosey 2012 p 138 139 Salvadori 1987 pp 233 235 Minke 2012 p 119 127 Ӧzdeniz et al 1998 p 479 Castex 2008 p 191 Wilkie amp Morelli 2000 Crandall 2000 p 34 35 Creswell 1915a p 155 Andrews 1973 p 93 Hill 1996 p 69 Smith 1950 p 6 a b c Leick 2003 p 64 Delougaz amp Kantor 1996 p 131 132 143 Leick 2003 p 202 Kawami 1982 p 63 Chant amp Goodman 1999 p 23 Kubba 1987 p 114 Smith 1950 p 62 Spiers 1911 p 957 Smith 1950 p 61 62 Arnold 2003 Creswell 1915a p 147 National 2010 ADACH 2012 Paner amp Borcowski 2007 p 2 9 Minke 2012 p 128 a b McNeil 2002 p 883 Sinopoli 2010 p 21 Martines 2015 p 129 Wright 2009 p 13 a b Wright 2009 p 179 Hourihane 2012 p 303 a b Wright 2009 p 188 a b Melaragno 1991 p 9 Mainstone 2001 p 117 Lehmann 1945 p 248 249 a b Smith 1950 p 11 Lehmann 1945 p 248 Williams 2005 p 404 Jones 2003 p 180 Smith 1950 p 81 82 Grabar 1963 p 194 Winter 2006 p 169 Lucore 2009 p 43 53 Dodge 1984 p 285 Bardill 2008 p 340 Grabar 1963 p 192 Ashkan amp Ahmad 2009 p 99 Canepa 2013 p 345 Stronach 1976 p 623 Lehmann 1945 p 250 251 Smith 1950 p 82 a b Watson 2000 p 108 Qiyi Liu Sullivan Michael and Silbergeld Jerome Chinese architecture Encyclopedia Britannica 28 Oct 2021 https www britannica com art Chinese architecture Accessed 5 January 2022 Wang 1982 pp 175 178 Steinhardt 1993 p 376 Bibliography editJebel Hafit Tombs Abu Dhabi Authority for Culture and Heritage ADACH 2012 archived from the original on March 15 2012 Tombs cast light on nation s origins The National Abu Dhabi Media February 20 2010 retrieved January 2 2011 Andrews P A 1973 The White House of Khurasan The Felt Tents of the Iranian Yomut and Goklen Iran 11 Taylor amp Francis Ltd 93 110 doi 10 2307 4300487 JSTOR 4300487 Arnold Dieter 2003 Cupola in Strudwick Helen Strudwick Nigel eds The Encyclopaedia of Ancient Egyptian Architecture New York NY I B Tauris amp Co Ltd pp 62 63 Ashkan Maryam Ahmad Yahaya November 2009 Persian Domes History Morphology and Typologies Archnet IJAR International Journal of Architectural Research 3 3 98 115 Bardill Jonathan 2008 Chapter II 7 1 Building Materials and Techniques In Jeffreys Elizabeth Haldon John Cormack Robin eds The Oxford Handbook of Byzantine Studies Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 925246 6 Canepa Matthew P 2013 The Transformation of Sacred Space Topography and Royal Ritual in Persia and the Ancient Iranian World PDF in Deena Ragavan ed Heaven on Earth Temples Ritual and Cosmic Symbolism in the Ancient World Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago pp 319 372 Castex Jean 2008 Architecture of Italy Reference Guides to National Architecture Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 32086 6 Chant Colin Goodman David 1999 Pre Industrial Cities and Technology Abingdon England Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 63620 4 Crandall David P 2000 The Place of Stunted Ironwood Trees A Year in the Lives of the Cattle herding Himba of Namibia New York NY Continuum International Publishing Group Inc ISBN 978 0 82641 270 6 Creswell K A C January 1915 Persian Domes before 1400 A D The Burlington Magazine for Connoisseurs 26 142 The Burlington Magazine Publications Ltd 146 155 JSTOR 859853 Delougaz Pinhas Kantor Helene A 1996 Alizadeh Abbas ed Chogha Mish The First Five Seasons of Excavations 1961 1971 Part 1 Text PDF Chicago IL The Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago ISBN 978 1 885 92301 1 Dodge Hazel 1984 Building Materials and Techniques in the Eastern Mediterranean from the Hellenistic Period to the Fourth Century AD Thesis PhD Thesis ed Newcastle England Newcastle University hdl 10443 868 Grabar Oleg December 1963 The Islamic Dome Some Considerations Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 22 4 191 198 doi 10 2307 988190 JSTOR 988190 Hill Donald Routledge 1996 A history of engineering in classical and medieval times Illustrated ed New York NY Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 15291 4 Hitchcock Don Mezhirich Mammoth Camp retrieved August 15 2009 Hosey Lance ed 2012 The Shape of Green Aesthetics Ecology and Design Washington DC Island Press ISBN 978 1 61091 214 3 Hourihane Colum ed 2012 The Grove Encyclopedia of Medieval Art and Architecture Oxford England Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 539536 5 Jones Mark Wilson 2003 Principles of Roman architecture New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 10202 4 Kawami Trudy S 1982 Parthian Brick Vaults in Mesopotamia Their Antecedents and Decendants sic PDF Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Society 14 61 67 Archived from the original PDF on 2013 10 29 Kubba Shamil A A 1987 Mesopotamian Architecture and Town Planning from the Mesolithic to the end of the Proto Historic Period c 10 000 3 500 B C Oxford England B A R ISBN 978 0 860 54476 0 Lehmann Karl 1945 The Dome of Heaven in Kleinbauer W Eugene ed Modern Perspectives in Western Art History An Anthology of Twentieth Century Writings on the Visual Arts Medieval Academy Reprints for Teaching vol 25 University of Toronto Press published 1989 pp 227 270 ISBN 978 0 802 06708 1 Leick Gwendolyn ed 2003 Dome A Dictionary of Ancient Near Eastern Architecture London and New York Taylor amp Francis ISBN 978 0 203 19965 7 Levy Richard Dawson Peter 2009 Using finite element methods to analyze ancient architecture an example from the North American Arctic PDF Journal of Archaeological Science 36 10 Elsevier 2298 2307 doi 10 1016 j jas 2009 06 014 Retrieved May 17 2015 Lucore Sandra K 2009 Archimedes the North Baths at Morgantina and Early Developments in Vaulted Construction in Kosso Cynthia Scott Anne eds The nature and function of water baths bathing and hygiene from antiquity through the Renaissance Leiden The Netherlands Brill pp 43 59 ISBN 978 9 004 17357 6 Mainstone Rowland J 2001 Developments in Structural Form 2 ed Abingdon England Routledge ISBN 978 0 7506 5451 7 Martines Giangiacomo 2015 Four The Conception and Construction of Drum and Dome In Marder Tod A Jones Mark Wilson eds The Pantheon From Antiquity to the Present PDF Cambridge England Cambridge University Press pp 99 131 doi 10 1017 CBO9781139015974 005 ISBN 978 1 139 01597 4 Melaragno Michele G 1991 An Introduction to Shell Structures the Art and Science of Vaulting softcover ed New York New York Van Nostrand Reinhold ISBN 978 1 4757 0225 5 McNeil Ian ed 2002 An Encyclopaedia of the History of Technology Abingdon England Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 98165 6 Minke Gernot 2012 Building with Earth Design and Technology of a Sustainable Architecture 3rd revised ed Berlin Germany Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 034 60872 5 Ӧzdeniz M B Bekleyen A Gonul I A Gonul H Sarigul H Ilter T Dalkilic N Yildirim M 1998 Vernacular domed houses of Harran Turkey Habitat International 22 4 Great Britain Elsevier Science Ltd 477 485 doi 10 1016 S0197 3975 98 00027 7 Retrieved May 30 2020 Palmer Douglas Pettitt Paul Bahn Paul G 2005 Unearthing the past the great archaeological discoveries that have changed history Illustrated ed Guilford CT Globe Pequot ISBN 978 1 59228 718 5 Paner Henryk Borcowski Zbigniew 2007 Dome graves and other uncommon constructions from the Fourth Cataract region In Naser Claudia Lange Mathias eds Proceedings of the Second International Conference on the Archaeology of the Fourth Nile Cataract Berlin August 4th 6th 2005 Wiesbaden Germany Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 05680 9 Salvadori M G 1987 The Anasazi cribbed domes Building and Environment 22 3 Elsevier Ltd 233 235 doi 10 1016 0360 1323 87 90011 4 ISSN 0360 1323 Sinopoli Anna 2010 No Tension behaviour and Best Shape of Pseudo Vaults Construction History 25 The Construction History Society 21 51 JSTOR 41613958 Smith Earl Baldwin 1950 The Dome A Study in the History of Ideas Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 03875 9 Spiers Richard Phene 1911 Vault In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 956 961 Steinhardt Nancy Shatzman 1993 The Tangut Royal Tombs near Yinchuan Muqarnas An Annual on Islamic Art and Architecture 10 369 381 Stronach David 1976 On the Evolution of the Early Iranian Fire Temple In Loicq Jean Duchesne Guillemin J eds Acta Iranica Encyclopedie Permanente des Etudes Iraniennes Deuxieme Serie Volume XI Belgium Centre International d Etudes Indo iraniennes pp 605 628 ISBN 978 9 068 31002 3 Wang Zhongshu 1982 Han Civilization translated by K C Chang and Collaborators New Haven and London Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 02723 5 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a translator has generic name help Watson William 2000 The Arts of China to AD 900 New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 08284 5 Wilkie David S Morelli Gilda A 2000 Forest Foragers A Day in the Life of Efe Pygmies in the Democratic Republic of Congo Cultural Survival Quarterly 24 3 Cambridge MA Cultural Survival Inc Retrieved December 7 2010 Williams Hector 2005 The Exploration of Ancient Stymphalos 1982 2002 PDF Ancient Arcadia Papers from the Third International Seminar on Ancient Arcadia Held at the Norwegian Institute at Athens 7 10 May 2002 Uppsala Sweden Paul Forlag Astroms Retrieved April 26 2015 Winter Frederick E 2006 Studies in Hellenistic Architecture illustrated ed Toronto Canada University of Toronto Press ISBN 978 0 8020 3914 9 Wright G R H 2009 Ancient Building Technology Volume 3 Construction 2 Vols illustrated ed Leiden The Netherlands Brill ISBN 978 9 004 17745 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of early and simple domes amp oldid 1197787032, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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