Form, style, and meaning in Byzantine church architecture

Bibliographic Information

Form, style, and meaning in Byzantine church architecture

Hans Buchwald

(Variorum collected studies series, CS644)

Ashgate, c1999

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Using detailed analyses of individual buildings as a point of departure, Professor Buchwald here examines various approaches to Byzantine architectural forms, and raises questions concerning the use of stylistic and other forms of analysis. One group of articles focuses on stylistic currents in Asia Minor, including that of the 13th-century Lascarid dynasty, previously unknown. Others explore methods which appear to have been used in the design of Byzantine churches, such as dimensional 'rules of thumb', modular and geometric systems of proportion, and the quadratura, hitherto recognised only in Western architecture. The final essays pose further questions: what were the goals and achievements of Byzantine architects, when they transformed older existing buildings? How, and why, did they use stereometric Euclidean geometry? And was there any ultimately Platonic connection?

Table of Contents

  • Contents: Part one: Individual Buildings: Saint Sophia, turning point in the development of Byzantine architecture?
  • The church of St John the Theologian in Alaehir (Philadelphia)
  • Sardis Church E - a preliminary report
  • Part two: Architectural Forms in Asia Minor: Notes on the design of aisled basilicas in Asia Minor
  • Western Asia Minor as a generator of architectural forms in the Byzantine period, provincial back-wash or dynamic centre of production?
  • Lascarid architecture
  • Part three: Questions of Style and meaning: The concept of style in Byzantine architecture
  • Retrofit-hallmark of Byzantine architecture?
  • The first Byzantine architectural style: evolution or revolution?
  • Criteria for the evaluation of transitional Byzantine architecture
  • The geometry of Middle Byzantine Churches and some possible implications
  • Index.

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