Title: Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
1Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
- Architectural History
- ACT 322
- Doris Kemp
2Topics
- Byzantine Architecture
- The Ideal Byzantine Church
- Central Plan
- Domes
- Lighting and Decoration
- Hagia Sophia
- Other Justinian Structures
3Byzantine Architecture
- In the years around 500 A.D. the Western Empire
laid in ruins - Rome had been sacked twice and Italy was in the
hands of the Ostrogoths - The Eastern Empire lived on
- Constantinople was the capitol of the Eastern
Empire - Had been built on the Hellenic city of Byzantium
(modern day Istanbul, Turkey)
4Byzantine Architecture
- A formal shift from early Christian to Byzantine
architecture can be seen in the early sixth
century A.D. - Timber-roofed Latin basilican churches gave way
to domed, central-plan structures in the Eastern
Empire
5Byzantine ArchitectureIdeal Byzantine Church
- No two Byzantine churches were identical
- Features of the ideal Byzantine church
- Central plan
- Pendentive dome
- String focus on structure, lighting, and
elaborate decoration
6Byzantine ArchitectureIdeal Byzantine Church
- Central Plan
- The axis descended away from visitors
- Leaves no possible active participation except
weakly around a central axis - In most Byzantine churches, the centralized
building core was square
7Byzantine ArchitectureIdeal Byzantine Church
- Domes
- Central core of the church formed an integral
part of a larger structure that included
supporting structure and vaulting as well - The dome complimented the spatial core of the
church - Domes were generally placed over cylinders, as at
the Pantheon
8Byzantine ArchitectureIdeal Byzantine Church
- Domes
- Occasionally, domes were placed over polygons or
even squares - Created certain structural problems
- Pendentive
- Provided a way to set a circle (dome) atop a
square - A Roman invention, though rarely used
- Byzantines used pendentives very often
- Domes were used to invoke powerful images of the
Christian heaven
9Byzantine ArchitectureIdeal Byzantine Church
Photo Sullivan
10Byzantine ArchitectureIdeal Byzantine Church
- Lighting and Decoration
- Articulation was very important in Byzantine
architecture - No visible surfaces were left in a natural state
- All was dissolved in color and light
- Glowing marble pavements
- Richly veined marble walls
- Extensive mosaic cycles
- Rich patterns of light created by glass and
structural features
11Byzantine ArchitectureIdeal Byzantine Church
Photo Sullivan
12Byzantine ArchitectureHagia Sophia
- Hagia Sophia
- Symbolizes the ideal Byzantine church
- Built as the new Cathedral of Constantinople by
the Emperor Justinian in 532 537 A.D. - Intended to be the keystone of Justinians
massive architectural campaign
13Byzantine ArchitectureHagia Sophia
Photo Sullivan
14Byzantine ArchitectureHagia Sophia
- Hagia Sophia
- Justinian believed that only natural scientists
and philosophers would be able to create the
structure he had seen in his dreams - Designed by two men
- Anthemius of Tralles
- Natural scientist
- Mathematician
- Isidorus of Miletus
- Professor of stereometry and physics at
Constantinople
15Byzantine ArchitectureHagia Sophia
Photo Sullivan
16Byzantine ArchitectureHagia Sophia
- Hagia Sophia
- Built in an amazing five years
- Its first dome was destroyed by an earthquake and
rebuilt in 563 A.D. - Was converted to a mosque by the Ottoman Turks
17Byzantine ArchitectureHagia Sophia
- Hagia Sophia
- Has some structural problems
- Main piers are of excellent solidarity, built of
massive ashlar masonry - Rest of the building, however, was built of brick
in thick mortar beds - The dome generates tremendous pressure
- Corners are supported by pendentives but the
sides have little support
18Byzantine ArchitectureHagia Sophia
Photo Sullivan
19Byzantine ArchitectureHagia Sophia
Photo Sullivan
20Byzantine ArchitectureOther Justinian Structures
- No other Byzantine churches approach even half
the scale of Hagia Sophia - Two churches bear a resemblance to Hagia Sophia
- SS. Sergious and Bacchus
- S. Vitale
21Byzantine ArchitectureOther Justinian Structures
- SS. Sergius and Bacchus
- Located in Constantinople
- Built as a palace chapel between 527 and 536
- Many historians believe it was an experimental
version of the Hagia Sophia
22Byzantine ArchitectureOther Justinian Structures
Photo Sullivan
23Byzantine ArchitectureOther Justinian Structures
- S. Vitale
- Located in Ravenna, Italy
- Very precise and strict double-shell form that
featured a dome - Featured mosaics of Justinian and his queen,
Theodora, and their court
24Byzantine ArchitectureOther Justinian Structures
Photo Sullivan
25Byzantine ArchitectureOther Justinian Structures
- Church of St. John the Evangelist
- Built at his tomb in the Hellenistic city of
Ephesus on the coast of Asia Minor - c. 548 A.D.
Photo Sullivan
26Byzantine ArchitectureOther Justinian Structures
- S. Marco
- Located in Venice, Italy
- Although built in the Romanesque Period (c. 1063
1094), it is considered more Byzantine in style
than Romanesque
Photo Sullivan
27References
- Sullivan, Mary http//www.bluffton.edu/sullivanm
/ - http//www.brynmawr.edu/Acads/Cities/wld/wdpt1.htm
l - Trachtenburg/Hyman Architecture From Prehistory
to Postmodernity - Wodehouse/Moffett A History of Western
Architecture
28Early Christian and Byzantine Architecture
- Architectural History
- ACT 322
- Doris Kemp