Macedonia - Alexandria : monumental funerary complexes of the late classical and Hellenistic age / Dorota Gorzelany.
2019
NB1803.M27 G67 2019
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Title
Macedonia - Alexandria : monumental funerary complexes of the late classical and Hellenistic age / Dorota Gorzelany.
Author
ISBN
9781789691368 (pbk.)
1789691362 (pbk.)
9781789691375 (e-book)
1789691362 (pbk.)
9781789691375 (e-book)
Published
Oxford : Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, [2019]
Copyright
©2019
Language
English
Description
1 online resource (247 pages) : illustrations (chiefly color)
Call Number
NB1803.M27 G67 2019
Dewey Decimal Classification
726.809381
Summary
The type of monumental tomb that developed in Macedonia in the late Classical period was undoubtedly the most impressive of all the Greek funerary complexes. It was a burial chamber with a vestibule, built of stone blocks, vaulted and furnished with an architectural facade, concealed under a large tumulus rising above the ground. The concept of the Macedonian sepulcher, which the Macedonians and Greeks settling in Alexandria ad Aegyptum, the city founded by Alexander the Great on the Egyptian coast, brought with them, influenced the structural form of the underground tombs that were developed in the new city. ?Macedonia?Alexandria? explores the scope of this influence, comparing in synthetic form the structural elements of the cist graves, chamber and rock-cut tombs of Macedonia with the Alexandrian hypogea, while taking into account the different geographical factors that conditioned them. This is followed by a presentation of the facade and interior decoration, and a discussion of the themes of wall painting inside the tombs and a characteristic of the surviving tomb furnishings.
Note
The type of monumental tomb that developed in Macedonia in the late Classical period was undoubtedly the most impressive of all the Greek funerary complexes. It was a burial chamber with a vestibule, built of stone blocks, vaulted and furnished with an architectural facade, concealed under a large tumulus rising above the ground. The concept of the Macedonian sepulcher, which the Macedonians and Greeks settling in Alexandria ad Aegyptum, the city founded by Alexander the Great on the Egyptian coast, brought with them, influenced the structural form of the underground tombs that were developed in the new city. ?Macedonia?Alexandria? explores the scope of this influence, comparing in synthetic form the structural elements of the cist graves, chamber and rock-cut tombs of Macedonia with the Alexandrian hypogea, while taking into account the different geographical factors that conditioned them. This is followed by a presentation of the facade and interior decoration, and a discussion of the themes of wall painting inside the tombs and a characteristic of the surviving tomb furnishings.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and indexes.
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