Arikah Map

Portico

Portico:Under the portico of the Pantheon
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Under the portico of the Pantheon

A portico is a porch leading to the entrance of a building, or extended as a colonnade, with a roof structure over a walkway, supported by columns or enclosed by walls. This idea first appeared in ancient Greece and has influenced many cultures. The style is known in American culture, though it is not as popular as other Greek influences like pillars.

Some famous examples of porticos are the East Portico of the United States Capitol, and the portico adorning the Pantheon in Rome.

The temple-front applied to The Vyne, Hampshire was the first portico applied to an English country house.

Bologna, Italy, is very famous for its porticos. In total, there are over 45 kilometres of arcades, some 38 in the city center. The longest portico in the world, about 3.5 km, leads from the edge of the city up to San Luca Basilica.

A pronaos is the inner area of the portico of a Greek or Roman Temple, situated between the portico's colonnade or walls and the entrance to the cella or shrine. Roman temples commonly had an open pronaos, usually with only columns and no walls, and the pronaos could be as long as the cella. The word pronaos is Greek for "before a temple". In Latin, a pronaos is also referred to as an anticum or prodomus.


Contents

Types of portico

The different variants of porticos are named by the number of columns they have.

Tetrastyle

Portico:Tetrastyle temple with its tetrastyle portico of four Ionic columns, The Temple of Portunus
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Tetrastyle temple with its tetrastyle portico of four Ionic columns, The Temple of Portunus

The tetrastyle has four columns. Tetrastyle was commonly employed by the Greeks and the Etruscans for small structures such as public buildings and amphiprostyle altars devoted to the large Hexastyle temple in a sanctuary.

The Romans favoured the four columned portico for their pseudoperipteral temples like the Temple of Portunus, and for [mphiprostyle temples such as the Temple of Venus and Roma, and for the prostyle entrance porticos of large public buildings like the Basilica of Maxentius and Constantine.

Hexastyle

Hexastyle buildings had six columns and were the standard facade in canonical Greek Doric architecture between the archaic period 600–550 B.C up to the Age of Pericles 450–430 B.C.

Greek hexastyle

Portico:The hexastyle Temple of Concord at Agrigentum (c. 430 B.C)
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The hexastyle Temple of Concord at Agrigentum (c. 430 B.C)

Some well-known examples of classical Doric hexastyle Greek temples:

Hexastyle was also applied to Ionic temples, such as the prostyle porch of the Sanctuary of Athena on the Erechtheum at the Acropolis, Athens.

Roman hexastyle

With the colonization by the Greeks of southern Italy, hexastyle was adopted by the Etruscans and subsequently acquired by the ancient Romans. Roman taste favoured narrow pseudoperipteral and amphiprostyle buildings with tall columns, raised on podiums for the added pomp and grandeur conferred by considerable height. The Maison Carrée at Nîmes is the best-preserved Roman hexastyle temple surviving from antiquity.

Octostyle

Portico:The western side of the Parthenon.
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The western side of the Parthenon.

Octostyle had eight columns. Octostyle buildings are rarer than Hexastyle in the classical Greek architectural canon. The best-known octostyle buildings surviving from antiquity are the Parthenon in Athens built during the Age of Pericles (450–430 B.C), and the Pantheon in Rome (125 B.C).

Decastyle

The decastyle has ten columns; as in the temple of Apollo Didymaeus at Miletus, and the portico of University College London.

See also

References

Categories


Architectural elements | Columns and entablature

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