All Topics  
Greek Revival architecture

 
Greek Revival Architecture

   Email Print
   Bookmark   Link






 

Greek Revival architecture



 
 
The Greek Revival was an architectural movement of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, predominantly in northern Europe and the United States. A product of Hellenism
Hellenism (neoclassicism)

Hellenism, as a neoclassical movement distinct from other Roman or Greco-Roman forms of neoclassicism emerging after the European Renaissance, is most often associated with Germany and England in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries....
, it may be looked upon as the last phase in the development of Neoclassical architecture
Neoclassical architecture

Neoclassical architecture was an architectural style produced by the Neoclassicism that began in the mid-18th century, both as a reaction against the Rococo style of anti-tectonic naturalistic ornament, and an outgrowth of some classicizing features of Baroque architecture....
. The term was first used by Charles Robert Cockerell
Charles Robert Cockerell

Charles Robert Cockerell was an English architect, archaeologist, and writer. Early in his life, he trained in the architectural practice of his father, Samuel Pepys Cockerell....
 in a lecture he gave as Professor of Architecture to the Royal Academy
Royal Academy

The Royal Academy of Arts is an art institution based in Burlington House on Piccadilly, London, England. As an academy, it functions to encourage British art, and has a membership of practising artists....
 in 1842.

The term is indicative of how highly self-conscious practitioners of the style were, and that they realized they had created a new mode of architecture.






Discussion
Ask a question about 'Greek Revival architecture'
Start a new discussion about 'Greek Revival architecture'
Answer questions from other users
Full Discussion Forum



Recent Posts









Encyclopedia


The Greek Revival was an architectural movement of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, predominantly in northern Europe and the United States. A product of Hellenism
Hellenism (neoclassicism)

Hellenism, as a neoclassical movement distinct from other Roman or Greco-Roman forms of neoclassicism emerging after the European Renaissance, is most often associated with Germany and England in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries....
, it may be looked upon as the last phase in the development of Neoclassical architecture
Neoclassical architecture

Neoclassical architecture was an architectural style produced by the Neoclassicism that began in the mid-18th century, both as a reaction against the Rococo style of anti-tectonic naturalistic ornament, and an outgrowth of some classicizing features of Baroque architecture....
. The term was first used by Charles Robert Cockerell
Charles Robert Cockerell

Charles Robert Cockerell was an English architect, archaeologist, and writer. Early in his life, he trained in the architectural practice of his father, Samuel Pepys Cockerell....
 in a lecture he gave as Professor of Architecture to the Royal Academy
Royal Academy

The Royal Academy of Arts is an art institution based in Burlington House on Piccadilly, London, England. As an academy, it functions to encourage British art, and has a membership of practising artists....
 in 1842.

The term is indicative of how highly self-conscious practitioners of the style were, and that they realized they had created a new mode of architecture. With a newfound access to Greece, archaeologist-architects of the period studied the Doric
Doric order

The Doric order was one of the Classical order of Architecture of Ancient Greece or classical architecture; the other two canonical orders were the Ionic order and the Corinthian order....
 and Ionic
Ionic order

The Ionic order column forms one of the Classical order of classical architecture, the other two canonic orders being the Doric order and the Corinthian order....
 movement, examples of which can be found in Russia, Poland, Lithuania, and Finland (where the assembly of Greek buildings in Helsinki
Helsinki

Helsinki is the Capital and largest List of cities and towns in Finland of Finland. It is in the southern part of Finland, on the shore of the Gulf of Finland, by the Baltic Sea....
 city centre is particularly notable). Yet in each country it touched, the style was looked on as the expression of local nationalism and civic virtue, especially in Germany and the United States where the idiom was regarded as being free from ecclesiastical and aristocratic associations.

The taste for all things Greek in furniture and interior design was at its peak by the beginning of the nineteenth century, when the designs of Thomas Hope had influenced a number of decorative styles known variously as Neoclassical
Neoclassical architecture

Neoclassical architecture was an architectural style produced by the Neoclassicism that began in the mid-18th century, both as a reaction against the Rococo style of anti-tectonic naturalistic ornament, and an outgrowth of some classicizing features of Baroque architecture....
, Empire, Russian Empire, and Regency. Greek Revival architecture took a different course in a number of countries, lasting up till the Civil War in America
American Civil War

The American Civil War , also known as the War Between the States and several Naming the American Civil War, was a civil war in the United States....
 (1860s) and even later in Scotland. The style was also exported to Greece under the first two (German and Danish) kings of the newly independent nation.

Rediscovery of Greece

Despite the unbounded prestige of ancient Greece amongst the educated elite of Europe, there was little to no direct knowledge of that civilization before the middle of the 18th century. The monuments of Greek antiquity were known chiefly from Pausanias
Pausanias (geographer)

Pausanias was a Roman Greece traveller and geographer of the 2nd century AD, who lived in the times of Hadrian, Antoninus Pius and Marcus Aurelius....
 and other literary sources. Visiting Ottoman Greece was a difficult and dangerous business prior to the period of stagnation beginning with the Great Turkish War
Great Turkish War

The Great Turkish War refers to a series of conflicts between the Ottoman Empire and contemporary European powers, then joined into a Holy League, during the second half of the 17th century....
. Few Grand Tour
Grand Tour

The Grand Tour was the traditional travel of Europe undertaken by mainly Upper class European young men of means. The custom flourished from about 1660 until the advent of mass railroad transit in the 1840s, and was associated with a standard itinerary....
ists called on Athens during the first half of the 18th century, and none made any significant study of the architectural ruins. It would take until the expedition funded by the Society of Dilettanti of 1751 by James Stuart
James Stuart (1713-1788)

James "Athenian" Stuart was an English people archaeologist, architect and Fine art best known for his central role in pioneering Neoclassicism#Neoclassicism in architecture and in the decorative and visual arts....
 and Nicholas Revett
Nicholas Revett

Nicholas Revett was a Suffolk gentleman and amateur architect and artist.He is best known for his famous work with James Stuart documenting the ruins of ancient Athens....
 before serious archaeological enquiry began in earnest. Stuart and Revett's findings, published in 1762 (first volume) as The Antiquities of Athens, along with Julien-David Le Roy's Ruines des plus beaux monuments de la Grèce (1758) were the first accurate surveys of ancient Greek architecture.

Britain

Following James Stuart's travels to Greece in the early 1750s, intellectual curiosity quickly led to a desire to emulate. Stuart was commissioned after his return from Greece by George Lyttelton to produce the first Greek building in England, the garden temple at Hagley Hall
Hagley Hall

Hagley Hall , of Hagley, Worcestershire and its park are among the supreme achievements of 18th century English architecture and landscape gardening....
 (1758-9). A number of British architects in the second half of the century took up the expressive challenge of the Doric from their aristocratic patrons, including Joseph Bonomi
Joseph Bonomi

Joseph Bonomi or Giuseppi Bonomi may mean either of a father-son pair notable in architecture and sculpture:*Joseph Bonomi the Elder , architect...
 and John Soane
John Soane

Sir John Soane was an England architect who specialised in the Neoclassical architecture style. His architectural works are distinguished by their clean lines, massing of simple form, decisive detailing, careful proportions and skilful use of light sources....
, but it was to remain the private enthusiasm of connoisseurs up to the first decade of the nineteenth century.

Seen in its wider social context, Greek Revival architecture sounded a new note of sobriety and restraint in public buildings in Britain around 1800 as an assertion of nationalism
Nationalism

Nationalism refers to an ideology, a feeling, a form of culture, or a social movement that focuses on the nation. While there is significant debate over the historical origins of nations, nearly all Expert accept that nationalism, at least as an ideology and social movement, is a Modernity phenomenon originating in Europe....
 attendant on the Act of Union
Act of Union 1800

The phrase Act of Union 1800 is used to describe two complementary Acts whose official United Kingdom titles are the Union with Ireland Act 1800 , an Act of the Parliament of Great Britain, and the Act of Union 1800 ,...
, the Napoleonic wars, and the clamour for political reform. It was to be William Wilkins
William Wilkins

William Wilkins may refer to:* William Wilkins , , British architect and archaeologist* William Wilkins , , American lawyer, Senator for Pennsylvania, Secretary of War...
's winning design for the public competition for Downing College that announced the Greek style was to be the dominant idiom in architecture. Wilkins and Robert Smirke
Robert Smirke

People called Robert Smirke include:*An 18th/19th century English painter: Robert Smirke *A 19th century English architect: Robert Smirke , son of the painter...
 went on to build some of the most important buildings of the era, including the Theatre Royal
Theatre Royal

Theatre Royal is the name of many theatres, especially in the United Kingdom. The name was once an indication that the theatre was a patent theatre, with a Royal Letters Patent without which performances of serious drama would be illegal....
, Covent Garden
Covent Garden

Covent Garden is a district in London, England, located on the easternmost parts of the City of Westminster and the southwest corner of the London Borough of Camden....
 (1808-9), the General Post Office (1824-9), and the British Museum
British Museum

The British Museum is a museum of human history and culture situated in London. Its collections, which number more than 7 million Object , are amongst the largest and most comprehensive in the world and originate from all continents, illustrating and documenting the story of human culture from its beginning to the present....
 (1823-48), Wilkins University College London
University College London

University College London is a university institution and constituent college of the University of London based primarily in London, England, United Kingdom....
 (1826-30), and the National Gallery
National Gallery, London

The National Gallery in London, founded in 1824, houses a rich collection of over 2,300 paintings dating from the mid-13th century to 1900 in its home on Trafalgar Square....
 (1832-8).In London twenty three Greek revival churches were built between 1817 and 1829, the most notable being St.Pancras church by the Inwood brothers. In Scotland
Scotland

conventional_long_name = ScotlandAlba|common_name= Scotland|image_flag = Flag of Scotland.svg|flag_width = 130px...
 the style was avidly adopted by William Henry Playfair
William Henry Playfair

William Henry Playfair was one of the greatest Scottish architects of the 19th Century. His father James Playfair was also an architect and his uncles were John Playfair, the famous scientist, and William Playfair, an economist and pioneer of information graphics....
, Thomas Hamilton
Thomas Hamilton (architect)

Thomas Hamilton was a Scotland architect, based in Edinburgh. Born in Glasgow, his works include: the Dean Orphan Hospital, now the Dean Gallery; the Royal High School on Calton Hill, long considered as home for the Scottish Parliament; Bedlam Theatre, the George IV Bridge, which spans the Cowgate; the Royal College of Physicians of Edinbu...
, and Charles Robert Cockerell, who severally and jointly contributed to the massive expansion of Edinburgh
Edinburgh

Edinburgh ; is the Capital city of Scotland, a position it has held since 1437. It is the seventh largest city in the United Kingdom and the second largest Scottish City status in the United Kingdom after Glasgow....
's New Town
New Town, Edinburgh

The New Town, a central area of Edinburgh, the capital of Scotland, is often considered to be a masterpiece of city planning, and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site....
, including the Calton Hill development and the Moray estate. Such was the popularity of the Doric in Edinburgh that the city now enjoys a striking visual uniformity, and as such is sometimes whimsically referred to as the Athens of the North.

If it is tempting to see the Greek revival as the expression of Regency authoritarianism, then the changing conditions of life in Britain made Doric the loser of the Battle of the Styles
Battle of the Styles

The Battle of the Styles is a term used to refer to the conflict between supporters of the Gothic architecture and the Classical architecture in architecture....
, dramatically symbolized by the selection of Barry's Gothic design for the Palace of Westminster
Palace of Westminster

The Palace of Westminster, also known as the Houses of Parliament or Westminster Palace, in London, is where the two Houses of the Parliament of the United Kingdom meet....
 in 1836. Nevertheless, Greek continued to be in favour in Scotland well into the 1870s in the singular figure of Alexander Thomson
Alexander Thomson

Alexander "Greek" Thomson was an eminent Glaswegian architect and architectural theorist who was a pioneer in sustainable building. Although his work was published in the architectural press of his day, it was little appreciated outside of his city during his lifetime....
.

Germany and France

Walhalla Aussen
In Germany, the Greek revival is predominantly found in two centres, Berlin and Munich. In both locales, Doric was the court style rather than a popular movement, and was heavily patronized by Frederick William II and Ludwig I as the expression of their desires for their respective seats to become the capital of Germany. The earliest Greek building was the Brandenburg Gate
Brandenburg Gate

Brandenburg Gate is a former city gate and one of the main symbols of Berlin and Germany. It is located west of the city center at the intersection of Unter den Linden and Ebertstrasse, immediately west of the Pariser Platz....
 (1788-91) by Carl Gotthard Langhans
Carl Gotthard Langhans

Carl Gotthard Langhans was a Prussian builder and architect. His works are among the earliest buildings in the Germany classicism movement. His best-known work is the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin....
, who modelled it on the Propylaea
Propylaea

A Propylaea, Propylea or Propylaia is any monumental gateway based on the original Propylaea that serves as the entrance to the Acropolis in Athens....
. Ten years after the death of Frederick the Great
Frederick II of Prussia

Frederick II was a monarch of Kingdom of Prussia from the House of Hohenzollern. In his role as a prince-elector of the Holy Roman Empire, he was Frederick IV of Margraviate of Brandenburg....
, the Berlin Akademie initiated a competition for a monument to the king that would promote “morality and patriotism."

Friedrich Gilly
Friedrich Gilly

File:Friedrich Gilly.jpgFile:Friedrich Gilly .jpgFriedrich David Gilly was a Germany architect, the son of the architect David Gilly.Born in Altdamm , Pomerania , he was known as a prodigy and the teacher of the young Karl Friedrich Schinkel....
’s unexecuted design for a temple raised above the Leipziger Platz caught the tenor of high idealism that the Germans sought in Greek architecture and was enormously influential on Karl Friedrich Schinkel
Karl Friedrich Schinkel

Karl Friedrich Schinkel was a Germany architect and painter. Schinkel was the most prominent architect of neoclassicism in Prussia.Schinkel was born in Neuruppin in the Margraviate of Brandenburg....
 and Leo von Klenze
Leo von Klenze

Leo von Klenze was a German Neoclassicism architect, Painting and writer. Court architect of Bavarian King Ludwig I of Bavaria, Leo von Klenze was one of the most prominent representatives of Greek revival style....
. Schinkel was in a position to stamp his mark on Berlin after the catastrophe of the French occupation ended in 1813; his work on what is now the Altes Museum
Altes Museum

The Altes Museum , is one of several internationally renowned museums on Berlin's Museum Island in Berlin, Germany. Since restoration work in 1966, it houses the antique collection of the Berlin State Museums....
,
Schauspielhaus
Gendarmenmarkt

The Gendarmenmarkt is a square in Berlin, and the site of the Konzerthaus Berlin and the French Cathedral and German Cathedral. The centre of the Gendarmenmarkt is crowned by a statue of Germany's poet Friedrich Schiller....
, and the Neue Wache
Neue Wache

The Neue Wache is a building in central Berlin, the capital of Germany. It is located on the north side of the Unter den Linden, a major east-west thoroughfare in the centre of the city....
 transformed that city. Similarly, in Munich von Klenze’s Glyptothek
Glyptothek

The Glyptothek is a museum in Munich, Germany, which was commissioned by the Bavarian King Ludwig I of Bavaria to house his collection of Greece and Rome sculptures ....
 and Walhalla
Walhalla temple

The Walhalla Hall of Fame and Honor is a neo-classicism hall of fame located on the Danube River 10 km east of Regensburg, in Bavaria, Germany....
 were the fulfillment of Gilly’s vision of an orderly and moral German world.

By comparison, the Greek revival in France was never popular with either the State or the public. What little there is started with Charles de Wailly
Charles De Wailly

Charles De Wailly was a French architect and urbanist, and furniture designer, one of the principals in the Neoclassicism of the Antique. His major work was the Od?on for the Com?die-Fran?aise ....
’s crypt in the church of St Leu-St Gilles (1773-80), and Claude Nicolas Ledoux
Claude Nicolas Ledoux

Claude-Nicolas Ledoux was one of the earliest exponents of French Neoclassical architecture. He used his knowledge of architectural theory to design not only in domestic architecture but town planning; as a consequence of his visionary plan for the Ideal City of Chaux, he became known as a utopian....
’s Barriere des Bonshommes (1785-9). First-hand evidence of Greek architecture was of very little importance to the French, due to the influence of Marc-Antoine Laugier
Marc-Antoine Laugier

Marc-Antoine Laugier was a Jesuit priest and architectural theorist.Laugier is best known for his Essay on Architecture published in 1753....
’s doctrines that sought to discern the principles of the Greeks instead of their mere practices. It would take until Laboustre’s Neo-Grec
Neo-Grec

Neo-Grec is a term referring to late manifestations of Neoclassicism, early Neo-Renaissance now called the Greek Revival style, which was popularized in architecture, the decorative arts, and in painting during France's Second French Empire, or the reign of Napoleon III, a period that lasted approximately between 1848 and 1865....
 of the second Empire for the Greek revival to flower briefly in France.

North America

2ndbankofussouthfacade
Thomas Jefferson
Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson was the List of Presidents of the United States President of the United States , the principal author of the United States Declaration of Independence , and one of the most influential Founding Fathers of the United States for his promotion of the ideals of republicanism in the United States....
 owned a copy of the first volume of The Antiquities of Athens, and though he never practiced in the style Jefferson was to prove instrumental in introducing Greek Revival architecture to the United States. In 1803, he appointed Benjamin Henry Latrobe as surveyor of public building in the United States. Latrobe went on to design a number of important public buildings in Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C.

Washington, D.C. , formally the District of Columbia and commonly referred to as Washington, the District, or simply D.C., is the Capital of the United States, founded on July 16, 1790....
 and Philadelphia, including work on the United States Capitol
United States Capitol

The United States Capitol serves as the seat of government for the United States Congress, the legislature of the federal government of the United States....
 and the Bank of Pennsylvania
Bank of Pennsylvania

The Bank of Pennsylvania was established on July 17, 1780 by Philadelphia merchants to provide funds for the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War....
.

Latrobe's design for the Capitol was an imaginative interpretation of the classical orders not constrained by historical precedent, incorporating American motifs such as corncobs and tobacco leaves. This idiosyncratic approach was to become typical of the American attitude to Greek detailing. His overall plan for the Capitol did not survive, though much of his interiors do. He also did notable work on the Supreme Court interior (1806-7) and his masterpiece, the Basilica of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary
Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary

The Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary, also called Baltimore Basilica or Baltimore Cathedral, was the first Roman Catholic cathedral built in the United States, and was the first major religious building constructed in the nation after the adoption of the United States Constitution....
, Baltimore (1805-21). Even as he claimed that “I am a bigoted Greek in the condemnation of the Roman architecture…,” he did not seek to rigidly impose Greek forms, stating that “[o]ur religion requires a church wholly different from the temple, our legislative assemblies and our courts of justice, buildings of entirely different principles from their basilicas; and our amusements could not possibly be performed in their theatres or amphitheatres.” Latrobe’s circle of junior colleagues would prove to be an informal school of Greek revivalists, and it was his influence that was to shape the next generation of American architects.

The second phase in the development of American Greek revival saw the pupils of Latrobe create a monumental national style under the patronage of banker and hellenophile Nicholas Biddle
Nicholas Biddle (banker)

Nicholas Biddle , was an United States financier who served as the president of the Second Bank of the United States....
, including such works as the Second Bank of the United States
Second Bank of the United States

The Second Bank of the United States was opened in January 1817, six years after the First Bank of the United States lost its charter. The Second Bank of the United States was headquartered in Carpenters' Hall, Philadelphia, the same as the First Bank, and had branches throughout the nation....
 by William Strickland
William Strickland (architect)

William Strickland , was a noted architecture in nineteenth-century Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Nashville. He is noted as one of the founders of the Gothic revival movement when in 1823 he built St....
 (1824), Biddle’s home "Andalusia" by Thomas U. Walter
Thomas U. Walter

Thomas Ustick Walter of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania was the dean of American architecture between the death of Benjamin Latrobe and the work of Henry Hobson Richardson....
 (1835-1836), and Girard College
Girard College

Girard College is a private philanthropic boarding school on a 43 acre campus in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in the United States. The school is for academically capable students, grades 1 through 12, and grants full scholarships to eligible students from families with limited financial resources, headed by a single parent or guardian....
 also by Walter (1833-47). New York
New York City

The City of New York is the List of United States cities by population in the United States, while the New York metropolitan area ranks among the List of urban areas by population....
 saw the construction (1833) of the row of Greek temples at Sailors' Snug Harbor. At the same time, the popular appetite for the Greek was sustained by architectural pattern books, the most important of which was Asher Benjamin’s The Practical House Carpenter (1830). This guide helped create the proliferation of Greek homes seen especially in northern New York State and the Western Reserves of Ohio. From the period of about 1820 to 1850, the Greek Revival style dominated the United States and could be found as far west as Springfield, Illinois
Old State Capitol State Historic Site

The Old State Capitol State Historic Site, in Springfield, Illinois, is the fifth capitol building built for the U.S. state of Illinois. It was built in the Greek Revival style in 1837-40, and served as the state house in 1840-1876....
.

Other notable American architects to use Greek Revival designs included Latrobe's student, Robert Mills
Robert Mills

Robert Mills may mean:*Robert Mills , an American architect*Robert Mills , an American physicist*Bob Mills , Canadian politician*Robert P....
 who designed the Washington Monument
Washington Monument

The Washington Monument is a large, tall, sand-colored obelisk near the west end of the National Mall in Washington, D.C. It is a United States Presidential Memorial constructed to commemorate the first U.S....
, as well as George Hadfield
George Hadfield (architect)

George Hadfield was born in Livorno, Italy of English parents, who were hotel-keepers. He studied at the Royal Academy, and worked with James Wyatt for six years before emigrating to the United States....
, and Gabriel Manigault
Gabriel Manigault

Gabriel Manigault was an United States architect. He was born in Charleston, South Carolina, went to study in Geneva, Switzerland, and London, and came back to Charleston after the American Revolutionary War....
.

In Canada, Montreal
Montreal

Montreal, or Montr?al, is the largest city in the Provinces and territories of Canada of Quebec and the List of largest cities and second largest cities by country List of the 100 largest municipalities in Canada by population....
 architect John Ostell
John Ostell

John Ostell architect, surveyor and manufacturer, was born in London England and emigrated to Canada in 1834, where he apprenticed himself to a Montreal surveyor Andr? Trudeau to learn French methods of surveying....
 designed a number of prominent Greek Revival Buildings, including the first building on the McGill University
McGill University

McGill University is a Public university#Canada located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It bears the name of James McGill, a prominent Montreal merchant from Scotland, whose bequest formed the beginning of the university....
 campus and Montreal's original Custom House, now part of the Pointe-à-Callière Museum
Pointe-à-Callière Museum

Pointe-?-Calli?re Museum is the Montreal museum of archaeology and history located in Old Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It was founded in 1992 as part of celebrations to mark Montreal's 350th birthday....
. The Toronto Street Post Office
Toronto Street Post Office

The Toronto Street Post Office was also called Seventh Toronto Post Office and was built by Frederic Cumberland and Thomas Ridout from 1851 to 1853....
, completed in 1853, is another Canadian example.

Polychromy


The discovery that the Greeks had painted their temples had a profound influence on the later development of the style. The archaeological dig at Aegina
Aegina

Aegina is one of the Greek islands of Greece in the Saronic Gulf, 17 miles from Athens. Tradition derives the name from Aegina, the mother of Aeacus, who was born in and ruled the island....
 and Bassae
Bassae

Bassae or Bassai, Vassai or Vasses , meaning "little vale in the rocks", is an archaeological site in the northeastern part of Messinia Prefecture that was a part of Arcadia in ancient times....
 in 1811-12 by Cockerell, Otto Magnus von Stackelberg
Otto Magnus von Stackelberg (archaeologist)

Count Otto Magnus Baron von Stackelberg was one of the first archaeologists, as well as a writer, painter and art historian....
, and Karl Haller von Hallerstein had disinterred painted fragments of masonry daubed with impermanent colours. This revelation was a direct contradiction of Winckelmann’s notion of the Greek temple as timeless, fixed, and pure in its white
White

White is a color, the Color vision#Physiology of color perception which is evoked by light that stimulates all three types of color sensitive cone cells in the human eye in near equal amount and with high brightness compared to the surroundings....
ness. In 1823, Samuel Angell discovered the coloured metopes of Temple C at Selinunte
Selinunte

Selinunte is an ancient Greece archaeology site situated on the south coast of Sicily between the valleys of the rivers Belice and Modione in the province of Trapani....
, Sicily and published them in 1826. The French architect Jacques Ignace Hittorff
Jacques Ignace Hittorff

Jacques Ignace Hittorff was a German-born France architect who combined advanced structural use of new materials, notably cast iron, with conservative Beaux-Arts architecture classicism in a career that spanned the decades from the Bourbon Dynasty, Restored to the French Second Empire....
 witnessed the exhibition of Angell’s find and endeavoured to excavate Temple B at Selinus. His imaginative reconstructions of this temple were exhibited in Rome and Paris in 1824 and he went on to publish these as Architecture polychrome chez les Grecs (1830) and later in Restitution du Temple d'Empedocle a Selinote (1851). The controversy was to inspire von Klenze’s Aegina room at the Munich Glyptothek
Glyptothek

The Glyptothek is a museum in Munich, Germany, which was commissioned by the Bavarian King Ludwig I of Bavaria to house his collection of Greece and Rome sculptures ....
 of 1830, the first of his many speculative reconstructions of Greek colour.

Hittorff lectured in Paris in 1829-1830, that Greek temples had originally been painted ochre
Ochre

Ochre or Ocher is a color, usually described as Gold -yellow or light yellow brown....
 yellow, with the moulding and sculptural details in red, blue, green, and gold. While this may or may not have been the case with older wooden or plain stone temples, it was definitely not the case with the more luxurious marble
Marble

Marble is a nonfoliated metamorphic rock resulting from the metamorphism of limestone, composed mostly of calcite . It is extensively used for Marble sculpture, as a architecture material, and in many other applications....
 temples, where color was used sparingly to accentuate architectural highlights. Similarly, Henri Labrouste
Henri Labrouste

Henri Labrouste was a France architect from the famous Ecole des Beaux Arts school of architecture. After a six year stay in Rome, Labrouste opened an architectural training workshop, which quickly became the center of the Rationalist view....
 proposed a reconstruction of the temples at Paestum to the Academie des Beaux-Arts
Académie des beaux-arts

The Acad?mie des Beaux-Arts is a France learned society. It is one of the five academies of the Institut de France.It was created in 1795 as the merger of the:...
 in 1829, decked out in startling colour, inverting the accepted chronology of the three Doric temples, thereby implying that the development of the Greek orders did not increase in formal complexity over time, i.e., the evolution from Doric to Corinthian was not inexorable. Both events were to cause a minor scandal. The emerging understanding that Greek art was subject to changing forces of environment and culture was a direct assault on the architectural rationalism of the day.

Influence

With the rise of architectural historicism in the mid-nineteenth century it is no longer possible to speak of a Greek revival movement, where the Doric is employed it is as another self-consciously anachronizing style. The San Francisco mint
San Francisco Mint

The San Francisco Mint is a branch mint of the United States Mint, and was opened in 1854 to serve the gold mines of the California Gold Rush. It quickly outgrew its first building and moved into a new one in 1874....
 (completed 1874) is a case in point. Yet Greek culture and Greek design motifs continued to exert a powerful hold on late Victorian imagination and beyond. Peter Behrens
Peter Behrens

*Peter Behrens was a Germany architect and designer....
’s Haus Wiegund (1911-12), for example, echos the austere classicism of Gilly and Schinkel. Further north we find a resurgent interest in rationalism dressed in the neoclassical style; Nordic Classicism
Nordic Classicism

Nordic Classicism was a Architectural style that briefly blossomed in the Nordic countries between 1910 and 1930.Until a resurgence of interest for the period during the 1980s , Nordic Classicism was regarded as a mere interlude between two far more well-known architectural movements, National Romantic Style or Jugendstil and Functio...
. If the idiom has fallen out of favour since World War II it is thanks to its association, rightly or wrongly, with the pastiche classicism
Nazi architecture

Nazi architecture was an architecture plan and integral part of the Nazi party's plans to create a cultural and spirituality rebirth in Germany as part of the Third Reich....
 of Albert Speer
Albert Speer

Albert Speer was a Germany architect who was, for part of World War II, Minister of Armaments and War Production for the Nazi Germany. Speer was Adolf Hitler's chief architect before assuming ministerial office....
 which still provokes controversy as witnessed in Léon Krier
Léon Krier

L?on Krier is an architect, architectural theorist and urban planner. From the late 1970s onwards Krier has been one of the most influential neo-traditional architects and planners....
’s provocative essay “Krier on Speer".

Primary sources

  • Jacob Spon Voyage d'Italie, de Dalmatie, de Grèce et du Levant 1678
  • George Wheler Journey into Greece 1682
  • Richard Pococke
    Richard Pococke

    Richard Pococke was an English prelate and anthropology. He was Protestant Bishop of Ossory and Meath , both dioceses of the Church of Ireland....
     A Description of the East and Some Other Countries 1743-5
  • R. Dalton Antiquities and Views in Greece and Egypt 1751
  • Comte de Caylus Recueil d'antiquités 1752-67
  • Marc-Antoine Laugier
    Marc-Antoine Laugier

    Marc-Antoine Laugier was a Jesuit priest and architectural theorist.Laugier is best known for his Essay on Architecture published in 1753....
     Essai sur l'architecture 1753
  • J.J. Winkelmann Gedanken uber die Nachahmung der griechischen Werke in der Malerei und Bildhauerkunst" 1755
  • J D LeRoy Les Ruines des plus beaux monuments de la Grèce 1758
  • James Stuart
    James Stuart (1713-1788)

    James "Athenian" Stuart was an English people archaeologist, architect and Fine art best known for his central role in pioneering Neoclassicism#Neoclassicism in architecture and in the decorative and visual arts....
     and Nicholas Revett
    Nicholas Revett

    Nicholas Revett was a Suffolk gentleman and amateur architect and artist.He is best known for his famous work with James Stuart documenting the ruins of ancient Athens....
     
    The Antiquities of Athens 1762-1816
  • J.J. Winkelmann Anmerkungen uber die Baukunst der alten Tempel zu Girgenti in Sicilien 1762
  • J.J. Winkelmann Geschichte der Kunst des Alterthums 1764
  • Thomas Major The ruins of Paestum 1768
  • Stephen Riou The Grecian Orders 1768
  • R. Chandler et al. Ionian Antiquities 1768-1881
  • G. B. Piranesi Differentes vues...de Pesto 1778
  • J.J. Barthelemy Voyage du jeune Anarcharsis en Grèce dans le milieu du quatrième siecle avant l'ère vulgaire 1787
  • William Wilkins
    William Wilkins

    William Wilkins may refer to:* William Wilkins , , British architect and archaeologist* William Wilkins , , American lawyer, Senator for Pennsylvania, Secretary of War...
     
    The Antiquities of Magna Grecia 1807
  • Leo von Klenze
    Leo von Klenze

    Leo von Klenze was a German Neoclassicism architect, Painting and writer. Court architect of Bavarian King Ludwig I of Bavaria, Leo von Klenze was one of the most prominent representatives of Greek revival style....
     Der Tempel des olympischen Jupiter zu Agrigent 1821
  • S Agnell and T. Evens Sculptured Metopes Discovered among the ruins of Selinus 1823
  • Peter Oluf Brøndsted
    Peter Oluf Brøndsted

    Peter Oluf Br?ndsted , Denmark archaeologist and traveller, was born at Fruering in Jutland.After studying at the University of Copenhagen he visited Paris in 1806 with his friend Georg Koes....
     Voyages et recherches dans le Grèce 1826-30
  • Otto Magnus Stackelberg Der Apollotempel zu Bassae in Arcadien 1826
  • J I Hittorff and L von Zanth Architecture antique de la sicile 1827
  • C R Cockerell et al. Antiquities of Athens and other places of Greece, Sicily, etc. 1830
  • A. Blouet Expedition scientifique de Moree 1831-8
  • F. Kugler Uber die Polychromie der griechischen Architektur und Skulptur und ihr Grenze 1835
  • C. R. Cockerell The Temples of Jupiter Panhellenius at Aegina and of Apollo Epicurius at Bassae 1860
    • Pattern Books
  • Asher Benjamin
    Asher Benjamin

    Asher Benjamin was an United States architect and author whose work transitioned between Federal style architecture and the later Greek Revival....
     
    The American Builder's Companion 1806
  • Asher Benjamin The Builder's Guide 1839
  • Asher Benjamin The Practical House Carpenter 1830
  • Owen Biddle The Young Carpenter's Assistant 1805
  • William Brown The Carpenter's Assistant 1848
  • Minard Lafever The Young Builder's General Instructor 1829
  • Thomas U Walter Two Hundred Designs for Cottages and Villas 1846.


  • Secondary sources