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Architecture & Town Planning AE- 301 Neolithic Architectural Style
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Neolithic Architecture

Mar 31, 2015

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Page 1: Neolithic Architecture

Architecture & Town Planning AE-301

Neolithic Architectural Style

Page 2: Neolithic Architecture

Introduction to Neolithic Architecture

• Architecture of the Neolithic Period• In South-west Asia, it soon appeared after

10000 B.C.

• In Europe, it appeared between 8000 – 7000 B.C.

• In the Middle-East by 8000 B.C.

Page 3: Neolithic Architecture

Introduction to Neolithic Architecture

• Architectural Styles of this era doesn’t vary much.

• Construction Materials varied according to their Availability.

• Building materials consisted of thick timber posts, reeds, clay (hay clay or mud-bricks) and stone for the foundations and the upper structure (walls).

• for roofing, tree trunks, reeds, clay and hay were used.

Page 4: Neolithic Architecture

Introduction to Neolithic Architecture

Page 5: Neolithic Architecture

Introduction to Neolithic Architecture

• Can be distinguished by Two Phases.

1. Paleolithic Phase

• This Age, Era or Period, is a prehistoric era distinguished by the development of the first stone tools.

• Also characterized by the use of knapped stone tools, although at the time humans also used wood and bone tools.

Page 6: Neolithic Architecture

Introduction to Neolithic Architecture

• Can be distinguished by Two Phases.

1. Mesolithic Phase

• By the end of the Aurignacian, gradual changes took place in stone industries.

• Small stone tools called Microliths and retouched blade-lets can be found for the first time.

Tools used during Mesolithic Period

Page 7: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

• Different types of structures of the Neolithic era were uncovered and found.

1. Natural Caves

• Among the first shelters to be used by the prehistoric man was the natural cave.

• The natural caves gave the idea of supporting a roof slab by walls of stones which led to the construction of other types of dwellings.

Page 8: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

Page 9: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

2. Mud-Brick Structures

• Mud-Brick Structures were also found in this style

• Roofs of these buildings were also constructed out of local materials, such as a hard grass or wood.

• Circular, Rectangular and square shaped dwellings were found.

Page 10: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

3. Megalithic Structures

• Comprised of two Greek words (megas lithos) meaning "great stone."

• Aside from houses, other structures made up of large stones

• Found all over the world

• Famous example: Stone Henge ,UK.

Page 11: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

Page 12: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

4. Stone Circles

• Stones of different kinds are assembled in circles.

• It seems more than likely that prehistoric tombs and stone circles were temples for some kind or kinds of augury,

• even the interpretation of clouds.

• Found in many Areas

Page 13: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

Page 14: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

5. Dolmens

• Dolmens (Bret. dol = table + maen stone)• Dolmen is the name sometimes applied to two or

more upright stones supporting a horizontal slab

Page 15: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

6. Pile Dwellings

• Neolithic pile dwellings have been excavated

• Consists of Piles supporting wooden or other light materials roofs

Page 16: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

7. Wattle-and-Daub Dwellings

• Neolithic settlements included wattle-and-daub structures with thatched roofs and floors made of logs covered in clay.

Page 17: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

8. Sweathouses

• Sweathouses were resorted to as a sauna-treatment for aches and pains

• For a start, the entrance is as little as 75 cms high.

• No easy task to heat up the sweathouse

• Light a fire, maintain it and sweep out the ashes

Page 18: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

Page 19: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

9. Other Famous Examples include

• Catal Hayuk

• 32 acre town located in the south of Turkey known as Catal Huyuk

• Well Preserved homes and structures

• Also contains rectangular buildings with “windows”.

• However, none of the homes have doors, entrance appears to be through roofs.

Page 20: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

Page 21: Neolithic Architecture

Dwellings & Misc. Structures

• Temple of Tarxien, Malta

• Archaeological complex in Tarxien, Malta

• Date back to approximately 2800 BC.

Page 22: Neolithic Architecture

Habitat

• first farming and stock-rearing settlements were situated in coastal or inland areas, lowlands or hilly, close to water sources (lakes, rivers, streams, springs)

• Majority were open-settlements but cave dwelling also observed

Page 23: Neolithic Architecture

Habitat

1. Density

• Different according to regional characteristics

• For Example, large fertile plains were more densely populated than the semi-mountainous regions and the islands

• the density of the settlements did not remain the same throughout all the Neolithic phases.

• geomorphological changes, such as a rise in the sea level, as well as natural disasters, such as the overflowing of rivers, had a direct impact on settlement density

Page 24: Neolithic Architecture

Habitat

2. Settlements

• During the Early Neolithic, settlements consisted of huts with walls made of posts

• From the Middle Neolithic onwards houses with stone foundations and walls from mud-bricks (unfired bricks from a mixture of clay and hay) were built

• There are indications that two-storey dwellings existed as well

• Several settlements were surrounded by ditches or stone enclosures, whose function is not entirely clear: for defense or to demarcate the limits of the settlement?

Page 25: Neolithic Architecture

Habitat

2. Settlements• Open settlements had usually the form of a low hill,

2-4 meters high, with a diameter of 100-200 meters

Page 26: Neolithic Architecture

Political Organization

• During the early phases of the Neolithic, communities of at least 50-100 individuals were organized with the clan or extended family as the basic unit

• From the Late Neolithic onwards, an increase in the number of settlements and differentiation in their architectural structure and form has been observed

• The number of community members reached 100-300 individuals.

Page 27: Neolithic Architecture

Misc.

Mud and Clay Dwelling

Tarxien Temple

Page 28: Neolithic Architecture

Misc.

Tabon Cave, Phillipine

Mehrgarh Dwellings, Balochistan

Page 29: Neolithic Architecture

Misc.

Sweet Track, England

Nevali Cori, Turkey

Page 30: Neolithic Architecture

Misc.

Ring of Brodgar, Scotland

Skara Brae House, Scotland

Page 31: Neolithic Architecture

Misc.

Pada Lin Caves, Myanmar

Knap of Howar, Scotland