Roman architecture - translation to spanish
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Roman architecture - translation to spanish

ARCHITECTURAL STYLE, INSPIRED BY CLASSICAL GRECO-ROMAN ARCHITECTURAL PRINCIPLES
Classical Style; Classic architecture; Classical style; Classical Architecture; Petrifaction (architecture); Petrified carpentry; Classical (architecture); 🏛; History of classical architecture; Classical arch; Classic arch; Greco-Roman architecture
  • [[Croydon Airport]] in England, opened in 1920 and built in a Neoclassical style.
  • The [[Glyptothek]] in [[Munich]], designed by [[Leo von Klenze]] and built 1816–30, an example of [[Neoclassical architecture]].
  • Santa Maria Nova]], [[Vicenza]] (1578–90) was designed by the influential Renaissance architect [[Andrea Palladio]].
  • alt=Sebastiano Serlio's canon of the Classical orders, a prime example of classical architectural theory

Roman architecture      
Arquitectura romana
roman type         
  • page=215}}</ref>
STYLE OF TYPEFACE BASED ON CAROLINGIAN MINISCULE COMBINED WITH ROMAN SQUARE CAPITALS
Roman (printing); Roman typeface; Roman text; Roman (typeface); Roman (typoface)
(n.) = letra romana
Ex: The lack of anything other than upper and lower case roman type makes for monotony, and precludes emphasis or distinction.
Islamic architecture         
  • loc=''Timbuktu''}}</ref>
  • Mosque of the Prophet]], standing on the site of Muhammad's first mosque in [[Medina]]. The present-day building is the result of many reconstructions and expansions up to modern times.<ref name=":2422" />
  • Almnara Tower in [[Mogadishu]], [[Somalia]]
  • Sana'a]], Yemen
  • The [[Bibi-Heybat Mosque]] in [[Baku]], [[Azerbaijan]]
  • [[Sultan Ahmed Mosque]]
  • Bab al-Futuh gate built by the Fatimid vazir [[Badr al-Jamali]]
  • The Great Mosque of Xi'an, China
  • Ribbed dome in front of the mihrab in the Mosque–Cathedral of Córdoba, added in the 10th century
  • [[Islamic geometric patterns]] in [[Saint Petersburg]], [[Russia]]
  • [[Tarikhaneh Temple]], a pre-Islamic monument built in Sasanian Persia which was later turned into a mosque, showing elements of [[Iranian architecture]] before the spread of Islam
  • Great Mosque of Divriği]] (1228–1229)
  • Museum of Islamic Art]] at [[Doha]], [[Qatar]] designed by [[I. M. Pei]].
  • The 13th century [[Fakr ad-Din Mosque]] in Mogadishu
  • Great Mosque of Zabid]], with one of the oldest surviving minarets in Yemen (circa 13th century)
  • An iwan in the [[Jameh Mosque of Isfahan]]
  • The [[Dome of the Rock]] in [[Jerusalem]] (late 7th century)
  • Jibla]] (11th century), an example of a hypostyle courtyard mosque
  • The ''[[sahn]]'' (courtyard) and [[minaret]] of the [[Great Mosque of Kairouan]], [[Tunisia]]
  • pages=[https://archive.org/details/architecture00indo/page/86 86–87] }}</ref>
  • maqsura]]'' area of the Great Mosque of Cordoba, added to the mosque by al-Hakam II in the late 10th century
  • p=89}}
  • pp=96–99}} (photo circa 1900)
  • left
  • left
  • Section of the Umayyad-era [[Mshatta Facade]], now in the Pergamon Museum in Berlin, from a palace near [[Amman]]
  • Entrance courtyard of Qasr al-Hallabat
  • Mosque in Qasr al-Hallabat
  • Qusair 'Amra
  • The [[Registan]] is the ensemble of three [[madrasa]]s, in [[Samarkand]], modern day [[Uzbekistan]]
  • The walls and minaret of the [[Great Mosque of Samarra]] built by the Abbasids in the 9th century
  • Mughal]] paradise garden in [[Lahore]], [[Pakistan]]
  • [[Shibam]], an example of a historic fortified village
  • loc=Architecture}} the most famous building of [[Mughal architecture]]
  • pp=37, 53–55}}
ARCHITECTURAL STYLE
Islamic Architecture; Islamic style; Muslim architecture; Architecture in Islam; Architecture in Islamic; Arab Architecture; Arabic architecture; Arab architecture; Beginning of Islamic architecture
(n.) = arquitectura islámica
Ex: The author describes the working methods of the two Iranian architects and the role of stucco in Islamic architecture.

Definition

dita
Sinónimos
sustantivo
1) garantía: garantía, préstamo, aval, prenda
Antónimos
sustantivo

Wikipedia

Classical architecture

Classical architecture usually denotes architecture which is more or less consciously derived from the principles of Greek and Roman architecture of classical antiquity, or sometimes even more specifically, from the works of the Roman architect Vitruvius. Different styles of classical architecture have arguably existed since the Carolingian Renaissance, and prominently since the Italian Renaissance. Although classical styles of architecture can vary greatly, they can in general all be said to draw on a common "vocabulary" of decorative and constructive elements. In much of the Western world, different classical architectural styles have dominated the history of architecture from the Renaissance until the World War II, but it continues to inform many architects to this day.

The term classical architecture also applies to any mode of architecture that has evolved to a highly refined state, such as classical Chinese architecture, or classical Mayan architecture. It can also refer to any architecture that employs classical aesthetic philosophy. The term might be used differently from "traditional" or "vernacular architecture" although it can share underlying axioms with it.

For contemporary buildings following authentic classical principles, the term New Classical architecture is sometimes used.

Examples of use of Roman architecture
1. In Baalbek, another Phoenician city which has some of the finest examples of imperial Roman architecture temples may have suffered structural damage, the experts said.
2. Bursa was conquered by the Bithynian, Lydian, Persian, Roman and Byzantine empires and became famous for its Roman architecture and thermal baths.
3. In the temple of Athena there used to be a bronze lance of Achilles, the mythological hero of Homer‘s Iliad... «Do you see the ruins of buildings on the sides of the street with a church and episcopacy dwellings scattered among them? «The aqueducts were built in the Roman architecture style.» As she continued her explanation, I was wandering among the ruins she described.