320 pp. • 209
illustrations
first paperback edition
ISBN 1-934536-03-2
ISBN 978-1-934536-03-2
September 2007 • 7 x 10”
$39.95
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Master Builders of Byzantium
Robert Ousterhout
Examining Byzantine architecture— primarily churches built
in the area of Constantinople between the 9th and 15th centuries—from
the perspective of its masons, its master builders, Ousterhout identifies
the problems commonly encountered in the process of design and construction.
He analyzes written evidence, the archaeological record, and especially
the surviving buildings, concluding that Byzantine architecture
was far more innovative than has
previously been acknowledged.
Ousterhout explains how masons selected, manufactured, and utilized
materials from bricks and mortar to lead roofing tiles, from foundation
systems to roof vaultings. He situates richly decorated church interiors,
sheathed in marble revetments, mosaics, and frescoes—along
with their complex iconographic programs—within the purview
of the master builder, referring also to masons in Russia, the Balkans,
and Jerusalem.
Robert Ousterhout is Professor of Byzantine Art and Architecture
and Director of the Center
for Ancient Studies, University of Pennsylvania.
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