posted on 2017-07-03, 00:00authored byG. Massiot & cie
Sicilian characteristics include high foundations with four steps and closely spaced colonnades with heavy columns.\u000a\u000aThe temples of the later 5th century BCE are of a size similar to that of mainland temples, with stylobates measuring 16-17 x 38-40 m, and have a standard colonnade of 6 by 13 columns (although elsewhere in Sicily 6 by 14 was more frequent) and a cella with pronaos and opisthodomos; Sicilian characteristics include high foundations with four steps, closely spaced colonnades with heavy columns and frequent use of double angle contraction, wide steps in the front and omission of columns in the cella. The temples D (to Hera Lakinia) and F (Concord) in the south-east of the town (ca. 450 BCE and 425 BCE respectively) differ only in minor details and a more accurate execution in the later building. Both have double angle contraction (Temple D only at the eastern front). Temple F is one of the best-preserved ancient temples in the world. Temples D and F, together with the Temple of Zeus and the so-called Temple of Herakles, are arranged scenographically on a ridge at the southern boundary of the town (Valle dei Templi).
History
Alt Title
Temple of Juno Lacinia
Date Created
1910-01-01
Date Modified
2017-07-03
Spatial Coverage
+37.290594+13.585475|Agrigento|Agrigento, Sicily, Italy: formerly Akragas (Girgenti in Sicilian)
Temporal Coverage
before or circa 1910
Cultural Context
['Greek (ancient)', 'Classical']
Rights Statement
To view the physical lantern slide, please contact the Architecture Library.