Master Builders of ByzantiumPrinceton University Press Robert Ousterhout ISBN: 0691005354 price: $67.50 hardcover
In the first major study to examine Byzantine architecture
from the perspective of its builders, Robert Ousterhout
identifies the problems Byzantine masons commonly encountered in
the process of design and construction. From a careful analysis
of the written evidence, the archaeological record, and--most
importantly--surviving buildings, he concludes that Byzantine
architecture was far more innovative than has previously been
acknowledged.
Following preliminary observations on Byzantine church
architecture, Ousterhout examines the textual sources concerning
the respective roles of patrons, bureaucrats, and masons in the
building process. Narrowing his focus to the masons, or master
builders, he clarifies both their theoretical and their very
practical concerns in architectural design, suggesting that they
relied on geometry and memory, rather than blueprints, to guide
their work. Ousterhout explains how masons selected,
manufactured, and utilized building materials, ranging from
bricks and mortar to roofing tiles. He examines how they built
structural elements from the foundation systems to the vaulting.
Finally, he situates the richly decorated interiors, sheathed in
marble revetments, mosaics, and frescoes, within the purview of
the master builder. The study focuses on churches built in the
area of Constantinople between the ninth and fifteenth centuries,
but it also refers back to earlier works such as Hagia Sophia,
and it tracks Byzantine masons as far afield as Russia and
Jerusalem. With more than two hundred illustrations--many
published for the first time--this is a must read for anyone
interested in Byzantine art and architecture.
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