West Asia Architecture
West Asia Architecture
West Asia Architecture
Geographical
Provides much of the background of the western civilization
Covers the Arab states, Israel, Cyprus, Turkey, Persia (Iran), and
Trans-Caucasian republics of the former USSR, Iraq
(Mesopotamia)
Three broad zones comprise the greater part of West Asia:
❏ Arabian peninsula with its desert extending to Syria;
❏ Yemen stretching from the Mediterranean coastal plain;
Palestine through north Syria and Iraq to the head of the
Gulf, lies the zone of grasslands, foot hills, alluvial river
plains known as the Fertile Crescent,
❏ Mountains and plateaus of Anatolia, mountains and lakes
of Turkey and Iran, mountain ranges of Zargos
Fertile Crescent-cradle of Civilization
• -rich soil
• -flooding of water from Rivers Tigris, Euphrates
(Mesopotamia and Nile (Egypt) due to melting of
snow from Anatolia and Persian mountains
made the soil fertile and good for agriculture
• -irrigation (technology) increased food security
• -earliest settlements were found along these
rivers
• -consisted of Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Israel ,
part of Egypt, Turkey (Anatolia), Iran (Persia),
Iraq (Mesopotamia)
Climatic
• Western Persia and Mesopotamia, warmer climate good for growth of settlements, part of
the Fertile Crescent
• Little rain but water came from snow found in the mountain ranges of Anatolia and Persia
• The melting of snow caused annual flooding of Tigris and Euphrates River good for
agriculture
• Dry climate in Northern Mesopotamia, water from Tigris and Euphrates Rivers to irrigate
farmlands
• Southern Mesopotamia, fertile land good for agriculture - first complex societies of south-
west Asia evolved
• Babylonian
• Sumerian
• Assyrian
Mesopotamian Civilization
Geographical
location
In Greek Terms
• meso- city
• Potamus -river
Babylonian Civilization
• The city of Babylon started 4000 years ago along the Euphrates River
• King Hammurabi made the city one of the biggest during that time
• Several centuries later, city became a strong empire stretching from Persia to
Mediterranean Sea
• This period marked the construction of beautiful structures making the city one of the most
beautiful during the ancient world
• Persia conquered Babylon that caused it downfall
Famous structures
• Tower of Babel
• City walls
• Nebuchadnezzar palaces
• Hanging Garden of Babylon
• Ishtar gate
Babylonian Civilization
• Babylonia abundance of mud brick, lack of
stone
• Use of colored brick
• Use of pilaster-imbedded column for
ornamentation
• Frescoes on walls-frescoes technique in
painting on wall while the plater is still wet
• Use of reliefs-carvings on the walls
pilaster
Low relief
frescoes
Geological
Pavement
Winged Human Headed Lion Slab
(Lamassu) Gypsum Alabaster
City of Khorsabad
❏ Built by Sargon II (722 - 705 BC)
❏ Square planned with defensive perimeter
nearly 1 mile
❏ Contained a citadel and palaces
❏ “Palace without Rival”
Palace of Sargon
❏ Northeastern part of the City of
Khorsabad
❏ Contained courts, corridors, and
rooms covering 23 acres
❏ Each of the building was raised with
terrace
❏ Palace site was approached by broad
ramps
Palace of Sargon
❏ Main entrance to the palace grand court
was flanked with two towers and
guarded by a man-headed winged bull,
3.8m high supporting a semicircular arch
decorated with coloured glazed bricks
❏ Has 3 main parts, on the left were
temples; on the right were service
quarters and administrative, and
opposite were private residential
apartments, state chambers behind
Terracotta drains to carry rain water in
the mud-brick platform
City of Nineveh
❏ Capital of Assyrian empire 705-681 BC built by Sargon’s son Sennacherib
❏ Considerable labor spent in securing foundation platform
❏ More places built by Sennacherib successors
❏ Reliefs showed activity of hunting and bloody war against the Kingdom Elam
❏ Before its downfall, Nineveh was given extra rampart on the east side but was never
finished
❏ The city fell in the war against Babylonian in 612 BC and never to rise again
❏ Water was the primary concern of Assyrian Kings
❏ Ashurnasirpal II dug a canal from river Zab to irrigate the land near the Nimrud
❏ Sennacherib built an arched aqueduct of stone construction, which may be said to
anticipate Roman achievements of this class
ARCHITECTURAL
STYLES
Houses
❏ mud brick, mud plaster, and wooden doors,
which were all naturally available around the city
❏ Most houses had a square center room with
other rooms attached to it, but a great variation in
the size and materials used to build the houses
suggest they were built by the inhabitants
themselves.
❏ The smallest rooms may not have coincided with
the poorest people; in fact, it could be that the
poorest people built houses out of perishable
materials such as reeds on the outside of the
city, but there is very little direct evidence for this.
Mesopotamian Ornamentations
Confronted animals- 2
animals facing each
other
Wall frescoes
finish