Bouleuterion

Malcolm Bell, III
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Abstract

The bouleuterion housed the boule or council of a Greek polis in the form of a roofed meeting space. Most, if not all, cities had one; the remains of more than fifty buildings are extant. Although there were also bouleuteria in large sanctuaries and federal capitals, the major examples are urban. Bouleuteria were almost always located near a city’s agora. Over time their architects designed increasingly unobstructed interior spaces. Construction of dedicated bouleuteria began in the late archaic period; earlier councils may have met in porticoes or other buildings. Councils were generally composed of 100–500 bouletai and required a capacious meeting place; the bouleuterion became one of a city’s largest secular buildings. In the 5th and 4th centuries bce, the usual form was a hypostyle hall with symmetrically spaced interior columns, level floors, and seating on benches, as at Argos and Athens. Sloping stone seating was introduced early in the Hellenistic era and became standard; both rectilinear and curvilinear versions are known, the latter much more common. Secondary meeting spaces for committees of prytaneis or probouloi were sometimes adjacent. From c. 250 bce the design of bouleuteria became increasingly ambitious. After adoption of the wooden roofing truss, interior supports could be more widely spaced, as at Priene and Miletus, and eventually eliminated. Often the product of Hellenistic and Roman euergetism, bouleuteria were constructed by private citizens and rulers; sculptures were often dedicated within their precincts. Rare architectural sculpture was limited to motifs symbolizing the council’s role as a defense against a city’s enemies. A majority of known bouleuteria are in Asia Minor, where Greek cities long retained their civic identity under Rome; membership in the council came to signify high status, in some places becoming hereditary. Many bouleuteria were built between the 2nd century bce and 2nd century ce, often incorporated, as at Ephesus and Aphrodisias, into large urban complexes. As multivalent roofed halls, bouleuteria provided useful settings for civic ceremonies and were often used for cultural activities including oratory and spectacle. Later examples became more like odeia or roofed theaters, with vast open interiors, a raised stage, and a two-storey scaenae frons that was separated from the cavea by parodoi and populated by sculptures of benefactors, deities, and emperors. When epigraphical evidence is lacking, identification of a later building as an odeion or bouleuterion can be uncertain; while some roofed halls may have served both functions, location on or near the agora points at least to political use. In Asia Minor some bouleuteria continued into the late antique period; the building at Nysa may have survived until the 10th or 11th century ce.
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这个有屋顶的会议场所是希腊城邦议会的所在地。大多数(如果不是全部的话)城市都有;现存五十多座建筑物的遗迹。虽然在大型保护区和联邦首都也有,但主要的例子是城市。Bouleuteria几乎总是位于城市的集市附近。随着时间的推移,他们的建筑师设计了越来越通畅的室内空间。在古代晚期开始建造专用的输尿管;早期的议会可能在门廊或其他建筑中开会。理事会一般由100-500名成员组成,需要一个宽敞的会议场所;这座展览馆成为该市最大的世俗建筑之一。在公元前5世纪和4世纪,通常的形式是一个有对称间隔的内部柱、水平地板和长凳座位的复式大厅,就像在阿尔戈斯和雅典一样。倾斜的石头座位早在希腊化时代就被引入并成为标准;直线和曲线两种版本都是已知的,后者更为常见。专门委员会或专题委员会的次要会议空间有时相邻。从公元前250年开始,bouleuteria的设计变得越来越雄心勃勃。在采用木质屋顶桁架后,内部支撑可以更广泛地间隔,就像在Priene和Miletus一样,最终被取消。通常是希腊文化和罗马文化的产物,由普通公民和统治者建造;雕塑通常在他们的辖区内落成。罕见的建筑雕塑仅限于象征议会作为防御城市敌人的角色的主题。大多数已知的花束都在小亚细亚,那里的希腊城市长期保持着罗马统治下的公民身份;委员会的成员资格象征着高地位,在某些地方甚至可以世袭。在公元前2世纪和公元前2世纪之间,许多布里乌塔被建造,通常被合并,如在以弗所和阿芙洛狄西亚,成为大型城市综合体。作为多层屋顶的大厅,bouleuteria为公民仪式提供了有用的场所,并经常用于文化活动,包括演讲和表演。后来的例子变得更像odeia或有屋顶的剧院,有巨大的开放内部,一个升高的舞台,和一个两层的场景,由parodoi与大厅分开,里面有捐助者,神和皇帝的雕塑。在缺乏碑文证据的情况下,对一座后来的建筑的鉴定可能是不确定的;虽然一些有屋顶的大厅可能兼有这两种功能,但广场上或附近的位置至少表明了政治用途。在小亚细亚,一些花束一直延续到古代晚期;尼萨的建筑可能一直保存到公元10世纪或11世纪。
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