'',
Song dynasty Antiquity All significant
Iron Age civilizations of the
Near East and
Mediterranean made some use of columns.
Egyptian In
ancient Egyptian architecture as early as 2600 BC, the architect
Imhotep made use of stone columns whose surface was carved to reflect the organic form of bundled reeds, like
papyrus,
lotus and
palm. In later Egyptian architecture faceted cylinders were also common. Their form is thought to derive from archaic reed-built shrines. Carved from stone, the columns were highly decorated with carved and painted
hieroglyphs, texts, ritual imagery and natural motifs. Egyptian columns are famously present in the
Great Hypostyle Hall of Karnak (), where 134 columns are lined up in sixteen rows, with some columns reaching heights of 24 metres. One of the most important type are the papyriform columns. The origin of these columns goes back to the
5th Dynasty. They are composed of lotus (papyrus) stems which are drawn together into a bundle decorated with bands: the capital, instead of opening out into the shape of a
bellflower, swells out and then narrows again like a flower in bud. The base, which tapers to take the shape of a half-sphere like the stem of the lotus, has a continuously recurring decoration of stipules. The grammar of ornament (1868) (14587326250).jpg|Illustration of papyriform capitals, in
The Grammar of Ornament Lepsius-Projekt tw 1-2-108.jpg|Illustration of various types of capitals, drawn by the egyptologist
Karl Richard Lepsius Mammisi Philae2.JPG|Columns with
Hathoric capitals The double row of columns with papyrus bundle capitals - The Court of Amonhotep III - Luxor Temple (14075179947).jpg|Papyriform columns of the
Luxor Temple Greek and Roman The
Minoans used whole tree-trunks, placed on a stylobate (floor base) and topped by a simple round pillow-like capital. These were then painted as in the most famous Minoan palace of
Knossos. The Minoans employed columns to create large open-plan spaces, light-wells and as a focal point for religious rituals. These traditions were continued by the later
Mycenaean civilization, particularly in the
megaron or hall at the heart of their palaces. The importance of columns and their reference to palaces and therefore authority is evidenced in their use in heraldic motifs such as the famous lion-gate of
Mycenae where two lions stand each side of a column. While these early wooden columns have not survived, their stone bases have and it is through these that we may see their use and arrangement in palace buildings. The Egyptians, Persians, and other civilizations used columns for the practical purpose of holding up the roof inside a building, preferring outside walls to be decorated with
reliefs or painting, but the Ancient Greeks, followed by the Romans, used them on the outside as well, and the extensive use of columns on the interior and exterior of buildings is one of the most characteristic features of classical architecture, in buildings like the
Parthenon. The Greeks developed the
classical orders of architecture, which are most easily distinguished by the form of the column and its various elements. Their
Doric,
Ionic, and
Corinthian orders were expanded by the Romans to include the
Tuscan and
Composite orders. File:Knossos 03.JPG|Minoan columns at the West Bastion of the Palace of
Knossos File:EB1911 Capital Fig. 5 Early Greek Capital from the Tomb of Agamemnon, Mycenae.jpg|Illustration of the end of a Mycenaean column, from the
Tomb of Agamemnon File:Fotothek df tg 0001022 Architektur ^ Säule ^ dorische Ordnung ^ Brücke.jpg|Illustration of the
Tuscan order File:DoricParthenon.jpg|Illustration of the
Doric order File:Ionic Order from “Les ruines plus beaux des monuments de la Grèce” p197.jpg|Illustration of the
Ionic order File:Evolution of the Corinthian Capital 138.jpg|Evolution of the
Corinthian order File:Fotothek df tg 0001039 Architektur ^ Säule ^ komposite Ordnung.jpg|Illustration of the
Composite order File:Femme en priere entre deux colonnes ioniques - Louvre.jpg|Praying Woman between two ionic columns, 2nd century, marble, in the
Louvre Persian column, of
Persia (Iran) Some of the most elaborate columns in the ancient world were those of the
Persians, especially the massive stone columns erected in
Persepolis. They included double-bull structures in their
capitals.
The Hall of Hundred Columns at Persepolis, measuring 70 × 70 metres, was built by the
Achaemenid king
Darius I (524–486 BC). Many of the ancient
Persian columns are still standing, particularly at sites such as Persepolis; some were originally around 20–24 metres tall, making them among the tallest columns of the ancient world. Tall columns with bull's head capitals were used for porticoes and to support the roofs of the hypostyle hall, partly inspired by the ancient Egyptian precedent. Since the columns carried timber beams rather than stone, they could be taller, slimmer and more widely spaced than Egyptian ones.
South Asia Indo-Corinthian capitals are
capitals crowning
columns or
pilasters, which can be found in the northwestern
Indian subcontinent, and usually combine
Hellenistic and
Indian elements. These capitals are typically dated to the first centuries of the
Common Era, and constitute an important aspect of
Greco-Buddhist art. Indo-Corinthian capitals display a design and foliage structure which is derived from the academic
Corinthian capital developed in Greece. Its importation to India followed the road of Hellenistic expansion in the East in the centuries after the conquests of
Alexander the Great. In particular the
Greco-Bactrian kingdom, centered on
Bactria (today's northern
Afghanistan), upheld the type at the doorstep of India, in such places as
Ai-Khanoum until the end of the 2nd century BCE. In India, the design was often adapted, usually taking a more elongated form and sometimes being combined with scrolls, generally within the context of Buddhist
stupas and temples.
Middle Ages Columns, or at least large structural exterior ones, became much less significant in the architecture of the
Middle Ages. The classical forms were abandoned in both
Byzantine and
Romanesque architecture in favour of more flexible forms, with capitals often using various types of foliage decoration, and in the West scenes with figures carved in
relief. During the Romanesque period, builders continued to reuse and imitate ancient Roman columns wherever possible; where new, the emphasis was on elegance and beauty, as illustrated by twisted columns. Often they were decorated with mosaics. SantApollinare Nuovo Pulpito marmoreo.jpg|Byzantine columns from
Basilica of Sant'Apollinare Nuovo (
Ravenna, Italy) Hagia_Sophia_(15468276434).jpg|The capital of a Byzantine column from
Hagia Sophia (
Istanbul, Turkey) Igreja de São Tiago, Coimbra. Capiteis y colunelos.jpg|Romanesque columns from the 12th century Neuwiller StPierre-Paul 117.JPG|Gothic columns of a church from
Neuwiller-lès-Saverne (France) File:Gelnhausen, Marienkirche, Südportal-20160804-007.jpg|Slender Gothic columns at a portal of (
Gelnhausen, Germany) File:20131204_Istanbul_085.jpg|Column use is common in
Ottoman architecture, an example in
Topkapı Palace (
Istanbul, Turkey)
Mesoamerica In
Teotihuacan's unique grid-planned layout, elaborate palace compounds such as the Palace of
Quetzalpapálotl, located southwest of the
Pyramid of the Moon, featured facades and columns decorated with low-relief carvings. This palace's open patio was surrounded by heavy stone columns incised on three sides with bas-reliefs, adorned with water symbols on cornices painted red and white. At
Tula, the
Pyramid of the Atlanteans was supported by huge stone columns carved as warriors bearing atlatls, sheaves of arrows, butterfly breast plates, and solar discs, while the nearby Great Vestibule featured an L-shaped platform with dozens of stubbed columns.
Puuc Maya architecture is distinguished by round columns with entasis and square capitals placed in doorways, as seen at
Sayil's Palace with its porticoed chambers featuring round columns, and at
Labna, where freestanding, round columns with capitals appear alongside carved stone facades. At
Chacmultun, the Puuc style is expressed with colonettes (small columns) on upper facades, columned doorways, and rounded columns at Building 1. Columns at
Chichen Itza appear in several architectural forms, most notably colonnaded halls, which are long masonry structures fronted by a series of columns that functioned as administrative buildings for the elite, and gallery‑patios, which combine a long, open colonnaded gallery with a rectangular patio that uses interior columns to widen the interior space. Both types are common at Chichen Itza but rare elsewhere in Yucatán. File:Wiki Loves Pyramids, Wikimania15, ArmAg (16).JPG|Courtyard of the
Quetzalpapalotl Palace in
Teotihuacan with square columns adorned with mythological birds File:TulaSite101.JPG|The
Atlantean figures and the remaining column drums in the shape of
feathered serpents in
Tula. Originally, they provided the support for the roof of a structure on top of Pyramid B. File:Sayil '2010 - 03.jpg|Load bearing columns and engaged columns in the facade of the Grand Palace of
Sayil File:Chichen-Itza-1000-Warriors-Columns.jpg|Columns in the
Group of a Thousand Columns, an architectural complex in Chichen Itza
Renaissance and later styles Renaissance architecture was keen to revive the classical vocabulary and styles, and the informed use and variation of the classical orders remained fundamental to the training of architects throughout
Baroque,
Rococo and
Neo-classical architecture. ==Structure==