The Lefkandi-Toumba Building as a Timber-Framed Structure

The article demonstrates that the building or megaron on the Toumba hill at Lefkandi (Euboea), dating from c.950 BC, was a timber-framed structure, in contrast to the common view of it as a building with loadbearing walls. This raises the possibility that the walls, perhaps even parts of the frame a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alexandra Coucouzeli, Allan McRobie, Igor Kavrakov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EXARC 2024-11-01
Series:EXARC Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://exarc.net/ark:/88735/10772
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Summary:The article demonstrates that the building or megaron on the Toumba hill at Lefkandi (Euboea), dating from c.950 BC, was a timber-framed structure, in contrast to the common view of it as a building with loadbearing walls. This raises the possibility that the walls, perhaps even parts of the frame and the roof, were still under construction, rather than fully completed as previously assumed, when the building was buried under a mound. The reconstruction of the timber frame of the building, as well as an analysis of the manner of its production, give us valuable insights into ancient wooden architecture. Even more, a structural analysis intended to test the integrity of the frame sheds light on the complex rationale behind the adoption of such designs as prototypes of later large-scale temples in Greece. Additionally, there is no evidence that the timber frame suffered any significant structural failure, but if such failure ever occurred, it would most likely be a partial uplift of the thatched roof due to high winds.
ISSN:2212-8956