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Polygonal masonry

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The twelve-angled stone, Hatunrumiyoc street, Cusco, Peru

Polygonal masonry consists of stones that have five or more face angles, in contrast to Ashlar blocks which have four rectangular ones.[1]

In Greece, Cyclopean masonry was the first type of polygonal masonry.[2] To fit the stones properly to each other, masons would utilize strips of lead to form templates of the already laid blocks, which were then used to fashion the to-be-adjoined ones.[3]

Sites

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Easter Island

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Ahu Vinapú

Finland

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A part of the wall of the Bomarsund Fortress

Greece

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Section of polygonal wall at Delphi

Italy

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In Italy, polygonal masonry is particularly indicative of the region of Latium, but it occurs also in Etruria, Lucania, Samnium, and Umbria; scholars including Giuseppe Lugli have carried out studies of the technique.[4][5] Some notable sites that have fortification walls built in this technique include Norba, Signia, Alatri, Boiano, Circeo, Cosa, Alba Fucens, Palestrina, and Terracina.[6] The Porta Rosa of the ancient city of Velia employs a variant of the technique known as Lesbian masonry.[1]

Japan

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Shuri Castle, Naha

Latvia

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Daugavpils Fortress

Malta

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Peru

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Sacsayhuamán, Cusco, Perú, 2015-07-31, DD 27.JPG
Sacsayhuamán, Cusco, Perú
Pumacocha Archaeological site - wall.jpg
Pumacocha Archaeological site

Portugal

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Russia

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Spain

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Turkey

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United Arab Emirates

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References

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  1. ^ a b G.R.H. Wright (23 November 2009). Ancient Building Technology, Volume 3: Construction (2 Vols). BRILL. pp. 154–. ISBN 90-04-17745-0.
  2. ^ Carmelo G. Malacrino (2010). Constructing the Ancient World: Architectural Techniques of the Greeks and Romans. Getty Publications. pp. 97–. ISBN 978-1-60606-016-2.
  3. ^ Scranton, Robert L. (1941). Greek walls. Harvard University Press. p. 27. ISBN 9780598572547.
  4. ^ Frank, T. 1924. "Roman buildings of the Republic: an attempt to date them from their materials." MAAR 3.
  5. ^ Giuseppe Lugli (1957). La Tecnica Edilizia Romana Con Particolare Riguardo a Roma E Lazio: Testo. 1. Johnson Reprint.
  6. ^ Jeffrey Alan Becker (2007). The Building Blocks of Empire: Civic Architecture, Central Italy, and the Roman Middle Republic. ProQuest. pp. 109–. ISBN 978-0-549-55847-7.
  • P. Gros. 1996. L'architecture romaine: du début du IIIe siècle av. J.-C. à la fin du Haut-Empire. 2 v. Paris: Picard.