Page:A general history for colleges and high schools (Myers, 1890).djvu/210

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176
GREEK ARCHITECTURE.

CHAPTER XVIII.

GREEK ARCHITECTURE, SCULPTURE, AND PAINTING.

The Greek Sense of Beauty.—The Greeks were artists by nature. "Ugliness gave them pain like a blow." Everything they made was beautiful. Beauty they placed next to holiness; indeed, they almost or quite made beauty and right the same thing. They are said to have thought it strange that Socrates was good, seeing he was so unprepossessing in appearance.

PELASGIAN MASONRY.


i. Architecture.

Pelasgian Architecture.—The term Pelasgian is applied to various structures of massive masonry found in different parts of Greece, Italy, and Asia Minor. The origin of these works was a mystery to the earliest Hellenes, who ascribed them to a race of giants called Cyclops; hence the name Cyclopean that also attaches to them.

These works exhibit three well-defined stages of development.