- An
attic (sometimes
referred to as a loft) is a
space found directly below the
pitched roof of a
house or
other building. It is also
known as a sky parlor...
- black-figure
style. In the 5th
century BCE
Attic fine pottery, now
predominantly red-figure,
maintained its
dominance in the markets.
Attic pottery was...
- In
classical architecture, the term
attic refers to a
storey (or low wall)
above the
cornice of a
classical façade. The
decoration of the
topmost part...
- of ****enistic Gr****.
Atticism was portra**** as a
return to
classical methods after what was
perceived as the
pretentious style of the ****enistic, Sophist...
-
painters and
potters were
satisfied to
follow the
Attic style. By the end of the
Archaic period the
styles of black-figure pottery, red-figure
pottery and...
- Neo-
Attic or
Atticizing is a
sculptural style,
beginning in ****enistic
sculpture and vase-painting of the 2nd
century BC and
climaxing in
Roman art of...
-
harking back to the
sophists and the
Gorgianic style."
Unlike the more austere,
formal and
traditional Attic style,
Asiatic oratory was more bombastic, emotional...
- The ten
Attic orators were
considered the
greatest Gr****
orators and
logographers of the
classical era (5th–4th
century BC). They are
included in the...
-
defenders to
shoot downwards; this
incline is
called the
superior talus.
Attic style Baluster Merlon Redoubt Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Parapet" . Encyclopædia...
-
Attic Gr**** is the Gr****
dialect of the
ancient region of Attica,
including the
polis of Athens.
Often called classical Gr****, it was the
prestige dialect...