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・ Apamea cinefacta
・ Apamea cogitata
・ Apamea commoda
・ Apamea contradicta
・ Apamea crenata
・ Apamea cristata
・ Apamea cuculliformis
・ Apamea devastator
・ Apachita Pura Pura
・ Apachite
・ Apachyidae
・ Apachyus
・ Apacilagua
・ Apaconjunctdonta
・ Apacunca Genetic Reserve
Apadana
・ Apadana (disambiguation)
・ Apadana Complex
・ Apadhup
・ Apadmi
・ Apadravya
・ Apadrinar en Perú
・ Apadāna
・ Apaecasia
・ Apaegocera
・ APAF1
・ Apaga
・ Apaga River
・ Apaga, Armenia
・ Apagado


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Apadana : ウィキペディア英語版
Apadana

An Apadana () is a large hypostyle hall, the best known examples being the great audience hall and portico at Persepolis and the palace of Susa. The Persepolis Apadana belongs to the oldest building phase of the city of Persepolis, the first half of the 5th century BC, as part of the original design by Darius the Great. Its construction completed by Xerxes I. Modern scholarships "demonstrates the metaphorical nature of the Apadana reliefs as idealised social orders".〔M. Root (1986) p. 1.〕
==The term "apadana"==
As a word, "apadāna" (Old Persian𐎠𐎱𐎭𐎠𐎴, masc.) is used to designate a hypostyle hall, i.e., a palace or audience hall of stone construction with columns. The word is rendered in Elamite as ''ha-ha-da-na'' and in Babylonian ''ap-pa-da-an'' is etymologically ambiguous. It has been compared to the Sanskrit "apadana" ( आपादन) which means 'to arrive at', and also to the Sanskrit ''apa-dhā'' ( अपधा) which means "a hide-out or concealment", and the Greek ''apo-thēkē'' "storehouse". The word survived into later periods in Iran, as the Parthian 'pdn(y) or 'pdnk(y) "palace", and outside Iran it still survives in several languages as loan-words (including the Arabic ''fadan'', the Armenian ''aparan-kʿ'' "palace".)〔R. Schmitt, Apadana i. Term, in ''Encyclopaedia Iranica''〕
More precisely, however, this word is the direct ancestor of the medieval and modern architectural term, ayvan/aywan. The Old Persian term 𐎠𐎱𐎭𐎠𐎴, a-pad-an, standing for "unprotected", refers to the fact that the veranda-shaped structure is open to the outside elements on one of its four sides, and thus 'unprotected' / exposed to the natural elements. This is exactly what the Apadana palace has: open (columned) verandas on three sides—a unique feature among all palace buildings at Persepolis. The Parthian and Sasanian architects largely did away with the columns holding up the ceiling of the veranda, replacing them with a barrel vaulting, such as the famous Ayvan of Kisra at Ctesiphon. The later evolution of term into aywan in the post-Islamic architecture that evolved from the old "apadana", refers to both columned (such as the palace of Chehel Sotoun, Isfahan) or barrel vaulted (all the four-aywaned mosques). Like the old Apadana, the new aywans are also verandas: open to the natural elements on one side.
As a modern architectural and archaeological term, the word "apadana" is also used to refer to Urartian hypostyle halls, such as those excavated at Altintepe and Erebuni. These halls predate those from Persia, and it has been proposed that Urartu could be the stylistic origin of the later Persian hypostyle audience halls.〔Henri Stierlin, "Greece, from Mycenae to the Parthenon (Taschen's World Architecture)", 1997. p116.〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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