Vol. 21 No. 3 (2024): Travel
Articles

Piranesi’s challenge: Rethinking the origins of European architecture

Ipek Ek
Yaşar University, Department of Architecture

Published 2024-11-28

Keywords

  • Giovanni Battista Piranesi,
  • Roman architecture,
  • Eighteenth-century origin debates,
  • Origins of European architecture,
  • Egyptian architecture

How to Cite

Ek, I. (2024). Piranesi’s challenge: Rethinking the origins of European architecture. A|Z ITU JOURNAL OF THE FACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE, 21(3), 599–617. https://doi.org/10.58278/0.2024.65

Abstract

Italian architect, archaeologist, and scholar Giovanni Battista Piranesi was a prolific Enlightenment figure who produced an elaborate series of drawings and etchings to support his following argument on the origins of European architecture: Roman architecture derived not from the Greek but from the Etruscan, which, according to him, derived from Egypt. Based on his meticulous archaeological examinations in excavations, he developed a history of architecture that was not based on the East West division and the separation of the continents. However, Johann Joachim Winckelmann’s approach rooting the origin of Roman architecture in the Greek came to dominate the standard history of architecture, and Piranesi was misinterpreted both in his day and posthumously. The posthumous codification of architectural history excluded Piranesi from the standardized progress of architectural history in the West and resulted in his identification by idiosyncrasy. Therefore, this work is an attempt to restore his argument to architectural history.