Monuments and Buildings


 
 
Concept Explanation
 

Monuments and Buildings

Monument and Buildings: Monument and buildings often provide information about the period during which they were built. Temples, places and mosques can tell us not only of the religious practices but also about the political, economic and social conditions of that time.

Monuments have been created for thousands of years, and they are often the most durable and famous symbols of ancient civilizations. Prehistoric tumuli, dolmens, and similar structures have been created in a large number of prehistoric cultures across the world, and the many forms of monumental tombs of the more wealthy and powerful members of a society are often the source of much of our information and art from those cultures.

As societies became organized on a larger scale, so monuments so large as to be difficult to destroy like the Egyptians pyramids, the Greek Parthenon, the Great wall of China Indian Taj Mahal or the Moai of Easter island have become symbols of their civilizations. In more recent times, monumental structures such as the Statue of Liberty and Eiffel Tower have become iconic emblems of modern nation-states. The term monumentality relates to the symbolic status and physical presence of a monument. In this context, German art historian Helmut Scharf states that “A monument exists in the form of an object and also as symbol thereof. As a language symbol, a monument usually refers to something concrete, in some rare cases it is also used metaphorically  A monument can be a language symbol for a unity of several monuments ... or only for a single one, but in a broader sense it can also be used in nearly all knowable planes of being.  What is considered a monument always depends on the importance it attributes to the prevailing or traditional consciousness of a specific historical and social situation.”

 
 


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