A tetrapylon (plural tetrapyla; Greek: τετράπυλον, lit.'four gates'; Latin: quadrifrons, lit.'four fronts', also used in English) is a rectangular form of monument with arched passages in two directions, at right angles, generally built on a crossroads. They appear in ancient Roman architecture, usually as a form of the Roman triumphal arch at significant crossroads or geographical "focal points".

The North Tetrapylon at Jerash in Jordan
The so-called "Arch of Janus" in Rome
The so-called "Arch of Janus" in Rome, 4th-century

A tetrapylon was effectively a 'doubling' of the original triumphal arch form; with a total of four major arched openings, one on each side of the structure (one pair of openings opposite each other along one axis, and a second pair of openings of equal or lesser prominence perpendicular to the first pair; hence a structure with two barrel vaulted passageways, in the form of a cross). Roman examples are usually roughly square in plan, with the crossing archways of the same size; in some later examples, the plan is oblong, with the longer sides having a larger archway as for example at the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.

The three-arched form is called an octopylon as it has eight piers. As it still has four faces it can still be called a quadrifrons. The tetrakionion is another variant, with four groups of columns, usually four in each, that were never connected by stone.[1]

Called chahartaq, similar structures were built in Sasanian architecture and perhaps earlier as well as later periods in the architecture of Iran, some apparently as parts of the fire temples of Zoroastrianism. These normally had small domes above, which Roman examples did not. Since many Roman tetrapylons are in Eastern parts of the empire once ruled by the Persians, influence has been proposed, although Roman examples follow the style of Greco-Roman classical architecture.[2]

Description

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Arch of Septimius Severus (Leptis Magna), Libya

The tetrapylon was a relatively rare type of monument in classical architecture. The defining quality of this form is the concept of four gates, with four pillars or other supporting structures placed at the corners marking the divisions between them. A tetrapylon could take the form of a single building or multiple, separate structures.

They were built as grandiose landmarks, rarely functioning as gateways, but as decorative and aesthetically pleasing ornamental architecture.

The normal Roman type is square, with the four faces usually very similar; these are found "from Spain to Syria", with a probable example in England.[3] Post-classical examples, like the Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel in Paris and the Gateway of India in Mumbai, tend to be oblong, with three arches on the long face, the central of which is the main one, much larger than the side arches, or the single arches passing in the other direction. This was probably also the form of the Arch of Galerius, which crossed a main city road, with the other axis crossing, or marking, the entrance road for the imperial palace. This may have been extended from a tetrapylon to an octopylon.

Although at an important crossroad in the city, the Arch of Septimius Severus at Leptis Magna has three steps up from the road level, suggesting that it was not passed through by wheeled traffic.

The better known Parisian Arc de Triomphe has only one arch in each face, but is also oblong, with the arch on the long face much larger. None of these modern arches straddle a significant road.

Tetrakionion

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Perhaps the most striking construction at Palmyra in Syria, the tetrakionion or tetrapylon marked the second pivot in the route of the colonnaded street. It consisted of a square platform bearing at each corner a tight grouping of four columns. Each of the four groups of pillars supported 150,000kg of solid cornice. It was badly vandalized in 2017 by Islamic extremists.

A tetrakionion (Koinē Greek: τετρακιόνιον), plural tetrakionia, is a type of tetrapylon in which the central crossing is not roofed, and the four corner-markers exist as four separate structures, now unconnected, but perhaps originally supporting coverings in perishable materials such as wood and fabric. These are typically associated with turnings on colonnaded streets as part of a grand processional route.

Even after recent attempts at destruction when the city was occupied by the Islamic State, the example at Palmyra, Syria is the best preserved. The South Tetrapylon at Jerash seems to have had this form, as well as structures in Anjar, Lebanon, Ephesus, and other cities, all in the Eastern Roman Empire, apart from a tomb in Pompeii that is much smaller than the examples on streets. Some, perhaps all, seem to have had statues either on the tops of the columns, or perhaps in between them at the bottom, on the rather high plinths that large examples have.[4]

The relatively small example at Aphrodisias, Turkey is rather different, with the two groups of columns on each side of the roadway joined by open pediments over arches, while none of the structure crosses the road itself.[5] This thus represents a hybrid of the tetrapylon and tetrakionion.

Notable ancient tetrapyla

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Arch of Marcus Aurelius in Tripoli, from Views in the Ottoman Empire, 1803, by Luigi Mayer

Notes

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  1. ^ MacDonald, 87
  2. ^ Ball, 281-283
  3. ^ MacDonald, 87
  4. ^ MacDonald, 87-90
  5. ^ MacDonald, 90
  6. ^ "Southern Tetrapylon". Madain Project. Retrieved 7 April 2020.

References

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