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GUILLOCHE , a French word for anSee also: ornament, either painted or carved, which was one of the See also: principal decorative bands employed"by the Greeks in their temples or on their vases
.
Guilloches are single, See also: double or triple; they consist of a series of circles equidistant one from the other and enclosed in a See also: band which winds round them and interlaces
.
This guilloche is of See also: Asiatic origin and was largely employed in the decoration of the See also: Assyrian palaces, where it was probably copied from Chaldaean See also: work, as there is an early example at Erech which See also: dates from the See also: time of Gudea (2294 B.C.)
.
The ornament as painted by the Greeks has almost entirely disappeared, but traces are found in the See also: temple of See also: Nemesis at Rhamnus; and on the terra-cotta slabs by which the See also: timber See also: roofs of See also: Greek temples were protected, it is painted in See also: colours which are almost as brilliant as when first produced, those of the See also: Treasury of See also: Gela at See also: Olympia being of See also: great beauty
.
These examples are double guilloches, with two rows of circles, each with an See also: independent interlacing band and See also: united by a small arc with palmette inside; in both the single and double guilloches of Greek work there is a flower in the centre of the circles
.
In the triple guilloche, the centre See also: row of circles comes See also: half-way between the others, and the enclosing band crosses diagonally both ways, interlacing alternately
.
The best example of the triple guilloche is that which is carved on the See also: torus moulding of the See also: base and on the small See also: convex moulding above the echinus of the capitals of the columns of the See also: Erechtheum at Athens
.
It was largely employed in See also: Roman work, and the single guilloche is found almost universally as a border in mosaic pavements, not only in See also: Italy but throughout See also: Europe
.
In the
See also: Renaissance in Italy it was also a favourite enrichment for See also: borders and occasionally in See also: France and See also: England
.
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