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It seems that the first peripteral temples were rectangle wooden structures.
The peripteral temple was surrounded by a double file of Ionic columns.
Both were constructed to a peripteral hexastyle design.
Part of the northeast side of this porous peripteral temple has been restored.
The temple is a peripteral Ionic ordered temple with 11x6 columns.
The 2nd century BC saw a revival of temple architecture, including peripteral temples.
The peripteral temple belongs to the period of transition from the archaic to the classical period.
North-west of the town is a late 2nd or early 3rd century peripteral temple, built on a high platform surrounded by a colonnade.
It was a Hexastyle peripteral building with six columns along the short sides and eleven on the long sides.
From the early Hellenistic period onwards, the Greek peripteral temple lost much of its importance.
It is of hexastyle peripteral design.
If they are surrounded by a colonnade, they are known as peripteral tholoi.
The peripteral colonnade of 48 Ionic columns was placed in such a way, that the emphasis was given to the front side.
The octastyle temple was peripteral, with eight Corinthian columns at the short sides and eleven on the long sides.
This form is sometimes called pseudoperipteral, as distinct from a true peripteral temple like the Parthenon entirely surrounded by free-standing columns.
Ten columns would have run along the East and West exterior sides of the temple, with none around the back of the chamber (Peripteral style).
The Parthenon is a peripteral octastyle Doric temple with Ionic architectural features.
Pseudoperipteral buildings appear similar to peripteral buildings with free-standing columns surrounding the cella as a peristyle.
It is hexastyle, peripteral except at the back, and six of its columns, 0.70 meters in diameter, are still standing, built into the wall of the church.
Another temple probably peripteral was built in the 7th century B.C, with an inner row of wooden columns over its Geometric predecessor.
Unlike peripteral temples, there is a greater space between the columns of the peristyle and the cella; dipteral temples have two peristyles.
The surviving architectural elements indicate that the length of its crepidoma was probably ca. 46 m, that the temple was peripteral and of doric order.
Peripteral octastyle describes a temple with a single row of columns around the naos, with eight columns across the front, like the Parthenon, Athens.
The Doric temple of Apollo Clarius was probably built in the 3rd century B.C, and it was peripteral with 6 x 11 columns.
The ruins of the Temple of Delphi visible today date from the 4th century BC, and are of a peripteral Doric building.