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Mudbrick

 
Wikipedia: Mudbrick
Mudbrick was used for the outer construction of Sumerian ziggurats—some of the world's largest and oldest constructions. Choqa Zanbil, a 13th century BC, Elamite, ziggurat in Iran is similarly constructed from clay bricks.
The Great Mosque of Djenné is a well-known Mosque that is located in Djenné, Mali. It was made with mudbrick and is the largest mudbrick structure in the world.
Mudbrick home in Pakistan

A mudbrick is a firefree brick made of a mixture of clay, mud, sand, and water mixed with a binding material such as rice husks or straw. They use a stiff mixure and let them dry in the sun for 25 days.

In warm regions with very little timber available to fuel a kiln, bricks were generally sun dried. This had the result that their useful lifespan is reduced to around thirty years. Once a building collapsed, new bricks would have to be made and the new structure rebuilt on top of the rubble of the decayed old brick. This phenomenon is the primary factor behind the mounds or tells on which many ancient cities stand. In some cases they extended the life of mud bricks by putting kiln dried bricks on top or covering them with stucco.

Adobe is a type of mudbrick also used today to save energy and is an environmentally safe way to insulate a house. This type of house tends to stay cool in the summer and warm in the winter. [1]

Contents

Banco

The Great Mosque of Djenné, in central Mali, is the world's largest mudbrick structure. It, like much Sahelian architecture, is built with a mudbrick called Banco: a recipe of mud and grain husks, fermented, and either formed into bricks or applied on surfaces as a plaster like paste in broad strokes. This plaster must be reapplied annually. [2] While used universally for small single storey unornamented homes and other buildings from Senegal to Sudan, its more decorative usage, in mosques, palaces, markets and other public buildings has been termed Sudano-Sahelian Architecture.

Ancient world

The South Asian inhabitants of Mehrgarh constructed, and lived in, mud brick houses between 7000–3300 BCE.[3] Mudbricks were in use in the Near East during the aceramic Neolithic B period. The Sumerians used sun-dried bricks in their city construction;[4] typically these bricks were flat on the plano-convex mudbricks. Some bricks were formed in a square mould and rounded so that the middle was thicker than the ends.

In Minoan Crete at the Knossos site there is archaeological evidence that sun-dried bricks were used in the Neolithic period (e.g. prior to 3400 BC).[5]

Mudbricks were used to some extent in pre-Roman Egypt, and mudbrick use increased at the time of Roman influence.[6]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Modern Marvels: Bible tech" History channel
  2. ^ [http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/art/3562677/Timbuktu-Mud-mud-glorious-mud.html Timbuktu: Mud, mud, glorious mud]. Dominic Bradbury. The Telegraph (London) 29 October 2008
  3. ^ Possehl, Gregory L. (1996)
  4. ^ Mogens Herman Hansen, A Comparative Study of Six City-state Cultures, Københavns universitet Polis centret (2002) Videnskabernes Selskab, 144 pages ISBN:8778763169
  5. ^ C. Michael Hogan, Knossos fieldnotes, Modern Antiquarian (2007)
  6. ^ Kathryn A. Bard and Steven Blake Shubert, Encyclopedia of the Archaeology of Ancient Egypt, 1999, Routledge, 938 pages ISBN:0415185890

References

  • Possehl, Gregory L. (1996). Mehrgarh in Oxford Companion to Archaeology, edited by Brian Fagan. Oxford University Press.

External links


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