We cannot answer this question if you do not tell us what period you are referring to.
Ramses the Great was believed to have more monuments and statues built and paced in his burial chamber than any other pharoah in history.Ramses the great made more Monument's and more Statues then any other.Ramses the Great was believed to have more monuments and statues built and paced in his burial chamber than any other pharoah in history.
temples and statues and obelisks
More than any other either before him or after. They include: the Rock Temple at Abu Simbel; the Ramesseum in W. Thebes; a massive extension to the temple complex at Karnak; a massive statue at Memphis; many more statues and buildings all over Egypt plus a tomb of enormous proportions.
They made sacrifices to them and built statues and other works of art that honored them.
He built no pyramids but he built temples, statues of himself and a massive rock tomb. His name Ramses II.
They were built to house statues of the gods. The were also used as places of refuge and a protected place to stash money and other valuables.
Carpenters from the colonial times built stuff out of wood
In the Anicent times, buildings was a message of power. Pericles took the idea, and built many buildings such as Acroplis, Pathernon and other famous buildings.
Ramses the second built a city called the House of Ramses. In front of it there was 4 66 foot tall statues of him. The ears were three feet long. Want to learn more about Ramses? Then ask , why was Ramses the second a great pharaoh.
To get to the other side! Nah I'm just messin with ya. They built buildings for the same reason We do: shelter from the elements, protection ect.
The school opened in 1961 but it was called The Stevenage Technical Grammar School. In 1963 the name was changed to The Nobel School. The majority of the buildings we built in 1961 but other buildings have been built since. The school is now undergoing a rebuild programme which should be completed by the end of 2012.
A manor was not really built. It was an estate, which was made up of a large tract of land divided into agricultural land and wilderness areas, a manor house where the lord lived, other houses, perhaps in a village, agricultural buildings, other work buildings, and so on. There are links below to related questions.