Doric Order

  • Commercial Stimulation Edict: -3 slave unrest
  • Reduces slave population decline
  • +3% wealth from subsistence
Description

In classical architecture, the uniform assembly of constituent parts according to established proportions is called an ‘order’. There are five main architectural orders, three of which were created in ancient Greece; Doric, Ionic, and the later Corinthian. Doric order, originating on the western mainland during the Archaic Period, is the oldest and most functional of the three; short, fluted columns and plain round tops without a base plinth. Proportionally, Doric order has shorter, thicker columns than those designed in the Ionic style, giving a more ‘masculine’ look which had a bearing on the type of building it was used for. A surviving example is the marble Temple of Hephaestus in Athens, to the northwest of the hill housing the city’s ancient agora, or marketplace.

Requires
Tech
Enables
Buildings
Tech
Faction Availability