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  2. Four-room house - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four-room_house

    A four-room house, also known as an "Israelite house" or a "pillared house" is the name given to the mud and stone houses characteristic of the Iron Age of Levant. The four-room house is so named because its floor plan is divided into four sections, although not all four are proper rooms, one often being an unroofed courtyard .

  3. Housebarn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housebarn

    A model of a typical Israelite four-room house. Housebarns were built beginning in prehistoric times after people discovered that the body heat of animals helps to warm human living areas. [5] The ancient four room house is an Iron Age type highly identified with the ancient Israelites. [6]

  4. Dmytro Yavornytsky National Historical Museum of Dnipro

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dmytro_Yavornytsky...

    It was located in his own four-room house in Soborna Square. Pol's collection consisted of 4770 units and was one of the biggest and most preeminent collections of that time. Pol's museum was divided into seven divisions.

  5. Tell Qasile - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tell_Qasile

    A secondary smaller temple was built next to the main one. South of the temples were the residential houses of about 100 sqm, built in the Four-room house design. Many of the findings in the Tell and temple, like clay jugs for oil and wine, bronze vessels and seals.

  6. Burnt House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Burnt_House

    The ground floor of the Burnt House was exposed to reveal a house with an area of about 55 (32 ft) square. It included a small courtyard, four rooms, a kitchen and a mikvah (ritual bath). The walls of the house, built of stones and cement and covered with a thick white plaster, were preserved to a height of about one meter.

  7. Traditional Chinese house architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Chinese_house...

    Traditional Chinese house architecture refers to a historical series of architecture styles and design elements that were commonly utilised in the building of civilian homes during the imperial era of ancient China. Throughout this two-thousand year long period, significant innovations and variations of homes existed, but house design generally ...

  8. List of house types - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_house_types

    An I-house is a two or three-story house that is one room deep with a double-pen, hall-parlor, central-hall or saddlebag layout. [15] New England I-house: characterized by a central chimney [16] Pennsylvania I-house: characterized by internal gable-end chimneys at the interior of either side of the house [16]

  9. Siheyuan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siheyuan

    A more detailed and further stratified Confucian order was followed in ancient China. The main house in the north was assigned to the eldest member of the family, i.e. the head of the family, usually grandparents. If the main house had enough rooms, a central room would serve as a shrine for ancestral worship.