Xystus (architectural term)

Xystus (architectural term)

Xystus was the Greek architectural term for the covered portico of the gymnasium, in which the exercises took place during the winter or in rainy weather, etc. The Romans applied the term to the garden walk in front of the porticoes, which was divided into flower beds with borders of box, and to a promenade between rows of large trees. The term took its name from the Greek word "xustos", meaning "smooth", due to the polished floor of the xystus. "Xystus" was used, by extension, to refer to the whole building containing the gymnasium and portico, as in the xysti of Jerusalem and Elis.

The 1913 edition of Webster's Dictionary lists xyst as an alternative spelling for "xystus". [cite web
url=http://machaut.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/WEBSTER.sh?WORD=xystus&FLOAT=ON
title=1913 Webster's Dictionary definition for "Xyst, Xystus"
publisher=ARTFL Project
accessdate=2008-09-03
] , and xystarch as the term for a superintendent of a xystus. [cite web
url=http://machaut.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/WEBSTER.sh?WORD=xystarch&FLOAT=ON
title=1913 Webster's Dictionary definition for "Xystarch"
publisher=ARTFL Project
accessdate=2008-09-03
]

References

*1911


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  • Xystus — has several meanings:* Xystus (Architectural term), a Greek architectural term. * Xystus, another spelling for the Roman name Sixtus …   Wikipedia

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