Answer:
The Greek order that has an entablature with a three-panel architrave and a decorated frieze is the Ionic order.
Step-by-step explanation:
The Ionic order is one of the three main styles of Classical Greek architecture - the other two being the Doric and the Corinthian. The Ionic order appeared during the mid 6th-century BC in Ionia, which was located in the southern part of Asia Minor. The Greek started to practice this order in mainland around the 5th-century BC, especially in the Archaic Period (750-480 BC).
Main characteristics of the Ionic order:
- The Ionic columns always have a base - they are slender columns
- The Ionic columns are fluted - with a number of 24 hollow flutes in the shaft
- The entablature which rests on the columns has three parts:
- an architrave - it is plain and divided into two or three bands
- a frieze - it rests on the architrave and it is really decorated and sculptural - the motifs are narrative and in bas-relief style
- a cornice - built with dentils (spaced ends), a crown and a cyma - to support the roof