Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

Page concordance

< >
Scan Original
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
< >
page |< < of 320 > >|
1the Ancients in their Publick Buildings always
eft
a great many of both the afore-mention'd
Kinds
of Apertures.
This appears from their
Theatres
, which if we obſerve are extremely
full
of Apertures, not only Stair-caſes, but
Windows
and Doors.
And we ought ſo to
order
the Proportions of theſe Openings, as
not
to make very little ones in great Walls,
nor
too large in ſmall ones.
In theſe Sorts of
Apertures
various Deſigns have been com­
mended
; but the beſt Architects have never
made
Uſe of any but Squares and ſtrait Lines.
However all have agreed in this, that let them
be
of what Shape they will, they ſhould be ac­
modated
to the Bigneſs and Form of the

Building
. *The Doors, then they
fay
ſhould always be more high than
broad
; and the higheſt be ſuch as
are
capable of receiving two Circles [A] one
upon
t'other, and the loweſt ſhould be of
the
Heighth of the Diagonal of a Square [B]
whereof
the Groundſell is one of the Sides.
It
is
alſo convenient to place the Doors in ſuch a
Manner
, that they may lead to as many Parts
of
the Edifice as poſſible: And in order to give
Beauty
to ſuch Apertures, Care muſt be taken
that
thoſe of like Dimenſions correſpond with
each
other both on the Right and Left.
It was
uſual
to leave the Windows and Doors in odd
Numbers
, but ſo as for the Side ones to anſwer
each
other, and that in the Middle to be
ſomewhat
larger than the reſt.
And particular
Regard
was always had to the Strength of the
Building
, for which Reaſon they contrived to
ſet
the Openings clear from the Corners and
from
the Columns, in the weakeſt Parts of the
Wall
, but not ſo weak as to be inſufficient to
ſupport
the Weight: It being their Cuſtom
to
raiſe as many Parts of the Wall as they
could
plum, and as it were of one Piece
without
any Interruption from the Foundation
quite
up to the Covering.
There is a certain
Kind
of an Aperture, which in Form and
Poſition
imitates the Doors and Windows, but
which
does not penetrate the whole Thickneſs
of
the Wall, and ſo, as Niches leave very
handſome
and convenient Seats for Statues and
Paintings
.
But in what Parts theſe are to be
left
, as alſo how frequent and large, will be
ſhewn
more diſtinctly when we come to treat
of
the Ornaments of Edifices.
We ſhall only
obſerve
here, that they not only add to the
Beauty
of the Work, but alſo ſave ſome Ex­
pence
, as they make leſs Stone and Lime to
ſerve
for the Walling.
This chiefly is to be
taken
Care of, that you make theſe Niches in
convenient
Numbers, not too big, and of a juſt
Form
; and ſo as in their Order to imitate the
Windows
.
And let them be as you will, I
have
remark'd in the Structures of the Ancients,
that
they never uſed to ſuffer them to take up
above
the ſeventh Part of the Front, nor leſs
than
the ninth.
The Spaces between the
Columns
are to be reckoned among the princi­
pal
Apertures, and are to be leſt variouſly ac­
cording
to the Variety of Buildings.
But we
ſhall
ſpeak of theſe more clearly in their
proper
Place, and chieſly when we treat of
Sacred
Edifies.
Let it be ſufficient to premiſe
here
, that thoſe Openings ſhould be left in ſuch
a
Manner, as to have particular Reſpect to the
Nature
of the Columns, which are deſign'd
for
the Support of the Covering; and firſt, that
thoſe
Columns be not too ſmall, nor ſtand too
thin
, ſo as not to be duly able to bear the
Weight
, nor too big, or ſet ſo thick as not to
leave
open convenient Spaces for Paſſage.
Laſtly, the Apertures muſt be different, when
the
Columns are frequent from what they are
when
they ſtand thin, becauſe over frequent
Columns
we lay an Architrave, and over the
others
we turn an Arch.
But in all Openings
over
which we make Arches, we ſhould con­
trive
to have the Arch never leſs than a half
Circle
, with an Addition of the ſeventh Part
of
half its Diameter: The moſt experienced
Workmen
having found that Arch to be by
much
the beſt adapted for enduring in a
Manner
to Perpetuity; all other Arches being
thought
leſs ſtrong for ſupporting the Weight,
and
more liable to ruin.
It is moreover imagi­
ned
, that the half Circle is the only Arch
which
has no Occaſion either for Chain or any
other
Fortification; and all others, if you
don
't either chain them or place ſome Weight
againſt
them for a Counterpoiſe, are found by
their
own Weight to burſt out and fall to ruin.
I will not omit here what I have taken Notice
of
among the Ancients, a Contrivance certainly
very
excellent and Praiſe-worthy: Their beſt
Architects
placed theſe Apertures and the
Arches
of the Roofs of their Temples in ſuch
a
Manner, that even tho' you took away every
Column
from under them, yet they would
ſtill
ſtand firm and not fall down, the Arches
on
which the Roof was placed being drawn
quite
down to the Foundation with wonderful
Art
, known but to few: So that the Work
upheld
itſelf by being only ſet upon Arches; for
thoſe
Arches having the ſolid Earth for their
Chain
, no Wonder they ſtood firm without any
other
Support.

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index