Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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113[Figure 13]
THE
ARCHITECTURE

OF

Leone Batiſta Alberti.
BOOK III. CHAP. I.
The whole Buſineſs of the working
Part
of Building is this; by a re­
gular
and artful Conjunction of
different
Things, whether ſquare
Stone
, or uneven Scantlings, or
Timber
, or any other ſtrong Material, to form
them
as well as poſſible into a ſolid, regular,
and
conſiſtent Structure.
We call it regular
and
conſiſtent when the Parts are not incon­
gruous
and disjointed, but are diſpoſed in their
proper
Places, and are anſwerable one to the
other
, and conformable to a right Ordinance of
Lines
.
We are therefore to conſider what are
the
principal eſſential Parts in the Wall, and
what
are only the Lines and Diſpoſition of
thoſe
Parts.
Nor are the Parts of the Wall
any
Thing difficult to find out; for the Top,
the
Bottom, the right Side, the Left, the re­
mote
Parts, the Near, the Middle are obvious
of
themſelves; but the particular Nature of
each
of theſe, and wherein they differ, is not
ſo
eaſily known.
For the raiſing a Building is
not
, as the Ignorant imagine, merely laying
Stone
upon Stone, or Brick upon Brick; but
as
there is a great Diverſity of Parts, ſo there
requires
a great Diverſity of Materials and Con­
trivance
.
For one Thing is proper in the
Foundation
, another in the naked Wall and in
the
Corniſh, another for the Coins, and for the
Lips
of the Apertures, one for the outward
Face
of the Wall, another for the cramming
and
filling up the middle Parts: Our Buſineſs
here
is to ſhew what is requiſite in each of
theſe
.
In doing this, therefore, we ſhall begin
at
the Foundation, imitating, as we ſaid before,
thoſe
that are actually going to raiſe the Struc­
ture
.
The Foundation, if I miſtake not, is
not
properly a Part of the Wall, but the Place
and
Seat on which the Wall is reared.
For
if
we can find a Seat perfectly firm and ſolid,
conſiſting
perhaps of nothing but Stone, what
Foundation
are we obliged to make?
None,

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