Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1Time ſee any Commotion in the City. In theſe
Particulars
the Palace of a King and of a Ty­
rant
agree; but then they differ in theſe
other
.
The Palace of a King ſhould ſtand in
the
Heart of a City, it ſhould be eaſy of Acceſs,
beautiſully
adorned, and rather delicate and
polite
than proud or ſtately: But a Tyrant
ſhould
have rather a Caſtle than a Palace, and
it
ſhould ſtand in a Manner out of the City and
in
it at the ſame Time.
It looks noble to have
the
Palace of a King be near adjoyning to the
Theatre
, the Temple, and ſome Noblemens
handſome
Houſes: The Tyrant muſt have his
Caſtle
entirely ſeparated from all other Build­
ings
.
Both ſhould be built in a handſome and
noble
Manner, but yet ſo that the Palace may
not
be ſo large and rambling as to be not eaſily
defended
againſt any Inſult; nor the Caſtle ſo
cloſe
and ſo crampt up, as to look more like a
Jail
than the Reſidence of a great Prince.
We ſhould not omit one Contrivance very con­
venient
for a Tyrant, which is to have ſome
private
Pipes concealed within the Body of the
Wall
, by which he may ſecretly hear every
Thing
that is ſaid either by Strangers or Ser­
vants
.
But as a Royal Houſe is different from
a
Fortreſs in almoſt all Reſpects, and eſpecial­
ly
in the main Ones, the beſt Way is to let the
Palace
join to the Fortreſs.
The Ancients
uſed
to build their Fortreſs in the City, that to
they
or their King might have a Place to fly
to
in any Time of Adverſity, and where the Vir­
tue
of their Virgins and Matrons might be
protected
by the Holineſs of a Sanctuary: For
Feſtus tells us, that the Ancients uſed to con­
ſecrate
their Fortreſſes to Religion, upon which
Account
they were called Auguriales, and that
in
them a certain Sacrifice uſed to be perform­
ed
by Virgins, which was extremely ſecret and
entirely
remote from the Knowledge of the
Vulgar
.
Accordingly you ſeldom meet with
an
ancient Fortreſs without its Temple.
But
Tyrants
afterwards uſurped the Fortreſs to
themſelves
, and overthrew the Piety and Reli­
gion
of the Place, converting it to their cruel
and
wicked Purpoſes, and ſo made what was
deſigned
as a Refuge to the Miſerable, a Source
of
Miſeries.
But, to return. The Fortreſs be­
longing
to the Temple of Jupiter Hammon
was
encompaſſed with three Walls; the firſt
Fortification
was for the Prince, the ſecond for
his
Spouſe and her Children, and the laſt was
the
Poſt of the Soldiers.
A Stucture very well
contrived
, only that it was much better adapt­
ed
for Defence than Offence.
I muſt confeſs
that
as I cannot ſay much for the Valour of a
Soldier
that only knows how to repulſe an
nemy
that aſſaults him, ſo I cannot much
commend
a Fort that, beſides being able to
defend
itſelf, is not alſo well diſpoſed for of­
fending
its Enemies.
But yet you ſhould con­
trive
the Matter ſo, that though you have both
thoſe
Advantages, you ſhould ſeem to have had
an
Eye only to one of them, namely, your own
Defence
; that it may be thought the other
happened
only from the Situation and Nature
of
the Building.
CHAP. IV.

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