Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1
CHAP. III.
The Art of Building, as far as I can
gather
from the Works of the Ancients,
ſpent
the firſt Vigour of its Youth (if I may
be
allowed that Expreſſion) in Aſia: It after­
wards
flouriſhed among the Greeks; and at
laſt
came to its full Maturity in Italy. And
this
Account ſeems very probable; for the
Kings
of Aſia abounding in Wealth and Lei­
ſure
, when they came to conſider themſelves,
their
own Riches, and the Greatneſs and Ma­
jeſty
of their Empire, and found that they had
Occaſion
for larger and nobler Habitations,
they
began to ſearch out and collect every
Thing
that might ſerve to this Purpoſe; and
in
order to make their Buildings larger and
handſomer
, began perhaps with building their
Roofs
of larger Timbers, and their Walls of a
better
Sort of Stone.
This ſhewed noble and
great
, and not unhandſome.
Then finding
that
ſuch Works were admired for being very
large
, and imagining that a King was obliged
to
do ſomething which private Men could not
effect
, theſe great Monarchs began to be de­
lighted
with huge Works, which they fell to
raiſing
with a Kind of Emulation of one an­
other
, till they came to erecting thoſe wild im­
menſe
Moles, the Pyramids.
Hereupon I ima­
gine
that by frequent Building they began to
find
out the Difference that there was between
a
Structure built in one Manner, and one built
in
another, and ſo getting ſome Notion of
Beauty
and Proportion, began to neglect thoſe
Things
which wanted thoſe Qualities. Greece
came
next; which flouriſhing in excellent
Geniuſſes
and Men of Learning, paſſionately
deſirous
of adorning their Country, began to
erect
Temples and other publick Structures.
They then thought fit to look abroad and take
a
more careful View of the Works of the Aſ­
ſyrians
and Ægyptians, till at laſt they came
to
underſtand that in all Things of this Nature
the
Skill of the Workman was more admired
than
the Wealth of the Prince: For any one
that
is rich may raiſe a great Pile of Building;
but
to raiſe ſuch a one as may be commended
by
the Skilful, is the Part only of a ſuperior
Genius
.
Hereupon Greece finding that in theſe
Works
ſhe could not equal thoſe Nations in
Expence
, reſolved to try if ſhe could not out-do
them
in Ingenuity.
She began therefore to
trace
and deduce this Art of Building, as in­
deed
ſhe did all others, from the very Lap of
Nature
itſelf, examining, weighing and con­
ſidering
it in all its Parts with the greateſt Di­
ligence
and Exactneſs: enquiring with the
greateſt
Strictneſs into the Difference between
thoſe
Buildings which were highly praiſed, and
thoſe
which were diſliked, without neglecting
the
leaſt Particular.
She tried all Manner of
Experiments
, ſtill tracing and keeping cloſe to
the
Footſteps of Nature, mingling uneven
Numbers
with even, ſtrait Lines with Curves,
Light
with Shade, hoping that as it happens
from
the Conjunction of Male and Female, ſhe
ſhould
by the Mixture of theſe Oppoſites hit
upon
ſome third Thing that would anſwer her
Purpoſe
: Nor even in the moſt minute Parti­
culars
did ſhe neglect to weigh and conſider all
the
Parts over and over again, how thoſe on
the
right Hand agreed with thoſe on the left,
the
Upright with the Platform, the nearer with
the
more remote, adding, diminiſhing, propor­
tioning
the great Parts to the Small, the Simi­
lar
to the Diſſimilar, the Laſt to the Firſt, till
ſhe
had clearly demonſtrated that different
Rules
were to be obſerved in thoſe Edifices
which
were intended for Duration, to ſtand as
it
were Monuments to Eternity, and thoſe
which
were deſigned chiefly for Beauty.
Theſe
were
the Methods purſued by the Greeks.
Italy, in her firſt Beginnings, having Regard
wholly
to Parſimony, concluded that the Mem­
bers
in Buildings ought to be contrived in the
ſame
Manner as in Animals; as, for Inſtance,
in
a Horſe, whoſe Limbs are generally moſt
beautiful
when they are moſt uſeful for Service:
from
whence they inferred that Beauty was
never
ſeparate and diſtinct from Conveniency.
But afterwards when they had obtained the
Empire
of the World, being then no leſs in­
flamed
than the Greeks with the Deſire of
dorning
their City and themſelves, in leſs than
thirty
Years that which before was the fineſt
Houſe
in the whole City of Rome, could not

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