Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1no leſs Awfulneſs, than Ornaments do Beauty,
to
any Structure of this Nature.
The Anci­
ents
, who had their Inſtructions from the
Etrurians, thought the ſame Kind of Situation
not
proper for the Temples of different Gods:
The
Temples to the Gods that preſided over
Peace
, Modeſty and good Arts, they judged
fit
to be placed within the Compaſs of the
Walls
; but thoſe Deities that were the Guar­
dians
of Pleaſures, Feuds and Combuſtions,
ſuch
as Venus, Mars and Vulcan, they placed
ſomewhere
without the City. Veſta, Jupiter
and
Minerva, whom Plato calls the Protectors
of
Cities, they ſeated in the Heart of the
Town
, or in the Citadel; Pallas, the Goddeſs
of
working Trades, and Mercury, to whom the
Merchants
ſacrificed in the Month of May,
and
Iſis, they ſet in the publick Market-place;
Neptune, upon the Sea-ſhore, and Janus on
the
Summit of the higheſt Hills; the Temple
of
Æſculapius they built in the Iſland of the
Tiber, being of Opinion that the chief Thing
neceſſary
to the Sick, was Water.
In other
Countries
Plutarch tells us, that they uſed to
place
the Temple of this God out of the City,
for
the Sake of the Goodneſs of the Air.
Fur­
ther
, they imagined that the Temples of vari­
ous
Gods ought to be built in various Forms.
The Temple of the Sun and of Bacchus they
thought
ſhould be round; and Varro ſays,
that
of Jupiter ſhould be partly uncovered at the
Top
, becauſe it was that God who opened the
Seeds
of all Things.
The Temple of the God­
deſs
Veſta, ſuppoſing her to be the Earth, they
built
as round as a Ball: Thoſe of the other
celeſtial
Gods they raiſed ſomewhat above the
Ground
; thoſe of the infernal Gods they built
under
Ground, and thoſe of the terreſtrial
they
ſet upon the Level.
If I am not miſtaken
too
, their various Sorts of Sacrifices made them
invent
different Sorts of Temples: For ſome
waſhed
their Altars with Blood, others ſacrificed
with
Wine and a Cake; others were daily
practiſing
new Rites. Poſthumius enacted a
Law
among the Romans, that no Wine ſhould
be
ſprinkled upon a funeral Pile; for which
Reaſon
the Ancients uſed to perform their Li­
bations
not with Wine but Milk.
In the Hy­
perborean
Iſland in the Ocean, where Latona
was
fabled to be born, the Metropolis was con­
ſecrated
to Apollo; the Citizens of which, be­
ing
uſed conſtantly every Day to ſing the
Praiſes
of their Gods, were all good Maſters of
Muſick
.
I find in Theophraſtus the Sophiſt, that
the
People of the Iſthmus, or the Morea, uſed
to
ſacrifice an Ant to the Sun and to Neptune.
It
was not lawful for the Ægyptians to appeaſe
their
Gods by any Thing but Prayers within
their
City; wherefore, that they might ſacri­
fice
Sheep to Saturn and Serapis, they built
their
Temples out of the Town.
But our
Countrymen
by Degrees got into a Way of
making
uſe of Baſiliques or Palaces for their
Places
of Worſhip; which was occaſioned by
their
being accuſtomed from the Beginning to
meet
and get together in the Palaces of private
Perſons
; beſides, that the Altar had a very
great
Air of Dignity when ſet in the Place of
the
Tribunal, as had alſo the Choir when diſ­
poſed
about the Altar.
The other Parts of the
Structure
, ſuch as the Nave and the Portico,
ſerved
the People either to walk about in, or
to
attend the religious Ceremonies.
Add to
this
, that the Voice of the Pontiff, when he
preached
, might be more diſtinctly heard in a
Baſilique
cieled with a Timber, than in a Tem­
ple
with a vaulted Roof: But of theſe Things
we
ſhall treat in another Place.
It may not
be
amiſs to take Notice here of what the An­
cients
tell us, that the Temples dedicated to
Venus, Diana, the Muſes, the Nymphs and the
more
tender Goddeſſes, ought in their Struc­
ture
to imitate that Virgin's Delicacy and ſmil­
ing
Gaiety of Youth, which is proper to them;
but
that Hercules, Mars, and the other greater
Deities
ſhould have Temples which ſhould ra­
ther
fill the Beholders with Awe by their Gra­
vity
, than with Pleaſure by their Beauty.
Laſt­
ly
, the Place where you intend to fix a Tem­
ple
, ought to be noted, famous, and indeed
ſtately
, clear from all Contagion of ſecular
Things
, and, in order thereunto, it ſhould have
a
ſpacious handſome Area in its Front, and be
ſurrounded
on every Side with great Streets, or
rather
with noble Squares, that you may have
a
beautiful View of it on every Side.

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