Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1
CHAP. VI.
It is now Time to make our Entrance into
the
City; but as there are ſome Ways
both
within and without the Town which are
much
more eminent than the common Sort,
as
thoſe which lead to the Temple, the Baſi­
lique
, or the Place for publick Spectacles, we
ſhall
firſt ſay ſomething of theſe.
We read
that
Heliogabalus paved theſe broader and no­
bler
Ways with Macedonian Marble and Por­
phiry
.
Hiſtorians ſay much in Praiſe of a noble
Street
in Bubaſtus, a City of Ægypt, which led
to
the Temple; for it ran thro' the Market­
place
, and was paved with very fine Stone, was
four
Jugera, or four hundred and eighty Foot
broad
, and bordered on each Side with ſtately
Trees
. Ariſteas tells us, that in Feruſalem
there
were ſome very beautiful Streets, tho'
narrow
, thro' which the Magiſtrates and Nobles
only
were allowed to paſs, to the Intent chiefly
that
the ſacred Things which they carried,
might
not be polluted by the Touch of any
Thing
profane. Plato highly celebrates a Way
all
planted with Cypreſs Trees which led from
Gnoſſus to the Cave and Temple of Fupiter. I
find
that the Romans had two Streets of this
Sort
, extremely noble and beautiful, one from
the
Gate to the Church of St. Paul, fifteen
Stadia
, or a Mile and ſeven Furlongs in Length,
and
the other from the Bridge to the Church
of
St. Peter, two thouſand five hundred Foot
long
, and all covered with a Portico of Co­
lumns
of Marble, with a Roof of Lead.
Such
Ornaments
are extremely proper for Ways of
this
Nature.
But let us now return to the
more
common Highways.
The principal Head
and
Boundary of all Highways, whether within
or
without the City, unleſs I am miſtaken, is
the
Gate for thoſe by Land, and the Haven for
thoſe
by Sea: Unleſs we will take notice of
ſubterraneous
Ways, of the Nature of thoſe
which
we are told were at Thebes in Ægypt,
thro
' which their Kings could lead an Army
unknown
to any of the Citizens, or thoſe which
I
find to have been pretty numerous near Pre­
neſte
, in the ancient Latium, dug under Ground
from
the Top of the Hill to the Level of the
Plain
, with wonderful Art; in one of which
we
are told, that Marius periſhed when cloſe
preſſed
by the Siege.
We are told by the
Author
of the Life of Apollonius, of a very
wonderful
Paſſage made by a Lady of Media
at
Babylon, under the River, and arched with
Stone
and Bitumen, thro' which ſhe could go
dryſhod
from the Palace to a Country Houſe,
on
the other Side of the River.
But we are
not
obliged to believe all that the Greek Wri­
ters
tell us.
To return to our Subject. The
Gates
are adorned in the ſame Manner as tri­
umphal
Arches, of which anon.
The Haven
is
adorned by broad Porticoes, raiſed ſomewhat
above
the Level of the Ground, by a ſtately
Temple
, lofty and beautiful, with ſpacious
Squares
before it, and the Mouth of the Ha­
ven
itſelf by huge Statues, ſuch as were for­
merly
to be ſeen in ſeveral Places, and particu­
larly
at Rhodes, where Herod is ſaid to have
erected
three.
Hiſtorians very much celebrate
the
Mole at Samos, which they ſay was an
hundred
and twenty Foot high, and ran out
two
Furlongs into the Sea.
Doubtleſs ſuch
Works
muſt greatly adorn the Haven, eſpeci­
ally
if they are maſterly wrought, and not of
baſe
Materials.
The Streets within the City,
beſides
being handſomely paved and cleanly
kept
, will be rendered much more noble, if
the
Doors are built all after the ſame Model,
and
the Houſes on each Side ſtand in an even
Line
, and none higher than another.
The Parts
of
the Street which are principally to be ad­
orned
, are theſe: The Bridge, the Croſs-ways,
and
the Place for publick Spectactles, which
laſt
is nothing elſe but an open Place, with

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