Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1with a Line which ſome made ſtrait, others
curve
.
Thoſe who extended them with Strait­
lines
, drew them out beyond the Semicircle,
parallel
to each other, to the Addition of one
fourth
Part of the Diameter: But thoſe who
extended
them with Curve-lines, firſt mark'd
out
a compleat Circle, and then taking off one
fourth
Part of its Circumference, the Remain­
der
was left for the Platform of the Theatre.
The Limits of the Area being marked out and
fixed
, the next Work was to raiſe the Seats;
and
the firſt Thing to be done in order to this,
was
to reſolve how high the Seats ſhould be,
and
from their Height to calculate how much
of
the Platform they muſt take up.
Moſt
Architects
made the Height of the Theatre
equal
to the Area in the Middle, knowing that
in
low Theatres the Voice was ſunk and loſt,
but
made ſtronger and clearer in high ones.
Some of the beſt Artiſts made the Height of
the
Building to be four fifths of the Breadth
of
the Area.
Of this whole Height the Seats
never
took up leſs than half, nor more than
two
thirds, and their Breadth was ſometimes
equal
to their Height, and ſometimes only two
fifths
of it.
I ſhall here deſcribe one of theſe
Structures
which I think the moſt compleat
and
perfect of any.
The outermoſt Founda­
tions
of the Seats, or rather of the Wall againſt
which
the higheſt Seat muſt terminate, muſt
be
laid diſtant from the Center of the Semi­
circle
one whole Semidiameter of the Area,
with
the Addition of a third.
The firſt or
loweſt
Seat muſt not be upon the very Level
of
the Area, but be raiſed upon a Wall, which
in
the larger Theatres muſt be in Height the
ninth
Part of the Semidiameter of the middle
Area
, from the Top of which Wall the Seats
muſt
take their firſt Flight: And in the ſmalleſt
Theatres
, this Wall muſt never be leſs than
ſeven
Foot high.
The Benches themſelves
muſt
be a Foot and an half high, and two
and
an half broad.
Among theſe Seats, Spaces
muſt
be left at certain Diſtances for Paſſages
into
the middle Area, and for Stairs to go up
from
thence to thoſe Seats, which Stair-caſes
and
Paſſages ſhould be with vaulted Roofs,
and
in Number proportionable to the Bigneſs
of
the Theatre.
Of theſe Paſſages there ſhould
be
ſeven principal ones, all directed exactly to
the
Center of the Area, and perfectly clear
and
open, at equal Diſtances from each other;
and
of theſe ſeven, one ſhould be larger than
the
reſt, anſwering to the middle of the Semi­
circle
, which I call the Maſter Entrance, be­
cauſe
it muſt anſwer to the high Street.
An­
other
Paſſage muſt be made at the Head of
the
Semicircle on the Right Hand, and ſo an­
other
on the Leſt to anſwer it, and between
theſe
and the Maſter Entrance four others, two
on
each Side.
There may be as many other
Openings
and Paſſages as the Compaſs of the
Theatre
requires, and will admit of.
The
Ancients
in their great Theatres divided the
Rows
of Seats into three Parts, and each of
theſe
Diviſions was diſtinguiſhed from the other
by
a Seat twice as broad as the others, which
was
a Kind of Landing-place, ſeparating the
higher
Seats from the lower; and at theſe
Landing-places
, the Stairs for coming up to
the
ſeveral Seats terminated.
I have obſerved,
that
the beſt Architects, and the moſt inge­
nious
Contrivers uſed at each great Entrance
to
make two different Stairs, one more upright
and
direct, for the Young and the Nimble,
and
another broader and eaſier, with more fre­
quent
Reſts, for the Matrons and old People.
This may ſuffice as to the Seats. Oppoſite to
the
Front of the Theatre was raiſed the Stage
for
the Actors, and every thing belonging to
the
Repreſentation, and here ſate the Nobles
in
peculiar and honourable Seats, ſeparate from
the
common People, or perhaps in the middle
Area
in handſome Places erected for that Pur­
poſe
.
The Pulpitum or Stage, was made ſo
large
as to be fully ſufficient for every thing
that
was to be acted upon it.
It came forward
equal
to the Center of the Semicircle, and was
raiſed
in Height not above five Foot, that the
Nobles
who ſate in the Area might from thence
eaſily
ſee every Geſture of the Actors.
But
when
the middle Area was not reſerved for the
Nobles
to ſit in, but was allowed to the Actors
and
Muſicians: Then the Stage was made leſs,
but
raiſed higher, ſometimes to the Height of
ſix
Cubits.
In both Kinds the Stage was adorn­
ed
with Rows of Colonades one over another,
in
Imitation of Houſes, with their proper Doors
and
Windows, and in Front was one principal
Door
with all the Dreſs of the Door of a
Temple
, to repreſent a Royal Palace, with
other
Doors on each Side for the Actors to
make
their Entrances and Exits at, according
to
the Nature of the Drama.
And as there
are
three Sorts of Poets concerned in theatrical
Performances
, the Tragick, who deſcribe the
Misfortunes
and Diſtreſſes of Princes; the Co­
mick
who repreſent the Lives and Manners of
private
Perſons, and the Paſtoral, who ſing the
Delights
of the Country, and the Loves of

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