Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

Page concordance

< >
< >
page |< < of 320 > >|
THE Ancients had learnt from the Philoſo­
phers
, that the Air, by the Percuſſion of the
Voice
, and the Force of Sound, was put into a
circular
Motion, in the ſame Manner as Water
is
when any thing is ſuddenly plunged into it,
and
that, as for Inſtance, in a Lute, or in a
Valley
, between two Hills, eſpecially if the
Place
be woody, the Sound and Voice are ren­
dered
much more clear and ſtrong, becauſe the
ſwelling
Circles of the Air meet with ſome­
thing
which beats back the Rays of the Voice
that
iſſue from the Center, in the ſame Man­
ner
as a Ball is beat back from a Wall againſt
which
it is thrown, by which means thoſe Cir­
cles
are made cloſer and ſtronger: For this
Reaſon
the Ancients built their Theatres cir­
cular
; and that the Voice might meet with no
Obſtacle
to ſtop its free Aſcent to the very
higheſt
Part of the Theatre, they placed their
Seats
in ſuch a Manner, that all the Angles of
them
lay in one exact Line, and upon the
higheſt
Seat, which was no ſmall Help, they
raiſed
Porticoes facing the middle Area of the
Theatre
, the Front of which Porticoes were as
open
and free as poſſible, but the Back of them
was
entirely ſhut up with a continued Wall.
Under this Portico they raiſed a low Wall,
which
not only ſerved for a Pedeſtal to the
Columns
, but alſo helped to collect the ſwelling
Orbs
of the Voice, and to throw it gently into
the
Portico itſelf, where being received into a
thicker
Air, it was not reverberated from thence
too
violently, but returned clear and a little
more
ſtrengthened.
And over all this, as a
Cieling
to the Theatre, both to keep off the
Weather
, and to retain the Voice, they ſpread
a
Sail all ſtrewed over with Stars, which they
could
remove at Pleaſure, and which ſhaded
the
middle Area, the Seats, and all the Specta­
tors
.
The upper Portico was built with a
great
deal of Art; for in order to ſupport it,
there
were other Porticoes and Colonades at
the
Back of the Theatre, out to the Street, and
in
the larger Theatres, theſe Porticoes were
made
double, that if any violent Rain or Storm
obliged
the Spectators to fly for Shelter, it
might
not drive in upon them.
Theſe Porti­
coes
and Colonades, thus placed under the up­
per
Portico, were not like thoſe which we have
deſcribed
for Temples or Baſiliques, but built
of
ſtrong Pilaſters, and in Imitation of tri­
umphal
Arches.
We ſhall firſt therefore treat
of
theſe under Porticoes, as being built for the
Sake
of that above.
The Rule for the Aper­
tures
of theſe Porticoes is, that to every Paſſage
into
the middle Area of the Theatre, there
ought
to be one of them, and each of theſe
Apertures
ſhould be accompanied with others
in
certain Proportions, anſwering exactly one to
the
other in Height, Breadth, Deſign and Or­
naments
.
The Breadth of the Area for walk­
ing
in theſe Porticoes, ſhould be equal to the
Aperture
between Pilaſter and Pilaſter, and the
Breadth
of each Pilaſter ſhould be equal to half
that
Aperture: All which Rules muſt be ob­
ſerved
with the greateſt Care and Exactneſs.
Laſtly, againſt theſe Pilaſters we muſt not ſet
Columns
entirely inſulate, as in triumphal
Arches
, but only three quarter Columns with
Pedeſtals
under them, in Height one ſixth of
the
Column itſelf.
The other Ornaments muſt
be
the ſame as thoſe in Temples.
The Height
of
theſe three quarter Columns, with their
whole
Entablature, muſt be equal to half the
perpendicular
Height of the Seats within, ſo
that
on the Outſide there muſt be two Orders
of
Columns one over the other, the ſecond of
which
muſt be juſt even with the Top of thoſe
Seats
, and over this we muſt lay the Pavement
for
the upper Portico, which as we ſhewed be­
fore
, muſt look into the middle Area of the
Theatre
, in Shape reſembling a Horſe-ſhoe.
This Subſtructure being laid, we are to raiſe
our
upper Portico, the Front and Colonade
whereof
is not to receive its Light from with­
out
, like thoſe before deſcribed, but is to be
open
to the Middle of the Theatre, as we have
already
obſerved.
This Work being raiſed in
order
to prevent the Voice from being loſt and
diſperſed
, may be called the Circumvallation.
Its Height ſhould be the whole Height of the
outer
Portico, with the Addition of one half,
and
its Parts are theſe.
The low Wall under
the
Columns, which we may call a continued
Pedeſtal
.
This Wall of the whole Height of

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index