Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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1to the Streets. At the famous City Peruſia,
which
has ſeveral little Towers placed here
and
there upon the Hills, like the Fingers of
a
Man's Hand extending out, if the Enemy
offers
to attack one of the Angles with a good
Number
of Men, he can find no Place to be­
gin
his Aſſault, and being obliged to march
under
thoſe Towers, is not able to withſtand
the
Weapons that will be caſt, and the Sallies
made
upon him.
So that the ſame Method
for
walling of Towns will not ſerve in all Pla­
ces
.
Moreover the Ancients lay it down for
a
Rule, that Cities and Ships ſhould by no
means
be either ſo big as to look empty, nor
ſo
little as to be crowded.
Others are for hav­
ing
their Towns full and cloſe, believing that
it
adds to their Safety: Others, feeding them­
ſelves
with great Hopes of Times to come, de­
light
in having a vaſt deal of Room: Others,
perhaps
, have an Eye to the Fame and Ho­
nour
of Poſterity.
The City of the Sun, built
by
Buſiris, and call'd Thebes, as Hiſtories in­
form
us, was twenty Miles in Circuit; Mem­
phis
, eighteen Miles, ſix Furlongs; Babylon,
three
and forty Miles, ſix Furlong; Nineveh,
threeſcore
Miles; and ſome Towns encloſed
ſo
much Ground, that even within the Walls
they
could raiſe Proviſions for the whole Year.
But, I think, there is a great deal of Wiſdom
in
the old Proverb, which tells us, that we
ought
in all Things to avoid exceſs; though
if
I were to commit an Error of either Side,
I
ſhould rather chuſe that Proportion which
would
allow of an Encreaſe of Citizens, than that
which
is hardly ſufficient to contain the preſent
Inhabitants
.
Add to this, that a City is not
built
wholly for the Sake of Shelter, but ought
to
be ſo contrived, that beſides mere civil
Conveniencies
there may be handſome Spaces
left
for Squares, Courſes for Chariots, Gardens,
Places
to take the Air in, for Swimming, and
the
like, both for Ornament and Recreation.
In the Days of Romulus, Dionyſius of Hali­
carnaſſus
, tells us, that the Fathers in Beginning
their
Towns, uſed, after performing a Sacriſice,
to
kindle Fires before their Tents, and to
make
the People paſs through them, believing
that
they were purged and purified by the
Flame
; and they held it unlawful to admit
any
Body to this Ceremony that was polluted
or
unclean.
This is what we find to have
been
the Cuſtom of thoſe Nations.
In other
Places
they uſed to mark out the Foundation
of
their Walls by ſtrowing all the Way a Duſt
made
of white Earth, which they called pure;
and
Alexander, upon laying out the Town of
Pharos, for want of this Earth made uſe of
Meal
.
From theſe Ceremonies the Diviners
took
Occaſion to foretell what ſhould happen
in
Times to come; for noting the Nativity, as
we
may call it, of the City, and ſome Events
that
ſeemed to have ſome Connection with it,
they
imagined they might thence draw Pre­
dictions
of its future Succeſſes.
The Hetrurians
too
in the Books of their Ceremonies taught
this
Art of foretelling the Fortune of Towns
from
the Day of their Nativities; and this not
from
the Obſervation of the Heavens, which
we
mentioned in the Second Book, but from
Principles
and Conjectures founded upon
preſent
Circumſtances. Cenſorinus informs us,
that
the Method they taught was this: Such
Men
as happened to be born the very ſame
Day
that the City was begun, and lived the
Longeſt
of any one born on that Day, were
reckoned
by their Death to put a Period to the
firſt
Age of that City; next, the longeſt Liver
of
thoſe that dwelt in the City; at that Time,
when
they died concluded the ſecond Age;
and
ſo for the other Ages.
Then they ſup­
poſed
that the Gods generally ſent Omens to
point
out the Concluſion of each particular
Age
.
Theſe were the Superſtitions which
they
taught; and they add that the Hetrurians
by
theſe Prognoſticks could certainly fix every
Age
of their City, which they determined to
to
be as follows; their firſt four Ages they
made
an hundred Years each; the Fifth, an
hundred
and Twenty-three; the Sixth, an
hundred
and Twenty, and as many the

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