Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

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CHAP. VII.
We come now to Places for publick
Shows
.
We are told that Epimenides,
the
ſame that ſlept fifty-ſeven Years in a Cave;
when
the Athenians were building a Place for
publick
Shows reproved them, telling them, you
know
not how much Miſchief this Place ſhall
occaſion
; if you did, you would pull it to
Pieces
with your Teeth.
Neither dare I pre­
ſume
to find Fault with our Pontiffs, and thoſe
whoſe
Buſineſs it is to ſet good Examples to
others
, for having, with good Cauſe no doubt,
aboliſhed
the Uſe of publick Shows.
Yet Moſes
was
commended for ordaining, that all his Peo­
ple
ſhould upon certain ſolemn Days meet to­
gether
in one Temple, and celebrate publick
Feſtivals
at ſtated Seaſons.
What may we ſup­
poſe
his View to have been in this Inſtitution?
Doubtleſs he hoped the People, by thus meet­
ing
frequently together at publick Feaſts, might
grow
more humane, and be the cloſer linked
in
Friendſhip one with another.
So I imagine
our
Anceſtors inſtituted publick Shows in the
City
, not ſo much for the Sake of the Diverſi­
ons
themſelves, as for their Uſefulneſs.
And
indeed
if we examine the Matter thoroughly,
we
ſhall find many Reaſons to grieve that ſo
excellent
and ſo uſeful an Entertainment ſhould
have
been ſo long diſuſed: For as of theſe
publick
Diverſions ſome were contrived for the
Delight
and Amuſement of Peace and Leiſure,
others
for an Exerciſe of War and Buſineſs;
the
one ſerved wonderfully to revive and keep
up
the Vigour and Fire of the Mind, and the
other
to improve the Strength and Intrepidity
of
the Heart.
It is indeed true that ſome cer­
tain
and conſtant Medium ſhould be obſerved,
in
order to make theſe Entertainments uſeful
and
ornamental to a Country.
The Arcadi­
ans
, we are told, were the firſt that invented
publick
Games, to civilize and poliſh the Minds
of
their People, who had been too much ac­
cuſtomed
to a hard and ſevere Way of Life;
and
Polybius writes, that thoſe who afterwards
left
off thoſe Entertainments, grew ſo barbarous
and
cruel, that they became execrable to all
Greece. But indeed the Memory of publick
Games
is extremely ancient, and the Invention
of
them is aſcribed to various Perſons. Dionyſi­
us
is ſaid to have been the firſt Inventor of
Dances
and Sports, as Hercules was of the Di­
verſion
of the Combate.
We read that the
Olympick
Games were invented by the Æto­
lians
and the Eleans, after their return from the
Siege
of Troy. We are told, that Dionyſius of
Lemnos, who was the Inventor of the Chorus
in
Tragedies, was alſo the firſt that built a
Place
on purpoſe for publick Shows.
In Italy,
Lucius
Mummius, upon Occaſion of his Tri­
umph
, firſt introduced theatrical Entertain­
ments
two hundred Years before the Em­
peror
Nero's Time, and the Actors were
brought
to Rome from Etruria. Horſe-Races
were
brought from the Tyrians, and almoſt the
whole
Variety of publick Diverſions came to
Italy from Aſia. I am inclined to believe that
the
ancient Race of Men, that firſt began to
cut
the Figure of Janus upon their brazen
Coins
, were content to ſtand to ſee theſe Sort
of
Games under ſome Beech or Elm, according
to
thoſe Verſes of Ovid, ſpeaking of Romulus's
Show
.

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