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+The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Text-Book of the History of Architecture, by Alfred D. F. Hamlin
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
+www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
+will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
+using this eBook.
+
+Title: A Text-Book of the History of Architecture
+ Seventh Edition, revised
+
+Author: Alfred D. F. Hamlin
+
+Release Date: August 15, 2008 [eBook #26319]
+[Most recently updated: October 28, 2023]
+
+Language: English
+
+Produced by: Louise Hope, Joseph R. Hauser and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE ***
+
+
+
+
+[This text uses utf-8 (unicode) file encoding. If the apostrophes and
+quotation marks in this paragraph appear as garbage, make sure your
+text reader’s “character set” or “file encoding” is set to Unicode
+(UTF-8). You may also need to change the default font. As a last
+resort, use the latin-1 version of the file instead.
+
+Errors and inconsistencies, including details about some place names,
+are listed at the end of the e-text. Spelling variations are as in the
+original.]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+ * * * *
+
+
+ COLLEGE HISTORIES OF ART
+
+ Edited By
+ JOHN C. VAN DYKE, L.H.D.
+
+ * * *
+
+ HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE
+ A. D. F. Hamlin
+
+
+ * * * * *
+ * * * *
+
+
+ COLLEGE HISTORIES OF ART
+
+ Edited By
+
+ JOHN C. VAN DYKE, L.H.D.
+
+ Professor of the History of Art
+ in Rutgers College
+
+ * * *
+
+ HISTORY OF PAINTING
+
+By JOHN C. VAN DYKE, the Editor of the Series. With Frontispiece
+and 110 Illustrations, Bibliographies, and Index. Crown 8vo, $1.50.
+
+ HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE
+
+By ALFRED D. F. HAMLIN, A.M. Adjunct Professor of Architecture,
+Columbia College, New York. With Frontispiece and 229 Illustrations
+and Diagrams, Bibliographies, Glossary, Index of Architects, and
+a General Index. Crown 8vo, $2.00.
+
+ HISTORY OF SCULPTURE
+
+By ALLAN MARQUAND, Ph.D., L.H.D. and ARTHUR L. FROTHINGHAM, Jr.,
+Ph.D., Professors of Archæology and the History of Art in Princeton
+University. With Frontispiece and 112 Illustrations. Crown 8vo, $1.50.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+ * * * *
+
+
+ [Illustration: THE PARTHENON, ATHENS, AS RESTORED BY CH. CHIPIEZ.
+ (From model in Metropolitan Museum, New York.)]
+
+
+
+
+ A TEXT-BOOK
+
+ of the
+
+ HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE
+
+
+ by
+
+ A. D. F. HAMLIN, A.M.
+
+ Professor of the History of Architecture
+ in the School of Architecture,
+ Columbia University
+
+
+ SEVENTH EDITION
+ Revised
+
+
+ LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
+ 91 and 93 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW YORK
+ London, Bombay, and Calcutta
+ 1909
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright, 1895, by
+ LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO.
+
+ _All rights reserved._
+
+ First Edition, March, 1896
+ Printed and Revised, December, 1896.
+ December, 1898 (Revised)
+ October, 1900 (Revised)
+ October, 1902 (Revised)
+ September, 1904, June, 1906 (Revised).
+ November, 1907 (Revised)
+ January, 1909
+
+ Press of J. J. Little & Ives Co.
+ 425-435 East 24th Street, New York
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+The aim of this work has been to sketch the various periods and styles
+of architecture with the broadest possible strokes, and to mention,
+with such brief characterization as seemed permissible or necessary,
+the most important works of each period or style. Extreme condensation
+in presenting the leading facts of architectural history has been
+necessary, and much that would rightly claim place in a larger work has
+been omitted here. The danger was felt to be rather in the direction of
+too much detail than of too little. While the book is intended primarily
+to meet the special requirements of the college student, those of the
+general reader have not been lost sight of. The majority of the
+technical terms used are defined or explained in the context, and the
+small remainder in a glossary at the end of the work. Extended criticism
+and minute description were out of the question, and discussion of
+controverted points has been in consequence as far as possible avoided.
+
+The illustrations have been carefully prepared with a view to
+elucidating the text, rather than for pictorial effect. With the
+exception of some fifteen cuts reproduced from Lübke’s _Geschichte der
+Architektur_ (by kind permission of Messrs. Seemann, of Leipzig), the
+illustrations are almost all entirely new. A large number are from
+original drawings made by myself, or under my direction, and the
+remainder are, with a few exceptions, half-tone reproductions prepared
+specially for this work from photographs in my possession.
+Acknowledgments are due to Messrs. H. W. Buemming, H. D. Bultman, and
+A. E. Weidinger for valued assistance in preparing original drawings;
+and to Professor W. R. Ware, to Professor W. H. Thomson, M.D., and to
+the Editor of the Series for much helpful criticism and suggestion.
+
+It is hoped that the lists of monuments appended to the history of each
+period down to the present century may prove useful for reference, both
+to the student and the general reader, as a supplement to the body of
+the text.
+
+ A. D. F. HAMLIN.
+
+ COLUMBIA COLLEGE, NEW YORK,
+ January 20, 1896.
+
+
+The author desires to express his further acknowledgments to the friends
+who have at various times since the first appearance of this book called
+his attention to errors in the text or illustrations, and to recent
+advances in the art or in its archæology deserving of mention in
+subsequent editions. As far as possible these suggestions have been
+incorporated in the various revisions and reprints which have appeared
+since the first publication.
+
+ A. D. F. H.
+
+ COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY,
+ October 28, 1907.
+
+
+
+TABLE OF CONTENTS.
+
+ PAGE
+ Preface v
+
+ List of Illustrations xi
+
+ General Bibliography xix
+
+ Introduction xxi
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+ Primitive and Prehistoric Architecture 1
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+ Egyptian Architecture 6
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+ Egyptian Architecture, _Continued_ 16
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ Chaldæan and Assyrian Architecture 28
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+ Persian, Lycian, and Jewish Architecture 35
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ Greek Architecture 43
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ Greek Architecture, _Continued_ 60
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ Roman Architecture 74
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ Roman Architecture, _Continued_ 88
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+ Early Christian Architecture 110
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ Byzantine Architecture 120
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ Sassanian and Mohammedan Architecture--Arabian,
+ Moresque, Persian, indian, and Turkish 135
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ Early Mediæval Architecture in Italy and France 155
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ Early Mediæval Architecture in Germany,
+ Great Britain, and Spain 172
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ Gothic Architecture 182
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ Gothic Architecture in France 196
+
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ Gothic Architecture in Great Britain 218
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ Gothic Architecture in Germany, the Netherlands,
+ and Spain 237
+
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ Gothic Architecture in Italy 254
+
+ CHAPTER XX.
+ Early Renaissance Architecture in Italy 270
+
+ CHAPTER XXI.
+ Renaissance Architecture in Italy--The Advanced
+ Renaissance and Decline 288
+
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+ Renaissance Architecture in France 308
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+ Renaissance Architecture in Great Britain
+ and the Netherlands 326
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV.
+ Renaissance Architecture in Germany, Spain,
+ and Portugal 338
+
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+ The Classic Revivals in Europe 354
+
+ CHAPTER XXVI.
+ Recent Architecture in Europe 368
+
+ CHAPTER XXVII.
+ Architecture in the United States 383
+
+ CHAPTER XXVIII.
+ Oriental Architecture--India, China, and Japan 401
+
+ Appendix 417
+
+ Glossary 429
+
+ Index of Architects 431
+
+ Index 435
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
+
+
+The authorship of the original drawings is indicated by the initials
+affixed: A. = drawings by the author; B. = H. W. Buemming; Bn. = H. D.
+Bultman; Ch. = Château, _L’Architecture en France_; G. = drawings
+adapted from Gwilt’s _Encyclopædia of Architecture_; L. = Lübke’s
+_Geschichte der Architektur_; W. = A. E. Weidinger. All other
+illustrations are from photographs.
+
+ PAGE
+
+ FRONTISPIECE. The Parthenon Restored
+ (from model in Metropolitan Museum, New York)
+ 1 Section of Great Pyramid (A.) 8
+ 2 Section of King’s Chamber (A.) 9
+ 3 Plan of Sphinx Temple (A.) 9
+ 4 Ruins of Sphinx Temple (A.) 10
+ 5 Tomb at Abydos (A.) 11
+ 6 Tomb at Beni-Hassan (A.) 11
+ 7 Section and Half-plan of same (A.) 12
+ 8 Plan of the Ramesseum (A.) 14
+ 9 Temple of Edfou. Plan (B.) 17
+ 10 Temple of Edfou. Section (B.) 17
+ 11 Temple of Karnak. Plan (L.) 18
+ 12 Central Portion of Hypostyle Hall at Karnak
+ (from model in Metropolitan Museum, New York) 20
+ 13 Great Temple of Ipsamboul 21
+ 14 Edfou. Front of Hypostyle Hall 23
+ 15 Osirid Pier (Medinet Abou) (A.) 24
+ 16 Types of Column (A.) 25
+ 17 Egyptian Floral Ornament-Forms (A.) 26
+ 18 Palace of Sargon at Khorsabad. Plan (L.) 30
+ 19 Gate, Khorsabad (A.) 32
+ 20 Assyrian Ornament (A.) 34
+ 21 Column from Persepolis (B.) 37
+ 22 Lion Gate at Mycenæ (A.) 44
+ 23 Polygonal Masonry, Mycenæ (A.) 45
+ 24 Tholos of Atreus; Plan and Section (A.) 46
+ 25 Tholos of Atreus, Doorway (after Clarke) (A.) 46
+ 26 Greek Doric Order (A.) 48
+ 27 Doric Order of the Parthenon.
+ (From cast in Metropolitan Museum, New York) 49
+ 28 Greek Ionic Order, Miletus (A.) 51
+ 29 Side View of Ionic Capital (B.) 52
+ 30 Greek Corinthian Order (A.) 53
+ 31 Types of Greek Temple Plans (A.) 54
+ 32 Carved Anthemion Ornament, Athens 57
+ 33 Temple of Zeus, Agrigentum; Plan (A.) 61
+ 34 Ruins of the Parthenon 63
+ 35 Plan of the Erechtheum (A.) 64
+ 36 West End of the Erechtheum (A.) 64
+ 37 Propylæa at Athens. Plan (G.) 65
+ 38 Choragic Monument of Lysicrates.
+ (From model in Metropolitan Museum, New York) 67
+ 39 Temple of Olympian Zeus, Athens. Plan (A.) 68
+ 40 Plan of Greek Theatre (A.) 70
+ 41 Mausoleum at Halicarnassus (A.) 72
+ 42 Roman Doric Order from Theatre of Marcellus.
+ (Model in Metropolitan Museum, New York) 77
+ 43 Roman Ionic Order (A.) 78
+ 44 Roman Corinthian Order.
+ (From model in Metropolitan Museum, New York) 79
+ 45 Roman Arcade with Engaged Columns (A.) 80
+ 46 Barrel Vault (A.) 81
+ 47 Groined Vault (A.) 81
+ 48 Roman Wall Masonry (B.) 83
+ 49 Roman Carved Ornament. (Lateran Museum) 85
+ 50 Roman Ceiling Panels (A.) 86
+ 51 Temple of Fortuna Virilis. Plan 89
+ 52 Circular Temple, Tivoli (A.) 90
+ 53 Temple of Venus and Rome. Plan (A.) 93
+ 54 Plan of the Pantheon (B.) 94
+ 55 Interior of the Pantheon 95
+ 56 Exterior of the Pantheon.
+ (Model in Metropolitan Museum, New York) 96
+ 57 Forum and Basilica of Trajan (A.) 97
+ 58 Basilica of Constantine. Plan (G.) 98
+ 59 Ruins of Basilica of Constantine 99
+ 60 Central Block, Thermæ of Caracalla. Plan (G.) 100
+ 61 Roman Theatre, Herculanum 101
+ 62 Colosseum at Rome. Half Plan (A.) 102
+ 63 Arch of Constantine.
+ (Model in Metropolitan Museum, New York) 104
+ 64 Palace of Diocletian, Spalato. Plan (G.) 106
+ 65 Plan of House of Pansa, Pompeii (A.) 107
+ 66 Plan of Santa Costanza, Rome (A.) 111
+ 67 Plan of the Basilica of
+ St. Paul-beyond-the-Walls, Rome (A.) 113
+ 68 St. Paul-beyond-the-Walls. Interior 114
+ 69 Church at Kalb Louzeh (A.) 116
+ 70 Cathedral at Bozrah. Plan (A.) 117
+ 71 Diagram of Pendentives (A.) 123
+ 72 Spandril, Hagia Sophia 125
+ 73 Capital with Impost Block, S. Vitale 126
+ 74 Plan of St. Sergius, Constantinople (A.) 127
+ 75 Plan of Hagia Sophia, Constantinople (A.) 128
+ 76 Section of Hagia Sophia (A.) 128
+ 77 Interior of Hagia Sophia (full page) 129
+ 78 Plan of St. Mark’s, Venice (A.) 132
+ 79 Interior of St. Mark’s 133
+ 80 Mosque of Sultan Hassan, Cairo. Sanctuary 137
+ 81 Mosque of Kaîd Bey, Cairo 139
+ 82 Moorish Detail, Alhambra 141
+ 83 Interior of Great Mosque, Cordova 142
+ 84 Plan of the Alhambra (A.) 144
+ 85 Tomb of Mahmûd, Bijapur. Section (A.) 147
+ 86 The Taj Mahal, Agra 149
+ 87 Mosque of Mehmet II., Constantinople. Plan (L.) 151
+ 88 Exterior of Ahmediyeh Mosque, Constantinople 152
+ 89 Interior of Suleimaniyeh Mosque, Constantinople 153
+ 90 Interior of San Ambrogio, Milan 157
+ 91 West Front and Campanile, Cathedral of Piacenza 158
+ 92 Baptistery, Cathedral, and Leaning Tower, Pisa 160
+ 93 Interior of Pisa Cathedral 161
+ 94 Plan of St. Front, Perigueux (G.) 164
+ 95 Interior of St. Front (L.) 165
+ 96 Plan of Notre Dame du Port, Clermont (Ch.) 166
+ 97 Section of same (Ch.) 166
+ 98 A Six-part Ribbed Vault (A.) 167
+ 99 Plan of Minster at Worms (G.) 173
+ 100 One Bay, Cathedral of Spires (L.) 174
+ 101 East End, Church of the Apostles, Cologne 175
+ 102 Plan of Durham Cathedral (Bn.) 177
+ 103 One Bay, Transept of Winchester Cathedral (G.) 178
+ 104 Front of Iffley Church (A.) 179
+ 105 Constructive System of Gothic Church (A.) 183
+ 106 Plan of Sainte Chapelle, Paris (Bn.) 184
+ 107 Early Gothic Flying Buttress (Bn.) 185
+ 108 Ribbed Vault, English Type (Bn. after Babcock) 186
+ 109 Penetrations and Intersections of Vaults (Bn.) 187
+ 110 Plate Tracery, Charlton-on-Oxmore 188
+ 111 Bar Tracery, St. Michael’s, Warfield (W.) 189
+ 112 Rose Window from St. Ouen, Rouen (G.) 190
+ 113 Flamboyant Detail, Strasburg 191
+ 114 Early Gothic Carving (A.) 192
+ 115 Carving, Decorated Period, from Southwell Minster 193
+ 116 Plan of Notre Dame, Paris (L.) 198
+ 117 Interior of Notre Dame 199
+ 118 Interior of Le Mans Cathedral 200
+ 119 Vaulting with Zigzag Ridge Joints (A.) 201
+ 120 One Bay, Abbey of St. Denis (G.) 203
+ 121 The Sainte Chapelle, Paris. Exterior 204
+ 122 Amiens Cathedral; Plan (G.) 205
+ 123 Alby Cathedral. Plan (A. after Lübke) 206
+ 124 West Front of Notre Dame, Paris 207
+ 125 West Front of St. Maclou, Rouen 208
+ 126 French Gothic Capitals (A.) 210
+ 127 House of Jacques Cœur, Bourges (L.) 215
+ 128 Plan of Salisbury Cathedral (Bn.) 219
+ 129 Ribbed Vaulting, Choir of Exeter Cathedral 221
+ 130 Lierne Vaulting, Tewkesbury Abbey 222
+ 131 Vault of Chapter House, Wells 223
+ 132 Cloisters of Salisbury Cathedral 225
+ 133 Perpendicular Tracery, St. George’s, Windsor 226
+ 134 West Front, Lichfield Cathedral 228
+ 135 One Bay of Choir, Lichfield Cathedral (A.) 229
+ 136 Fan Vaulting, Henry VII.’s Chapel 231
+ 137 Eastern Part, Westminster Abbey. Plan (L.) 232
+ 138 Roof of Nave, St. Mary’s, Westonzoyland (W.) 233
+ 139 One Bay, Cathedral of St. George, Limburg (L.) 239
+ 140 Section of St. Elizabeth, Marburg (Bn.) 240
+ 141 Cologne Cathedral, Plan (G.) 242
+ 142 Church of Our Lady, Treves (L.) 243
+ 143 Plan of Ulm Cathedral (L.) 244
+ 144 Town Hall, Louvain 247
+ 145 Façade of Burgos Cathedral 249
+ 146 Detail from S. Gregorio, Valladolid 251
+ 147 Duomo at Florence, Plan (G.) 256
+ 148 Duomo at Florence, Nave 257
+ 149 One Bay, Cathedral of S. Martino, Lucca (L.) 258
+ 150 Interior of Sienna Cathedral 259
+ 151 Façade of Sienna Cathedral 261
+ 152 Exterior of the Certosa, Pavia 262
+ 153 Plan of the Certosa, Pavia 263
+ 154 Upper Part of Campanile, Florence 265
+ 155 Upper Part of Palazzo Vecchio, Florence 266
+ 156 Loggia dei Lanzi, Florence 267
+ 157 West Front of Doge’s Palace, Venice 268
+ 158 Capital, Palazzo Zorzi, Venice 275
+ 159 Section of Dome, Duomo of Florence (Bn.) 276
+ 160 Exterior of Dome, Duomo of Florence 277
+ 161 Interior of S. Spirito, Florence 278
+ 162 Court of Riccardi Palace, Florence 279
+ 163 Façade of Strozzi Palace, Florence 280
+ 164 Tomb of Pietro di Noceto, Lucca 282
+ 165 Vendramini Palace, Venice 285
+ 166 Façade of Giraud Palace, Rome (L.) 290
+ 167 Plan of Farnese Palace, Rome (L.) 292
+ 168 Court of Farnese Palace, Rome 293
+ 169 Bramante’s Plan for St. Peter’s, Rome (L.) 294
+ 170 Plan of St. Peter’s, Rome, as now standing
+ (Bn. after G.) 295
+ 171 Interior of St. Peter’s (full page) 297
+ 172 Library of St. Mark, Venice 301
+ 173 Interior of San Severo, Naples 302
+ 174 Church of Santa Maria della Salute, Naples 303
+ 175 Court Façade, East Wing of Blois 311
+ 176 Staircase Tower, Blois 313
+ 177 Plan of Château of Chambord (A.) 314
+ 178 Upper Part of Château of Chambord 314
+ 179 Detail of Court of Louvre, southwest portion 315
+ 180 The Luxemburg Palace, Paris 318
+ 181 Colonnade of the Louvre 321
+ 182 Dome of the Invalides, Paris 322
+ 183 Façade of St. Sulpice, Paris 323
+ 184 Burghley House 327
+ 185 Whitehall Palace. The Banqueting Hall 329
+ 186 Plan of St. Paul’s Cathedral, London (G.) 330
+ 187 Exterior of St. Paul’s Cathedral 331
+ 188 Plan of Blenheim (G.) 332
+ 189 St. Martin’s-in-the-Fields, London 333
+ 190 Renaissance Houses, Brussels 335
+ 191 The Castle, Hämelschenburg 341
+ 192 The Friedrichsbau, Heidelberg Castle 344
+ 193 Pavilion of Zwinger Palace, Dresden 345
+ 194 Marienkirche, Dresden 346
+ 195 Portal of University, Salamanca 349
+ 196 Court (Patio) of Casa de Zaporta 350
+ 197 Palace of Charles V., Granada 351
+ 198 Façade of British Museum, London 357
+ 199 St. George’s Hall, Liverpool 358
+ 200 The Old Museum, Berlin 359
+ 201 The Propylæa, Munich 360
+ 202 Plan of the Panthéon, Paris (G.) 361
+ 203 Exterior of the Panthéon 362
+ 204 Arch of Triumph of l’Étoile, Paris 363
+ 205 The Madeleine, Paris 364
+ 206 Door of École des Beaux-Arts, Paris 365
+ 207 St. Isaac’s Cathedral, St. Petersburg 366
+ 208 Plan of Louvre and Tuileries (A.) 371
+ 209 Pavilion Richelieu, Louvre 372
+ 210 Grand Staircase, Paris Opera House 373
+ 211 Fountain of Longchamps, Marseilles 374
+ 212 Galliéra Museum, Paris 375
+ 213 Royal Theatre, Dresden 376
+ 214 Maria-Theresienhof, Vienna 377
+ 215 Houses of Parliament, London 379
+ 216 Assize Courts, Manchester 380
+ 217 Natural History Museum, South Kensington 381
+ 218 Christ Church, Philadelphia 386
+ 219 Craigie House, Cambridge (Mass.) 387
+ 220 National Capitol, Washington 389
+ 221 Custom House, New York 390
+ 222 Trinity Church, Boston 394
+ 223 Public Library, Woburn (Mass.) 395
+ 224 Times Building, New York 396
+ 225 Country House (Mass.) 398
+ 226 Porch of Temple of Vimalah Sah, Mount Abu. 406
+ 227 Tower of Victory, Chittore 407
+ 228 Double Temple at Hullabîd: Detail 410
+ 229 Shrine of Soubramanya, Tanjore 412
+
+
+
+
+GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY.
+
+
+(This includes the leading architectural works treating of more than one
+period or style. The reader should consult also the special references
+at the head of each chapter. Valuable material is also contained in the
+leading architectural periodicals and in monographs too numerous to
+mention.)
+
+
+DICTIONARIES AND ENCYCLOPEDIAS.
+
+Agincourt, _History of Art by its Monuments_; London.
+
+Architectural Publication Society, _Dictionary of Architecture_; London.
+
+Bosc, _Dictionnaire raisonné d’architecture_; Paris.
+
+Durm and others, _Handbuch der Architektur_; Stuttgart. (This is an
+encyclopedic compendium of architectural knowledge in many volumes; the
+series not yet complete. It is referred to as the _Hdbuch. d. Arch._)
+
+Gwilt, _Encyclopedia of Architecture_; London.
+
+Longfellow and Frothingham, _Cyclopedia of Architecture in Italy and the
+Levant_; New York.
+
+Planat, _Encyclopédie d’architecture_; Paris.
+
+Sturgis, _Dictionary of Architecture and Building_; New York.
+
+
+GENERAL HANDBOOKS AND HISTORIES.
+
+Bühlmann, _Die Architektur des klassischen Alterthums und der
+Renaissance_; Stuttgart. (Also in English, published in New York.)
+
+Choisy, _Histoire de l’architecture_; Paris.
+
+Durand, _Recueil et parallèle d’édifices de tous genres_; Paris.
+
+Fergusson, _History of Architecture in All Countries_; London.
+
+Fletcher and Fletcher, _A History of Architecture_; London.
+
+Gailhabaud, _L’Architecture du Vme. au XVIIIme. siècle_;
+Paris.--_Monuments anciens et modernes_; Paris.
+
+Kugler, _Geschichte der Baukunst_; Stuttgart.
+
+Longfellow, _The Column and the Arch_; New York.
+
+Lübke, _Geschichte der Architektur_; Leipzig.--_History of Art_, tr. and
+rev. by R. Sturgis; New York.
+
+Perry, _Chronology of Mediæval and Renaissance Architecture_; London.
+
+Reynaud, _Traité d’architecture_; Paris.
+
+Rosengarten, _Handbook of Architectural Styles_; London and New York.
+
+Simpson, _A History of Architectural Development_; London.
+
+Spiers, _Architecture East and West_; London.
+
+Stratham, _Architecture for General Readers_; London.
+
+Sturgis, _European Architecture_; New York.
+
+_Transactions of the Royal Institute of British Architects_; London.
+
+Viollet-le-Duc, _Discourses on Architecture_; Boston.
+
+
+THEORY, THE ORDERS, ETC.
+
+Chambers, _A Treatise on Civil Architecture_; London.
+
+Daviler, _Cours d’architecture de Vignole_; Paris.
+
+Esquié, _Traité élémentaire d’architecture_; Paris.
+
+Guadet, _Théorie de l’architecture_; Paris.
+
+Robinson, _Principles of Architectural Composition_; New York.
+
+Ruskin, _The Seven Lamps of Architecture_; London.
+
+Sturgis, _How to Judge Architecture_; New York.
+
+Tuckerman, _Vignola, the Five Orders of Architecture_; New York.
+
+Van Brunt, _Greek Lines and Other Essays_; Boston.
+
+Van Pelt, _A Discussion of Composition_.
+
+Ware, _The American Vignola_; Scranton.
+
+
+
+
+HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE.
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+A history of architecture is a record of man’s efforts to build
+beautifully. The erection of structures devoid of beauty is mere
+building, a trade and not an art. Edifices in which strength and
+stability alone are sought, and in designing which only utilitarian
+considerations have been followed, are properly works of engineering.
+Only when the idea of beauty is added to that of use does a structure
+take its place among works of architecture. We may, then, define
+architecture as the art which seeks to harmonize in a building the
+requirements of utility and of beauty. It is the most useful of the fine
+arts and the noblest of the useful arts. It touches the life of man at
+every point. It is concerned not only in sheltering his person and
+ministering to his comfort, but also in providing him with places for
+worship, amusement, and business; with tombs, memorials, embellishments
+for his cities, and other structures for the varied needs of a complex
+civilization. It engages the services of a larger portion of the
+community and involves greater outlays of money than any other
+occupation except agriculture. Everyone at some point comes in contact
+with the work of the architect, and from this universal contact
+architecture derives its significance as an index of the civilization of
+an age, a race, or a people.
+
+It is the function of the historian of architecture to trace the origin,
+growth, and decline of the architectural styles which have prevailed in
+different lands and ages, and to show how they have reflected the great
+movements of civilization. The migrations, the conquests, the
+commercial, social, and religious changes among different peoples have
+all manifested themselves in the changes of their architecture, and it
+is the historian’s function to show this. It is also his function to
+explain the principles of the styles, their characteristic forms and
+decoration, and to describe the great masterpieces of each style and
+period.
+
+
++STYLE+ is a quality; the “historic styles” are phases of development.
+_Style_ is character expressive of definite conceptions, as of grandeur,
+gaiety, or solemnity. An _historic style_ is the particular phase, the
+characteristic manner of design, which prevails at a given time and
+place. It is not the result of mere accident or caprice, but of
+intellectual, moral, social, religious, and even political conditions.
+Gothic architecture could never have been invented by the Greeks, nor
+could the Egyptian styles have grown up in Italy. Each style is based
+upon some fundamental principle springing from its surrounding
+civilization, which undergoes successive developments until it either
+reaches perfection or its possibilities are exhausted, after which a
+period of decline usually sets in. This is followed either by a reaction
+and the introduction of some radically new principle leading to the
+evolution of a new style, or by the final decay and extinction of the
+civilization and its replacement by some younger and more virile
+element. Thus the history of architecture appears as a connected chain
+of causes and effects succeeding each other without break, each style
+growing out of that which preceded it, or springing out of the
+fecundating contact of a higher with a lower civilization. To study
+architectural styles is therefore to study a branch of the history of
+civilization.
+
+Technically, architectural styles are identified by the means they
+employ to cover enclosed spaces, by the characteristic forms of the
+supports and other members (piers, columns, arches, mouldings,
+traceries, etc.), and by their decoration. The +plan+ should receive
+special attention, since it shows the arrangement of the points of
+support, and hence the nature of the structural design. A comparison,
+for example, of the plans of the Hypostyle Hall at Karnak (Fig. 11, h)
+and of the Basilica of Constantine (Fig. 58) shows at once a radical
+difference in constructive principle between the two edifices, and hence
+a difference of style.
+
+
++STRUCTURAL PRINCIPLES.+ All architecture is based on one or more of
+three fundamental structural principles; that of the _lintel_, of the
+_arch_ or _vault_, and of the _truss_. The principle of the +lintel+ is
+that of resistance to transverse strains, and appears in all
+construction in which a cross-piece or beam rests on two or more
+vertical supports. The +arch+ or +vault+ makes use of several pieces to
+span an opening between two supports. These pieces are in compression
+and exert lateral pressures or _thrusts_ which are transmitted to the
+supports or abutments. The thrust must be resisted either by the
+massiveness of the abutments or by the opposition to it of
+counter-thrusts from other arches or vaults. Roman builders used the
+first, Gothic builders the second of these means of resistance. The
++truss+ is a framework so composed of several pieces of wood or metal
+that each shall best resist the particular strain, whether of tension or
+compression, to which it is subjected, the whole forming a compound beam
+or arch. It is especially applicable to very wide spans, and is the most
+characteristic feature of modern construction. How the adoption of one
+or another of these principles affected the forms and even the
+decoration of the various styles, will be shown in the succeeding
+chapters.
+
+
++HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT.+ Geographically and chronologically, architecture
+appears to have originated in the Nile valley. A second centre of
+development is found in the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates, not
+uninfluenced by the older Egyptian art. Through various channels the
+Greeks inherited from both Egyptian and Assyrian art, the two influences
+being discernible even through the strongly original aspect of Greek
+architecture. The Romans in turn, adopting the external details of Greek
+architecture, transformed its substance by substituting the Etruscan
+arch for the Greek construction of columns and lintels. They developed a
+complete and original system of construction and decoration and spread
+it over the civilized world, which has never wholly outgrown or
+abandoned it.
+
+With the fall of Rome and the rise of Constantinople these forms
+underwent in the East another transformation, called the Byzantine, in
+the development of Christian domical church architecture. In the North
+and West, meanwhile, under the growing institutions of the papacy and of
+the monastic orders and the emergence of a feudal civilization out of
+the chaos of the Dark Ages, the constant preoccupation of architecture
+was to evolve from the basilica type of church a vaulted structure, and
+to adorn it throughout with an appropriate dress of constructive and
+symbolic ornament. Gothic architecture was the outcome of this
+preoccupation, and it prevailed throughout northern and western Europe
+until nearly or quite the close of the fifteenth century.
+
+During this fifteenth century the Renaissance style matured in Italy,
+where it speedily triumphed over Gothic fashions and produced a
+marvellous series of civic monuments, palaces, and churches, adorned
+with forms borrowed or imitated from classic Roman art. This influence
+spread through Europe in the sixteenth century, and ran a course of two
+centuries, after which a period of servile classicism was followed by a
+rapid decline in taste. To this succeeded the eclecticism and confusion
+of the nineteenth century, to which the rapid growth of new requirements
+and development of new resources have largely contributed.
+
+In Eastern lands three great schools of architecture have grown up
+contemporaneously with the above phases of Western art; one under the
+influence of Mohammedan civilization, another in the Brahman and
+Buddhist architecture of India, and the third in China and Japan. The
+first of these is the richest and most important. Primarily inspired
+from Byzantine art, always stronger on the decorative than on the
+constructive side, it has given to the world the mosques and palaces of
+Northern Africa, Moorish Spain, Persia, Turkey, and India. The other two
+schools seem to be wholly unrelated to the first, and have no affinity
+with the architecture of Western lands.
+
+Of Mexican, Central American, and South American architecture so little
+is known, and that little is so remote in history and spirit from the
+styles above enumerated, that it belongs rather to archæology than to
+architectural history, and will not be considered in this work.
+
+
+NOTE.--The reader’s attention is called to the Appendix to this volume,
+in which are gathered some of the results of recent investigations and
+of the architectural progress of the last few years which could not
+readily be introduced into the text of this edition. The General
+Bibliography and the lists of books recommended have been revised and
+brought up to date.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+PRIMITIVE AND PREHISTORIC ARCHITECTURE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Desor, _Les constructions lacustres du lac de
+ Neufchatel_. Fergusson, _Rude Stone Monuments_. R. C. Hoare,
+ _Ancients Wiltshire_. Lyell, _The Antiquity of Man_. Lubbock,
+ _Prehistoric Times_. Nadaillac, _Prehistoric America_. Rougemont,
+ _L’age du Bronze_. Tylor, _Primitive Culture_.
+
+
++EARLY BEGINNINGS.+ It is impossible to trace the early stages of the
+process by which true architecture grew out of the first rude attempts
+of man at building. The oldest existing monuments of architecture--those
+of Chaldæa and Egypt--belong to an advanced civilization. The rude and
+elementary structures built by savage and barbarous peoples, like the
+Hottentots or the tribes of Central Africa, are not in themselves works
+of architecture, nor is any instance known of the evolution of a
+civilized art from such beginnings. So far as the monuments testify, no
+savage people ever raised itself to civilization, and no primitive
+method of building was ever developed into genuine architecture, except
+by contact with some existing civilization of which it appropriated the
+spirit, the processes, and the forms. How the earliest architecture came
+into existence is as yet an unsolved problem.
+
+
++PRIMITIVE ARCHITECTURE+ is therefore a subject for the archæologist
+rather than the historian of art, and needs here only the briefest
+mention. If we may judge of the condition of the primitive races of
+antiquity by that of the savage and barbarous peoples of our own time,
+they required only the simplest kinds of buildings, though the purposes
+which they served were the same as those of later times in civilized
+communities. A hut or house for shelter, a shrine of some sort for
+worship, a stockade for defence, a cairn or mound over the grave of the
+chief or hero, were provided out of the simplest materials, and these
+often of a perishable nature. Poles supplied the framework; wattles,
+skins, or mud the walls; thatching or stamped earth the roof. Only the
+simplest tools were needed for such elementary construction. There was
+ingenuity and patient labor in work of this kind; but there was no
+planning, no fitting together into a complex organism of varied
+materials shaped with art and handled with science. Above all, there was
+no progression toward higher ideals of fitness and beauty. Rudimentary
+art displayed itself mainly in objects of worship, or in carvings on
+canoes and weapons, executed as talismans to ward off misfortune or to
+charm the unseen powers; but even this art was sterile and never grew of
+itself into civilized and progressive art.
+
+Yet there must have been at some point in the remote past an exception
+to this rule. Somewhere and somehow the people of Egypt must have
+developed from crude beginnings the architectural knowledge and resource
+which meet us in the oldest monuments, though every vestige of that
+early age has apparently perished. But although nothing has come down to
+us of the actual work of the builders who wrought in the primitive ages
+of mankind, there exist throughout Europe and Asia almost countless
+monuments of a primitive character belonging to relatively recent times,
+but executed before the advent of historic civilization to the regions
+where they are found. A general resemblance among them suggests a common
+heritage of traditions from the hoariest antiquity, and throws light on
+the probable character of the transition from barbaric to civilized
+architecture.
+
+
++PREHISTORIC MONUMENTS.+ These monuments vary widely as well as in
+excellence; some of them belong to Roman or even Christian times; others
+to a much remoter period. They are divided into two principal classes,
+the megalithic structures and lake dwellings. The latter class may be
+dismissed with the briefest mention. It comprises a considerable number
+of very primitive houses or huts built on wooden piles in the lakes of
+Switzerland and several other countries in both hemispheres, and forming
+in some cases villages of no mean size. Such villages, built over the
+water for protection from attack, are mentioned by the writers of
+antiquity and portrayed on Assyrian reliefs. The objects found in them
+reveal an incipient but almost stationary civilization, extending back
+from three thousand to five thousand years or more, and lasting through
+the ages of stone and bronze down into historic times.
+
+The +megalithic+ remains of Europe and Asia are far more important. They
+are very widely distributed, and consist in most cases of great blocks
+of stone arranged in rows, circles, or avenues, sometimes with huge
+lintels resting upon them. Upright stones without lintels are called
+_menhirs_; standing in pairs with lintels they are known as _dolmens_;
+the circles are called _cromlechs_. Some of the stones are of gigantic
+size, some roughly hewn into shape; others left as when quarried. Their
+age and purpose have been much discussed without reaching positive
+results. It is probable that, like the lake dwellings, they cover a long
+range of time, reaching from the dawn of recorded history some thousands
+of years back into the unknown past, and that they were erected by races
+which have disappeared before the migrations to which Europe owes her
+present populations. That most of them were in some way connected with
+the worship of these prehistoric peoples is generally admitted; but
+whether as temples, tombs, or memorials of historical or mythical events
+cannot, in all cases, be positively asserted. They were not dwellings or
+palaces, and very few were even enclosed buildings. They are imposing by
+the size and number of their immense stones, but show no sign of
+advanced art, or of conscious striving after beauty of design. The small
+number of “carved stones,” bearing singular ornamental patterns,
+symbolic or mystical rather than decorative in intention, really tends
+to prove this statement rather than to controvert it. It is not
+impossible that the dolmens were generally intended to be covered by
+mounds of earth. This would group them with the tumuli referred to
+below, and point to a sepulchral purpose in their erection. Some
+antiquaries, Fergusson among them, contend that many of the European
+circles and avenues were intended as battle-monuments or trophies.
+
+There are also +walls+ of great antiquity in various parts of Europe,
+intended for fortification; the most important of these in Greece and
+Italy will be referred to in later chapters. They belong to a more
+advanced art, some of them even deserving to be classed among works of
+archaic architecture.
+
+The +tumuli+, or burial mounds, which form so large a part of the
+prehistoric remains of both continents, are interesting to the architect
+only as revealing the prototypes of the pyramids of Egypt and the
+subterranean tombs of Mycenæ and other early Greek centres. The piling
+of huge cairns or commemorative heaps of stone is known from the
+Scriptures and other ancient writings to have been a custom of the
+greatest antiquity. The pyramids and the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus are
+the most imposing and elaborate outgrowths of this practice, of which
+the prehistoric tumuli are the simpler manifestations.
+
+These crude and elementary products of undeveloped civilizations have no
+place, however, in any list of genuine architectural works. They belong
+rather to the domain of archæology and ethnology, and have received this
+brief mention only as revealing the beginnings of the builder’s art, and
+the wide gap that separates them from that genuine architecture which
+forms the subject of the following chapters.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS+: The most celebrated in England are at Avebury, an
+ avenue, large and small circles, barrows, and the great tumuli of
+ Bartlow and Silbury “Hills;” at Stonehenge, on Salisbury Plain,
+ great megalithic circles and many barrows; “Sarsen stones” at
+ Ashdown; tumuli, dolmens, chambers, and circles in Derbyshire. In
+ Ireland, many cairns and circles. In Scotland, circles and barrows
+ in the Orkney Islands. In France, Carnac and Lokmariaker in
+ Brittany are especially rich in dolmens, circles, and avenues. In
+ Scandinavia, Germany, and Italy, in India and in Africa, are many
+ similar remains.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+EGYPTIAN ARCHITECTURE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Champollion, _Monuments de l’Egypte et de la
+ Nubie_. Choisy, _L’art de bâtir chez les Egyptiens_.
+ Flinders-Petrie, _History of Egypt; Ten Years Digging in Egypt,
+ 1881-91_. Jomard, _Description de l’Egypte, Antiquités_. Lepsius,
+ _Denkmäler aus Aegypten und Aethiopien_. Mariette, _Monuments of
+ Upper Egypt_. Maspero, _Egyptian Archæology_. Perrot and Chipiez,
+ _History of Art in Ancient Egypt_. Prisse d’Avennes, _Histoire de
+ l’art égyptien_. Reber, _History of Ancient Art_. Rossellini,
+ _Monumenti del Egitto_. Wilkinson, _Manners and Customs of Ancient
+ Egyptians_.
+
+
++LAND AND PEOPLE.+ As long ago as 5000 B.C., the Egyptians were a people
+already highly civilized, and skilled in the arts of peace and war. The
+narrow valley of the Nile, fertilized by the periodic overflow of the
+river, was flanked by rocky heights, nearly vertical in many places,
+which afforded abundance of excellent building stone, while they both
+isolated the Egyptians and protected them from foreign aggression. At
+the Delta, however, the valley widened out, with the falling away of
+these heights, into broad lowlands, from which there was access to the
+outer world.
+
+The art history of Egypt may be divided into five periods as follows:
+
+I. THE ANCIENT EMPIRE (cir. 4500?-3000 B.C.), comprising the first ten
+dynasties, with Memphis as the capital.
+
+II. THE FIRST THEBAN MONARCHY or MIDDLE EMPIRE (3000-2100 B.C.)
+comprising the eleventh, twelfth, and thirteenth dynasties reigning at
+Thebes.
+
+The Hyksos invasion, or incursion of the Shepherd Kings, interrupted the
+current of Egyptian art history for a period of unknown length, probably
+not less than four or five centuries.
+
+III. THE SECOND THEBAN MONARCHY (1700?-1000 B.C.), comprising the
+eighteenth to twentieth dynasties inclusive, was the great period of
+Egyptian history; the age of conquests and of vast edifices.
+
+IV. THE DECADENCE or SAITIC PERIOD (1000-324 B.C.), comprising the
+dynasties twenty-one to thirty (Saitic, Bubastid, Ethiopic, etc.),
+reigning at Sais, Tanis, and Bubastis, and the Persian conquest;
+a period almost barren of important monuments.
+
+(Periods III. and IV. constitute together the period of the NEW EMPIRE,
+if we omit the Persian dominion.)
+
+V. THE REVIVAL (from 324 B.C. to cir. 330 A.D.) comprises the Ptolemaic
+or Macedonian and Roman dominations.
+
+
++THE ANCIENT EMPIRE: THE PYRAMIDS.+ The great works of this period are
+almost exclusively sepulchral, and include the most ancient buildings of
+which we have any remains. While there is little of strictly
+architectural art, the overwhelming size and majesty of the Pyramids,
+and the audacity and skill shown in their construction, entitle them to
+the first place in any sketch of this period. They number over a
+hundred, scattered in six groups, from Abu-Roash in the north to Meidoum
+in the south, and are of various shapes and sizes. They are all royal
+tombs and belong to the first twelve dynasties; each contains a
+sepulchral chamber, and each at one time possessed a small chapel
+adjacent to it, but this has, in almost every case, perished.
+
+Three pyramids surpass all the rest by their prodigious size; these are
+at Ghizeh and belong to the fourth dynasty. They are known by the names
+of their builders; the oldest and greatest being that of +Cheops+, or
+Khufu;[1] the second, that of +Chephren+, or Khafra; and the third, that
+of +Mycerinus+, or Menkhara. Other smaller ones stand at the feet of
+these giants.
+
+ [Footnote 1: The Egyptian names known to antiquity are given
+ here first in the more familiar classic form, and then in the
+ Egyptian form.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 1.--SECTION OF GREAT PYRAMID.
+ a, _King’s Chamber_; b, _Queen’s Chamber_; c, _Chamber
+ cut in Rock_.]
+
+The base of the “Great Pyramid” measures 764 feet on a side; its height
+is 482 feet, and its volume must have originally been nearly three and
+one-half million cubic yards (Fig. 1). It is constructed of limestone
+upon a plateau of rock levelled to receive it, and was finished
+externally, like its two neighbors, with a coating of polished stone,
+supposed by some to have been disposed in bands of different colored
+granites, but of which it was long ago despoiled. It contained three
+principal chambers and an elaborate system of inclined passages, all
+executed in finely cut granite and limestone. The sarcophagus was in the
+uppermost chamber, above which the superincumbent weight was relieved by
+open spaces and a species of rudimentary arch of Λ-shape (Fig. 2). The
+other two pyramids differ from that of Cheops in the details of their
+arrangement and in size, not in the principle of their construction.
+Chephren is 454 feet high, with a base 717 feet square. Mycerinus, which
+still retains its casing of pink granite, is but 218 feet in height,
+with a base 253 feet on a side.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 2.--SECTION OF KING’S CHAMBER.]
+
+Among the other pyramids there is considerable variety both of type and
+material. At Sakkarah is one 190 feet high, constructed in six unequal
+steps on a slightly oblong base measuring nearly 400 × 357 feet. It was
+attributed by Mariette to Ouenephes, of the first dynasty, though now
+more generally ascribed to Senefrou of the third. At Abu-Seir and
+Meidoum are other stepped pyramids; at Dashour is one having a broken
+slope, the lower part steeper than the upper. Several at Meroë with
+unusually steep slopes belong to the Ethiopian dynasties of the
+Decadence. A number of pyramids are built of brick.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 3.--PLAN OF SPHINX TEMPLE.]
+
++TOMBS.+ The Ancient Empire has also left us a great number of tombs of
+the type known as _Mastabas_. These are oblong rectangular structures of
+stone or brick with slightly inclined sides and flat ceilings. They
+uniformly face the east, and are internally divided into three parts;
+the chamber or chapel, the _serdab_, and the well. In the first of
+these, next the entrance, were placed the offerings made to the _Ka_ or
+“double,” for whom also scenes of festivity or worship were carved and
+painted on its walls to minister to his happiness in his incorporeal
+life. The serdabs, or secret inner chambers, of which there were several
+in each mastaba, contained statues of the defunct, by which the
+existence and identity of the Ka were preserved. Finally came the well,
+leading to the mummy chamber, deep underground, which contained the
+sarcophagus. The sarcophagi, both of this and later ages, are good
+examples of the minor architecture of Egypt; many of them are panelled
+in imitation of wooden construction and richly decorated with color,
+symbols, and hieroglyphs.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 4.--RUINS OF SPHINX TEMPLE.]
+
++OTHER MONUMENTS.+ Two other monuments of the Ancient Empire also claim
+attention: the +Sphinx+ and the adjacent so-called “+Sphinx temple+” at
+Ghizeh. The first of these, a huge sculpture carved from the rock,
+represents Harmachis in the form of a human-headed lion. It is
+ordinarily partly buried in the sand; is 70 feet long by 66 feet high,
+and forms one of the most striking monuments of Egyptian art. Close to
+it lie the nearly buried ruins of the temple once supposed to be that of
+the Sphinx, but now proved by Petrie to have been erected in connection
+with the second pyramid. The plan and present aspect of this venerable
+edifice are shown in Figs. 3 and 4. The hall was roofed with stone
+lintels carried on sixteen square monolithic piers of alabaster. The
+whole was buried in a rectangular mass of masonry and revetted
+internally with alabaster, but was wholly destitute internally as well
+as externally of decoration or even of mouldings. With the exception of
+scanty remains of a few of the pyramid-temples or chapels, and the
+temple discovered by Petrie in Meidoum, it is the only survival from the
+temple architecture of that early age.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 5.--TOMB AT ABYDOS.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 6.--TOMB AT BENI-HASSAN.]
+
++THE MIDDLE EMPIRE: TOMBS.+ The monuments of this period, as of the
+preceding, are almost wholly sepulchral. We now encounter two types of
+tombs. One, structural and pyramidal, is represented by many examples at
+Abydos, the most venerated of all the burial grounds of Egypt (Fig. 5).
+All of these are built of brick, and are of moderate size and little
+artistic interest. The second type is that of tombs cut in the vertical
+cliffs of the west bank of the Nile Valley. The entrance to these faces
+eastward as required by tradition; the remoter end of the excavation
+pointing toward the land of the Sun of Night. But such tunnels only
+become works of architecture when, in addition to the customary mural
+paintings, they receive a decorative treatment in the design of their
+structural forms. Such a treatment appears in several tombs at
+Beni-Hassan, in which columns are reserved in cutting away the rock,
+both in the chapel-chambers and in the vestibules or porches which
+precede them. These columns are polygonal in some cases, clustered in
+others. The former type, with eight, sixteen, or thirty-two sides (in
+these last the _arrises_ or edges are emphasized by a slight concavity
+in each face, like embryonic fluting), have a square abacus, suggesting
+the Greek Doric order, and giving rise to the name _proto-Doric_
+(Fig. 6). Columns of this type are also found at Karnak, Kalabshé,
+Amada, and Abydos. A reminiscence of primitive wood construction is seen
+in the dentils over the plain architrave of the entrance, which in other
+respects recalls the triple entrances to certain mastabas of the Old
+Empire. These dentils are imitations of the ends of rafters, and to some
+archæologists suggest a wooden origin for the whole system of columnar
+design. But these rock-cut shafts and heavy architraves in no respect
+resemble wooden prototypes, but point rather to an imitation cut in the
+rock of a well-developed, pre-existing system of stone construction,
+some of whose details, however, were undoubtedly derived from early
+methods of building in wood. The vault was below the chapel and reached
+by a separate entrance. The serdab was replaced by a niche in which was
+the figure of the defunct carved from the native rock. Some of the tombs
+employed in the chapel-chamber columns of quatrefoil section with
+capitals like clustered buds (Fig. 7), and this type became in the next
+period one of the most characteristic forms of Egyptian architecture.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 7.--SECTION AND HALF-PLAN OF A TOMB AT
+ BENI-HASSAN.]
+
+
++TEMPLES.+ Of the temples of this period only two have left any remains
+of importance. Both belong to the twelfth dynasty (cir. 2200 B.C.). Of
+one of these many badly shattered fragments have been found in the ruins
+of Bubastis; these show the clustered type of lotus-bud column mentioned
+above. The other, of which a few columns have been identified among the
+ruins of the Great Temple at Karnak, constituted the oldest part of that
+vast agglomeration of religious edifices, and employed columns of the
+so-called proto-Doric type. From these remains it appears that
+structural stone columns as well as those cut in the rock were used at
+this early period (2200 B.C.). Indeed, it is probable that the whole
+architectural system of the New Empire was based on models developed in
+the age we are considering; that the use of multiplied columns of
+various types and the building of temples of complex plan adorned with
+colossal statues, obelisks, and painted reliefs, were perfectly
+understood and practised in this period. But the works it produced have
+perished, having been most probably demolished to make way for the more
+sumptuous edifices of later times.
+
+
++THE NEW EMPIRE.+ This was the grand age of Egyptian architecture and
+history. An extraordinary series of mighty men ruled the empire during a
+long period following the expulsion of the Hyksos usurpers. The names of
+Thothmes, Amenophis, Hatasu, Seti, and Rameses made glorious the
+eighteenth and nineteenth dynasties. Foreign conquests in Ethiopia,
+Syria, and Assyria enlarged the territory and increased the splendor of
+the empire. The majority of the most impressive ruins of Egypt belong to
+this period, and it was in these buildings that the characteristic
+elements of Egyptian architecture were brought to perfection and carried
+out on the grandest scale.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 8.--PLAN OF THE RAMESSEUM.
+ a, _Sanctuary_; b, _Hypostyle Hall_; c, _Second court_;
+ d, _Entrance court_; e, _Pylons_.]
+
++TOMBS OF THE NEW EMPIRE.+ Some of these are structural, others
+excavated; both types displaying considerable variety in arrangement and
+detail. The rock-cut tombs of Bab-el-Molouk, among which are twenty-five
+royal sepulchres, are striking both by the simplicity of their openings
+and the depth and complexity of their shafts, tunnels, and chambers.
+From the pipe-like length of their tunnels they have since the time of
+Herodotus been known by the name _syrinx_. Every precaution was taken to
+lead astray and baffle the intending violator of their sanctity. They
+penetrated hundreds of feet into the rock; their chambers, often formed
+with columns and vault-like roofs, were resplendent with colored reliefs
+and ornament destined to solace and sustain the shadowy Ka until the
+soul itself, the Ba, should arrive before the tribunal of Osiris, the
+Sun of Night. Most impressively do these brilliant pictures,[2] intended
+to be forever shut away from human eyes, attest the sincerity of the
+Egyptian belief and the conscientiousness of the art which it inspired.
+
+ [Footnote 2: See Van Dyke’s _History of Painting_, Figure 1.]
+
+While the tomb of the private citizen was complete in itself, containing
+the Ka-statues and often the chapel, as well as the mummy, the royal
+tomb demanded something more elaborate in scale and arrangement. In some
+cases external structures of temple-form took the place of the
+underground chapel and serdab. The royal effigy, many times repeated in
+painting and sculpture throughout this temple-like edifice, and flanking
+its gateways with colossal seated figures, made buried Ka-statues
+unnecessary. Of these sepulchral temples three are of the first
+magnitude. They are that of +Queen Hatasu+ (XVIIIth dynasty) at
+Deir-el-Bahari; that of +Rameses II.+ (XIXth dynasty), the +Ramesseum+,
+near by to the southwest; and that of +Rameses III.+ (XXth dynasty) at
+Medinet Abou still further to the southwest. Like the tombs, these were
+all on the west side of the Nile; so also was the sepulchral temple of
+Amenophis III. (XVIIIth dynasty), the +Amenopheum+, of which hardly a
+trace remains except the two seated colossi which, rising from the
+Theban plain, have astonished travellers from the times of Pausanias and
+Strabo down to our own. These mutilated figures, one of which has been
+known ever since classic times as the “vocal Memnon,” are 56 feet high,
+and once flanked the entrance to the forecourt of the temple of
+Amenophis. The plan of the Ramesseum, with its sanctuary, hypostyle
+hall, and forecourts, its pylons and obelisks, is shown in Figure 8, and
+may be compared with those of other temples given on pp. 17 and 18. That
+of Medinet Abou resembles it closely. The Ramesseum occupies a rectangle
+of 590 × 182 feet; the temple of Medinet Abou measures 500 × 160 feet,
+not counting the extreme width of the entrance pylons. The temple of
+Hatasu at Deir-el-Bahari is partly excavated and partly structural,
+a model which is also followed on a smaller scale in several lesser
+tombs. Such an edifice is called a _hemispeos_.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+EGYPTIAN ARCHITECTURE--_Continued_.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Same as for Chapter II.
+
+
++TEMPLES.+ The surpassing glory of the New Empire was its great temples.
+Some of them were among the most stupendous creations of structural art.
+To temples rather than palaces were the resources and energies of the
+kings devoted, and successive monarchs found no more splendid outlet for
+their piety and ambition than the founding of new temples or the
+extension and adornment of those already existing. By the forced labor
+of thousands of fellaheen (the system is in force to this day and is
+known as the _corvée_) architectural piles of vast extent could be
+erected within the lifetime of a monarch. As in the tombs the internal
+walls bore pictures for the contemplation of the Ka, so in the temples
+the external walls, for the glory of the king and the delectation of the
+people, were covered with colored reliefs reciting the monarch’s
+glorious deeds. Internally the worship and attributes of the gods were
+represented in a similar manner, in endless iteration.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 9.--TEMPLE OF EDFOU. PLAN.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 10.--TEMPLE OF EDFOU. SECTION.]
+
++THE TEMPLE SCHEME.+ This is admirably shown in the temple of Khonsu, at
+Karnak, built by Rameses III. (XXth dynasty), and in the temple of Edfou
+(Figs. 9 and 10), though this belongs to the Roman period. It comprised
+a sanctuary or _sekos_, a hypostyle (columnar) hall, known as the “hall
+of assembly,” and a forecourt preceded by a double pylon or gateway.
+Each of these parts might be made more or less complex in different
+temples, but the essential features are encountered everywhere under all
+changes of form. The building of a temple began with the sanctuary,
+which contained the sacred chamber and the shrine of the god, with
+subordinate rooms for the priests and for various rites and functions.
+These chambers were low, dark, mysterious, accessible only to the
+priests and king. They were given a certain dignity by being raised upon
+a sort of platform above the general level, and reached by a few steps.
+They were sumptuously decorated internally with ritual pictures in
+relief. The hall was sometimes loftier, but set on a slightly lower
+level; its massive columns supported a roof of stone lintels, and light
+was admitted either through clearstory windows under the roof of a
+central portion higher than the sides, as at Karnak, or over a low
+screen-wall built between the columns of the front row, as at Edfou and
+Denderah. This method was peculiar to the Ptolemaic and Roman periods.
+The court was usually surrounded by a single or double colonnade;
+sometimes, however, this colonnade only flanked the sides or fronted the
+hall, or again was wholly wanting. The _pylons_ were twin buttress-like
+masses flanking the entrance gate of the court. They were shaped like
+oblong truncated pyramids, crowned by flaring cornices, and were
+decorated on the outer face with masts carrying banners, with obelisks,
+or with seated colossal figures of the royal builder. An avenue of
+sphinxes formed the approach to the entrance, and the whole temple
+precinct was surrounded by a wall, usually of crude brick, pierced by
+one or more gates with or without pylons. The piety of successive
+monarchs was displayed in the addition of new hypostyle halls, courts,
+pylons, or obelisks, by which the temple was successively extended in
+length, and sometimes also in width, by the increased dimensions of the
+new courts. The great Temple of Karnak most strikingly illustrates this
+growth. Begun by Osourtesen (XIIth dynasty) more than 2000 years B.C.,
+it was not completed in its present form until the time of the
+Ptolemies, when the last of the pylons and external gates were erected.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 11.--TEMPLE OF KARNAK. PLAN.]
+
+The variations in the details of this general type were numerous. Thus,
+at El Kab, the temple of Amenophis III. has the sekos and hall but no
+forecourt. At Deir-el-Medineh the hall of the Ptolemaic Hathor-temple is
+a mere porch in two parts, while the enclosure within the circuit wall
+takes the place of the forecourt. At Karnak all the parts were repeated
+several times, and under Amenophis III. (XVIIIth dynasty) a wing was
+built at a nearly right angle to the main structure. At Luxor, to a
+complete typical temple were added three aisles of an unfinished
+hypostyle hall, and an elaborate forecourt, whose axis is inclined to
+that of the other buildings, owing to a bend of the river at that point.
+At Abydos a complex sanctuary of many chambers extends southeast at
+right angles to the general mass, and the first court is without
+columns. But in all these structures a certain unity of effect is
+produced by the lofty pylons, the flat roofs diminishing in height over
+successive portions from the front to the sanctuary, the sloping
+windowless walls covered with carved and painted pictures, and the dim
+and massive interiors of the columnar halls.
+
+
++TEMPLES OF KARNAK.+ Of these various temples that of +Amen-Ra+ is
+incomparably the largest and most imposing. Its construction extended
+through the whole duration of the New Empire, of whose architecture it
+is a splendid _résumé_ (Fig. 11). Its extreme length is 1,215 feet, and
+its greatest width 376 feet. The sanctuary and its accessories, mainly
+built by Thothmes I. and Thothmes III., cover an area nearly 456 × 290
+feet in extent, and comprise two hypostyle halls and countless smaller
+halls and chambers. It is preceded by a narrow columnar vestibule and
+two pylons enclosing a columnar atrium and two obelisks. This is entered
+from the +Great Hypostyle Hall+ (h in Fig. 11; Fig. 12), the noblest
+single work of Egyptian architecture, measuring 340 × 170 feet, and
+containing 134 columns in sixteen rows, supporting a massive stone roof.
+The central columns with bell-capitals are 70 feet high and nearly 12
+feet in diameter; the others are smaller and lower, with lotus-bud
+capitals, supporting a roof lower than that over the three central
+aisles. A clearstory of stone-grated windows makes up the difference in
+height between these two roofs. The interior, thus lighted, was splendid
+with painted reliefs, which helped not only to adorn the hall but to
+give scale to its massive parts. The whole stupendous creation was the
+work of three kings--Rameses I., Seti I., and Rameses II. (XIXth
+dynasty).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 12.--CENTRAL PORTION OF HYPOSTYLE HALL
+ AT KARNAK.
+ (From model in Metropolitan Museum, New York.)]
+
+In front of it was the great court, flanked by columns, and still
+showing the ruins of a central avenue of colossal pillars begun, but
+never completed, by the Bubastid kings of the XXIId dynasty. One or two
+smaller structures and the curious lateral wing built by Amenophis III.,
+interrupt the otherwise orderly and symmetrical advance of this plan
+from the sanctuary to the huge first pylon (last in point of date)
+erected by the Ptolemies.
+
+The smaller temple of Khonsu, south of that of Amen-Ra, has already been
+alluded to as a typical example of templar design. Next to Karnak in
+importance comes the +Temple of Luxor+ in its immediate neighborhood. It
+has two forecourts adorned with double-aisled colonnades and connected
+by what seems to be an unfinished hypostyle hall. The +Ramesseum+ and
+the temples of +Medinet Abou+ and +Deir-El-Bahari+ have already been
+mentioned (p. 15). At Gournah and Abydos are the next most celebrated
+temples of this period; the first famous for its rich clustered
+lotus-columns, the latter for its beautiful sanctuary chambers,
+dedicated each to a different deity, and covered with delicate painted
+reliefs of the time of Seti I.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 13.--GREAT TEMPLE OF IPSAMBOUL.]
+
++GROTTO TEMPLES.+ Two other styles of temple remain to be noticed. The
+first is the subterranean or grotto temple, of which the two most
+famous, at Ipsamboul (Abou-simbel), were excavated by Rameses II. They
+are truly colossal conceptions, reproducing in the native rock the main
+features of structural temples, the court being represented by the
+larger of two chambers in the Greater Temple (Fig. 13) Their façades are
+adorned with colossal seated figures of the builder; the smaller has
+also two effigies of Nefert-Ari, his consort. Nothing more striking and
+boldly impressive is to be met with in Egypt than these singular
+rock-cut façades. Other rock-cut temples of more modest dimensions are
+at Addeh, Feraig, Beni-Hassan (the “Speos Artemidos”), Beit-el-Wali, and
+Silsileh. At Gherf-Hossein, Asseboua, and Derri are temples partly
+excavated and partly structural.
+
+
++PERIPTERAL TEMPLES.+ The last type of temple to be noticed is
+represented by only three or four structures of moderate size; it is the
+_peripteral_, in which a small chamber is surrounded by columns, usually
+mounted on a terrace with vertical walls. They were mere chapels, but
+are among the most graceful of existing ruins. At Philæ are two
+structures, one by Nectanebo, the other Ptolemaic, resembling peripteral
+temples, but without cella-chambers or roofs. They may have been
+waiting-courts for the adjoining temples. That at Elephantine (Amenophis
+III.) has square piers at the sides, and columns only at the ends.
+Another by Thothmes II., at Medinet Abou, formed only a part (the
+sekos?) of a larger plan. At Edfou is another, belonging to the
+Ptolemaic period.
+
+
++LATER TEMPLES.+ After the architectural inaction of the Decadence came
+a marvellous recrudescence of splendor under the Ptolemies, whose
+Hellenic origin and sympathies did not lead them into the mistaken
+effort to impose Greek models upon Egyptian art. The temples erected
+under their dominion, and later under Roman rule, vied with the grandest
+works of the Ramessidæ, and surpassed them in the rich elaboration and
+variety of their architectural details. The temple at Edfou (Figs. 9,
+10, 14) is the most perfectly preserved, and conforms most closely to
+the typical plan; that of Isis, at Philæ, is the most elaborate and
+ornate. Denderah also possesses a group of admirably preserved temples
+of the same period. At Esneh, and at Kalabshé and Kardassy or Ghertashi
+in Nubia are others. In all these one notes innovations of detail and a
+striving for effect quite different from the simpler majesty of the
+preceding age (Fig. 14). One peculiar feature is the use of screen walls
+built into the front rows of columns of the hypostyle hall. Light was
+admitted above these walls, which measured about half the height of the
+columns and were interrupted at the centre by a curious doorway cut
+through their whole height and without any lintel. Long disused types of
+capital were revived and others greatly elaborated; and the wall-reliefs
+were arranged in bands and panels with a regularity and symmetry rather
+Greek than Egyptian.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 14.--EDFOU. FRONT OF HYPOSTYLE HALL.]
+
++ARCHITECTURAL DETAILS.+ With the exception of a few purely utilitarian
+vaulted structures, all Egyptian architecture was based on the principle
+of the lintel. Artistic splendor depended upon the use of painted and
+carved pictures, and the decorative treatment of the very simple
+supports employed. Piers and columns sustained the roofs of such
+chambers as were too wide for single lintels, and produced, in halls
+like those of Karnak, of the Ramesseum, or of Denderah, a stupendous
+effect by their height, massiveness, number, and colored decoration. The
+simplest piers were plain square shafts; others, more elaborate, had
+lotus stalks and flowers or heads of Hathor carved upon them. The most
+striking were those against whose front faces were carved colossal
+figures of Osiris, as at Luxor, Medmet Abou, and Karnak (Fig. 15). The
+columns, which were seldom over six diameters in height, were treated
+with greater variety; the shafts, slightly tapering upward, were either
+round or clustered in section, and usually contracted at the base. The
+capitals with which they were crowned were usually of one of the five
+chief types described below. Besides round and clustered shafts, the
+Middle Empire and a few of the earlier monuments of the New Empire
+employed polygonal or slightly fluted shafts (see p. 11), as at Beni
+Hassan and Karnak; these had a plain square abacus, with sometimes a
+cushion-like echinus beneath it. A round plinth served as a base for
+most of the columns.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 15.--OSIRID PIER (MEDINET ABOU).]
+
++CAPITALS.+ The five chief types of capital were: a, the plain lotus
+bud, as at Karnak (Great Hall); b, the clustered lotus bud (Beni-Hassan,
+Karnak, Luxor, Gournah, etc.); c, the _campaniform_ or inverted bell
+(central aisles at Karnak, Luxor, the Ramesseum); d, the palm-capital,
+frequent in the later temples; and e, the Hathor-headed, in which heads
+of Hathor adorn the four faces of a cubical mass surmounted by a model
+of a shrine (Sedinga, Edfou, Denderah, Esneh). These types were richly
+embellished and varied by the Ptolemaic architects, who gave a clustered
+or quatrefoil plan to the bell-capital, or adorned its surface with palm
+leaves. A few other forms are met with as exceptions. The first four are
+shown in Fig. 16.
+
+Every part of the column was richly decorated in color. Lotus-leaves or
+petals swathed the swelling lower part of the shaft, which was elsewhere
+covered with successive bands of carved pictures and of hieroglyphics.
+The capital was similarly covered with carved and painted ornament,
+usually of lotus-flowers or leaves, or alternate stalks of lotus and
+papyrus.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 16.--TYPES OF COLUMN.
+ a, _Campaniform_; b, _Clustered Lotus-Column_; c, _Simple
+ Lotus-Column_; d, _Palm-Column_.]
+
+The lintels were plain and square in section, and often of prodigious
+size. Where they appeared externally they were crowned with a simple
+cavetto cornice, its curved surface covered with colored flutings
+alternating with _cartouches_ of hieroglyphics. Sometimes, especially on
+the screen walls of the Ptolemaic age, this was surmounted by a cresting
+of adders or uræi in closely serried rank. No other form of cornice or
+cresting is met with. Mouldings as a means of architectural effect were
+singularly lacking in Egyptian architecture. The only moulding known is
+the clustered torus (_torus_ = a convex moulding of semicircular
+profile), which resembles a bundle of reeds tied together with cords or
+ribbons. It forms an astragal under the cavetto cornice and runs down
+the angles of the pylons and walls.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 17.--EGYPTIAN FLORAL ORNAMENT-FORMS.]
+
++POLYCHROMY AND ORNAMENT.+ Color was absolutely essential to the
+decorative scheme. In the vast and dim interiors, as well as in the
+blinding glare of the sun, mere sculpture or relief would have been
+wasted. The application of brilliant color to pictorial forms cut in low
+relief, or outlined by deep incision with the edges of the figures
+delicately rounded (_intaglio rilievo_) was the most appropriate
+treatment possible. The walls and columns were covered with pictures
+treated in this way, and the ceilings and lintels were embellished with
+symbolic forms in the same manner. All the ornaments, as distinguished
+from the paintings, were symbolical, at least in their origin. Over the
+gateway was the solar disk or globe with wide-spread wings, the symbol
+of the sun winging its way to the conquest of night; upon the ceiling
+were sacred vultures, zodiacs, or stars spangled on a blue ground.
+Externally the temples presented only masses of unbroken wall; but
+these, as well as the pylons, were covered with huge pictures of a
+historical character. Only in the tombs do we find painted ornament of a
+purely conventional sort (Fig. 17). Rosettes, diaper patterns, spirals,
+and checkers are to be met with in them; but many of these can be traced
+to symbolic origins.[3]
+
+ [Footnote 3: See Goodyear’s _Grammar of the Lotus_ for an
+ elaborate and ingenious presentation of the theory of a common
+ lotus-origin for all the conventional forms occurring in Egyptian
+ ornament.]
+
+
++DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE.+ The only remains of palaces are the pavilion of
+Rameses III. at Medinet Abou, and another at Semneh. The Royal Labyrinth
+has so completely perished that even its site is uncertain. The
+Egyptians lived so much out of doors that the house was a less important
+edifice than in colder climates. Egyptian dwellings were probably in
+most cases built of wood or crude brick, and their disappearance is thus
+easily explained. Relief pictures on the monuments indicate the use of
+wooden framing for the walls, which were probably filled in with crude
+brick or panels of wood. The architecture was extremely simple. Gateways
+like those of the temples on a smaller scale, the cavetto cornice on the
+walls, and here and there a porch with carved columns of wood or stone,
+were the only details pretending to elegance. The ground-plans of many
+houses in ruined cities, as at Tel-el-Amarna and a nameless city of
+Amenophis IV., are discernible in the ruins; but the superstructures are
+wholly wanting. It was in religious and sepulchral architecture that the
+constructive and artistic genius of the Egyptians was most fully
+manifested.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS+: The principal necropolis regions of Egypt are centred
+ about Ghizeh and ancient Memphis for the Old Empire (pyramids and
+ mastabas), Thebes for the Middle Empire (Silsileh, Beni Hassan),
+ and Thebes (Vale of the Kings, Vale of the Queens) and Abydos for
+ the New Empire.
+
+ The Old Empire has also left us the Sphinx, Sphinx temple, and the
+ temple at Meidoum.
+
+ The most important temples of the New Empire were those of Karnak
+ (the great temple, the southern or temple of Khonsu), of Luxor,
+ Medinet Abou (great temple of Rameses III., lesser temples of
+ Thothmes II. and III. with peripteral sekos; also Pavilion of
+ Rameses III.); of Abydos; of Gournah; of Eilithyia (Amenophis
+ III.); of Soleb and Sesebi in Nubia; of Elephantine (peripteral);
+ the tomb temple of Deir-el-Bahari, the Ramesseum, the Amenopheum;
+ hemispeos at Gherf Hossein; two grotto temples at Ipsamboul.
+
+ At Meroë are pyramids of the Ethiopic kings of the Decadence.
+
+ Temples of the Ptolemaic period: Philæ, Denderah.
+
+ Temples of the Roman period: Koum Ombos, Edfou; Kalabshé, Kardassy
+ and Dandour in Nubia; Esneh.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CHALDÆAN AND ASSYRIAN ARCHITECTURE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Reber. Also, Babelon, _Manual of
+ Oriental Antiquities_. Botta and Flandin, _Monuments de Ninive_.
+ Layard, _Discoveries in Nineveh_; _Nineveh and its Remains_.
+ Loftus, _Travels and Researches in Chaldæa and Susiana_. Perrot
+ and Chipiez, _History of Art in Chaldæa and Assyria_. Peters,
+ _Nippur_. Place, _Ninive et l’Assyrie_.
+
+
++SITUATION; HISTORIC PERIODS.+ The Tigro-Euphrates valley was the seat
+of a civilization nearly or quite as old as that of the Nile, though
+inferior in its monumental art. The kingdoms of Chaldæa and Assyria
+which ruled in this valley, sometimes as rivals and sometimes as
+subjects one of the other, differed considerably in character and
+culture. But the scarcity of timber and the lack of good building-stone
+except in the limestone table-lands and more distant mountains of upper
+Mesopotamia, the abundance of clay, and the flatness of the country,
+imposed upon the builders of both nations similar restrictions of
+conception, form, and material. Both peoples, moreover, were probably,
+in part at least, of Semitic race.[4] The Chaldæans attained
+civilization as early as 4000 B.C., and had for centuries maintained
+fixed institutions and practised the arts and sciences when the
+Assyrians began their career as a nation of conquerors by reducing
+Chaldæa to subjection.
+
+ [Footnote 4: This is denied by some recent writers, so far as
+ the Chaldæans are concerned, and is not intended here to apply
+ to the Accadians and Summerians of primitive Chaldæa.]
+
+The history of Chaldæo-Assyrian art may be divided into three main
+periods, as follows:
+
+1. The EARLY CHALDÆAN, 4000 to 1250 B.C.
+
+2. The ASSYRIAN, 1250 to 606 B.C.
+
+3. The BABYLONIAN, 606 to 538 B.C.
+
+In 538 the empire fell before the Persians.
+
+
++GENERAL CHARACTER OF MONUMENTS.+ Recent excavations at Nippur (Niffer),
+the sacred city of Chaldæa, have uncovered ruins older than the
+Pyramids. Though of slight importance architecturally, they reveal the
+early knowledge of the arch and the possession of an advanced culture.
+The poverty of the building materials of this region afforded only the
+most limited resources for architectural effect. Owing to the flatness
+of the country and the impracticability of building lofty structures
+with sun-dried bricks, elevation above the plain could be secured only
+by erecting buildings of moderate height upon enormous mounds or
+terraces, built of crude brick and faced with hard brick or stone. This
+led to the development of the stepped pyramid as the typical form of
+Chaldæo-Assyrian architecture. Thick walls were necessary both for
+stability and for protection from the burning heat of that climate. The
+lack of stone for columns and the difficulty of procuring heavy beams
+for long spans made broad halls and chambers impossible. The plans of
+Assyrian palaces look like assemblages of long corridors and small cells
+(Fig. 18). Neither the wooden post nor the column played any part in
+this architecture except for window-mullions and subordinate members.[5]
+It is probable that the vault was used for roofing many of the halls;
+the arch was certainly employed for doors and the barrel-vault for the
+drainage-tunnels under the terraces, made necessary by the heavy
+rainfall. What these structures lacked in durability and height was made
+up in decorative magnificence. The interior walls were wainscoted to a
+height of eight or nine feet with alabaster slabs covered with those
+low-relief pictures of hunting scenes, battles, and gods, which now
+enrich the museums of London, Paris, and other modern cities. Elsewhere
+painted plaster or more durable enamelled tile in brilliant colors
+embellished the walls, and, doubtless, rugs and tapestries added their
+richness to this architectural splendor.
+
+ [Footnote 5: See Fergusson, _Palaces of Nineveh and Persepolis_,
+ for an ingenious but unsubstantiated argument for the use of
+ columns in Assyrian palaces.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 18.--PALACE OF SARGON AT KHORSABAD.]
+
+
++CHALDÆAN ARCHITECTURE.+ The ruins at Mugheir (the Biblical Ur), dating,
+perhaps, from 2200 B.C., belong to the two-storied terrace or platform
+of a temple to Sin or Hurki. The wall of sun-dried brick is faced with
+enamelled tile. The shrine, which was probably small, has wholly
+disappeared from the summit of the mound. At Warka (the ancient Erech)
+are two terrace-walls of palaces, one of which is ornamented with convex
+flutings and with a species of mosaic in checker patterns and zigzags,
+formed by terra-cotta cones or spikes driven into the clay, their
+exposed bases being enamelled in the desired colors. The other shows a
+system of long, narrow panels, in a style suggesting the influence of
+Egyptian models through some as yet unknown channel. This panelling
+became a common feature of the later Assyrian art (see Fig. 19). At
+Birs-Nimroud are the ruins of a stepped pyramid surmounted by a small
+shrine. Its seven stages are said to have been originally faced with
+glazed tile of the seven planetary colors, gold, silver, yellow, red,
+blue, white, and black. The ruins at Nippur, which comprise temples,
+altars, and dwellings dating from 4000 B.C., have been alluded to.
+Babylon, the later capital of Chaldæa, to which the shapeless mounds of
+Mujehbeh and Kasr seem to have belonged, has left no other recognizable
+vestige of its ancient magnificence.
+
+
++ASSYRIAN ARCHITECTURE.+ Abundant ruins exist of Nineveh, the Assyrian
+capital, and its adjacent palace-sites. Excavations at Koyunjik,
+Khorsabad, and Nimroud have laid bare a number of these royal dwellings.
+Among them are the palace of Assur-nazir-pal (885 B.C.) and two palaces
+of Shalmaneser II. (850 B.C.) at Nimroud; the great palace of Sargon at
+Khorsabad (721 B.C.); that of Sennacherib at Koyunjik (704 B.C.); of
+Esarhaddon at Nimroud (650 B.C.); and of Assur-bani-pal at Koyunjik (660
+B.C.). All of these palaces are designed on the same general principle,
+best shown by the plan (Fig. 18) of the palace of Sargon at Khorsabad,
+excavated by Botta and Place.
+
+In this palace two large and several smaller courts are surrounded by a
+complex series of long, narrow halls and small, square chambers. One
+court probably belonged to the harem, another to the king’s apartments,
+others to dependents and to the service of the palace. The crude brick
+walls are immensely thick and without windows, the only openings being
+for doors. The absence of columns made wide halls impossible, and great
+size could only be attained in the direction of length. A terraced
+pyramid supported an altar or shrine to the southwest of the palace; at
+the west corner was a temple, the substructure of which was crowned by a
+cavetto cornice showing plainly the influence of Egyptian models. The
+whole palace stood upon a stupendous platform faced with cut stone, an
+unaccustomed extravagance in Assyria.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 19.--GATE, KHORSABAD.]
+
++ARCHITECTURAL DETAILS.+ There is no evidence that the Assyrians ever
+used columnar supports except in minor or accessory details. There are
+few halls in any of the ruins too wide to be spanned by good Syrian
+cedar beams or palm timbers, and these few cases seem to have had
+vaulted ceilings. So clumsy a feature as the central wall in the great
+hall of Esarhaddon’s palace at Nimroud would never have been resorted to
+for the support of the ceiling, had the Assyrians been familiar with the
+use of columns. That they understood the arch and vault is proved by
+their admirable terrace-drains and the fine arched gate in the walls of
+Khorsabad (Fig. 19), as well as by bas-reliefs representing dwellings
+with domes of various forms. Moreover, a few vaulted chambers of
+moderate size, and fallen fragments of crude brick vaulting of larger
+span, have been found in several of the Assyrian ruins.
+
+The construction was extremely simple. The heavy clay walls were faced
+with alabaster, burned brick, or enamelled tiles. The roofs were
+probably covered with stamped earth, and sometimes paved on top with
+tiles or slabs of alabaster to form terraces. Light was introduced most
+probably through windows immediately under the roof and divided by small
+columns forming mullions, as suggested by certain relief pictures. No
+other system seems consistent with the windowless walls of the ruins. It
+is possible that many rooms depended wholly on artificial light or on
+the scant rays coming through open doors. To this day, in the hot season
+the population of Mosul takes refuge from the torrid heats of summer in
+windowless basements lighted only by lamps.
+
+
++ORNAMENT.+ The only structural decorations seem to have been the
+panelling of exterior walls in a manner resembling the Chaldæan
+terrace-walls, and a form of parapet like a stepped cresting. There were
+no characteristic mouldings, architraves, capitals, or cornices. Nearly
+all the ornament was of the sort called _applied_, _i.e._, added after
+the completion of the structure itself. Pictures in low relief covered
+the alabaster revetment. They depicted hunting-scenes, battles, deities,
+and other mythological subjects, and are interesting to the architect
+mainly for their occasional representations of buildings and details of
+construction. Above this wainscot were friezes of enamelled brick
+ornamented with symbolic forms used as decorative motives; winged bulls,
+the “sacred tree” and mythological monsters, with rosettes, palmettes,
+lotus-flowers, and _guilloches_ (ornaments of interlacing bands winding
+about regularly spaced buttons or eyes). These ornaments were also used
+on the archivolts around the great arches of palace gates. The most
+singular adornments of these gates were the carved “portal guardians”
+set into the deep jambs--colossal monsters with the bodies of bulls, the
+wings of eagles, and human heads of terrible countenance. Of mighty
+bulk, they were yet minutely wrought in every detail of head-dress,
+beard, feathers, curly hair, and anatomy.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 20.--ASSYRIAN ORNAMENT.]
+
+The purely conventional ornaments mentioned above--the rosette,
+guilloche, and lotus-flower, and probably also the palmette, were
+derived from Egyptian originals. They were treated, however, in a quite
+new spirit and adapted to the special materials and uses of their
+environment. Thus the form of the palmette, even if derived, as is not
+unlikely, from the Egyptian lotus-motive, was assimilated to the more
+familiar palm-forms of Assyria (Fig. 20).
+
+Assyrian architecture never rivalled the Egyptian in grandeur or
+constructive power, in seriousness, or the higher artistic qualities. It
+did, however, produce imposing results with the poorest resources, and
+in its use of the arch and its development of ornamental forms it
+furnished prototypes for some of the most characteristic features of
+later Asiatic art, which profoundly influenced both Greek and Byzantine
+architecture.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS+: The most important Chaldæan and Assyrian monuments of
+ which there are extant remains, have already been enumerated in
+ the text. It is therefore unnecessary to duplicate the list here.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+PERSIAN, LYCIAN AND JEWISH ARCHITECTURE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Babelon; Bliss, _Excavations at
+ Jerusalem_. Reber. Also Dieulafoy, _L’Art antique de la Perse_.
+ Fellows, _Account of Discoveries in Lycia_. Fergusson, _The Temple
+ at Jerusalem_. Flandin et Coste, _Perse ancienne_. Perrot and
+ Chipiez, _History of Art in Persia_; _History of Art in Phrygia,
+ Lydia, Caria, and Lycia_; _History of Art in Sardinia and Judæa_.
+ Texier, _L’Arménie et la Perse_; _L’Asie Mineure_. De Vogüé, _Le
+ Temple de Jérusalem_.
+
+
++PERSIAN ARCHITECTURE.+ With the Persians, who under Cyrus (536 B.C.)
+and Cambyses (525 B.C.) became the masters of the Orient, the Aryan race
+superseded the Semitic, and assimilated in new combinations the forms it
+borrowed from the Assyrian civilization. Under the Achæmenidæ (536 to
+330 B.C.) palaces were built in Persepolis and Susa of a splendor and
+majesty impossible in Mesopotamia, and rivalling the marvels in the Nile
+Valley. The conquering nation of warriors who had overthrown the
+Egyptians and Assyrians was in turn conquered by the arts of its
+vanquished foes, and speedily became the most luxurious of all nations.
+The Persians were not great innovators in art; but inhabiting a land of
+excellent building resources, they were able to combine the Egyptian
+system of interior columns with details borrowed from Assyrian art, and
+suggestions, derived most probably from the general use in Persia and
+Central Asia, of wooden posts or columns as intermediate supports. Out
+of these elements they evolved an architecture which has only become
+fully known to us since the excavations of M. and Mme. Dieulafoy at Susa
+in 1882.
+
+
++ELEMENTS OF PERSIAN ARCHITECTURE.+ The Persians used both crude and
+baked bricks, the latter far more freely than was practicable in
+Assyria, owing to the greater abundance of fuel. Walls when built of the
+weaker material were faced with baked brick enamelled in brilliant
+colors, or both moulded and enamelled, to form colored pictures in
+relief. Stone was employed for walls and columns, and, in conjunction
+with brick, for the jambs and lintels of doors and windows. Architraves
+and ceiling-beams were of wood. The palaces were erected, as in Assyria,
+upon broad platforms, partly cut in the rock and partly structural,
+approached by imposing flights of steps. These palaces were composed of
+detached buildings, propylæa or gates of honor, vast audience-halls open
+on one or two sides, and chambers or dwellings partly enclosing or
+flanking these halls, or grouped in separate buildings. Temples appear
+to have been of small importance, perhaps owing to habits of out-of-door
+worship of fire and sun. There are few structural tombs, but there are a
+number of imposing royal sepulchres cut in the rock at Naksh-i-Roustam.
+
+
++ARCHITECTURAL DETAILS.+ The Persians, like the Egyptians, used the
+column as an internal feature in hypostyle halls of great size, and
+externally to form porches, and perhaps, also, open kiosks without
+walls. The great +Hall of Xerxes+ at Persepolis covers 100,000 square
+feet--more than double the area of the Hypostyle Hall at Karnak. But the
+Persian column was derived from wooden prototypes and used with wooden
+architraves, permitting a wider spacing than is possible with stone. In
+the present instance thirty-six columns sufficed for an area which in
+the Karnak hall contained one hundred and thirty-four. The shafts being
+slender and finely fluted instead of painted or carved, the effect
+produced was totally different from that sought by the Egyptians. The
+most striking peculiarity of the column was the capital, which was
+forked (Fig. 21). In one of the two principal types the fork, formed by
+the coupled fore-parts of bulls or symbolic monsters, rested directly on
+the top of the shaft. In the other, two singular members were interposed
+between the fork and the shaft; the lower, a sort of double bell or
+bell-and-palm capital, and above it, just beneath the fork, a curious
+combination of vertical scrolls or volutes, resembling certain ornaments
+seen in Assyrian furniture. The transverse architrave rested in the
+fork; the longitudinal architrave was supported on the heads of the
+monsters. A rich moulded base, rather high and in some cases adorned
+with carved leaves or flutings, supported the columns, which in the Hall
+of Xerxes were over 66 feet high and 6 feet in diameter. The architraves
+have perished, but the rock-cut tomb of Darius at Naksh-i-Roustam
+reproduces in its façade a palace-front, showing a banded architrave
+with dentils--an obvious imitation of the ends of wooden rafters on a
+lintel built up of several beams.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 21.--COLUMN FROM PERSEPOLIS.]
+
+These features of the architrave, as well as the fine flutings and
+moulded bases of the columns, are found in Ionic architecture, and in
+part, at least, in Lycian tombs. As all these examples date from nearly
+the same period, the origin of these forms and their mutual relations
+have not been fully determined. The Persian capitals, however, are
+unique, and so far as known, without direct prototypes or derivatives.
+Their constituent elements may have been borrowed from various sources.
+One can hardly help seeing the Egyptian palm-capital in the lower member
+of the compound type (Fig. 21).
+
+The doors and windows had banded architraves or trims and cavetto
+cornices very Egyptian in character. The portals were flanked, as in
+Assyria, by winged monsters; but these were built up in several courses
+of stone, not carved from single blocks like their prototypes. Plaster
+or, as at Susa, enamelled bricks, replaced as a wall-finish the Assyrian
+alabaster wainscot. These bricks, splendid in color, and moulded into
+relief pictures covering large surfaces, are the oldest examples of the
+skill of the Persians in a branch of ceramic art in which they have
+always excelled down to our own day.
+
+
++LYCIAN ARCHITECTURE.+ The architecture of those Asiatic peoples which
+served as intermediaries between the ancient civilizations of Egypt and
+Assyria on the one hand and of the Greeks on the other, need occupy us
+only a moment in passing. None of them developed a complete and
+independent style or produced monuments of the first rank. Those chiefly
+concerned in the transmission of ideas were the Cypriotes, Phœnicians,
+and Lycians. The part played by other Asiatic nations is too slight to
+be considered here. From Cyprus the Greeks could have learned little
+beyond a few elementary notions regarding sculpture and pottery,
+although it is possible that the volute-form in Ionic architecture was
+originally derived from patterns on Cypriote pottery and from certain
+Cypriote steles, where it appears as a modified lotus motive. The
+Phœnicians were the world’s traders from a very early age down to the
+Persian conquest. They not only distributed through the Mediterranean
+lands the manufactures of Egypt and Assyria, but also counterfeited them
+and adopted their forms in decorating their own wares. But they have
+bequeathed us not a single architectural ruin of importance, either of
+temples or palaces, nor are the few tombs still extant of sufficient
+artistic interest to deserve even brief mention in a work of this scope.
+
+In Lycia, however, there arose a system of tomb-design which came near
+creating a new architectural style, and which doubtless influenced both
+Persia and the Ionian colonies. The tombs were mostly cut in the rock,
+though a few are free-standing monolithic monuments, resembling
+sarcophagi or small shrines mounted on a high base or pedestal.
+
+In all of these tombs we recognize a manifest copying in stone of framed
+wooden structures. The walls are panelled, or imitate open structures
+framed of squared timbers. The roofs are often gabled, sometimes in the
+form of a pointed arch; they generally show a banded architrave,
+dentils, and a raking cornice, or else an imitation of broadly
+projecting eaves with small round rafters. There are several with
+porches of Ionic columns; of these, some are of late date and evidently
+copied from Asiatic Greek models. Others, and notably one at Telmissus,
+seem to be examples of a primitive Ionic, and may indeed have been early
+steps in the development of that splendid style which the Ionic Greeks,
+both in Asia Minor and in Attica, carried to such perfection.
+
+
++JEWISH ARCHITECTURE.+ The Hebrews borrowed from the art of every people
+with whom they had relations, so that we encounter in the few extant
+remains of their architecture Egyptian, Assyrian, Phœnician, Greek,
+Roman, and Syro-Byzantine features, but nothing like an independent
+national style. Among the most interesting of these remains are tombs of
+various periods, principally occurring in the valleys near Jerusalem,
+and erroneously ascribed by popular tradition to the judges, prophets,
+and kings of Israel. Some of them are structural, some cut in the rock;
+the former (tomb of Absalom, of Zechariah) decorated with Doric and
+Ionic engaged orders, were once supposed to be primitive types of these
+orders and of great antiquity. They are now recognized to be debased
+imitations of late Greek work of the third or second century B.C. They
+have Egyptian cavetto cornices and pyramidal roofs, like many Asiatic
+tombs. The openings of the rock-cut tombs have frames or pediments
+carved with rich surface ornament showing a similar mixture of
+types--Roman triglyphs and garlands, Syrian-Greek acanthus leaves,
+conventional foliage of Byzantine character, and naturalistic carvings
+of grapes and local plant-life. The carved arches of two of the ancient
+city gates (one the so-called Golden Gate) in Jerusalem display rich
+acanthus foliage somewhat like that of the tombs, but more vigorous and
+artistic. If of the time of Herod or even of Constantine, as claimed by
+some, they would indicate that Greek artists in Syria created the
+prototypes of Byzantine ornament. They are more probably, however,
+Byzantine restorations of the 6th century A.D.
+
+The one great achievement of Jewish architecture was the national
++Temple of Jehovah+, represented by three successive edifices on Mount
+Moriah, the site of the present so-called “Mosque of Omar.” The first,
+built by Solomon (1012 B.C.) appears from the Biblical description[6] to
+have combined Egyptian conceptions (successive courts, lofty
+entrance-pylons, the Sanctuary and the sekos or “Holy of Holies”) with
+Phœnician and Assyrian details and workmanship (cedar woodwork,
+empaistic decoration or overlaying with _repoussé_ metal work, the
+isolated brazen columns Jachin and Boaz). The whole stood on a mighty
+platform built up with stupendous masonry and vaulted chambers from the
+valley surrounding the rock on three sides. This precinct was nearly
+doubled in size by Herod (18 B.C.) who extended it southward by a
+terrace-wall of still more colossal masonry. Some of the stones are
+twenty-two feet long; one reaches the prodigious length of forty feet.
+The “Wall of Lamentations” is a part of this terrace, upon which stood
+the Temple on a raised platform. As rebuilt by Herod, the Temple
+reproduced in part the antique design, and retained the porch of Solomon
+along the east side; but the whole was superbly reconstructed in white
+marble with abundance of gilding. Defended by the Castle of Antonia on
+the northwest, and embellished with a new and imposing triple colonnade
+on the south, the whole edifice, a conglomerate of Egyptian, Assyrian,
+and Roman conceptions and forms, was one of the most singular and yet
+magnificent creations of ancient art.
+
+ [Footnote 6: 1 Kings vi.-vii.; 2 Chronicles iii.-iv.]
+
+The temple of Zerubbabel (515 B.C.), intermediate between those above
+described, was probably less a re-edification of the first, than a new
+design. While based on the scheme of the first temple, it appears to
+have followed more closely the pattern described in the vision of
+Ezekiel (chapters xl.-xlii.). It was far inferior to its predecessor in
+splendor and costliness. No vestiges of it remain.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS.+ PERSIAN: at Murghab, the tomb of Cyrus, known as
+ Gabré-Madré-Soleiman--a gabled structure on a seven-stepped
+ pyramidal basement (525 B.C.). At Persepolis the palace of Darius
+ (521 B.C.); the Propylæa of Xerxes, his palace and his harem (?)
+ or throne-hall (480 B.C.). These splendid structures, several of
+ them of vast size, resplendent with color and majestic with their
+ singular and colossal columns, must have formed one of the most
+ imposing architectural groups in the world. At various points,
+ tower-like tombs, supposed erroneously by Fergusson to have been
+ fire altars. At Naksh-i-Roustam, the tomb of Darius, cut in the
+ rock. Other tombs near by at Persepolis proper and at Pasargadæ.
+ At the latter place remains of the palace of Cyrus. At Susa the
+ palace of Xerxes and Artaxerxes (480-405 B.C.).
+
+ There are no remains of private houses or temples.
+
+ LYCIAN: the principal Lycian monuments are found in Myra,
+ Antiphellus, and Telmissus. Some of the monolithic tombs have been
+ removed to the British and other European museums.
+
+ JEWISH: the temples have been mentioned above. The palace of
+ Solomon. The rock-cut monolithic tomb of Siloam. So-called tombs
+ of Absalom and Zechariah, structural; probably of Herod’s time or
+ later. Rock-cut Tombs of the Kings; of the Prophets, etc. City
+ gates (Herodian or early Christian period).
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+GREEK ARCHITECTURE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Reber. Also, Anderson and Spiers,
+ _Architecture of Greece and Rome_. Baumeister, _Denkmäler der
+ Klassischen Alterthums_. Bötticher, _Tektonik der Hellenen_.
+ Chipiez, _Histoire critique des ordres grecs_. Curtius, Adler and
+ Treu, _Die Ausgrabungen zu Olympia_. Durm, _Antike Baukunst_ (in
+ _Handbuch d. Arch._). Frazer, _Pausanias’ Description of Greece_.
+ Hitorff, _L’architecture polychrome chez les Grecs_. Michaelis,
+ _Der Parthenon_. Penrose, _An Investigation, etc., of Athenian
+ Architecture_. Perrot and Chipiez, _History of Art in Primitive
+ Greece_; _La Grèce de l’Epopée_; _La Grèce archaïque_. Stuart and
+ Revett, _Antiquities of Athens_. Tarbell, _History of Greek Art_.
+ Texier, _L’Asie Mineure_. Wilkins, _Antiquities of Magna Græcia_.
+
+
++GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS.+ Greek art marks the beginning of European
+civilization. The Hellenic race gathered up influences and suggestions
+from both Asia and Africa and fused them with others, whose sources are
+unknown, into an art intensely national and original, which was to
+influence the arts of many races and nations long centuries after the
+decay of the Hellenic states. The Greek mind, compared with the Egyptian
+or Assyrian, was more highly intellectual, more logical, more
+symmetrical, and above all more inquiring and analytic. Living nowhere
+remote from the sea, the Greeks became sailors, merchants, and
+colonizers. The Ionian kinsmen of the European Greeks, speaking a
+dialect of the same language, populated the coasts of Asia Minor and
+many of the islands, so that through them the Greeks were open to the
+influences of the Assyrian, Phœnician, Persian, and Lycian
+civilizations. In Cyprus they encountered Egyptian influences, and
+finally, under Psammetichus, they established in Egypt itself the Greek
+city of Naukratis. They were thus by geographical situation, by
+character, and by circumstances, peculiarly fitted to receive, develop,
+and transmit the mingled influences of the East and the South.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 22.--LION GATE AT MYCENÆ.]
+
++PREHISTORIC MONUMENTS.+[7] Authentic Greek history begins with the
+first Olympiad, 776 B.C. The earliest monuments of that historic
+architecture which developed into the masterpieces of the Periclean and
+Alexandrian ages, date from the middle of the following century. But
+there are a number of older buildings, belonging presumably to the
+so-called Heroic Age, which, though seemingly unconnected with the later
+historic development of Greek architecture, are still worthy of note.
+They are the work of a people somewhat advanced in civilization,
+probably the Pelasgi, who preceded the Dorians on Greek soil, and
+consist mainly of fortifications, walls, gates, and tombs, the most
+important of which are at +Mycenæ+ and +Tiryns+. At the latter place is
+a well-defined acropolis, with massive walls in which are passages
+covered by stones successively overhanging or corbelled until they meet.
+The masonry is of huge stones piled without cement. At Mycenæ the city
+wall is pierced by the remarkable +Lion Gate+ (Fig. 22), consisting of
+two jambs and a huge lintel, over which the weight is relieved by a
+triangular opening. This is filled with a sculptured group, now much
+defaced, representing two rampant lions flanking a singular column which
+tapers downward. This symbolic group has relations with Hittite and
+Phrygian sculptures, and with the symbolism of the worship of Rhea
+Cybele. The masonry of the wall is carefully dressed but not regularly
+coursed. Other primitive walls and gates showing openings and embryonic
+arches of various forms, are found widely scattered, at Samos and Delos,
+at Phigaleia, Thoricus, Argos and many other points. The very earliest
+are hardly more than random piles of rough stone. Those which may fairly
+claim notice for their artistic masonry are of a later date and of two
+kinds: the coursed, and the polygonal or Cyclopean, so called from the
+tradition that they were built by the Cyclopes. These Cyclopean walls
+were composed of large, irregular polygonal blocks carefully fitted
+together and dressed to a fairly smooth face (Fig. 23). Both kinds were
+used contemporaneously, though in the course of time the regular coursed
+masonry finally superseded the polygonal.
+
+ [Footnote 7: For enlargement on this topic see Appendix A.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 23.--POLYGONAL MASONRY.]
+
+
++THOLOS OF ATREUS.+ All these structures present, however, only the
+rudiments of architectural art. The so-called +Tholos+ (or Treasury) of
++Atreus+, at Mycenæ, on the other hand, shows the germs of truly
+artistic design (Fig. 24). It is in reality a tomb, and is one of a
+large class of prehistoric tombs found in almost every part of the
+globe, consisting of a circular stone-walled and stone-roofed chamber
+buried under a tumulus of earth. This one is a beehive-shaped
+construction of horizontal courses of masonry, with a stone-walled
+passage, the _dromos_, leading to the entrance door. Though internally
+of domical form, its construction with horizontal beds in the masonry
+proves that the idea of the true dome with the beds of each course
+pitched at an angle always normal to the curve of the vault, was not yet
+grasped. A small sepulchral chamber opens from the great one, by a door
+with the customary relieving triangle over it.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 24.--THOLOS OF ATREUS. PLAN AND SECTION.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 25.--THOLOS OF ATREUS. DOORWAY.]
+
+Traces of a metal lining have been found on the inner surface of the
+dome and on the jambs of the entrance door. This entrance is the most
+artistic and elaborate part of the edifice (Fig. 25). The main opening
+is enclosed in a three-banded frame, and was once flanked by columns
+which, as shown by fragments still existing and by marks on either side
+the door, tapered downward as in the sculptured column over the Lion
+Gate. Shafts, bases, and capitals were covered with zig-zag bands or
+chevrons of fine spirals. This well-studied decoration, the banded
+jambs, and the curiously inverted columns (of which several other
+examples exist in or near Mycenæ), all point to a fairly developed art,
+derived partly from Egyptian and partly from Asiatic sources. That
+Egyptian influences had affected this early art is further proved by a
+fragment of carved and painted ornament on a ceiling in Orchomenos,
+imitating with remarkable closeness certain ceiling decorations in
+Egyptian tombs.
+
+
++HISTORIC MONUMENTS; THE ORDERS.+ It was the Dorians and Ionians who
+developed the architecture of classic Greece. This fact is perpetuated
+in the traditional names, Doric and Ionic, given to the two systems of
+columnar design which formed the most striking feature of that
+architecture. While in Egypt the column was used almost exclusively as
+an internal support and decoration, in Greece it was chiefly employed to
+produce an imposing exterior effect. It was the most important element
+in the temple architecture of the Greeks, and an almost indispensable
+adornment of their gateways, public squares, and temple enclosures. To
+the column the two races named above gave each a special and radically
+distinct development, and it was not until the Periclean age that the
+two forms came to be used in conjunction, even by the mixed Doric-Ionic
+people of Attica. Each of the two types had its own special shaft,
+capital, entablature, mouldings, and ornaments, although considerable
+variation was allowed in the proportions and minor details. The general
+type, however, remained substantially unchanged from first to last. The
+earliest examples known to us of either order show it complete in all
+its parts, its later development being restricted to the refining and
+perfecting of its proportions and details. The probable origin of these
+orders will be separately considered later on.
+
+
++THE DORIC.+ The column of the Doric order (Figs. 26, 27) consists of a
+tapering shaft rising directly from the stylobate or platform and
+surmounted by a capital of great simplicity and beauty. The shaft is
+fluted with sixteen to twenty shallow channellings of segmental or
+elliptical section, meeting in sharp edges or _arrises_. The capital is
+made up of a circular cushion or _echinus_ adorned with fine grooves
+called _annulæ_, and a plain square _abacus_ or cap Upon this rests a
+plain architrave or _epistyle_, with a narrow fillet, the _tænia_,
+running along its upper edge. The frieze above it is divided into square
+panels, called the _metopes_, separated by vertical _triglyphs_ having
+each two vertical grooves and chamfered edges. There is a triglyph over
+each column and one over each intercolumniation, or two in rare
+instances where the columns are widely spaced. The cornice consists of a
+broadly projecting _corona_ resting on a _bed-mould_ of one or two
+simple mouldings. Its under surface, called the _soffit_, is adorned
+with _mutules_, square, flat projections having each eighteen _guttæ_
+depending from its under side. Two or three small mouldings run along
+the upper edge of the corona, which has in addition, over each slope of
+the gable, a gutter-moulding or _cymatium_. The cornices along the
+horizontal edges of the roof have instead of the cymatium a row of
+_antefixæ_, ornaments of terra-cotta or marble placed opposite the foot
+of each tile-ridge of the roofing. The enclosed triangular field of the
+gable, called the _tympanum_, was in the larger monuments adorned with
+sculptured groups resting on the shelf formed by the horizontal cornice
+below. Carved ornaments called _acroteria_ commonly embellished the
+three angles of the gable or pediment.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 26.--GREEK DORIC ORDER.
+ A, _Crepidoma, or stylobate_; b, _Column_; c, _Architrave_;
+ d, _Tænia_; e, _Frieze_; f, _Horizontal cornice_; g, _Raking
+ cornice_; h, _Tympanum of pediment_; k, _Metope_.]
+
+
++POLYCHROMY.+ It has been fully proved, after a century of debate, that
+all this elaborate system of parts, severe and dignified in their
+simplicity of form, received a rich decoration of color. While the
+precise shades and tones employed cannot be predicated with certainty,
+it is well established that the triglyphs were painted blue and the
+metopes red, and that all the mouldings were decorated with
+leaf-ornaments, “eggs-and-darts,” and frets, in red, green, blue, and
+gold. The walls and columns were also colored, probably with pale tints
+of yellow or buff, to reduce the glare of the fresh marble or the
+whiteness of the fine stucco with which the surfaces of masonry of
+coarser stone were primed. In the clear Greek atmosphere and outlined
+against the brilliant sky, the Greek temple must have presented an
+aspect of rich, sparkling gayety.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 27.--DORIC ORDER OF THE PARTHENON.]
+
++ORIGIN OF THE ORDER.+ It is generally believed that the details of the
+Doric frieze and cornice were reminiscences of a primitive wood
+construction. The triglyph suggests the chamfered ends of cross-beams
+made up of three planks each; the mutules, the sheathing of the eaves;
+and the guttæ, the heads of the spikes or trenails by which the
+sheathing was secured. It is known that in early astylar temples the
+metopes were left open like the spaces between the ends of
+ceiling-rafters. In the earlier peripteral temples, as at Selinus, the
+triglyph-frieze is retained around the cella-wall under the ceiling of
+the colonnade, where it has no functional significance, as a survival
+from times antedating the adoption of the colonnade, when the tradition
+of a wooden roof-construction showing externally had not yet been
+forgotten.
+
+A similar wooden origin for the Doric column has been advocated by some,
+who point to the assertion of Pausanias that in the Doric Heraion at
+Olympia the original wooden columns had with one exception been replaced
+by stone columns as fast as they decayed. (See p. 62.) This, however,
+only proves that wooden columns were sometimes used in early buildings,
+not that the Doric column was derived from them. Others would derive it
+from the Egyptian columns of Beni Hassan (p. 12), which it certainly
+resembles. But they do not explain how the Greeks could have been
+familiar with the Beni Hassan column long before the opening of Egypt to
+them under Psammetichus; nor why, granting them some knowledge of
+Egyptian architecture, they should have passed over the splendors of
+Karnak and Luxor to copy these inconspicuous tombs perched high up on
+the cliffs of the Nile. It would seem that the Greeks invented this form
+independently, developing it in buildings which have perished; unless,
+indeed, they brought the idea with them from their primitive Aryan home
+in Asia.
+
+
++THE IONIC ORDER+ was characterized by greater slenderness of proportion
+and elegance of detail than the Doric, and depended more on carving than
+on color for the decoration of its members (Fig. 28). It was adopted in
+the fifth century B.C. by the people of Attica, and used both for civic
+and religious buildings, sometimes alone and sometimes in conjunction
+with the Doric. The column was from eight to ten diameters in height,
+against four and one-third to seven for the Doric. It stood on a base
+which was usually composed of two tori (see p. 25 for definition)
+separated by a _scotia_ (a concave moulding of semicircular or
+semi-elliptical profile), and was sometimes provided also with a square
+flat base-block, the _plinth_. There was much variety in the proportions
+and details of these mouldings, which were often enriched by flutings or
+carved guilloches. The tall shaft bore twenty-four deep narrow flutings
+separated by narrow fillets. The capital was the most peculiar feature
+of the order. It consisted of a bead or _astragal_ and echinus, over
+which was a horizontal band ending on either side in a scroll or volute,
+the sides of which presented the aspect shown in Fig. 29. A thin moulded
+abacus was interposed between this member and the architrave.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 28.--GREEK IONIC ORDER. (MILETUS.)]
+
+The Ionic capital was marked by two awkward features which all its
+richness could not conceal. One was the protrusion of the echinus beyond
+the face of the band above it, the other was the disparity between the
+side and front views of the capital, especially noticeable at the
+corners of a colonnade. To obviate this, various contrivances were
+tried, none wholly successful. Ordinarily the two adjacent exterior
+sides of the corner capital were treated alike, the scrolls at their
+meeting being bent out at an angle of 45°, while the two inner faces
+simply intersected, cutting each other in halves.
+
+The entablature comprised an architrave of two or three flat bands
+crowned by fine mouldings; an uninterrupted frieze, frequently
+sculptured in relief; and a simple cornice of great beauty. In addition
+to the ordinary bed-mouldings there was in most examples a row of narrow
+blocks or _dentils_ under the corona, which was itself crowned by a high
+cymatium of extremely graceful profile, carved with the rich
+“honeysuckle” (_anthemion_) ornament. All the mouldings were carved with
+the “egg-and-dart,” heart-leaf and anthemion ornaments, so designed as
+to recall by their outline the profile of the moulding itself. The
+details of this order were treated with much more freedom and variety
+than those of the Doric. The pediments of Ionic buildings were rarely or
+never adorned with groups of sculpture. The volutes and echinus of the
+capital, the fluting of the shaft, the use of a moulded circular base,
+and in the cornice the high corona and cymatium, these were constant
+elements in every Ionic order, but all other details varied widely in
+the different examples.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 29.--SIDE VIEW OF IONIC CAPITAL.]
+
++ORIGIN OF THE IONIC ORDER.+ The origin of the Ionic order has given
+rise to almost as much controversy as that of the Doric. Its different
+elements were apparently derived from various sources. The Lycian tombs
+may have contributed the denticular cornice and perhaps also the general
+form of the column and capital. In the Persian architecture of the sixth
+century B.C., the high moulded base, the narrow flutings of the shaft,
+the carved bead-moulding and the use of scrolls in the capital are
+characteristic features, which may have been borrowed by the Ionians
+during the same century, unless, indeed, they were themselves the work
+of Ionic or Lycian workmen in Persian employ. The banded architrave and
+the use of the volute in the decoration of stele-caps (from στηλη =
+a memorial stone or column standing isolated and upright), furniture,
+and minor structures are common features in Assyrian, Lycian, and other
+Asiatic architecture of early date. The volute or scroll itself as an
+independent decorative motive may have originated in successive
+variations of Egyptian lotus-patterns.[8] But the combination of these
+diverse elements and their development into the final form of the order
+was the work of the Ionian Greeks, and it was in the Ionian provinces of
+Asia Minor that the most splendid examples of its use are to be found
+(Halicarnassus, Miletus, Priene, Ephesus), while the most graceful and
+perfect are those of Doric-Ionic Attica.
+
+ [Footnote 8: As contended by W. H. Goodyear in his _Grammar of
+ the Lotus_.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 30.--GREEK CORINTHIAN ORDER.
+ (From the monument of Lysicrates.)]
+
++THE CORINTHIAN ORDER.+ This was a late outgrowth of the Ionic rather
+than a new order, and up to the time of the Roman conquest was only used
+for monuments of small size (see Fig. 38). Its entablature in pure Greek
+examples was identical with the Ionic; the shaft and base were only
+slightly changed in proportion and detail. The capital, however, was a
+new departure, based probably on metallic embellishments of altars,
+pedestals, etc., of Ionic style. It consisted in the best examples of a
+high bell-shaped core surrounded by one or two rows of acanthus leaves,
+above which were pairs of branching scrolls meeting at the corners in
+spiral volutes. These served to support the angles of a moulded abacus
+with concave sides (Fig. 30). One example, from the Tower of the Winds
+(the clepsydra of Andronicus Cyrrhestes) at Athens, has only smooth
+pointed palm-leaves and no scrolls above a single row of acanthus
+leaves. Indeed, the variety and disparity among the different examples
+prove that we have here only the first steps toward the evolution of an
+independent order, which it was reserved for the Romans to fully
+develop.
+
+
++GREEK TEMPLES; THE TYPE.+ With the orders as their chief decorative
+element the Greeks built up a splendid architecture of religious and
+secular monuments. Their noblest works were temples, which they designed
+with the utmost simplicity of general scheme, but carried out with a
+mastery of proportion and detail which has never been surpassed. Of
+moderate size in most cases, they were intended primarily to enshrine
+the simulacrum of the deity, and not, like Christian churches, to
+accommodate great throngs of worshippers. Nor were they, on the other
+hand, sanctuaries designed, like those of Egypt, to exclude all but a
+privileged few from secret rites performed only by the priests and king.
+The statue of the deity was enshrined in a chamber, the _naos_ (see
+plan, Fig. 31), often of considerable size, and accessible to the public
+through a columnar porch the _pronaos_. A smaller chamber, the
+_opisthodomus_, was sometimes added in the rear of the main sanctuary,
+to serve as a treasury or depository for votive offerings. Together
+these formed a windowless structure called the _cella_, beyond which was
+the rear porch, the _posticum_ or _epinaos_. This whole structure was in
+the larger temples surrounded by a colonnade, the _peristyle_, which
+formed the most splendid feature of Greek architecture. The external
+aisle on either side of the cella was called the _pteroma_. A single
+gabled roof covered the entire building.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 31.--TYPES OF GREEK TEMPLE PLANS.
+ a, _In Antis_; b, _Prostyle_; c, _Amphiprostyle_; d, _Peripteral_
+ (_The Parthenon_); N, _Naos_; O, _Opisthodomus_; S, _Statue_.]
+
+The Greek colonnade was thus an exterior feature, surrounding the solid
+cella-wall instead of being enclosed by it as in Egypt. The temple was a
+public, not a royal monument; and its builders aimed, not as in Egypt at
+size and overwhelming sombre majesty, but rather at sunny beauty and the
+highest perfection of proportion, execution, and detail (Fig. 34).
+
+There were of course many variations of the general type just described.
+Each of these has received a special name, which is given below with
+explanations and is illustrated in Fig. 31.
+
+_In antis_; with a porch having two or more columns enclosed between the
+projecting side-walls of the cella.
+
+_Prostylar_ (or prostyle); with a columnar porch in front and no
+peristyle.
+
+_Amphiprostylar_ (or -style); with columnar porches at both ends but no
+peristyle.
+
+_Peripteral_; surrounded by columns.
+
+_Pseudoperipteral_; with false or engaged columns built into the walls
+of the cella, leaving no pteroma.
+
+_Dipteral_; with double lateral ranges of columns (see Fig. 39).
+
+_Pseudodipteral_; with a single row of columns on each side, whose
+distance from the wall is equal to two intercolumniations of the front.
+
+_Tetrastyle_, _hexastyle_, _octastyle_, _decastyle_, etc.; with four,
+six, eight, or ten columns in the end rows.
+
+
++CONSTRUCTION.+ All the temples known to us are of stone, though it is
+evident from allusions in the ancient writers that wood was sometimes
+used in early times. (See p. 62.) The finest temples, especially those
+of Attica, Olympia, and Asia Minor, were of marble. In Magna Græcia, at
+Assos, and in other places where marble was wanting, limestone,
+sandstone, or lava was employed and finished with a thin, fine stucco.
+The roof was almost invariably of wood and gabled, forming at the ends
+pediments decorated in most cases with sculpture. The disappearance of
+these inflammable and perishable roofs has given rise to endless
+speculations as to the lighting of the cellas, which in all known ruins,
+except one at Agrigentum, are destitute of windows. It has been
+conjectured that light was admitted through openings in the roof, and
+even that the central part of the cella was wholly open to the sky. Such
+an arrangement is termed _hypæthral_, from an expression used in a
+description by Vitruvius;[9] but this description corresponds to no
+known structure, and the weight of opinion now inclines against the use
+of the hypæthral opening, except possibly in one or two of the largest
+temples, in which a part of the cella in front of the statue may have
+been thus left open. But even this partial _hypæthros_ is not
+substantiated by direct evidence. It hardly seems probable that the
+magnificent chryselephantine statues of such temples were ever thus left
+exposed to the extremes of the climate, which are often severe even in
+Greece. In the model of the Parthenon designed by Ch. Chipiez for the
+Metropolitan Museum in New York, a small clerestory opening through the
+roof admits a moderate amount of light to the cella; but this ingenious
+device rests on no positive evidence (see Frontispiece). It seems on the
+whole most probable that the cella was lighted entirely by artificial
+illumination; but the controversy in its present state is and must be
+wholly speculative.
+
+ [Footnote 9: Lib. III., Cap. I.]
+
+The wooden roof was covered with tiles of terra-cotta or marble. It was
+probably ceiled and panelled on the under side, and richly decorated
+with color and gold. The pteroma had under the exterior roof a ceiling
+of stone or marble, deeply panelled between transverse architraves.
+
+The naos and opisthodomus being in the larger temples too wide to be
+spanned by single beams, were furnished with interior columns to afford
+intermediate support. To avoid the extremes of too great massiveness and
+excessive slenderness in these columns, they were built in two stages,
+and advantage was taken of this arrangement, in some cases, at least, to
+introduce lateral galleries into the naos.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 32.--CARVED ANTHEMION ORNAMENT. ATHENS.]
+
++SCULPTURE AND CARVING.+ All the architectural membering was treated
+with the greatest refinement of design and execution, and the aid of
+sculpture, both in relief and in the round, was invoked to give splendor
+and significance to the monument. The statue of the deity was the focus
+of internal interest, while externally, groups of statues representing
+the Olympian deities or the mythical exploits of gods, demigods, and
+heroes, adorned the gables. Relief carvings in the friezes and metopes
+commemorated the favorite national myths. In these sculptures we have
+the finest known adaptations of pure sculpture--_i.e._, sculpture
+treated as such and complete in itself--to an architectural framework.
+The noblest examples of this decorative sculpture are those of the
+Parthenon, consisting of figures in the full round from the pediments,
+groups in high relief from the metopes, and the beautiful frieze of the
+Panathenaic procession from the cella-wall under the pteroma ceiling.
+The greater part of these splendid works are now in the British Museum,
+whither they were removed by Lord Elgin in 1801. From Olympia, Ægina,
+and Phigaleia, other master-works of the same kind have been transferred
+to the museums of Europe. In the Doric style there was little carving
+other than the sculpture, the ornament being mainly polychromatic. Greek
+Ionic and Corinthian monuments, however, as well as minor works such as
+steles, altars, etc., were richly adorned with carved mouldings and
+friezes, festoons, acroteria, and other embellishments executed with the
+chisel. The anthemion ornament, a form related to the Egyptian lotus and
+Assyrian palmette, most frequently figures in these. It was made into
+designs of wonderful vigor and beauty (Fig. 32).
+
+
++DETAIL AND EXECUTION.+ In the handling and cutting of stone the Greeks
+displayed a surpassing skill and delicacy. While ordinarily they were
+content to use stones of moderate size, they never hesitated at any
+dimension necessary for proper effect or solid construction. The lower
+drums of the Parthenon peristyle are 6 feet 6½ inches in diameter, and
+2 feet 10 inches high, cut from single blocks of Pentelic marble. The
+architraves of the Propylæa at Athens are each made up of two lintels
+placed side by side, the longest 17 feet 7 inches long, 3 feet 10 inches
+high, and 2 feet 4 inches thick. In the colossal temples of Asia Minor,
+where the taste for the vast and grandiose was more pronounced, blocks
+of much greater size were used. These enormous stones were cut and
+fitted with the most scrupulous exactness. The walls of all important
+structures were built in regular courses throughout, every stone
+carefully bedded with extremely close joints. The masonry was usually
+laid up without cement and clamped with metal; there is no filling in
+with rubble and concrete between mere facings of cut stone, as in most
+modern work. When the only available stone was of coarse texture it was
+finished with a coating of fine stucco, in which sharp edges and minute
+detail could be worked.
+
+The details were, in the best period, executed with the most
+extraordinary refinement and care. The profiles of capitals and
+mouldings, the carved ornament, the arrises of the flutings, were cut
+with marvellous precision and delicacy. It has been rightly said that
+the Greeks “built like Titans and finished like jewellers.” But this
+perfect finish was never petty nor wasted on unworthy or vulgar design.
+The just relation of scale between the building and all its parts was
+admirably maintained; the ornament was distributed with rare judgment,
+and the vigor of its design saved it from all appearance of triviality.
+
+The sensitive taste of the Greeks led them into other refinements than
+those of mere mechanical perfection. In the Parthenon especially, but
+also in lesser degree in other temples, the seemingly straight lines of
+the building were all slightly curved, and the vertical faces inclined.
+This was done to correct the monotony and stiffness of absolutely
+straight lines and right angles, and certain optical illusions which
+their acute observation had detected. The long horizontal lines of the
+stylobate and cornice were made convex upward; a similar convexity in
+the horizontal corona of the pediment counteracted the seeming concavity
+otherwise resulting from its meeting with the multiplied inclined lines
+of the raking cornice. The columns were almost imperceptibly inclined
+toward the cella, and the corner intercolumniations made a trifle
+narrower than the rest; while the vertical lines of the arrises of the
+flutings were made convex outward with a curve of the utmost beauty and
+delicacy. By these and other like refinements there was imparted to the
+monument an elasticity and vigor of aspect, an elusive and surprising
+beauty impossible to describe and not to be explained by the mere
+composition and general proportions, yet manifest to every cultivated
+eye.[10]
+
+ [Footnote 10: These refinements, first noticed by Allason in
+ 1814, and later confirmed by Cockerell and Haller as to the
+ columns, were published to the world in 1838 by Hoffer, verified
+ by Penrose in 1846, and further developed by the investigations
+ of Ziller and later observers.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+GREEK ARCHITECTURE--_Continued_.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Same as for Chapter VI. Also, Bacon and Clarke,
+ _Investigations at Assos_. Espouy, _Fragments d’architecture
+ antique_. Harrison and Verrall, _Mythology and Monuments of
+ Ancient Athens_. Hitorff et Zanth, _Recueil des Monuments de
+ Ségeste et Sélinonte_. Magne, _Le Parthénon_. Koldewey and
+ Puchstein, _Die griechischen Tempel in Unteritalien und Sicilien_.
+ Waldstein, _The Argive Heræum_.
+
+
++HISTORIC DEVELOPMENT.+ The history of Greek architecture, subsequent to
+the Heroic or Primitive Age, may be divided into periods as follows:
+
+The ARCHAIC; from 650 to 500 B.C.
+
+The TRANSITIONAL; from 500 to 460 B.C., or to the revival of prosperity
+after the Persian wars.
+
+The PERICLEAN; from 460 to 400 B.C.
+
+The FLORID or ALEXANDRIAN; from 400 to 300 B.C.
+
+The DECADENT; 300 to 100 B.C.
+
+The ROMAN; 100 B.C. to 200 A.D.
+
+These dates are, of course, somewhat arbitrary; it is impossible to set
+exact bounds to style-periods, which must inevitably overlap at certain
+points, but the dates, as given above, will assist in distinguishing the
+successive phases of the history.
+
+
++ARCHAIC PERIOD.+ The archaic period is characterized by the exclusive
+use of the Doric order, which appears in the earliest monuments complete
+in all its parts, but heavy in its proportions and coarse in its
+execution. The oldest known temples of this period are the +Apollo
+Temple+ at Corinth (650 B.C.?), and the +Northern Temple+ on the
+acropolis at +Selinus+ in Sicily (cir. 610-590 B.C.). They are both of a
+coarse limestone covered with stucco. The columns are low and massive
+(4⅓ to 4⅔ diameters in height), widely spaced, and carry a very high
+entablature. The triglyphs still appear around the cella wall under the
+pteroma ceiling, an illogical detail destined to disappear in later
+buildings. Other temples at Selinus date from the middle or latter part
+of the sixth century; they have higher columns and finer profiles than
+those just mentioned. The great +Temple of Zeus+ at +Selinus+ was the
+earliest of five colossal Greek temples of very nearly identical
+dimensions; it measured 360 feet by 167 feet in plan, but was never
+completed. During the second half of the sixth century important Doric
+temples were built at Pæstum in South Italy, and Agrigentum in Sicily;
+the somewhat primitive temple at Assos in Asia Minor, with uncouth
+carvings of centaurs and monsters on its architrave, belongs to this
+same period. The +Temple of Zeus+ at +Agrigentum+ (Fig. 33) is another
+singular and exceptional design, and was the second of the five colossal
+temples mentioned above. The pteroma was entirely enclosed by walls with
+engaged columns showing externally, and was of extraordinary width. The
+walls of the narrow cella were interrupted by heavy piers supporting
+atlantes, or applied statues under the ceiling. There seem to have been
+windows between these figures, but it is not clear whence they borrowed
+their light, unless it was admitted by the omission of the metopes
+between the external triglyphs.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 33.--TEMPLE OF ZEUS. AGRIGENTUM.]
+
+
++THE TRANSITION.+ During the transitional period there was a marked
+improvement in the proportions, detail, and workmanship of the temples.
+The cella was made broader, the columns more slender, the entablature
+lighter. The triglyphs disappeared from the cella wall, and sculpture of
+a higher order enhanced the architectural effect. The profiles of the
+mouldings and especially of the capitals became more subtle and refined
+in their curves, while the development of the Ionic order in important
+monuments in Asia Minor was preparing the way for the splendors of the
+Periclean age. Three temples especially deserve notice: the +Athena
+Temple+ on the island of +Ægina+, the +Temple of Zeus+ at +Olympia+, and
+the so-called +Theseum+--perhaps a temple of Heracles--in Athens. They
+belong to the period 470-450 B.C.; they are all hexastyle and
+peripteral, and without triglyphs on the cella wall. Of the three the
+second in the list is interesting as the scene of those rites which
+preceded and accompanied the Panhellenic Olympian games, and as the
+central feature of the Altis, the most complete temple-group and
+enclosure among all Greek remains. It was built of a coarse
+conglomerate, finished with fine stucco, and embellished with sculpture
+by the greatest masters of the time. The adjacent +Heraion+ (temple of
+Hera) was a highly venerated and ancient shrine, originally built with
+wooden columns which, according to Pausanias, were replaced one by one,
+as they decayed, by stone columns. The truth of this statement is
+attested by the discovery of a singular variety of capitals among its
+ruins, corresponding to the various periods at which they were added.
+The Theseum is the most perfectly preserved of all Greek temples, and in
+the refinement of its forms is only surpassed by those of the Periclean
+age.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 34.--RUINS OF THE PARTHENON.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 35.--PLAN OF ERECHTHEUM.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 36.--WEST END OF ERECHTHEUM, RESTORED.]
+
++THE PERICLEAN AGE.+ The Persian wars may be taken as the dividing line
+between the Transition period and the Periclean age. The _élan_ of
+national enthusiasm that followed the expulsion of the invader, and the
+glory and wealth which accrued to Athens as the champion of all Hellas,
+resulted in a splendid reconstruction of the Attic monuments as well as
+a revival of building activity in Asia Minor. By the wise administration
+of Pericles and by the genius of Ictinus, Phidias, and other artists of
+surpassing skill, the Acropolis at Athens was crowned with a group of
+buildings and statues absolutely unrivalled. Chief among them was the
++Parthenon+, the shrine of Athena Parthenos, which the critics of all
+schools have agreed in considering the most faultless in design and
+execution of all buildings erected by man (Figs. 31, 34, and
+Frontispiece). It was an octastyle peripteral temple, with seventeen
+columns on the side, and measured 220 by 100 feet on the top of the
+stylobate. It was the work of Ictinus and Callicrates, built to enshrine
+the noble statue of the goddess by Phidias, a standing chryselephantine
+figure forty feet high. It was the masterpiece of Greek architecture not
+only by reason of its refinements of detail, but also on account of the
+beauty of its sculptural adornments. The frieze about the cella wall
+under the pteroma ceiling, representing in low relief with masterly
+skill the Panathenaic procession; the sculptured groups in the metopes,
+and the superb assemblages of Olympic and symbolic figures of colossal
+size in the pediments, added their majesty to the perfection of the
+architecture. Here also the horizontal curvatures and other refinements
+are found in their highest development. Northward from it, upon the
+Acropolis, stood the +Erechtheum+, an excellent example of the
+Attic-Ionic style (Figs. 35, 36). Its singular irregularities of plan
+and level, and the variety of its detail, exhibit in a striking way the
+Greek indifference to mere formal symmetry when confronted by practical
+considerations. The motive in this case was the desire to include in one
+design several existing and venerated shrines to Attic deities and
+heroes--Athena Polias, Poseidon, Pandrosus, Erechtheus, Boutes, etc.
+Begun by unknown architects in 479 B.C., and not completed until 408
+B.C., it remains in its ruin still one of the most interesting and
+attractive of ancient buildings. Its two colonnades of differing design,
+its beautiful north doorway, and the unique and noble caryatid porch or
+balcony on the south side are unsurpassed in delicate beauty combined
+with vigor of design.[11] A smaller monument of the Ionic order, the
+amphiprostyle temple to +Nike Apteros+--the Wingless Victory--stands on
+a projecting spur of the Acropolis to the southwest. It measures only 27
+feet by 18 feet in plan; the cella is nearly square; the columns are
+sturdier than those of the Erechtheum, and the execution of the monument
+is admirable. It was the first completed of the extant buildings of the
+group of the Acropolis and dates from 466 B.C.
+
+ [Footnote 11: See Appendix, p. 427.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 37.--PROPYLÆA AT ATHENS. PLAN.]
+
+In the +Propylæa+ (Fig. 37), the monumental gateway to the Acropolis,
+the Doric and Ionic orders appear to have been combined for the first
+time (437 to 432 B.C.). It was the master work of Mnesicles. The front
+and rear façades were Doric hexastyles; adjoining the front porch were
+two projecting lateral wings employing a smaller Doric order. The
+central passageway led between two rows of Ionic columns to the rear
+porch, entered by five doorways and crowned, like the front, with a
+pediment. The whole was executed with the same splendor and perfection
+as the other buildings of the Acropolis, and was a worthy gateway to the
+group of noble monuments which crowned that citadel of the Attic
+capital. The two orders were also combined in the temple of +Apollo
+Epicurius+ at +Phigalæa+ (Bassæ). This temple was erected in 430 B.C. by
+Ictinus, who used the Ionic order internally to decorate a row of
+projecting piers instead of free-standing columns in the naos, in which
+there was also a single Corinthian column of rather archaic design,
+which may have been used as a support for a statue or votive offering.
+
+
++ALEXANDRIAN AGE.+ A period of reaction followed the splendid
+architectural activity of the Periclean age. A succession of disastrous
+wars--the Sicilian, Peloponnesian, and Corinthian--drained the energies
+and destroyed the peace of European Greece for seventy-five years,
+robbing Athens of her supremacy and inflicting wounds from which she
+never recovered. In the latter part of the fourth century, however, the
+triumph of the Macedonian empire over all the Mediterranean lands
+inaugurated a new era of architectural magnificence, especially in Asia
+Minor. The keynote of the art of this time was splendor, as that of the
+preceding age was artistic perfection. The Corinthian order came into
+use, as though the Ionic were not rich enough for the sumptuous taste of
+the time, and capitals and bases of novel and elaborate design
+embellished the Ionic temples of Asia Minor. In the temple of +Apollo
+Didymæus+ at Miletus, the plinths of the bases were made octagonal and
+panelled with rich scroll-carvings; and the piers which buttressed the
+interior faces of the cella-walls were given capitals of singular but
+elegant form, midway between the Ionic and Corinthian types. This temple
+belongs to the list of colossal edifices already referred to; its
+dimensions were 366 by 163 feet, making it the largest of them all. The
+famous +Artemisium+ (temple of Artemis or Diana) measured 342 by 163
+feet. Several of the columns of the latter were enriched with sculptured
+figures encircling the lower drums of the colossal shafts. The most
+lavish expenditure was bestowed upon small structures, shrines, and
+sarcophagi. The graceful monument still visible in Athens, erected by
+the choragus Lysicrates in token of his victory in the choral
+competitions, belongs to this period (330 B.C.). It is circular, with a
+slightly domical imbricated roof, and is decorated with elegant engaged
+Corinthian columns (Fig. 38). In the Imperial Museum at Constantinople
+are several sarcophagi of this period found at Sidon, but executed by
+Greek artists, and of exceptional beauty. They are in the form of
+temples or shrines; the finest of them, supposed by some to have been
+made for Alexander’s favorite general Perdiccas, and by others for the
+Persian satrap who figures prominently on its sculptured reliefs, is the
+most sumptuous work of the kind in existence. The exquisite polychromy
+of its beautiful reliefs and the perfection of its rich details of
+cornice, pediment, tiling, and crestings, make it an exceedingly
+interesting and instructive example of the minor architecture of the
+period.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 38.--CHORAGIC MONUMENT OF LYSICRATES.
+ (Restored model, N.Y.)]
+
+
++THE DECADENCE.+ After the decline of Alexandrian magnificence Greek art
+never recovered its ancient glory, but the flame was not suddenly
+extinguished. While in Greece proper the works of the second and third
+centuries B.C., are for the most part weak and lifeless, like the +Stoa
+of Attalus+ (175 B.C.) and the +Tower of the Winds+ (the Clepsydra of
+Andronicus Cyrrhestes, 100 B.C.) at Athens or the Portico of Philip in
+Delos, there were still a few worthy works built in Asia Minor. The
+splendid +Altar+ erected at +Pergamon+ by Eumenes II. (circ. 180 B.C.)
+in the Ionic order, combined sculpture of extraordinary vigor with
+imposing architecture in masterly fashion. At +Aizanoi+ an Ionic +Temple
+to Zeus+, by some attributed to the Roman period, but showing rather the
+character of good late Greek work, deserves mention for its elegant
+details, and especially for its frieze-decoration of acanthus leaves and
+scrolls resembling those of a Corinthian capital.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 39.--TEMPLE OF OLYMPIAN ZEUS. ATHENS.]
+
++ROMAN PERIOD.+ During this period, _i.e._, throughout the second and
+first centuries B.C., the Roman dominion was spreading over Greek
+territory, and the structures erected subsequent to the conquest partake
+of the Roman character and mingle Roman conceptions with Greek details
+and _vice versâ_. The temple of the +Olympian Zeus+ at Athens (Fig. 39),
+a mighty dipteral Corinthian edifice measuring 354 by 171 feet, standing
+on a vast terrace or temenos surrounded by a buttressed wall, was begun
+by Antiochus Epiphanes (170 B.C.) on the site of an earlier unfinished
+Doric temple of the time of Pisistratus, and carried out under the
+direction of the Roman architect, Cossutius. It was not, however,
+finally completed until the time of Hadrian, 130 A.D. Meanwhile Sulla
+had despoiled it of several columns[12] which he carried to Rome (86
+B.C.), to use in the rebuilding of the temple of Jupiter on the Capitol,
+where they undoubtedly served as models in the development of the Roman
+Corinthian order. The columns were 57 feet high, with capitals of the
+most perfect Corinthian type; fifteen are now standing, and one lies
+prostrate near by. To the Roman period also belong the +Agora Gate+
+(circ. 35 B.C.), the +Arch of Hadrian+ (117 A.D.), the +Odeon of
+Regilla+ or of Herodes Atticus (143 A.D.), at Athens, and many temples
+and tombs, theatres, arches, etc., in the Greek provinces.
+
+ [Footnote 12: L. Bevier, in _Papers of the American Classical
+ School at Athens_ (vol. i., pp. 195, 196), contends that these
+ were columns left from the old Doric temple. This is untenable,
+ for Sulla would certainly not have taken the trouble to carry
+ away archaic Doric columns, with such splendid Corinthian columns
+ before him.]
+
+
++SECULAR MONUMENTS; PROPYLÆA.+ The stately gateway by which the
+Acropolis was entered has already been described. It was the noblest and
+most perfect of a class of buildings whose prototype is found in the
+monumental columnar porches of the palace-group at Persepolis. The
+Greeks never used the arch in these structures, nor did they attach to
+them the same importance as did most of the other nations of antiquity.
+The Altis of Olympia, the national shrine of Hellenism, appears to have
+had no central gateway of imposing size, but a number of insignificant
+entrances disposed at random. The +Propylæa+ of +Sunium+, +Priene+ and
++Eleusis+ are the most conspicuous, after those of the Athenian
+Acropolis. Of these the Ionic gateway at Priene is the finest, although
+the later of the two at Eleusis is interesting for its anta-capitals.
+(_Anta_ = a flat pilaster decorating the end of a wing-wall and treated
+with a base and capital usually differing from those of the adjacent
+columns.) These are of Corinthian type, adorned with winged horses,
+scrolls, and anthemions of an exuberant richness of design,
+characteristic of this late period.
+
+
++COLONNADES, STOÆ.+ These were built to connect public monuments (as the
+Dionysiac theatre and Odeon at Athens); or along the sides of great
+public squares, as at Assos and Olympia (the so-called +Echo Hall+); or
+as independent open public halls, as the +Stoa Diple+ at Thoricus. They
+afforded shelter from sun and rain, places for promenading, meetings
+with friends, public gatherings, and similar purposes. They were rarely
+of great size, and most of them are of rather late date, though the
+archaic structure at Pæstum, known as the +Basilica+, was probably in
+reality an open hall of this kind.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 40.--PLAN OF GREEK THEATRE.
+ o, _Orchestra_; l, _Logeion_; p, _Paraskenai_; _s, s_, _Stoa_.]
+
++THEATRES, ODEONS.+ These were invariably cut out of the rocky
+hillsides, though in a few cases (Mantinæa, Myra, Antiphellus) a part of
+the seats were sustained by a built-up substructure and walls to eke out
+the deficiency of the hill-slope under them. The front of the excavation
+was enclosed by a stage and a set scene or background, built up so as to
+leave somewhat over a semicircle for the _orchestra_ or space enclosed
+by the lower tier of seats (Fig. 40). An altar to Dionysus (Bacchus) was
+the essential feature in the foreground of the orchestra, where the
+Dionysiac choral dance was performed. The seats formed successive steps
+of stone or marble sweeping around the sloping excavation, with carved
+marble thrones for the priests, archons, and other dignitaries. The only
+architectural decoration of the theatre was that of the set scene or
+_skene_, which with its wing-walls (_paraskenai_) enclosing the stage
+(_logeion_) was a permanent structure of stone or marble adorned with
+doors, cornices, pilasters, etc. This has perished in nearly every case;
+but at Aspendus, in Asia Minor, there is one still fairly well
+preserved, with a rich architectural decoration on its inner face. The
+extreme diameter of the theatres varied greatly; thus at Aizanoi it is
+187 feet, and at Syracuse 495 feet. The theatre of Dionysus at Athens
+(finished 325 B.C.) could accommodate thirty thousand spectators.
+
+The odeon differed from the theatre principally in being smaller and
+entirely covered in by a wooden roof. The +Odeon of Regilla+, built by
+Herodes Atticus in Athens (143 A.D.), is a well-preserved specimen of
+this class, but all traces of its cedar ceiling and of its intermediate
+supports have disappeared.
+
+
++BUILDINGS FOR ATHLETIC CONTESTS.+ These comprised stadia and
+hippodromes for races, and gymnasia and palæstræ for individual
+exercise, bathing, and amusement. The _stadia_ and _hippodromes_ were
+oblong enclosures surrounded by tiers of seats and without conspicuous
+architectural features. The _palæstra_ or _gymnasium_--for the terms are
+not clearly distinguished--was a combination of courts, chambers, tanks
+(_piscinæ_) for bathers and _exedræ_ or semicircular recesses provided
+with tiers of seats for spectators and auditors, destined not merely for
+the exercises of athletes preparing for the stadium, but also for the
+instruction and diversion of the public by recitations, lectures, and
+discussions. It was the prototype of the Roman thermæ, but less
+imposing, more simple in plan and adornment. Every Greek city had one or
+more of them, but they have almost wholly disappeared, and the brief
+description by Vitruvius and scanty remains at Alexandria Troas and
+Ephesus furnish almost the only information we possess regarding their
+form and arrangement.
+
+
++TOMBS.+ These are not numerous, and the most important are found in
+Asia Minor. The greatest of these is the famed +Mausoleum+ at
+Halicarnassus in Caria, the monument erected to the king Mausolus by his
+widow Artemisia (354 B.C.; Fig. 41). It was designed by Satyrus and
+Pythius in the Ionic style, and comprised a podium or base 50 feet high
+and measuring 80 feet by 100 feet, in which was the sepulchre. Upon this
+base stood a cella surrounded by thirty-six Ionic columns; and crowned
+by a pyramidal roof, on the peak of which was a colossal marble quadriga
+at a height of 130 feet. It was superbly decorated by Scopas and other
+great sculptors with statues, marble lions, and a magnificent frieze.
+The British Museum possesses fragments of this most imposing monument.
+At Xanthus the +Nereid Monument+, so called from its sculptured figures
+of Nereides, was a somewhat similar design on a smaller scale, with
+sixteen Ionic columns. At Mylassa was another tomb with an open
+Corinthian colonnade supporting a roof formed in a stepped pyramid. Some
+of the later rock-cut tombs of Lycia at Myra and Antiphellus may also be
+counted as Hellenic works.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 41.--MAUSOLEUM AT HALICARNASSUS.
+ (As restored by the author.)]
+
+
++DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE.+ This never attained great importance in Greece,
+and our knowledge of the typical Greek house is principally derived from
+literary sources. Very few remains of Greek houses have been found
+sufficiently well preserved to permit of restoring even the plan. It is
+probable that they resembled in general arrangement the houses of
+Pompeii (see p. 107); but that they were generally insignificant in size
+and decoration. The exterior walls were pierced only by the entrance
+doors, all light being derived from one or more interior courts. In the
+Macedonian epoch there must have been greater display and luxury in
+domestic architecture, but no remains have come down to us of sufficient
+importance or completeness to warrant further discussion.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS.+ In addition to those already mentioned in the text
+ the following should be enumerated:
+
+ PREHISTORIC PERIOD. In the Islands about Santorin, remains of
+ houses antedating 1500 B.C.; at Tiryns the Acropolis, walls, and
+ miscellaneous ruins; the like also at Mycenæ, besides various
+ tombs; walls and gates at Samos, Thoricus, Menidi, Athens, etc.
+
+ ARCHAIC PERIOD. Doric Temples at Metapontium (by Durm assigned to
+ 610 B.C.), Selinus, Agrigentum, Pæstum; at Athens the first
+ Parthenon; in Asia Minor the primitive Ionic Artemisium at Ephesus
+ and the Heraion at Samos, the latter the oldest of colossal Greek
+ temples.
+
+ TRANSITIONAL PERIOD. At Agrigentum, temples of Concord, Castor and
+ Pollux, Demeter, Æsculapius, all circ. 480 B.C.; temples at
+ Selinus and Segesta.
+
+ PERICLEAN PERIOD. In Athens the Ionic temple on the Illissus,
+ destroyed during the present century; on Cape Sunium the temple of
+ Athena, 430 B.C., partly standing; at Nemea, the temple of Zeus;
+ at Tegea, the temple of Athena Elea (400? B.C.); at Rhamnus, the
+ temples of Themis and of Nemesis; at Argos, two temples, stoa, and
+ other buildings; all these were Doric.
+
+ ALEXANDRIAN PERIOD. The temple of Dionysus at Teos; temple of
+ Artemis Leucophryne at Magnesia, both about 330 B.C. and of the
+ Ionic order.
+
+ DECADENCE AND ROMAN PERIOD. At Athens the Stoa of Eumenes, circ.
+ 170 B.C.; the monument of Philopappus on the Museum hill, 110
+ A.D.; the Gymnasium of Hadrian, 114 to 137 A.D.; the last two of
+ the Corinthian order.
+
+ THEATRES. Besides those already mentioned there are important
+ remains of theatres at Epidaurus, Argos, Segesta, Iassus (400?
+ B.C.), Delos, Sicyon, and Thoricus; at Aizanoi, Myra, Telmissus,
+ and Patara, besides many others of less importance scattered
+ through the Hellenic world. At Taormina are extensive ruins of a
+ large Greek theatre rebuilt in the Roman period.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ROMAN ARCHITECTURE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Anderson and Spiers, Baumeister,
+ Reber. Choisy, _L’Art de bâtir chez les Romains_. Desgodetz, _Rome
+ in her Ancient Grandeur_. Durm, _Die Baukunst der Etrusker_; _Die
+ Baukunst der Romer_. Lanciani, _Ancient Rome in the Light of
+ Modern Discovery_; _New Tales of Old Rome_; _Ruins and Excavations
+ of Ancient Rome_. De Martha, _Archéologie étrusque et romaine_.
+ Middleton, _Ancient Rome in 1888_.
+
+
++LAND AND PEOPLE.+ The geographical position of Italy conferred upon her
+special and obvious advantages for taking up and carrying northward and
+westward the arts of civilization. A scarcity of good harbors was the
+only drawback amid the blessings of a glorious climate, fertile soil,
+varied scenery, and rich material resources. From a remote antiquity
+Dorian colonists had occupied the southern portion and the island of
+Sicily, enriching them with splendid monuments of Doric art; and
+Phœnician commerce had brought thither the products of Oriental art and
+industry. The foundation of Rome in 753 B.C. established the nucleus
+about which the sundry populations of Italy were to crystallize into the
+Roman nation, under the dominating influence of the Latin element. Later
+on, the absorption of the conquered Etruscans added to this composite
+people a race of builders and engineers, as yet rude and uncouth in
+their art, but destined to become a powerful factor in developing the
+new architecture that was to spring from the contact of the practical
+Romans with the noble art of the Greek centres.
+
+
++GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS.+ While the Greeks bequeathed to posterity the
+most perfect models of form in literary and plastic art, it was reserved
+for the Romans to work out the applications of these to every-day
+material life. The Romans were above all things a practical people.
+Their consummate skill as organizers is manifest in the marvellous
+administrative institutions of their government, under which they united
+the most distant and diverse nationalities. Seemingly deficient in
+culture, they were yet able to recast the forms of Greek architecture in
+new moulds, and to evolve therefrom a mighty architecture adapted to
+wholly novel conditions. They brought engineering into the service of
+architecture, which they fitted to the varied requirements of
+government, public amusement, private luxury, and the common comfort.
+They covered the antique world with arches and amphitheatres, with
+villas, baths, basilicas, and temples, all bearing the unmistakable
+impress of Rome, though wrought by artists and artisans of divers races.
+Only an extraordinary genius for organization could have accomplished
+such results.
+
+The architects of Rome marvellously extended the range of their art, and
+gave it a flexibility by which it accommodated itself to the widest
+variety of materials and conditions. They made the arch and vault the
+basis of their system of design, employing them on a scale previously
+undreamed of, and in combinations of surpassing richness and majesty.
+They systematized their methods of construction so that soldiers and
+barbarians could execute the rough mass of their buildings, and
+formulated the designing of the decorative details so that artisans of
+moderate skill could execute them with good effect. They carried the
+principle of repetition of motives to its utmost limit, and sought to
+counteract any resulting monotony by the scale and splendor of the
+design. Above all they developed planning into a fine art, displaying
+their genius in a wonderful variety of combinations and in an unfailing
+sense of the demands of constructive propriety, practical convenience,
+and artistic effect. Where Egyptian or Greek architecture shows one type
+of plan, the Roman shows a score.
+
+
++GREEK INFLUENCE.+ Previous to the closing years of the Republic the
+Romans had no art but the Etruscan. The few buildings of importance they
+possessed were of Etruscan design and workmanship, excepting a small
+number built by Greek hands. It was not until the Empire that Roman
+architecture took on a truly national form. True Roman architecture is
+essentially imperial. The change from the primitive Etruscan style to
+the splendors of the imperial age was due to the conquest of the Greek
+states. Not only did the Greek campaigns enrich Rome with an
+unprecedented wealth of artistic spoils; they also brought into Italy
+hosts of Greek artists, and filled the minds of the campaigners with the
+ambition to realize in their own dominions the marble colonnades, the
+temples, theatres, and propylæa of the Greek cities they had pillaged.
+The Greek orders were adopted, altered, and applied to arcaded designs
+as well as to peristyles and other open colonnades. The marriage of the
+column and arch gave birth to a system of forms as characteristic of
+Roman architecture as the Doric or Ionic colonnade is of the Greek.
+
+
++THE ROMAN ORDERS.+ To meet the demands of Roman taste the Etruscan
+column was retained with its simple entablature; the Doric and Ionic
+were adopted in a modified form; the Corinthian was developed into a
+complete and independent order, and the Composite was added to the list.
+A regular system of proportions for all these five orders was gradually
+evolved, and the mouldings were profiled with arcs of circles instead of
+the subtler Greek curves. In the building of many-storied structures the
+orders were superposed, the more slender over the sturdier, in an
+orderly and graded succession. The immense extent and number of the
+Roman buildings, the coarse materials often used, the relative scarcity
+of highly trained artisans, and above all, the necessity of making a
+given amount of artistic design serve for the largest possible amount of
+architecture, combined to direct the designing of detail into uniform
+channels. Thus in time was established a sort of canon of proportions,
+which was reduced to rules by Vitruvius, and revived in much more
+detailed and precise form by Vignola in the sixteenth century.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 42.--ROMAN DORIC ORDER.
+ (THEATRE OF MARCELLUS).]
+
+In each of the orders, including the Doric, the column was given a base
+one half of a diameter in height (the unit of measurement being the
+diameter of the lower part of the shaft, the _crassitudo_ of Vitruvius).
+The shaft was made to contract about one-sixth in diameter toward the
+capital, under which it was terminated by an _astragal_ or collar of
+small mouldings; at the base it ended in a slight flare and fillet
+called the _cincture_. The entablature was in all cases given not far
+from one quarter the height of the whole column. The +Tuscan+ order was
+a rudimentary or Etruscan Doric with a column seven diameters high and a
+simple entablature without triglyphs, mutules, or dentils. But few
+examples of its use are known. The +Doric+ (Fig. 42) retained the
+triglyphs and metopes, the mutules and guttæ of the Greek; but the
+column was made eight diameters high, the shaft was smooth or had deep
+flutings separated by narrow fillets, and was usually provided with a
+simple moulded base on a square plinth. Mutules were used only over the
+triglyphs, and were even replaced in some cases by dentils; the corona
+was made lighter than the Greek, and a cymatium replaced the antefixæ on
+the lateral cornices. The Ionic underwent fewer changes, and these
+principally in the smaller mouldings and details of the capital. The
+column was nine diameters high (Fig. 43). The +Corinthian+ was made into
+an independent order by the designing of a special base of small _tori_
+and _scotiæ_, and by sumptuously carved _modillions_ or brackets
+enriching the cornice and supporting the corona above a denticulated
+bed-mould (Fig. 44). Though the first designers of the modillion were
+probably Greeks, it must, nevertheless, be taken as really a Roman
+device, worthily completing the essentially Roman Corinthian order. The
++Composite+ was formed by combining into one capital portions of the
+Ionic and Corinthian, and giving to it a simplified form of the
+Corinthian cornice. The Corinthian order remained, however, the favorite
+order of Roman architecture.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 43.--ROMAN IONIC ORDER.]
+
+
++USE OF THE ORDERS.+ The Romans introduced many innovations in the
+general use and treatment of the orders. Monolithic shafts were
+preferred to those built up of superposed drums. The fluting was omitted
+on these, and when hard and semi-precious stone like porphyry or
+verd-antique was the material, it was highly polished to bring out its
+color. These polished monoliths were often of great size, and they were
+used in almost incredible numbers.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 44.--CORINTHIAN ORDER
+ (TEMPLE OF CASTOR AND POLLUX).]
+
+Another radical departure from Greek usage was the mounting of columns
+on pedestals to secure greater height without increasing the size of the
+column and its entablature. The Greek _anta_ was developed into the
+Roman pilaster or flattened wall-column, and every free column, or range
+of columns perpendicular to the façade, had its corresponding pilaster
+to support the wall-end of the architrave. But the most radical
+innovation was the general use of engaged columns as wall-decorations or
+buttresses. The engaged column projected from the wall by more than half
+its diameter, and was built up with the wall as a part of its substance
+(Fig. 45). The entablature was in many cases advanced only over the
+columns, between which it was set back almost to the plane of the wall.
+This practice is open to the obvious criticism that it makes the column
+appear superfluous by depriving it of its function of supporting the
+continuous entablature. The objection has less weight when the
+projecting entablature over the column serves as a pedestal for a statue
+or similar object, which restores to the column its function as a
+support (see the Arch of Constantine, Fig. 63).
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 45.--ROMAN ARCADE WITH ENGAGED COLUMNS
+ (From the Colosseum.)]
+
++ARCADES.+ The orders, though probably at first used only as free
+supports in porticos and colonnades, were early applied as decorations
+to arcaded structures. This practice became general with the
+multiplication of many-storied arcades like those of the amphitheatres,
+the engaged columns being set between the arches as buttresses,
+supporting entablatures which marked the divisions into stories (Fig.
+45). This combination has been assailed as a false and illogical device,
+but the criticism proceeds from a too narrow conception of architectural
+propriety. It is defensible upon both artistic and logical grounds; for
+it not only furnishes a most desirable play of light and shade and a
+pleasing contrast of rectangular and curved lines, but by emphasizing
+the constructive divisions and elements of the building and the vertical
+support of the piers, it also contributes to the expressiveness and
+vigor of the design.
+
+
++VAULTING.+ The Romans substituted vaulting in brick, concrete, or
+masonry for wooden ceilings wherever possible, both in public and
+private edifices. The Etruscans were the first vault-builders, and the
+Cloaca Maxima, the great sewer of Republican Rome (about 500 B.C.) still
+remains as a monument of their engineering skill. Probably not only
+Etruscan engineers (whose traditions were perhaps derived from Asiatic
+sources in the remote past), but Asiatic builders also from conquered
+eastern provinces, were engaged together in the development of the
+wonderful system of vaulted construction to which Roman architecture so
+largely owed its grandeur. Three types of vault were commonly used: the
+barrel-vault, the groined or four-part vault, and the dome.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 46.--BARREL VAULT.]
+
+The barrel vault (Fig. 46) was generally semi-cylindrical in section,
+and was used to cover corridors and oblong halls, like the
+temple-cellas, or was bent around a curve, as in amphitheatre passages.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 47.--GROINED VAULT.
+ _g, g_, _Groins._]
+
+The groined vault is formed by the intersection of two barrel-vaults
+(Fig. 47). When several compartments of groined vaulting are placed
+together over an oblong plan, a double advantage is secured. Lateral
+windows can be carried up to the full height of the vaulting instead of
+being stopped below its springing; and the weight and thrust of the
+vaulting are concentrated upon a number of isolated points instead of
+being exerted along the whole extent of the side walls, as with the
+barrel-vault. The Romans saw that it was sufficient to dispose the
+masonry at these points in masses at right angles to the length of the
+hall, to best resist the lateral thrust of the vault. This appears
+clearly in the plan of the Basilica of Constantine (Fig. 58).
+
+The dome was in almost all Roman examples supported on a circular wall
+built up from the ground, as in the Pantheon (Fig. 54). The pendentive
+dome, sustained by four or eight arches over a square or octagonal plan,
+is not found in true Roman buildings.
+
+The Romans made of the vault something more than a mere constructive
+device. It became in their hands an element of interior effect at least
+equally important with the arch and column. No style of architecture has
+ever evolved nobler forms of ceiling than the groined vault and the
+dome. Moreover, the use of vaulting made possible effects of
+unencumbered spaciousness and amplitude which could never be compassed
+by any combination of piers and columns. It also assured to the Roman
+monuments a duration and a freedom from danger of destruction by fire
+impossible with any wooden-roofed architecture, however noble its form
+or careful its execution.
+
+
++CONSTRUCTION.+ The constructive methods of the Romans varied with the
+conditions and resources of different provinces, but were everywhere
+dominated by the same practical spirit. Their vaulted architecture
+demanded for the support of its enormous weights and for resistance to
+its disruptive thrusts, piers and buttresses of great mass. To construct
+these wholly of cut stone appeared preposterous and wasteful to the
+Roman. Italy abounds in clay, lime, and a volcanic product, _pozzolana_
+(from Puteoli or Pozzuoli, where it has always been obtained in large
+quantities), which makes an admirable hydraulic cement. With these
+materials it was possible to employ unskilled labor for the great bulk
+of this massive masonry, and to erect with the greatest rapidity and in
+the most economical manner those stupendous piles which, even in their
+ruin, excite the admiration of every beholder.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 48.--ROMAN WALL MASONRY.
+ a, _Brickwork_; b, _Tufa ashlar_; r, _Opus reticulatum_;
+ i, _Opus incertum_.]
+
++STONE, CONCRETE, AND BRICK MASONRY.+ For buildings of an externally
+decorative character such as temples, arches of triumph, and
+amphitheatres, as well as in all places where brick and concrete were
+not easily obtained, stone was employed. The walls were built by laying
+up the inner and outer faces in _ashlar_ or cut stone, and filling in
+the intermediate space with rubble (random masonry of uncut stone) laid
+up in cement, or with concrete of broken stone and cement dumped into
+the space in successive layers. The cement converted the whole into a
+conglomerate closely united with the face-masonry. In Syria and Egypt
+the local preference for stones of enormous size was gratified, and even
+surpassed, as in Herod’s terrace-walls for the temple at Jerusalem
+(p. 41), and in the splendid structures of Palmyra and Baalbec. In
+Italy, however, stones of moderate size were preferred, and when blocks
+of unusual dimensions occur, they are in many cases marked with false
+joints, dividing them into apparently smaller blocks, lest they should
+dwarf the building by their large scale. The general use in the Augustan
+period of marble for a decorative lining or wainscot in interiors led in
+time to the objectionable practice of coating buildings of concrete with
+an apparel of sham marble masonry, by carving false joints upon an
+external veneer of thin slabs of that material. Ordinary concrete walls
+were frequently faced with small blocks of tufa, called, according to
+the manner of its application, _opus reticulatum_, _opus incertum_,
+_opus spicatum_, etc. (Fig. 48). In most cases, however, the facing was
+of carefully executed brickwork, covered sometimes by a coating of
+stucco. The bricks were large, measuring from one to two feet square
+where used for quoins or arches, but triangular where they served only
+as facings. Bricks were also used in the construction of skeleton ribs
+for concrete vaults of large span.
+
+
++VAULTING.+ Here, as in the wall-masonry, economy and common sense
+devised methods extremely simple for accomplishing vast designs. While
+the smaller vaults were, so to speak, cast in concrete upon moulds made
+of rough boards, the enormous weight of the larger vaults precluded
+their being supported, while drying or “setting,” upon timber centrings
+built up from the ground. Accordingly, a skeleton of light ribs was
+first built on wooden centrings, and these ribs, when firmly “set,”
+became themselves supports for intermediate centrings on which to cast
+the concrete fillings between the ribs. The whole vault, once hardened,
+formed really a monolithic curved lintel, exerting no thrust whatever,
+so that the extraordinary precautions against lateral disruption
+practised by the Romans were, in fact, in many cases quite superfluous.
+
+
++DECORATION.+ The temple of Castor and Pollux in the Forum (long
+miscalled the temple of Jupiter Stator), is a typical example of Roman
+architectural decoration, in which richness was preferred to the subtler
+refinements of design (see Fig. 44). The splendid figure-sculpture which
+adorned the Greek monuments would have been inappropriate on the
+theatres and thermæ of Rome or the provinces, even had there been the
+taste or the skill to produce it. Conventional carved ornament was
+substituted in its place, and developed into a splendid system of highly
+decorative forms. Two principal elements appear in this decoration--the
+acanthus-leaf, as the basis of a whole series of wonderfully varied
+motives; and symbolism, represented principally by what are technically
+termed _grotesques_--incongruous combinations of natural forms, as when
+an infant’s body terminates in a bunch of foliage (Fig. 49). Only to a
+limited extent do we find true sculpture employed as decoration, and
+that mainly for triumphal arches or memorial columns.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 49--ROMAN CARVED ORNAMENT.
+ (Lateran Museum.)]
+
+The architectural mouldings were nearly always carved, the Greek
+water-leaf and egg-and-dart forming the basis of most of the
+enrichments; but these were greatly elaborated and treated with more
+minute detail than the Greek prototypes. Friezes and bands were commonly
+ornamented with the foliated scroll or _rinceau_ (a convenient French
+term for which we have no equivalent). This motive was as characteristic
+of Roman art as the anthemion was of the Greek. It consists of a
+continuous stem throwing out alternately on either side branches which
+curl into spirals and are richly adorned with rosettes, acanthus-leaves,
+scrolls, tendrils, and blossoms. In the best examples the detail was
+modelled with great care and minuteness, and the motive itself was
+treated with extraordinary variety and fertility of invention. A derived
+and enriched form of the anthemion was sometimes used for bands and
+friezes; and grotesques, dolphins, griffins, infant genii, wreaths,
+festoons, ribbons, eagles, and masks are also common features in Roman
+relief carving.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 50.--ROMAN CEILING PANELS.
+ (a, From Palmyra; b, Basilica of Constantine.)]
+
+The Romans made great use of panelling and of moulded plaster in their
+interior decoration, especially for ceilings. The panelling of domes and
+vaults was usually roughly shaped in their first construction and
+finished afterward in stucco with rich moulding and rosettes. The panels
+were not always square or rectangular, as in Greek ceilings, but of
+various geometric forms in pleasing combinations (Fig. 50). In works of
+a small scale the panels and decorations were wrought in relief in a
+heavy coating of plaster applied to the finished structure, and these
+stucco reliefs are among the most refined and charming products of Roman
+art. (Baths of Titus; Baths at Pompeii; Palace of the Cæsars and tombs
+at Rome.)
+
+
++COLOR DECORATION.+ Plaster was also used as a ground for painting,
+executed in distemper or by the encaustic process, wax liquefied by a
+hot iron being the medium for applying the color in the latter case.
+Pompeii and Herculaneum furnish countless examples of brilliant
+wall-painting in which strong primary colors form the ground, and a
+semi-naturalistic, semi-fantastic representation of figures,
+architecture and landscape is mingled with festoons, vines, and purely
+conventional ornament. Mosaic was also employed to decorate floors and
+wall-spaces, and sometimes for ceilings.[13] The later imperial baths
+and palaces were especially rich in mosaic of the kind called opus
+Grecanicum, executed with numberless minute cubes of stone or glass, as
+in the Baths of Caracalla and the Villa of Hadrian at Tivoli.
+
+ [Footnote 13: See Van Dyke’s _History of Paintings_, p. 33.]
+
+To the walls of monumental interiors, such as temples, basilicas, and
+thermæ, splendor of color was given by veneering them with thin slabs of
+rare and richly colored marble. No limit seems to have been placed upon
+the costliness or amount of these precious materials. Byzantine
+architecture borrowed from this practice its system of interior color
+decoration.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ROMAN ARCHITECTURE--_Continued_.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Same as for Chapter VIII. Also, Guhl and
+ Kohner, _Life of the Ancient Greeks and Romans_. Adams, _Ruins of
+ the Palace of Spalato_. Burn, _Rome and the Campagna_. Cameron,
+ _Roman Baths_. Mau, tr. by Kelcey, _Pompeii, its Life and Art_.
+ Mazois, _Ruines de Pompeii_. Von Presuhn, _Die neueste
+ Ausgrabungen zu Pompeii_. Wood, _Ruins of Palmyra and Baalbec_.
+
+
++THE ETRUSCAN STYLE.+ Although the first Greek architects were employed
+in Rome as early as 493 B.C., the architecture of the Republic was
+practically Etruscan until nearly 100 B.C. Its monuments, consisting
+mainly of city walls, tombs, and temples, are all marked by a general
+uncouthness of detail, denoting a lack of artistic refinement, but they
+display considerable constructive skill. In the Etruscan walls we meet
+with both polygonal and regularly coursed masonry; in both kinds the
+true arch appears as the almost universal form for gates and openings.
+A famous example is the Augustan Gate at Perugia, a late work rebuilt
+about 40 B.C., but thoroughly Etruscan in style. At Volaterræ (Volterra)
+is another arched gate, and in Perugia fragments of still another appear
+built into the modern walls.
+
+The Etruscans built both structural and excavated tombs; they consisted
+in general of a single chamber with a slightly arched or gabled roof,
+supported in the larger tombs on heavy square piers. The interiors were
+covered with pictures; externally there was little ornament except about
+the gable and doorway. The latter had a stepped or moulded frame with
+curious _crossettes_ or ears projecting laterally at the top. The gable
+recalled the wooden roofs of Etruscan temples, but was coarse in detail,
+especially in its mouldings. Sepulchral monuments of other types are
+also met with, such as _cippi_ or memorial pillars, sometimes in groups
+of five on a single pedestal (tomb at Albano).
+
+Among the temples of Etruscan style that of +Jupiter Capitolinus+ on the
+Capitol at Rome, destroyed by fire in 80 B.C., was the chief. Three
+narrow chambers side by side formed a cella nearly square in plan,
+preceded by a hexastyle porch of huge Doric, or rather Tuscan, columns
+arranged in three aisles, widely spaced and carrying ponderous wooden
+architraves. The roof was of wood; the cymatium and ornaments, as well
+as the statues in the pediment, were of terra-cotta, painted and gilded.
+The details in general showed acquaintance with Greek models, which
+appeared in debased and awkward imitations of triglyphs, cornices,
+antefixæ, etc.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 51.--TEMPLE FORTUNA VIRILIS. PLAN.]
+
++GREEK STYLE.+ The victories of Marcellus at Syracuse, 212 B.C., Fabius
+Maximus at Tarentum (209 B.C.), Flaminius (196 B.C.), Mummius (146
+B.C.), Sulla (86 B.C.), and others in the various Greek provinces,
+steadily increased the vogue of Greek architecture and the number of
+Greek artists in Rome. The temples of the last two centuries B.C., and
+some of earlier date, though still Etruscan in plan, were in many cases
+strongly Greek in the character of their details. A few have remained to
+our time in tolerable preservation. The temple of +Fortuna Virilis+
+(really of Fors Fortuna), of the second century (?) B.C., is a
+tetrastyle prostyle pseudoperipteral temple with a high _podium_ or
+base, a typical Etruscan cella, and a deep porch, now walled up, but
+thoroughly Greek in the elegant details of its Ionic order (Fig. 51).
+Two circular temples, both called erroneously +Temples of Vesta+, one at
+Rome near the Cloaca Maxima, the other at Tivoli, belong among the
+monuments of Greek style. The first was probably dedicated to Hercules,
+the second probably to the Sibyls; the latter being much the better
+preserved of the two. Both were surrounded by peristyles of eighteen
+Corinthian columns, and probably covered by domical roofs with gilded
+bronze tiles. The Corinthian order appears here complete with its
+modillion cornice, but the crispness of the detail and the fineness of
+the execution are Greek and not Roman. These temples date from about 72
+B.C., though the one at Rome was probably rebuilt in the first century
+A.D. (Fig. 52).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 52.--CIRCULAR TEMPLE. TIVOLI.]
+
+
++IMPERIAL ARCHITECTURE; AUGUSTAN AGE.+ Even in the temples of Greek
+style Roman conceptions of plan and composition are dominant. The Greek
+architect was not free to reproduce textually Greek designs or details,
+however strongly he might impress with the Greek character whatever he
+touched. The demands of imperial splendor and the building of great
+edifices of varied form and complex structure, like the thermæ and
+amphitheatres, called for new adaptations and combinations of planning
+and engineering. The reign of Augustus (27 B.C.-14 A.D.) inaugurated the
+imperial epoch, but many works erected before and after his reign
+properly belong to the Augustan age by right of style. In general, we
+find in the works of this period the happiest combination of Greek
+refinement with Roman splendor. It was in this period that Rome first
+assumed the aspect of an opulent and splendid metropolis, though the way
+had been prepared for this by the regularization and adornment of the
+Roman Forum and the erection of many temples, basilicas, fora, arches,
+and theatres during the generation preceding the accession of Augustus.
+His reign saw the inception or completion of the portico of Octavia, the
+Augustan forum, the Septa Julia, the first Pantheon, the adjoining
+Thermæ of Agrippa, the theatre of Marcellus, the first of the imperial
+palaces on the Palatine, and a long list of temples, including those of
+the Dioscuri (Castor and Pollux), of Mars Ultor, of Jupiter Tonans on
+the Capitol, and others in the provinces; besides colonnades, statues,
+arches, and other embellishments almost without number.
+
+
++LATER IMPERIAL WORKS.+ With the successors of Augustus splendor
+increased to almost fabulous limits, as, for instance, in the vast
+extent and the prodigality of ivory and gold in the famous Golden House
+of Nero. After the great fire in Rome, presumably kindled by the agents
+of this emperor, a more regular and monumental system of street-planning
+and building was introduced, and the first municipal building-law was
+decreed by him. To the reign of Vespasian (68-79 A.D.) we owe the
+rebuilding in Roman style and with the Corinthian order of the temple of
+Jupiter Capitolinus, the Baths of Titus, and the beginning of the
+Flavian amphitheatre or Colosseum. The two last-named edifices both
+stood on the site of Nero’s Golden House, of which the greater part was
+demolished to make way for them. During the last years of the first
+century the arch of Titus was erected, the Colosseum finished,
+amphitheatres built at Verona, Pola, Reggio, Tusculum, Nîmes (France),
+Constantine (Algiers), Pompeii and Herculanum (these last two cities and
+Stabiæ rebuilt after the earthquake of 63 A.D.), and arches, bridges,
+and temples erected all over the Roman world.
+
+The first part of the second century was distinguished by the splendid
+architectural achievements of the reign of Hadrian (117-138 A.D.) in
+Rome and the provinces, especially Athens. Nearly all his works were
+marked by great dignity of conception as well as beauty of detail.
+During the latter part of the century a very interesting series of
+buildings were erected in the Hauran (Syria), in which Greek and Arab
+workmen under Roman direction produced examples of vigorous stone
+architecture of a mingled Roman and Syrian character.
+
+The most-remarkable thermæ of Rome belong to the third century--those of
+Caracalla (211-217 A.D.) and of Diocletian (284-305 A.D.)--their ruins
+to-day ranking among the most imposing remains of antiquity. In Syria
+the temples of the Sun at Baalbec and Palmyra (273 A.D., under
+Aurelian), and the great palace of Diocletian at Spalato, in Dalmatia
+(300 A.D.), are still the wonder of the few travellers who reach those
+distant spots.
+
+While during the third and fourth centuries there was a marked decline
+in purity and refinement of detail, many of the later works of the
+period display a remarkable freedom and originality in conception. But
+these works are really not Roman, they are foreign, that is, provincial
+products; and the transfer of the capital to Byzantium revealed the
+increasing degree in which Rome was coming to look to the East for her
+strength and her art.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 53.--TEMPLE OF VENUS AND ROME. PLAN.]
+
++TEMPLES.+ The Romans built both rectangular and circular temples, and
+there was much variety in their treatment. In the rectangular temples a
+high _podium_, or basement, was substituted for the Greek stepped
+stylobate, and the prostyle plan was more common than the peripteral.
+The cella was relatively short and wide, the front porch inordinately
+deep, and frequently divided by longitudinal rows of columns into three
+aisles. In most cases the exterior of the cella in prostyle temples was
+decorated by engaged columns. A barrel vault gave the interior an aspect
+of spaciousness impossible with the Greek system of a wooden ceiling
+supported on double ranges of columns. In the place of these, free or
+engaged columns along the side-walls received the ribs of the vaulting.
+Between these ribs the ceiling was richly panelled, or coffered and
+sumptuously gilded. The temples of +Fortuna Virilis+ and of +Faustina+
+at Rome (the latter built 141 A.D., and its ruins incorporated into the
+modern church of S. Lorenzo in Miranda), and the beautiful and admirably
+preserved +Maison Carrée+, at Nîmes (France) (4 A.D.) are examples of
+this type. The temple of +Concord+, of which only the podium remains,
+and the small temple of Julius (both of these in the Forum) illustrate
+another form of prostyle temple in which the porch was on a long side of
+the cella. Some of the larger temples were peripteral. The temple of the
++Dioscuri+ (Castor and Pollux) in the Forum, was one of the most
+magnificent of these, certainly the richest in detail (Fig. 44). Very
+remarkable was the double temple of +Venus and Rome+, east of the Forum,
+designed by the Emperor Hadrian about 130 A.D. (Fig. 53). It was a vast
+pseudodipteral edifice containing two cellas in one structure, their
+statue-niches or apses meeting back to back in the centre. The temple
+stood in the midst of an imposing columnar peribolus entered by
+magnificent gateways. Other important temples have already been
+mentioned on p. 91.
+
+Besides the two circular temples already described, the temple of Vesta,
+adjoining the House of the Vestals, at the east end of the Forum should
+be mentioned. At Baalbec is a circular temple whose entablature curves
+inward between the widely-spaced columns until it touches the cella in
+the middle of each intercolumniation. It illustrates the caprices of
+design which sometimes resulted from the disregard of tradition and the
+striving after originality (273 A.D.).
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 54.--PLAN OF THE PANTHEON.]
+
++THE PANTHEON.+ The noblest of all circular temples of Rome and of the
+world was the +Pantheon+. It was built by Hadrian, 117-138 A.D., on the
+site of the earlier rectangular temple of the same name erected by
+Agrippa. It measures 142 feet in diameter internally; the wall is 20
+feet thick and supports a hemispherical dome rising to a height of 140
+feet (Figs. 54, 55). Light is admitted solely through a round opening 28
+feet in diameter at the top of the dome, the simplest and most
+impressive method of illumination conceivable. The rain and snow that
+enter produce no appreciable effect upon the temperature of the vast
+hall. There is a single entrance, with noble bronze doors, admitting
+directly to the interior, around which seven niches, alternately
+rectangular and semicircular in plan and fronted by Corinthian columns,
+lighten, without weakening, the mass of the encircling wall. This wall
+was originally incrusted with rich marbles, and the great dome, adorned
+with deep coffering in rectangular panels, was decorated with rosettes
+and mouldings in gilt stucco. The dome appears to have been composed of
+numerous arches and ribs, filled in and finally coated with concrete.
+A recent examination of a denuded portion of its inner surface has
+convinced the writer that the interior panelling was executed after, and
+not during, its construction, by hewing the panels out of the mass of
+brick and concrete, without regard to the form and position of the
+origin skeleton of ribs.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 55.--INTERIOR OF THE PANTHEON.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 56.--EXTERIOR OF THE PANTHEON.
+ (From model in Metropolitan Museum, New York.)]
+
+The exterior (Fig. 56) was less successful than the interior. The gabled
+porch of twelve superb granite columns 50 feet high, three-aisled in
+plan after the Etruscan mode, and covered originally by a ceiling of
+bronze, was a rebuilding with the materials and on the plan of the
+original pronaos of the Pantheon of Agrippa. The circular wall behind it
+is faced with fine brickwork, and displays, like the dome, many curious
+arrangements of discharging arches, reminiscences of traditional
+constructive precautions here wholly useless and fictitious because only
+skin-deep. A revetment of marble below and plaster above once concealed
+this brick facing. The portico, in spite of its too steep gable (once
+filled with a “gigantomachia” in gilt bronze) and its somewhat awkward
+association with a round building, is nevertheless a noble work, its
+capitals in Pentelic marble ranking among the finest known examples of
+the Roman Corinthian. Taken as a whole, the Pantheon is one of the great
+masterpieces of the world’s architecture.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 57.--FORUM AND BASILICA OF TRAJAN.]
+
++FORA AND BASILICAS.+ The fora were the places for general public
+assemblage. The chief of those in Rome, the +Forum Magnum+, or +Forum
+Romanum+, was at first merely an irregular vacant space, about and in
+which, as the focus of the civic life, temples, halls, colonnades, and
+statues gradually accumulated. These chance aggregations the systematic
+Roman mind reduced in time to orderly and monumental form; successive
+emperors extended them and added new fora at enormous cost and with
+great splendor of architecture. Those of Julius, Augustus, Vespasian,
+and Nerva (or Domitian), adjoining the Roman Forum, were magnificent
+enclosures surrounded by high walls and single or double colonnades.
+Each contained a temple or basilica, besides gateways, memorial columns
+or arches, and countless statues. The +Forum of Trajan+ surpassed all
+the rest; it covered an area of thirty-five thousand square yards, and
+included, besides the main area, entered through a triumphal arch, the
+Basilica Ulpia, the temple of Trajan, and his colossal Doric column of
+Victory. Both in size and beauty it ranked as the chief architectural
+glory of the city (Fig. 57). The six fora together contained thirteen
+temples, three basilicas, eight triumphal arches, a mile of porticos,
+and a number of other public edifices.[14] Besides these, a net-work of
+colonnades covered large tracts of the city, affording sheltered
+communication in every direction, and here and there expanding into
+squares or gardens surrounded by peristyles.
+
+ [Footnote 14: Lanciani: _Ancient Rome in the Light of Recent
+ Discoveries_, p. 89.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 58.--BASILICA OF CONSTANTINE. PLAN.]
+
+The public business of Rome, both judicial and commercial, was largely
+transacted in the _basilicas_, large buildings consisting usually of a
+wide and lofty central nave flanked by lower side-aisles, and
+terminating at one or both ends in an apse or semicircular recess called
+the _tribune_, in which were the seats for the magistrates. The
+side-aisles were separated from the nave by columns supporting a
+clearstory wall, pierced by windows above the roofs of the side-aisles.
+In some cases the latter were two stories high, with galleries; in
+others the central space was open to the sky, as at Pompeii, suggesting
+the derivation of the basilica from the open square surrounded by
+colonnades, or from the forum itself, with which we find it usually
+associated. The most important basilicas in Rome were the +Sempronian+,
+the +Æmilian+ (about 54 B.C.), the +Julian+ in the Forum Magnum (51
+B.C.), and the +Ulpian+ in the Forum of Trajan (113 A.D.). The last two
+were probably open basilicas, only the side-aisles being roofed. The
+Ulpian (Fig. 57) was the most magnificent of all, and in conjunction
+with the Forum of Trajan formed one of the most imposing of those
+monumental aggregations of columnar architecture which contributed so
+largely to the splendor of the Roman capital.
+
+These monuments frequently suffered from the burning of their wooden
+roofs. It was Constantine who completed the first vaulted and fireproof
+basilica, begun by his predecessor and rival, Maxentius, on the site of
+the former Temple of Peace (Figs. 58, 59). Its design reproduced on a
+grand scale the plan of the tepidarium-halls of the thermæ, the
+side-recesses of which were converted into a continuous side-aisle by
+piercing arches through the buttress-walls that separated them. Above
+the imposing vaults of these recesses and under the cross-vaults of the
+nave were windows admitting abundant light. A _narthex_, or porch,
+preceded the hall at one end; there were also a side entrance from the
+Via Sacra, and an apse or tribune for the magistrates opposite each of
+these entrances. The dimensions of the main hall (325 × 85 feet), the
+height of its vault (117 feet), and the splendor of its columns and
+incrustations excited universal admiration, and exercised a powerful
+influence on later architecture.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 59.--BASILICA OF CONSTANTINE. RUINS.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 60.--THERMÆ OF CARACALLA.
+ PLAN OF CENTRAL BLOCK.
+ A, _Caldarium, or Hot Bath_; B, _Intermediate Chamber_;
+ C, _Tepidarium, or Warm Bath_; D, _Frigidarium, or Cold Bath_;
+ E, _Peristyles_; a, _Gymnastic Rooms_; b, _Dressing Rooms_;
+ c, _Cooling Rooms_; d, _Small Courts_; e, _Entrances_;
+ v, _Vestibules_.]
+
++THERMÆ.+ The leisure of the Roman people was largely spent in the great
+baths, or _thermæ_, which took the place substantially of the modern
+club. The establishments erected by the emperors for this purpose were
+vast and complex congeries of large and small halls, courts, and
+chambers, combined with a masterly comprehension of artistic propriety
+and effect in the sequence of oblong, square, oval, and circular
+apartments, and in the relation of the greater to the lesser masses.
+They were a combination of the Greek _palæstra_ with the Roman _balnea_,
+and united in one harmonious design great public swimming-baths, private
+baths for individuals and families, places for gymnastic exercises and
+games, courts, peristyles, gardens, halls for literary entertainments,
+lounging-rooms, and all the complex accommodation required for the
+service of the whole establishment. They were built with apparent
+disregard of cost, and adorned with splendid extravagance. The earliest
+were the +Baths of Agrippa+ (27 B.C.) behind the Pantheon; next may be
+mentioned those of +Titus+, built on the substructions of Nero’s Golden
+House. The remains of the +Thermæ of Caracalla+ (211 A.D.) form the most
+extensive mass of ruins in Rome, and clearly display the admirable
+planning of this and similar establishments. A gigantic block of
+buildings containing the three great halls for cold, warm, and hot
+baths, stood in the centre of a vast enclosure surrounded by private
+baths, _exedræ_, and halls for lecture-audiences and other gatherings.
+The enclosure was adorned with statues, flower-gardens, and places for
+out-door games. The +Baths of Diocletian+ (302 A.D.) embodied this
+arrangement on a still more extensive scale; they could accommodate
+3,500 bathers at once, and their ruins cover a broad territory near the
+railway terminus of the modern city. The church of S. Maria degli Angeli
+was formed by Michael Angelo out of the _tepidarium_ of these
+baths--a colossal hall 340 × 87 feet, and 90 feet high. The original
+vaulting and columns are still intact, and the whole interior most
+imposing, in spite of later stucco disfigurements. The circular
+_laconicum_ (sweat-room) serves as the porch to the present church. It
+was in the building of these great halls that Roman architecture reached
+its most original and characteristic expression. Wholly unrelated to any
+foreign model, they represent distinctively Roman ideals, both as to
+plan and construction.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 61.--ROMAN THEATRE. (HERCULANUM.)
+ (From model.)]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 62.--COLOSSEUM. HALF PLAN.]
+
++PLACES OF AMUSEMENT.+ The earliest Roman theatres differed from the
+Greek in having a nearly semicircular plan, and in being built up from
+the level ground, not excavated in a hillside (Fig. 61). The first
+theatre was of wood, built by Mummius 145 B.C., and it was not until
+ninety years later that stone was first substituted for the more
+perishable material, in the theatre of Pompey. The +Theatre of
+Marcellus+ (23-13 B.C.) is in part still extant, and later theatres in
+Pompeii, Orange (France), and in the Asiatic provinces are in excellent
+preservation. The orchestra was not, as in the Greek theatre, reserved
+for the choral dance, but was given up to spectators of rank; the stage
+was adorned with a permanent architectural background of columns and
+arches, and sometimes roofed with wood, and an arcade or colonnade
+surrounded the upper tier of seats. The amphitheatre was a still more
+distinctively Roman edifice. It was elliptical in plan, surrounding an
+elliptical arena, and built up with continuous encircling tiers of
+seats. The earliest stone amphitheatre was erected by Statilius Taurus
+in the time of Augustus. It was practically identical in design with the
+later and much larger Flavian amphitheatre, commonly known as the
++Colosseum+, begun by Vespasian and completed 82 A.D. (Fig. 62). This
+immense structure measured 607 × 506 feet in plan and was 180 feet high;
+it could accommodate eighty-seven thousand spectators. Engaged columns
+of the Tuscan, Ionic, and Corinthian orders decorated three stories of
+the exterior; the fourth was a nearly unbroken wall with slender
+Corinthian pilasters. Solidly constructed of travertine, concrete, and
+tufa, the Colosseum, with its imposing but monotonous exterior, almost
+sublime by its scale and seemingly endless repetition, but lacking in
+refinement or originality of detail and dedicated to bloody and cruel
+sports, was a characteristic product of the Roman character and
+civilization. At Verona, Pola, Capua, and many cities in the foreign
+provinces there are well-preserved remains of similar structures.
+
+Closely related to the amphitheatre were the circus and the stadium. The
++Circus Maximus+ between the Palatine and Aventine hills was the oldest
+of those in Rome. That erected by Caligula and Nero on the site
+afterward partly occupied by St. Peter’s, was more splendid, and is said
+to have been capable of accommodating over three hundred thousand
+spectators after its enlargement in the fourth century. The long, narrow
+race-course was divided into two nearly equal parts by a low parapet,
+the _spina_, on which were the goals (_metæ_) and many small decorative
+structures and columns. One end of the circus, as of the stadium also,
+was semicircular; the other was segmental in the circus, square in the
+stadium; a colonnade or arcade ran along the top of the building, and
+the entrances and exits were adorned with monumental arches.
+
+
++TRIUMPHAL ARCHES AND COLUMNS.+ Rome and the provincial cities abounded
+in monuments commemorative of victory, usually single or triple arches
+with engaged columns and rich sculptural adornments, or single colossal
+columns supporting statues. The arches were characteristic products of
+Roman design, and some of them deserve high praise for the excellence of
+their proportions and the elegance of their details. There were in Rome
+in the second century A.D., thirty-eight of these monuments. The +Arch
+of Titus+ (71-82 A.D.) is the simplest and most perfect of those still
+extant in Rome; the arch of +Septimius Severus+ in the Forum (203 A.D.)
+and that of +Constantine+ (330 A.D.) near the Colosseum, are more
+sumptuous but less pure in detail. The last-named was in part enriched
+with sculptures taken from the earlier arch of Trajan. The statues of
+Dacian captives on the attic (_attic_ = a species of subordinate story
+added above the main cornice) of this arch were a fortunate addition,
+furnishing a _raison-d’être_ for the columns and broken entablatures on
+which they rest. Memorial columns of colossal size were erected by
+several emperors, both in Rome and abroad. Those of +Trajan+ and of
++Marcus Aurelius+ are still standing in Rome in perfect preservation.
+The first was 140 feet high including the pedestal and the statue which
+surmounted it; its capital marked the height of the ridge levelled by
+the emperor for the forum on which the column stands. Its most striking
+peculiarity is the spiral band of reliefs winding around the shaft from
+bottom to top and representing the Dacian campaigns of Trajan. The other
+column is of similar design and dimensions, but greatly inferior to the
+first in execution. Both are really towers, with interior stair-cases
+leading to the top.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 63.--ARCH OF CONSTANTINE.
+ (From model in Metropolitan Museum, New York.)]
+
+
++TOMBS.+ The Romans developed no special and national type of tomb, and
+few of their sepulchral monuments were of large dimensions. The most
+important in Rome were the pyramid of +Caius Cestius+ (late first
+century B.C.), and the circular tombs of +Cecilia Metella+ (60 B.C.),
++Augustus+ (14 A.D.) and +Hadrian+, now the Castle of S. Angelo (138
+A.D.). The latter was composed of a huge cone of marble supported on a
+cylindrical structure 230 feet in diameter standing on a square podium
+300 feet long and wide. The cone probably once terminated in the gilt
+bronze pine-cone now in the Giardino della Pigna of the Vatican. In the
+Mausoleum of Augustus a mound of earth planted with trees crowned a
+similar circular base of marble on a podium 220 feet square, now buried.
+
+The smaller tombs varied greatly in size and form. Some were vaulted
+chambers, with graceful internal painted decorations of figures and vine
+patterns combined with low-relief enrichments in stucco. Others were
+designed in the form of altars or sarcophagi, as at Pompeii; while
+others again resembled ædiculæ, little temples, shrines, or small towers
+in several stories of arches and columns, as at St. Rémy (France).
+
+
++PALACES AND DWELLINGS.+ Into their dwellings the Romans carried all
+their love of ostentation and personal luxury. They anticipated in many
+details the comforts of modern civilization in their furniture, their
+plumbing and heating, and their utensils. Their houses may be divided
+into four classes: the palace, the villa, the _domus_ or ordinary house,
+and the _insula_ or many-storied tenement built in compact blocks. The
+first three alone concern us, and will be taken up in the above order.
+
+The imperial +palaces+ on the Palatine Hill comprised a wide range in
+style and variety of buildings, beginning with the first simple house of
+Augustus (26 B.C.), burnt and rebuilt 3 A.D. Tiberius, Caligula, and
+Nero added to the Augustan group; Domitian rebuilt a second time and
+enlarged the palace of Augustus, and Septimius Severus remodelled the
+whole group, adding to it his own extraordinary seven-storied palace,
+the Septizonium. The ruins of these successive buildings have been
+carefully excavated, and reveal a remarkable combination of
+dwelling-rooms, courts, temples, libraries, basilicas, baths, gardens,
+peristyles, fountains, terraces, and covered passages. These were
+adorned with a profusion of precious marbles, mosaics, columns, and
+statues. Parts of the demolished palace of Nero were incorporated in the
+substructions of the Baths of Titus. The beautiful arabesques and
+plaster reliefs which adorned them were the inspiration of much of the
+fresco and stucco decoration of the Italian Renaissance. At Spalato, in
+Dalmatia, are the extensive ruins of the great +Palace of Diocletian+,
+which was laid out on the plan of a Roman camp, with two intersecting
+avenues (Fig. 64). It comprised a temple, mausoleum, basilica, and other
+structures besides those portions devoted to the purposes of a royal
+residence.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 64.--PALACE OF DIOCLETIAN. SPALATO.]
+
+The +villa+ was in reality a country palace, arranged with special
+reference to the prevailing winds, exposure to the sun and shade, and
+the enjoyment of a wide prospect. Baths, temples, _exedræ_, theatres,
+tennis-courts, sun-rooms, and shaded porticoes were connected with the
+house proper, which was built around two or three interior courts or
+peristyles. Statues, fountains, and colossal vases of marble adorned the
+grounds, which were laid out in terraces and treated with all the
+fantastic arts of the Roman landscape-gardener. The most elaborate and
+extensive villa was that of +Hadrian+, at Tibur (Tivoli); its ruins,
+covering hundreds of acres, form one of the most interesting spots to
+visit in the neighborhood of Rome.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 65.--HOUSE OF PANSA, POMPEII.
+ s, _Shops_; v, _Vestibule_; f, _Family Rooms_; k, _Kitchen_;
+ l, _Lavarium_; _P, P, P_, _Peristyles_.]
+
+There are few remains in Rome of the +domus+ or private house. Two,
+however, have left remarkably interesting ruins--the +Atrium Vestæ+, or
+House of the Vestal Virgins, east of the Forum, a well-planned and
+extensive house surrounding a cloister or court; and the +House of
+Livia+, so-called, on the Palatine Hill, the walls and decorations of
+which are excellently preserved. The typical Roman house in a provincial
+town is best illustrated by the ruins of Pompeii and Herculanum, which,
+buried by an eruption of Vesuvius in 79 A.D., have been partially
+excavated since 1721. The Pompeiian house (Fig. 65) consisted of several
+courts or _atria_, some of which were surrounded by colonnades and
+called _peristyles_. The front portion was reserved for shops, or
+presented to the street a wall unbroken save by the entrance; all the
+rooms and chambers opened upon the interior courts, from which alone
+they borrowed their light. In the brilliant climate of southern Italy
+windows were little needed, as sufficient light was admitted by the
+door, closed only by portières for the most part; especially as the
+family life was passed mainly in the shaded courts, to which fountains,
+parterres of shrubbery, statues, and other adornments lent their
+inviting charm. The general plan of these houses seems to have been of
+Greek origin, as well as the system of decoration used on the walls.
+These, when not wainscoted with marble, were covered with fantastic, but
+often artistic, painted decorations, in which an imaginary architecture
+as of metal, a fantastic and arbitrary perspective, illusory pictures,
+and highly finished figures were the chief elements. These were executed
+in brilliant colors with excellent effect. The houses were lightly
+built, with wooden ceilings and roofs instead of vaulting, and usually
+with but one story on account of the danger from earthquakes. That the
+workmanship and decoration were in the capital often superior to what
+was to be found in a provincial town like Pompeii, is evidenced by
+beautiful wall-paintings and reliefs discovered in Rome in 1879 and now
+preserved in the Museo delle Terme. More or less fragmentary remains of
+Roman houses have been found in almost every corner of the Roman empire,
+but nowhere exhibiting as completely as in Pompeii the typical Roman
+arrangement.
+
+
++WORKS OF UTILITY.+ A word should be said about Roman engineering works,
+which in many cases were designed with an artistic sense of proportion
+and form which raises them into the domain of genuine art. Such were
+especially the bridges, in which a remarkable effect of monumental
+grandeur was often produced by the form and proportions of the arches
+and piers, and an appropriate use of rough and dressed masonry, as in
+the Pons Ælius (Ponte S. Angelo), the great bridge at Alcantara (Spain),
+and the Pont du Gard, in southern France. The aqueducts are impressive
+rather by their length, scale, and simplicity, than by any special
+refinements of design, except where their arches are treated with some
+architectural decoration to form gates, as in the Porta Maggiore, at
+Rome.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS:+ (Those which have no important extant remains are
+ given in italics.) TEMPLES: _Jupiter Capitolinus_, 600 B.C.;
+ _Ceres, Liber, and Libera_, 494 B.C. (ruins of later rebuilding in
+ S. Maria in Cosmedin); _first T. of Concord_ (rebuilt in Augustan
+ age), 254 B.C.; _first marble temple_ in _portico of Metellus_, by
+ a Greek, Hermodorus, 143 B.C.; temples of Fortune at Præneste and
+ at Rome, and of “Vesta” at Rome, 83-78 B.C.; of “Vesta” at Tivoli,
+ and of Hercules at Cori, 72 B.C.; _first Pantheon_, 27 B.C. In
+ Augustan Age temples of _Apollo_, Concord rebuilt, Dioscuri,
+ _Julius_, _Jupiter Stator_, _Jupiter Tonans_, Mars Ultor, Minerva
+ (_at Rome_ and Assisi), Maison Carrée at Nîmes, Saturn; at
+ Puteoli, Pola, etc. _T. of Peace_; _T. Jupiter Capitolinus_,
+ rebuilt 70 A.D.; temple at Brescia. Temple of Vespasian, 96 A.D.;
+ also _of Minerva_ in Forum of Nerva; _of Trajan_, 117 A.D.; second
+ Pantheon; T. of Venus and Rome at Rome, and of Jupiter Olympius at
+ Athens, 135-138 A.D.; Faustina, 141 A.D.; many in Syria; temples
+ of Sun at _Rome_, Baalbec, and Palmyra, cir. 273 A.D.; of Romulus,
+ 305 A.D. (porch S. Cosmo and Damiano). PLACES OF ASSEMBLY:
+ FORA--Roman, Julian, 46 B.C.; Augustan, 40-42 B.C.; _of Peace_, 75
+ A.D.; Nerva, 97 A.D.; Trajan (by Apollodorus of Damascus, 117 A.D.)
+ BASILICAS: _Sempronian_, _Æmilian_, 1st century B.C.; Julian, 51
+ B.C.; _Septa Julia_, 26 B.C.; the Curia, later rebuilt by
+ Diocletian, 300 A.D. (now Church of S. Adriano); _at Fano_, 20
+ A.D. (?); Forum and Basilica at Pompeii, 60 A.D.; of Trajan; of
+ Constantine, 310-324 A.D. THEATRES (th.) and AMPHITHEATRES (amp.):
+ th. _Pompey_, 55 B.C.; of _Balbus_ and of Marcellus, 13 B.C.; th.
+ and amp. at Pompeii and Herculanum; Colosseum at Rome, 78-82 A.D.;
+ th. at Orange and in Asia Minor; amp. at Albano, Constantine,
+ Nîmes, Petra, Pola, Reggio, Trevi, Tusculum, Verona, etc.; amp.
+ Castrense at Rome, 96 A.D. Circuses and stadia at Rome. THERMÆ: of
+ Agrippa, 27 B.C.; _of Nero_; of Titus, 78 A.D. _Domitian_, 90
+ A.D.; Caracalla, 211 A.D.; Diocletian, 305 A.D.; _Constantine_,
+ 320 A.D.; “Minerva Medica,” 3d or 4th century A.D. ARCHES: _of
+ Stertinius_, 196 B.C.; _Scipio_, 190 B.C.; _Augustus_, 30 B.C.;
+ Titus, 71-82 A.D.; _Trajan_, 117 A.D.; Severus, 203 A.D.;
+ Constantine, 320 A.D.; of Drusus, Dolabella, Silversmiths, 204
+ A.D.; Janus Quadrifrons, 320 A.D. (?); all at Rome. Others at
+ Benevento, Ancona, Rimini in Italy; also at Athens, and at Reims
+ and St. Chamas in France. Columns of Trajan, _Antoninus_, Marcus
+ Aurelius at Rome, others at Constantinople, Alexandria, etc.
+ TOMBS: along Via Appia and Via Latina, at Rome; Via Sacra at
+ Pompeii; tower-tombs at St. Rémy in France; rock-cut at Petra; at
+ Rome, of Caius Cestius and Cecilia Metella, 1st century B.C.; of
+ Augustus, 14 A.D.; Hadrian, 138 A.D. PALACES and PRIVATE HOUSES:
+ On Palatine, of Augustus, Tiberius, Nero, Domitian, Septimius
+ Severus, _Elagabalus_; Villa of Hadrian at Tivoli; palaces of
+ Diocletian at Spalato and _of Constantine_ at Constantinople.
+ House of Livia on Palatine (Augustan period); of Vestals, rebuilt
+ by Hadrian, cir. 120 A.D. Houses at Pompeii and Herculanum, cir.
+ 60-79 A.D.; Villas of Gordianus (“Tor’ de’ Schiavi,” 240 A.D.),
+ and _of Sallust_ at Rome and _of Pliny_ at Laurentium.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+EARLY CHRISTIAN ARCHITECTURE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Bunsen, _Die Basiliken christlichen Roms_.
+ Butler, _Architecture and other Arts in Northern Central Syria_.
+ Corroyer, _L’architecture romane_. Cummings, _A History of
+ Architecture in Italy_. Essenwein (Handbuch d. Architektur),
+ _Ausgänge der klassischen Baukunst_. Gutensohn u. Knapp,
+ _Denkmäler der christlichen Religion_. Hübsch, _Monuments de
+ l’architecture chrétienne_. Lanciani, _Pagan and Christian Rome_.
+ Mothes, _Die Basilikenform bei den Christen_, etc. Okely,
+ _Development of Christian Architecture in Italy_. Von Quast, _Die
+ altchristlichen Bauwerke zu Ravenna_. De Rossi, _Roma
+ Sotterranea_. De Vogüé, _Syrie Centrale_; _Églises de la Terre
+ Sainte_.
+
+
++INTRODUCTORY.+ The official recognition of Christianity in the year 328
+by Constantine simply legalized an institution which had been for three
+centuries gathering momentum for its final conquest of the antique
+world. The new religion rapidly enlisted in its service for a common
+purpose and under a common impulse races as wide apart in blood and
+culture as those which had built up the art of imperial Rome. It was
+Christianity which reduced to civilization in the West the Germanic
+hordes that had overthrown Rome, bringing their fresh and hitherto
+untamed vigor to the task of recreating architecture out of the decaying
+fragments of classic art. So in the East its life-giving influence awoke
+the slumbering Greek art-instinct to new triumphs in the arts of
+building, less refined and perfect indeed, but not less sublime than
+those of the Periclean age. Long before the Constantinian edict, the
+Christians in the Eastern provinces had enjoyed substantial freedom of
+worship. Meeting often in the private basilicas of wealthy converts, and
+finding these, and still more the great public basilicas, suited to the
+requirements of their worship, they early began to build in imitation of
+these edifices. There are many remains of these early churches in
+northern Africa and central Syria.
+
+
++EARLY CHRISTIAN ART IN ROME.+ This was at first wholly sepulchral,
+developing in the catacombs the symbols of the new faith. Once
+liberated, however, Christianity appropriated bodily for its public
+rites the basilica-type and the general substance of Roman architecture.
+Shafts and capitals, architraves and rich linings of veined marble, even
+the pagan Bacchic symbolism of the vine, it adapted to new uses in its
+own service. Constantine led the way in architecture, endowing Bethlehem
+and Jerusalem with splendid churches, and his new capital on the
+Bosphorus with the first of the three historic basilicas dedicated to
+the Holy Wisdom (Hagia Sophia). One of the greatest of innovators, he
+seems to have had a special predilection for circular buildings, and the
+tombs and baptisteries which he erected in this form, especially that
+for his sister Constantia in Rome (known as Santa Costanza, Fig. 66),
+furnished the prototype for numberless Italian baptisteries in later
+ages.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 66.--STA. COSTANZA, ROME.]
+
+The Christian basilica (see Figs. 67, 68) generally comprised a broad
+and lofty nave, separated by rows of columns from the single or double
+side-aisles. The aisles had usually about half the width and height of
+the nave, and like it were covered with wooden roofs and ceilings. Above
+the columns which flanked the nave rose the lofty clearstory wall,
+pierced with windows above the side-aisle roofs and supporting the
+immense trusses of the roof of the nave. The timbering of the latter was
+sometimes bare, sometimes concealed by a richly panelled ceiling,
+carved, gilded, and painted. At the further end of the nave was the
+sanctuary or apse, with the seats for the clergy on a raised platform,
+the _bema_, in front of which was the altar. Transepts sometimes
+expanded to right and left before the altar, under which was the
+_confessio_ or shrine of the titular saint or martyr.
+
+An _atrium_ or forecourt surrounded by a covered arcade preceded the
+basilica proper, the arcade at the front of the church forming a porch
+or _narthex_, which, however, in some cases existed without the atrium.
+The exterior was extremely plain; the interior, on the contrary, was
+resplendent with incrustations of veined marble and with sumptuous
+decorations in glass mosaic (called _opus Grecanicum_) on a blue or
+golden ground. Especially rich were the half-dome of the apse and the
+wall-space surrounding its arch and called the _triumphal arch_; next in
+decorative importance came the broad band of wall beneath the clearstory
+windows. Upon these surfaces the mosaic-workers wrought with minute
+cubes of colored glass pictures and symbols almost imperishable, in
+which the glow of color and a certain decorative grandeur of effect in
+the composition went far to atone for the uncouth drawing. With growing
+wealth and an increasingly elaborate ritual, the furniture and
+equipments of the church assumed greater architectural importance.
+A large rectangular space was retained for the choir in front of the
+bema, and enclosed by a breast-high parapet of marble, richly inlaid. On
+either side were the pulpits or _ambones_ for the Gospel and Epistle.
+A lofty canopy was built over the altar, the _baldaquin_, supported on
+four marble columns. A few basilicas were built with side-aisles, in two
+stories, as in S. Lorenzo and Sta. Agnese. Adjoining the basilica in the
+earlier examples were the baptistery and the tomb of the saint, circular
+or polygonal buildings usually; but in later times these were replaced
+by the font or baptismal chapel in the church and the _confessio_ under
+the altar.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 67.--PLAN OF THE BASILICA OF ST. PAUL.]
+
+Of the two Constantinian basilicas in Rome, the one dedicated to +St.
+Peter+ was demolished in the fifteenth century; that of +St. John
+Lateran+ has been so disfigured by modern alterations as to be
+unrecognizable. The former of the two adjoined the site of the martyrdom
+of St. Peter in the circus of Caligula and Nero; it was five-aisled, 380
+feet in length by 212 feet in width. The nave was 80 feet wide and 100
+feet high, and the disproportionately high clearstory wall rested on
+horizontal architraves carried by columns. The impressive dimensions and
+simple plan of this structure gave it a majesty worthy of its rank as
+the first church of Christendom. +St. Paul beyond the Walls+ (S. Paolo
+fuori le mura), built in 386 by Theodosius, resembled St. Peter’s
+closely in plan (Figs. 67, 68). Destroyed by fire in 1821, it has been
+rebuilt with almost its pristine splendor, and is, next to the modern
+St. Peter’s and the Pantheon, the most impressive place of worship in
+Rome. +Santa Maria Maggiore+,[15] though smaller in size, is more
+interesting because it so largely retains its original aspect, its
+Renaissance ceiling happily harmonizing with its simple antique lines.
+Ionic columns support architraves to carry the clearstory, as in St.
+Peter’s. In most other examples, St. Paul’s included, arches turned from
+column to column perform this function. The first known case of such use
+of classic columns as arch-bearers was in the palace of Diocletian at
+Spalato; it also appears in Syrian buildings of the third and fourth
+centuries A.D.
+
+ [Footnote 15: Hereafter the abbreviation S. M. will be generally
+ used instead of the name Santa Maria.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 68.--ST. PAUL BEYOND THE WALLS. INTERIOR.]
+
+The basilica remained the model for ecclesiastical architecture in Rome,
+without noticeable change either of plan or detail, until the time of
+the Renaissance. All the earlier examples employed columns and capitals
+taken from ancient ruins, often incongruous and ill-matched in size and
+order. +San Clemente+ (1084) has retained almost intact its early
+aspect, its choir-enclosure, baldaquin, and ambones having been well
+preserved or carefully restored. Other important basilicas are mentioned
+in the list of monuments on pages 118, 119.
+
+
++RAVENNA.+ The fifth and sixth centuries endowed Ravenna with a number
+of notable buildings which, with the exception of the cathedral,
+demolished in the last century, have been preserved to our day. Subdued
+by the Byzantine emperor Justinian in 537, Ravenna became the
+meeting-ground for Early Christian and Byzantine traditions and the
+basilican and circular plans are both represented. The two churches
+dedicated to St. Apollinaris, +S. Apollinare Nuovo+ (520) in the city,
+and +S. Apollinare in Classe+ (538) three miles distant from the city,
+in what was formerly the port, are especially interesting for their fine
+mosaics, and for the impost-blocks interposed above the capitals of
+their columns to receive the springing of the pier-arches. These blocks
+appear to be somewhat crude modifications of the fragmentary architraves
+or entablatures employed in classic Roman architecture to receive the
+springing of vaults sustained by columns, and became common in Byzantine
+structures (Fig. 73). The use of external arcading to give some slight
+adornment to the walls of the second of the above-named churches, and
+the round bell-towers of brick which adjoined both of them, were first
+steps toward the development of the “wall-veil” or arcaded decoration,
+and of the campaniles, which in later centuries became so characteristic
+of north Italian churches (see Chapter XIII.). In Rome the campaniles
+which accompany many of the mediæval basilicas are square and pierced
+with many windows.
+
+The basilican form of church became general in Italy, a large proportion
+of whose churches continued to be built with wooden roofs and with but
+slight deviations from the original type, long after the appearance of
+the Gothic style. The chief departures from early precedent were in the
+exterior, which was embellished with marble incrustations as in
+S. Miniato (Florence); or with successive stories of wall-arcades, as in
+many churches in Pisa and Lucca (see Fig. 90); until finally the
+introduction of clustered piers, pointed arches, and vaulting, gradually
+transformed the basilican into the Italian Romanesque and Gothic styles.
+
+
++SYRIA AND THE EAST.+ In Syria, particularly the central portion, the
+Christian architecture of the 3d to 8th centuries produced a number of
+very interesting monuments. The churches built by Constantine in
+Syria--the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem (nominally built by his
+mother), of the Ascension at Jerusalem, the magnificent octagonal church
+on the site of the Temple, and finally the somewhat similar church at
+Antioch--were the most notable Christian monuments in Syria. The first
+three on the list, still extant in part at least, have been so altered
+by later additions and restorations that their original forms are only
+approximately known from early descriptions. They were all of large
+size, and the octagonal church on the Temple platform was of exceptional
+magnificence.[16] The columns and a part of the marble incrustations of
+the early design are still visible in the “Mosque of Omar,” but most of
+the old work is concealed by the decoration of tiles applied by the
+Moslems, and the whole interior aspect altered by the wood-and-plaster
+dome with which they replaced the simpler roof of the original.
+
+ [Footnote 16: Fergusson (_History of Architecture_, vol. ii., pp.
+ 408, 432) contends that this was the real Constantinian church of
+ the Holy Sepulchre, and that the one called to-day by that name
+ was erected by the Crusaders in the twelfth century. The more
+ general view is that the latter was originally built by
+ Constantine as the Church of the Sepulchre, though subsequently
+ much altered, and that the octagonal edifice was also his work,
+ but erected under some other name. Whether this church was later
+ incorporated in the “Mosque of Omar,” or merely furnished some of
+ the materials for its construction, is not quite clear.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 69.--CHURCH AT KALB LOUZEH.]
+
+Christian architecture in Syria soon, however, diverged from Roman
+traditions. The abundance of hard stone, the total lack of clay or
+brick, the remoteness from Rome, led to a peculiar independence and
+originality in the forms and details of the ecclesiastical as well as of
+the domestic architecture of central Syria. These innovations upon Roman
+models resulted in the development of distinct types which, but for the
+arrest of progress by the Mohammedan conquest in the seventh century,
+would doubtless have inaugurated a new and independent style of
+architecture. Piers of masonry came to replace the classic column, as at
+Tafkha (third or fourth century), Rouheiha and Kalb Louzeh (fifth
+century? Fig. 69); the ceilings in the smaller churches were often
+formed with stone slabs; the apse was at first confined within the main
+rectangle of the plan, and was sometimes square. The exterior assumed a
+striking and picturesque variety of forms by means of turrets, porches,
+and gables. Singularly enough, vaulting hardly appears at all, though
+the arch is used with fine effect. Conventional and monastic groups of
+buildings appear early in Syria, and that of +St. Simeon Stylites+ at
+Kelat Seman is an impressive and interesting monument. Four three-aisled
+wings form the arms of a cross, meeting in a central octagonal open
+court, in the midst of which stood the column of the saint. The eastern
+arm of the cross forms a complete basilica of itself, and the whole
+cross measures 330 × 300 feet. Chapels, cloisters, and cells adjoin the
+main edifice.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 70.--CATHEDRAL AT BOZRAH.]
+
+Circular and polygonal plans appear in a number of Syrian examples of
+the early sixth century. Their most striking feature is the inscribing
+of the circle or polygon in a square which forms the exterior outline,
+and the use of four niches to fill out the corners. This occurs at Kelat
+Seman in a small double church, perhaps the tomb and chapel of a martyr;
+in the cathedral at +Bozrah+ (Fig. 70), and in the small domical church
+of +St. George+ at +Ezra+. These were probably the prototypes of many
+Byzantine churches like St. Sergius at Constantinople, and San Vitale at
+Ravenna (Fig. 74), though the exact dates of the Syrian churches are not
+known. The one at Ezra is the only one of the three which has a dome,
+the others having been roofed with wood.
+
+The interesting domestic architecture of this period is preserved in
+whole towns and villages in the Hauran, which, deserted at the Arab
+conquest, have never been reoccupied and remain almost intact but for
+the decay of their wooden roofs. They are marked by dignity and
+simplicity of design, and by the same picturesque massing of gables and
+roofs and porches which has already been remarked of the churches. The
+arches are broad, the columns rather heavy, the mouldings few and
+simple, and the scanty carving vigorous and effective, often strongly
+Byzantine in type.
+
+Elsewhere in the Eastern world are many early churches of which even the
+enumeration would exceed the limits of this work. Salonica counts a
+number of basilicas and several domical churches. The church of +St.
+George+, now a mosque, is of early date and thoroughly Roman in plan and
+section, of the same class with the Pantheon and the tomb of Helena, in
+both of which a massive circular wall is lightened by eight niches. At
+Angora (Ancyra), Hierapolis, Pergamus, and other points in Asia Minor;
+in Egypt, Nubia, and Algiers, are many examples of both circular and
+basilican edifices of the early centuries of Christianity. In
+Constantinople there remains but a single representative of the
+basilican type, the church of +St. John Studius+, now the Emir Akhor
+mosque.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS+: ROME: 4th century: St. Peter’s, Sta. Costanza, 330?;
+ Sta. Pudentiana, 335 (rebuilt 1598); tomb of St. Helena;
+ Baptistery of Constantine; St. Paul’s beyond the Walls, 386; St.
+ John Lateran (wholly remodelled in modern times). 5th century:
+ Baptistery of St. John Lateran; Sta. Sabina, 425; Sta. Maria
+ Maggiore, 432; S. Pietro in Vincoli, 442 (greatly altered in
+ modern times). 6th century: S. Lorenzo, 580 (the older portion in
+ two stories); SS. Cosmo e Damiano. 7th century: Sta. Agnese, 625;
+ S. Giorgio in Velabro, 682. 8th century: Sta. Maria in Cosmedin;
+ S. Crisogono. 9th century: S. Nereo ed Achilleo; Sta. Prassede;
+ Sta. Maria in Dominica. 12th and 13th centuries: S. Clemente,
+ 1118; Sta. Maria in Trastevere; S. Lorenzo (nave); Sta. Maria in
+ Ara Coeli. RAVENNA: Baptistery of S. John, 400 (?); S. Francesco;
+ S. Giovanni Evangelista, 425; Sta. Agata, 430; S. Giovanni
+ Battista, 439; tomb of Galla Placidia, 450; S. Apollinare Nuovo,
+ 500-520; S. Apollinare in Classe, 538; St. Victor; Sta. Maria in
+ Cosmedin (the Arian Baptistery); tomb of Theodoric (Sta. Maria
+ della Rotonda, a decagonal two-storied mausoleum, with a low dome
+ cut from a single stone 36 feet in diameter), 530-540. ITALY IN
+ GENERAL: basilica at Parenzo, 6th century; cathedral and Sta.
+ Fosca at Torcello, 640-700; at Naples Sta. Restituta, 7th century;
+ others, mostly of 10th-13th centuries, at Murano near Venice, at
+ Florence (S. Miniato), Spoleto, Toscanella, etc.; baptisteries at
+ Asti, Florence, Nocera dei Pagani, and other places. IN SYRIA AND
+ THE EAST: basilicas of the Nativity at Bethlehem, of the Sepulchre
+ and of the Ascension at Jerusalem; also polygonal church on Temple
+ platform; these all of 4th century. Basilicas at Bakouzah, Hass,
+ Kelat Seman, Kalb Louzeh, Rouheiha, Tourmanin, etc.; circular
+ churches, tombs, and baptisteries at Bozrah, Ezra, Hass, Kelat
+ Seman, Rouheiha, etc.; all these 4th-8th centuries. Churches at
+ Constantinople (Holy Wisdom, St. John Studius, etc.), Hierapolis,
+ Pergamus, and Thessalonica (St. Demetrius, “Eski Djuma”); in Egypt
+ and Nubia (Djemla, Announa, Ibreem, Siout, etc.); at Orléansville
+ in Algeria. (For churches, etc., of 8th-10th centuries in the
+ West, see Chapter XIII.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+BYZANTINE ARCHITECTURE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Essenwein, Hübsch, Von Quast. Also,
+ Bayet, _L’Art Byzantin_. Choisy, _L’Art de bâtir chez les
+ Byzantins_. Lethaby and Swainson, _Sancta Sophia_. Ongania, _La
+ Basilica di San Marco_. Pulgher, _Anciennes Églises Byzantines de
+ Constantinople_. Salzenberg, _Altchristliche Baudenkmäle von
+ Constantinopel_. Texier and Pullan, _Byzantine Architecture_.
+
+
++ORIGIN AND CHARACTER.+ The decline and fall of Rome arrested the
+development of the basilican style in the West, as did the Arab conquest
+later in Syria. It was otherwise in the new Eastern capital founded by
+Constantine in the ancient Byzantium, which was rising in power and
+wealth while Rome lay in ruins. Situated at the strategic point of the
+natural highway of commerce between East and West, salubrious and
+enchantingly beautiful in its surroundings, the new capital grew rapidly
+from provincial insignificance to metropolitan importance. Its founder
+had embellished it with an extraordinary wealth of buildings, in which,
+owing to the scarcity of trained architects, quantity and cost doubtless
+outran quality. But at least the tameness of blindly followed precedent
+was avoided, and this departure from traditional tenets contributed
+undoubtedly to the originality of Byzantine architecture. A large part
+of the artisans employed in building were then, as now, from Asia Minor
+and the Ægean Islands, Greek in race if not in name. An Oriental taste
+for brilliant and harmonious color and for minute decoration spread over
+broad surfaces must have been stimulated by trade with the Far East and
+by constant contact with Oriental peoples, costumes, and arts. An
+Asiatic origin may also be assigned to the methods of vaulting employed,
+far more varied than the Roman, not only in form but also in materials
+and processes. From Roman architecture, however, the Byzantines borrowed
+the fundamental notion of their structural art; that, namely, of
+distributing the weights and strains of their vaulted structures upon
+isolated and massive points of support, strengthened by deep buttresses,
+internal or external, as the case might be. Roman, likewise, was the use
+of polished monolithic columns, and the incrustation of the piers and
+walls with panels of variegated marble, as well as the decoration of
+plastered surfaces by fresco and mosaic, and the use of _opus sectile_
+and _opus Alexandrinum_ for the production of sumptuous marble
+pavements. In the first of these processes the color-figures of the
+pattern are formed each of a single piece of marble cut to the shape
+required; in the second the pattern is compounded of minute squares,
+triangles, and curved pieces of uniform size. Under these combined
+influences the artists of Constantinople wrought out new problems in
+construction and decoration, giving to all that they touched a new and
+striking character.
+
+There is no absolute line of demarcation, chronological, geographical,
+or structural, between Early Christian and Byzantine architecture. But
+the former was especially characterized by the basilica with three or
+five aisles, and the use of wooden roofs even in its circular edifices;
+the vault and dome, though not unknown, being exceedingly rare.
+Byzantine architecture, on the other hand, rarely produced the simple
+three-aisled or five-aisled basilica, and nearly all its monuments were
+vaulted. The dome was especially frequent, and Byzantine architecture
+achieved its highest triumphs in the use of the _pendentive_, as the
+triangular spherical surfaces are called, by the aid of which a dome can
+be supported on the summits of four arches spanning the four sides of a
+square, as explained later. There is as little uniformity in the plans
+of Byzantine buildings as in the forms of the vaulting. A few types of
+church-plan, however, predominated locally in one or another centre; but
+the controlling feature of the style was the dome and the constructive
+system with which it was associated. The dome, it is true, had long been
+used by the Romans, but always on a circular plan, as in the Pantheon.
+It is also a fact that pendentives have been found in Syria and Asia
+Minor older than the oldest Byzantine examples. But the special feature
+characterizing the Byzantine dome on pendentives was its almost
+exclusive association with plans having piers and columns or aisles,
+with the dome as the central and dominant feature of the complex design
+(see plans, Figs. 74, 75, 78). Another strictly Byzantine practice was
+the piercing of the lower portion of the dome with windows forming a
+circle or crown, and the final development of this feature into a high
+drum.
+
+
++CONSTRUCTION.+ Still another divergence from Roman methods was in the
+substitution of brick and stone masonry for concrete. Brick was used for
+the mass as well as the facing of walls and piers, and for the vaulting
+in many buildings mainly built of stone. Stone was used either alone or
+in combination with brick, the latter appearing in bands of four or five
+courses at intervals of three or four feet. In later work a regular
+alternation of the two materials, course for course, was not uncommon.
+In piers intended to support unusually heavy loads the stone was very
+carefully cut and fitted, and sometimes tied and clamped with iron.
+
+Vaults were built sometimes of brick, sometimes of cut stone; in a few
+cases even of earthenware jars fitting into each other, and laid up in a
+continuous contracting spiral from the base to the crown of a dome, as
+in San Vitale at Ravenna. Ingenious processes for building vaults
+without centrings were made use of--processes inherited from the
+drain-builders of ancient Assyria, and still in vogue in Armenia,
+Persia, and Asia Minor. The groined vault was common, but always
+approximated the form of a dome, by a longitudinal convexity upward in
+the intersecting vaults. The aisles of Hagia Sophia[17] display a
+remarkable variety of forms in the vaulting.
+
+ [Footnote 17: “St. Sophia,” the common name of this church, is a
+ misnomer. It was not dedicated to a saint at all, but to the
+ Divine Wisdom (Hagia Sophia), which name the Turks have retained
+ in the softened form “Aya Sofia.”]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 71.--DIAGRAM OF PENDENTIVES.]
+
++DOMES.+ The dome, as we have seen, early became the most characteristic
+feature of Byzantine architecture; and especially the dome on
+pendentives. If a hemisphere be cut by five planes, four perpendicular
+to its base and bounding a square inscribed therein, and the fifth plane
+parallel to the base and tangent to the semicircular intersections made
+by the first four, there will remain of the original surface only four
+triangular spaces bounded by arcs of circles. These are called
+_pendentives_ (Fig. 71 a). When these are built up of masonry, each
+course forms a species of arch, by virtue of its convexity. At the crown
+of the four arches on which they rest, these courses meet and form a
+complete circle, perfectly stable and capable of sustaining any
+superstructure that does not by excessive weight disrupt the whole
+fabric by overthrowing the four arches which support it. Upon these
+pendentives, then, a new dome may be started of any desired curvature,
+or even a cylindrical drum to support a still loftier dome, as in the
+later churches (Fig. 71 b). This method of covering a square is simpler
+than the groined vault, having no sharp edges or intersections; it is at
+least as effective architecturally, by reason of its greater height in
+the centre; and is equally applicable to successive bays of an oblong,
+cruciform, and even columnar building. In the great cisterns at
+Constantinople vast areas are covered by rows of small domes supported
+on ranges of columns.
+
+The earlier domes were commonly pierced with windows at the base, this
+apparent weakening of the vault being compensated for by strongly
+buttressing the piers between the windows, as in Hagia Sophia. Here
+forty windows form a crown of light at the spring of the dome, producing
+an effect almost as striking as that of the simple _oculus_ of the
+Pantheon, and celebrated by ancient writers in the most extravagant
+terms. In later and smaller churches a high drum was introduced beneath
+the dome, in order to secure, by means of longer windows, more light
+than could be obtained by merely piercing the diminutive domes.
+
+Buttressing was well understood by the Byzantines, whose plans were
+skilfully devised to provide internal abutments, which were often
+continued above the roofs of the side-aisles to prop the main vaults,
+precisely as was done by the Romans in their thermæ and similar halls.
+But the Byzantines, while adhering less strictly than the Romans to
+traditional forms and processes, and displaying much more ready
+contrivance and special adaptation of means to ends, never worked out
+this pregnant structural principle to its logical conclusion as did the
+Gothic architects of Western Europe a few centuries later.
+
+
++DECORATION+. The exteriors of Byzantine buildings (except in some of
+the small churches of late date) were generally bare and lacking in
+beauty. The interiors, on the contrary, were richly decorated, color
+playing a much larger part than carving in the designs. Painting was
+resorted to only in the smaller buildings, the more durable and splendid
+medium of mosaic being usually preferred. This was, as a rule, confined
+to the vaults and to those portions of the wall-surfaces embraced by the
+vaults above their springing. The colors were brilliant, the background
+being usually of gold, though sometimes of blue or a delicate green.
+Biblical scenes, symbolic and allegorical figures and groups of saints
+adorned the larger areas, particularly the half-dome of the apse, as in
+the basilicas. The smaller vaults, the soffits of arches, borders of
+pictures, and other minor surfaces, received a more conventional
+decoration of crosses, monograms, and set patterns.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 72.--SPANDRIL. HAGIA SOPHIA.]
+
+The walls throughout were sheathed with slabs of rare marble in panels
+so disposed that the veining should produce symmetrical figures. The
+panels were framed in billet-mouldings, derived perhaps from classic
+dentils; the billets or projections on one side the moulding coming
+opposite the spaces on the other. This seems to have been a purely
+Byzantine feature.
+
+
++CARVED DETAILS.+ Internally the different stories were marked by
+horizontal bands and cornices of white or inlaid marble richly carved.
+The arch-soffits, the archivolts or bands around the arches, and the
+spandrils between them were covered with minute and intricate incised
+carving. The motives used, though based on the acanthus and anthemion,
+were given a wholly new aspect. The relief was low and flat, the leaves
+sharp and crowded, and the effect rich and lacelike, rather than
+vigorous. It was, however, well adapted to the covering of large areas
+where general effect was more important than detail. Even the capitals
+were treated in the same spirit. The impost-block was almost universal,
+except where its use was rendered unnecessary by giving to the capital
+itself the massive pyramidal form required to receive properly the
+spring of the arch or vault. In such cases (more frequent in
+Constantinople than elsewhere) the surface of the capital was simply
+covered with incised carving of foliage, basketwork, monograms, etc.;
+rudimentary volutes in a few cases recalling classic traditions (Figs.
+72, 73). The mouldings were weak and poorly executed, and the vigorous
+profiles of classic cornices were only remotely suggested by the
+characterless aggregations of mouldings which took their place.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 73.--CAPITAL WITH IMPOST BLOCK, S. VITALE.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 74.--ST. SERGIUS, CONSTANTINOPLE.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 75.--PLAN OF HAGIA SOPHIA.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 76.--SECTION OF HAGIA SOPHIA.]
+
++PLANS.+ The remains of Byzantine architecture are almost exclusively of
+churches and baptisteries, but the plans of these are exceedingly
+varied. The first radical departure from the basilica-type seems to have
+been the adoption of circular or polygonal plans, such as had usually
+served only for tombs and baptisteries. The Baptistery of St. John at
+Ravenna (early fifth century) is classed by many authorities as a
+Byzantine monument. In the early years of the sixth century the adoption
+of this model had become quite general, and with it the development of
+domical design began to advance. The church of +St. Sergius+ at
+Constantinople (Fig. 74), originally joined to a short basilica
+dedicated to St. Bacchus (afterward destroyed by the Turks), as in the
+double church at Kelat Seman, was built about 520; that of +San Vitale+
+at Ravenna was begun a few years later; both are domical churches on an
+octagonal plan, with an exterior aisle. Semicircular niches--four in St.
+Sergius and eight in San Vitale--projecting into the aisle, enlarge
+somewhat the area of the central space and give variety to the internal
+effect. The origin of this characteristic feature may be traced to the
+eight niches of the Pantheon, through such intermediate examples as the
+temple of Minerva Medica at Rome. The true pendentive does not appear in
+these two churches. Timidly employed up to that time in small
+structures, it received a remarkable development in the magnificent
+church of +Hagia Sophia+, built by Anthemius of Tralles and Isodorus of
+Miletus, under Justinian, 532-538 A.D. In the plan of this marvellous
+edifice (Fig. 75) the dome rests upon four mighty arches bounding a
+square, into two of which open the half-domes of semicircular apses.
+These apses are penetrated and extended each by two smaller niches and a
+central arch, and the whole vast nave, measuring over 200 × 100 feet, is
+flanked by enormously wide aisles connecting at the front with a
+majestic narthex. Huge transverse buttresses, as in the Basilica of
+Constantine (with whose structural design this building shows striking
+affinities), divide the aisles each into three sections. The plan
+suggests that of St. Sergius cut in two, with a lofty dome on
+pendentives over a square plan inserted between the halves. Thus was
+secured a noble and unobstructed hall of unrivalled proportions and
+great beauty, covered by a combination of half-domes increasing in span
+and height as they lead up successively to the stupendous central vault,
+which rises 180 feet into the air and fitly crowns the whole. The
+imposing effect of this low-curved but loftily-poised dome, resting as
+it does upon a crown of windows, and so disposed that its summit is
+visible from every point of the nave (as may be easily seen from an
+examination of the section, Fig. 76), is not surpassed in any interior
+ever erected.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 77.--INTERIOR OF HAGIA SOPHIA,
+ CONSTANTINOPLE.]
+
+The two lateral arches under the dome are filled by clearstory walls
+pierced by twelve windows, and resting on arcades in two stories carried
+by magnificent columns taken from ancient ruins. These separate the nave
+from the side-aisles, which are in two stories forming galleries, and
+are vaulted with a remarkable variety of groined vaults. All the masses
+are disposed with studied reference to the resistance required by the
+many and complex thrusts exerted by the dome and other vaults. That the
+earthquakes of one thousand three hundred and fifty years have not
+destroyed the church is the best evidence of the sufficiency of these
+precautions.
+
+Not less remarkable than the noble planning and construction of this
+church was the treatment of scale and decoration in its interior design.
+It was as conspicuously the masterpiece of Byzantine architecture as the
+Parthenon was of the classic Greek. With little external beauty, it is
+internally one of the most perfectly composed and beautifully decorated
+halls of worship ever erected. Instead of the simplicity of the Pantheon
+it displays the complexity of an organism of admirably related parts.
+The division of the interior height into two stories below the spring of
+the four arches, reduces the component parts of the design to moderate
+dimensions, so that the scale of the whole is more easily grasped and
+its vast size emphasized by the contrast. The walls are incrusted with
+precious marbles up to the spring of the vaulting; the capitals,
+spandrils, and soffits are richly and minutely carved with incised
+ornament, and all the vaults covered with splendid mosaics. Dimmed by
+the lapse of centuries and disfigured by the vandalism of the Moslems,
+this noble interior, by the harmony of its coloring and its impressive
+grandeur, is one of the masterpieces of all time (Fig. 77).
+
+
++LATER CHURCHES.+ After the sixth century no monuments were built at all
+rivalling in scale the creations of the former period. The later
+churches were, with few exceptions, relatively small and trivial.
+Neither the plan nor the general aspect of Hagia Sophia seems to have
+been imitated in these later works. The crown of dome-windows was
+replaced by a cylindrical drum under the dome, which was usually of
+insignificant size. The exterior was treated more decoratively than
+before, by means of bands and incrustations of colored marble, or
+alternations of stone and brick; and internally mosaic continued to be
+executed with great skill and of great beauty until the tenth century,
+when the art rapidly declined. These later churches, of which a number
+were spared by the Turks, are, therefore, generally pleasing and elegant
+rather than striking or imposing.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 78.--PLAN OF ST. MARK’S, VENICE.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 79.--INTERIOR OF ST. MARK’S.]
+
++FOREIGN MONUMENTS.+ The influence of Byzantine art was wide-spread,
+both in Europe and Asia. The leading city of civilization through the
+Dark Ages, Constantinople influenced Italy through her political and
+commercial relations with Ravenna, Genoa, and Venice. The church of +St.
+Mark+ in the latter city was one result of this influence (Figs. 78,
+79). Begun in 1063 to replace an earlier church destroyed by fire, it
+received through several centuries additions not always Byzantine in
+character. Yet it was mainly the work of Byzantine builders, who copied
+most probably the church of the Apostles at Constantinople, built by
+Justinian. The picturesque but wholly unstructural use of columns in the
+entrance porches, the upper parts of the façade, the wooden cupolas over
+the five domes, and the pointed arches in the narthex, are deviations
+from Byzantine traditions dating in part from the later Middle Ages
+Nothing could well be conceived more irrational, from a structural point
+of view, than the accumulation of columns in the entrance-arches; but
+the total effect is so picturesque and so rich in color, that its
+architectural defects are easily overlooked. The external veneering of
+white and colored marble occurs rarely in the East, but became a
+favorite practice in Venice, where it continued in use for five hundred
+years. The interior of St. Mark’s, in some respects better preserved
+than that of Hagia Sophia, is especially fine in color, though not equal
+in scale and grandeur to the latter church. With its five domes it has
+less unity of effect than Hagia Sophia, but more of the charm of
+picturesqueness, and its less brilliant and simpler lighting enhances
+the impressiveness of its more modest dimensions.
+
+In Russia and Greece the Byzantine style has continued to be the
+official style of the Greek Church. The Russian monuments are for the
+most part of a somewhat fantastic aspect, the Muscovite taste having
+introduced many innovations in the form of bulbous domes and other
+eccentric details. In Greece there are few large churches, and some of
+the most interesting, like the Cathedral at Athens, are almost toy-like
+in their diminutiveness. On +Mt. Athos+ (Hagion Oros) is an ancient
+monastery which still retains its Byzantine character and traditions. In
+Armenia (as at Ani, Etchmiadzin, etc.) are also interesting examples of
+late Armeno-Byzantine architecture, showing applications to exterior
+carved detail of elaborate interlaced ornament looking like a re-echo of
+Celtic MSS. illumination, itself, no doubt, originating in Byzantine
+traditions. But the greatest and most prolific offspring of Byzantine
+architecture appeared after the fall of Constantinople (1453) in the new
+mosque-architecture of the victorious Turks.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS.+ CONSTANTINOPLE: St. Sergius, 520; Hagia Sophia,
+ 532-538; Holy Apostles by Justinian (demolished); Holy Peace (St.
+ Irene) originally by Constantine, rebuilt by Justinian, and again
+ in 8th century by Leo the Isaurian; Hagia Theotokos, 12th century
+ (?); Monétes Choras (“Kahiré Djami”), 10th century; Pantokrator;
+ “Fetiyeh Djami.” Cisterns, especially the “Bin Bir Direk” (1,001
+ columns) and “Yere Batan Serai;” palaces, few vestiges except the
+ great hall of the Blachernæ palace. SALONICA: Churches--of Divine
+ Wisdom (“Aya Sofia”) St. Bardias, St. Elias. RAVENNA: San Vitale,
+ 527-540. VENICE: St. Mark’s, 977-1071; “Fondaco dei Turchi,” now
+ Civic Museum, 12th century. Other churches at Athens and Mt.
+ Athos; at Misitra, Myra, Ancyra, Ephesus, etc.; in Armenia at Ani,
+ Dighour, Etchmiadzin, Kouthais, Pitzounda, Usunlar, etc.; tombs at
+ Ani, Varzhahan, etc.; in Russia at Kieff (St. Basil, Cathedral),
+ Kostroma, Moscow (Assumption, St. Basil, Vasili Blaghennoi, etc.),
+ Novgorod, Tchernigoff; at Kurtea Darghish in Wallachia, and many
+ other places.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+SASSANIAN AND MOHAMMEDAN ARCHITECTURE.
+
+(ARABIAN, MORESQUE, PERSIAN, INDIAN, AND TURKISH.)
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Bourgoin, _Les Arts Arabes_. Coste, _Monuments
+ du Caire_; _Monuments modernes de la Perse_. Cunningham,
+ _Archæological Survey of India_. Fergusson, _Indian and Eastern
+ Architecture_. De Forest, _Indian Architecture and Ornament_.
+ Flandin et Coste, _Voyage en Perse_. Franz-Pasha, _Die Baukunst
+ des Islam_. Gayet, _L’Art Arabe_; _L’Art Persan_. Girault de
+ Prangey, _Essai sur l’architecture des Arabes en Espagne_, etc.
+ Goury and Jones, _The Alhambra_. Jacob, _Jeypore Portfolio of
+ Architectural Details_. Le Bon, _La civilisation des Arabes_; _Les
+ monuments de l’Inde_. Owen Jones, _Grammar of Ornament_.
+ Parvillée, _L’Architecture Ottomane_. Prisse d’Avennes, _L’Art
+ Arabe_. Texier, _Description de l’Arménie, la Perse_, etc.
+
+
++GENERAL SURVEY.+ While the Byzantine Empire was at its zenith, the new
+faith of Islam was conquering Western Asia and the Mediterranean lands
+with a fiery rapidity, which is one of the marvels of history. The new
+architectural styles which grew up in the wake of these conquests,
+though differing widely in conception and detail in the several
+countries, were yet marked by common characteristics which set them
+quite apart from the contemporary Christian styles. The predominance of
+decorative over structural considerations, a predilection for minute
+surface-ornament, the absence of pictures and sculpture, are found alike
+in Arabic, Persian, Turkish, and Indian buildings, though in varying
+degree. These new styles, however, were almost entirely the handiwork of
+artisans belonging to the conquered races, and many traces of Byzantine,
+and even after the Crusades, of Norman and Gothic design, are
+recognizable in Moslem architecture. But the Orientalism of the
+conquerors and their common faith, tinged with the poetry and
+philosophic mysticism of the Arab, stamped these works of Copts,
+Syrians, and Greeks with an unmistakable character of their own, neither
+Byzantine nor Early Christian.
+
+
++ARABIC ARCHITECTURE.+ In the building of mosques and tombs, especially
+at Cairo, this architecture reached a remarkable degree of decorative
+elegance, and sometimes of dignity. It developed slowly, the Arabs not
+being at the outset a race of builders. The early monuments of Syria and
+Egypt were insignificant, and the sacred _Kaabah_ at Mecca and the
+mosque at Medina hardly deserve to be called architectural monuments at
+all. The most important early works were the mosques of +’Amrou+ at
+Cairo (642, rebuilt and enlarged early in the eighth century), of +El
+Aksah+ on the Temple platform at Jerusalem (691, by Abd-el-Melek), and
+of +El Walid+ at Damascus (705-732, recently seriously injured by fire).
+All these were simple one-storied structures, with flat wooden roofs
+carried on parallel ranges of columns supporting pointed arches, the
+arcades either closing one side of a square court, or surrounding it
+completely. The long perspectives of the aisles and the minute
+decoration of the archivolts and ceilings alone gave them architectural
+character. The beautiful +Dome of the Rock+ (Kubbet-es-Sakhrah,
+miscalled the Mosque of Omar) on the Temple platform at Jerusalem is
+either a remodelled Constantinian edifice, or in large part composed of
+the materials of one (see p. 116).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 80.--MOSQUE OF SULTAN HASSAN, CAIRO: SANCTUARY.
+ a, _Mihrâb_, b, _Mimber_.]
+
+The splendid mosque of +Ibn Touloun+ (876-885) was built on the same
+plan as that of Amrou, but with cantoned piers instead of columns and a
+corresponding increase in variety of perspective and richness of effect.
+With the incoming of the Fatimite dynasty, however, and the foundation
+of the present city of Cairo (971), vaulting began to take the place of
+wooden ceilings, and then appeared the germs of those extraordinary
+applications of geometry to decorative design which were henceforth to
+be the most striking feature of Arabic ornament. Under the Ayûb dynasty,
+which began with Salâh-ed-din (Saladin) in 1172, these elements, of
+which the great +Barkouk+ mosque (1149) is the most imposing early
+example, developed slowly in the domical tombs of the _Karafah_ at
+Cairo, and prepared the way for the increasing richness and splendor of
+a long series of mosques, among which those of +Kalaoun+ (1284-1318),
++Sultan Hassan+ (1356), +El Mu’ayyad+ (1415), and +Kaîd Bey+ (1463),
+were the most conspicuous examples (Fig. 80). They mark, indeed,
+successive advances in complexity of planning, ingenuity of
+construction, and elegance of decoration. Together they constitute an
+epoch in Arabic architecture, which coincides closely with the
+development of Gothic vaulted architecture in Europe, both in the stages
+and the duration of its advances.
+
+The mosques of these three centuries are, like the mediæval monasteries,
+impressive aggregations of buildings of various sorts about a central
+court of ablutions. The tomb of the founder, residences for the _imams_,
+or priests, schools (_madrassah_), and hospitals (_mâristân_) rival in
+importance the prayer-chamber. This last is, however, the real focus of
+interest and splendor; in some cases, as in Sultan Hassan, it is a
+simple barrel-vaulted chamber open to the court; in others an oblong
+arcaded hall with many small domes; or again, a square hall covered with
+a high pointed dome on pendentives of intricately beautiful
+stalactite-work (see below). The ceremonial requirements of the mosque
+were simple. The-court must have its fountain of ablutions in the
+centre. The prayer-hall, or mosque proper, must have its _mihrâb_, or
+niche, to indicate the _kibleh_, the direction of Mecca; and its
+_mimber_, or high, slender pulpit for the reading of the Kôran. These
+were the only absolutely indispensable features of a mosque, but as
+early as the ninth century the _minaret_ was added, from which the call
+to prayer could be sounded over the city by the _mueddin_. Not until the
+Ayubite period, however, did it begin to assume those forms of varied
+and picturesque grace which lend to Cairo so much of its architectural
+charm.
+
+
++ARCHITECTURAL DETAILS.+ While Arabic architecture, in Syria and Egypt
+alike, possesses more decorative than constructive originality, the
+beautiful forms of its domes, pendentives, and minarets, the simple
+majesty of the great pointed barrel-vaults of the Hassan mosque and
+similar monuments, and the graceful lines of the universally used
+pointed arch, prove the Coptic builders and their later Arabic
+successors to have been architects of great ability. The Arabic domes,
+as seen both in the mosques and in the remarkable group of tombs
+commonly called “tombs of the Khalîfs,” are peculiar not only in their
+pointed outlines and their rich external decoration of interlaced
+geometric motives, but still more in the external and internal treatment
+of the pendentives, exquisitely decorated with stalactite ornament. This
+ornament, derived, no doubt, from a combination of minute corbels with
+rows of small niches, and presumably of Persian origin, was finally
+developed into a system of extraordinary intricacy, applicable alike to
+the topping of a niche or panel, as in the great doorways of the
+mosques, and to the bracketing out of minaret galleries (Figs. 81, 82).
+Its applications show a bewildering variety of forms and an
+extraordinary aptitude for intricate geometrical design.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 81.--MOSQUE OF KAÎD BEY, CAIRO]
+
+
++DECORATION.+ Geometry, indeed, vied with the love of color in its hold
+on the Arabic taste. Ceiling-beams were carved into highly ornamental
+forms before receiving their rich color-decoration of red, green, blue,
+and gold. The doors and the _mimber_ were framed in geometric patterns
+with slender intersecting bars forming complicated star-panelling. The
+voussoirs of arches were cut into curious interlocking forms; doorways
+and niches were covered with stalactite corbelling, and pavements and
+wall-incrustations, whether of marble or tiling, combined brilliancy and
+harmony of color with the perplexing beauty of interlaced
+star-and-polygon patterns of marvellous intricacy. Stained glass added
+to the interior color-effect, the patterns being perforated in plaster,
+with a bit of colored glass set into each perforation--a device not very
+durable, perhaps, but singularly decorative.
+
+
++OTHER WORKS.+ Few of the mediæval Arabic palaces have remained to our
+time. That they were adorned with a splendid prodigality appears from
+contemporary accounts. This splendor was internal rather than external;
+the palace, like all the larger and richer dwellings in the East,
+surrounded one or more courts, and presented externally an almost
+unbroken wall. The fountain in the chief court, the _diwân_ (a great,
+vaulted reception-chamber opening upon the court and raised slightly
+above it), the _dâr_, or men’s court, rigidly separated from the
+_hareem_ for the women, were and are universal elements in these great
+dwellings. The more common city-houses show as their most striking
+features successively corbelled-out stories and broad wooden eaves, with
+lattice-screens covering single windows, or almost a whole façade,
+composed of turned work (_mashrabiyya_), in designs of great beauty.
+
+The fountains, gates, and minor works of the Arabs display the same
+beauty in decoration and color, the same general forms and details which
+characterize the larger works, but it is impossible here to
+particularize further with regard to them.
+
+
++MORESQUE.+ Elsewhere in Northern Africa the Arabs produced no such
+important works as in Egypt, nor is the architecture of the other Moslem
+states so well preserved or so well known. Constructive design would
+appear to have been there even more completely subordinated to
+decoration; tiling and plaster-relief took the place of more
+architectural elements and materials, while horseshoe and cusped arches
+were substituted for the simpler and more architectural pointed arch
+(Fig. 82). The courts of palaces and public buildings were surrounded by
+ranges of horseshoe arches on slender columns; these last being provided
+with capitals of a form rarely seen in Cairo. Towers were built of much
+more massive design than the Cairo minarets, usually with a square,
+almost solid shaft and a more open lantern at the top, sometimes in
+several diminishing stories.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 82.--MOORISH DETAIL, ALHAMBRA.
+ _Showing stalactite and perforated work, Moorish cusped arch,
+ Hispano-Moresque capitals, and decorative inscriptions._]
+
+
++HISPANO-MORESQUE.+ The most splendid phase of this branch of Arabic
+architecture is found not in Africa but in Spain, which was overrun in
+710-713 by the Moors, who established there the independent Khalifate of
+Cordova. This was later split up into petty kingdoms, of which the most
+important were Granada, Seville, Toledo, and Valencia. This
+dismemberment of the Khalifate led in time to the loss of these cities,
+which were one by one recovered by the Christians during the fourteenth
+and fifteenth centuries; the capture of Granada, in 1492, finally
+destroying the Moorish rule.
+
+The dominion of the Moors in Spain was marked by a high civilization and
+an extraordinary activity in building. The style they introduced became
+the national style in the regions they occupied, and even after the
+expulsion of the Moors was used in buildings erected by Christians and
+by Jews. The “House of Pilate,” at Seville, is an example of this, and
+the general use of the Moorish style in Jewish synagogues, down to our
+own day, both in Spain and abroad, originated in the erection of
+synagogues for the Jews in Spain by Moorish artisans and in Moorish
+style, both during and after the period of Moslem supremacy.
+
+Besides innumerable mosques, castles, bridges, aqueducts, gates, and
+fountains, the Moors erected several monuments of remarkable size and
+magnificence. Specially worthy of notice among them are the Great Mosque
+at Cordova, the Alcazars of Seville and Malaga, the Giralda at Seville,
+and the Alhambra at Granada.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 83.--INTERIOR OF THE GREAT MOSQUE AT CORDOVA.]
+
+The +Mosque at Cordova+, begun in 786 by ‘Abd-er-Rahman, enlarged in
+876, and again by El Mansour in 976, is a vast arcaded hall 375 feet ×
+420 feet in extent, but only 30 feet high (Fig. 83). The rich wooden
+ceiling rests upon seventeen rows of thirty to thirty-three columns
+each, and two intersecting rows of piers, all carrying horseshoe arches
+in two superposed ranges, a large portion of those about the sanctuary
+being cusped, the others plain, except for the alternation of color in
+the voussoirs. The _mihrâb_ niche is particularly rich in its minutely
+carved incrustations and mosaics, and a dome ingeniously formed by
+intersecting ribs covers the sanctuary before it. This form of dome
+occurs frequently in Spain.
+
+The +Alcazars+ at Seville and Malaga, which have been restored in recent
+years, present to-day a fairly correct counterpart of the castle-palaces
+of the thirteenth century. They display the same general conceptions and
+decorative features as the Alhambra, which they antedate. The +Giralda+
+at Seville is, on the other hand, unique. It is a lofty rectangular
+tower, its exterior panelled and covered with a species of
+quarry-ornament in relief; it terminated originally in two or three
+diminishing stages or lanterns, which were replaced in the sixteenth
+century by the present Renaissance belfry.
+
+The +Alhambra+ is universally considered to be the masterpiece of
+Hispano-Moresque art, partly no doubt on account of its excellent
+preservation. It is most interesting as an example of the splendid
+citadel-palaces built by the Moorish conquerors, as well as for its
+gorgeous color-decoration of minute quarry-ornament stamped or moulded
+in the wet plaster wherever the walls are not wainscoted with tiles. It
+was begun in 1248 by Mohammed-ben-Al-Hamar, enlarged in 1279 by his
+successor, and again in 1306, when its mosque was built. Its plan (Fig.
+84) shows two large courts and a smaller one next the mosque, with three
+great square chambers and many of minor importance. Light arcades
+surround the Court of the Lions with its fountain, and adorn the ends of
+the other chief court; and the stalactite pendentive, rare in Moorish
+work, appears in the “Hall of Ambassadors” and some other parts of the
+edifice. But its chief glory is its ornamentation, less durable, less
+architectural than that of the Cairene buildings, but making up for this
+in delicacy and richness. Minute vine-patterns and Arabic inscriptions
+are interwoven with waving intersecting lines, forming a net-like
+framework, to all of which deep red, blue, black, and gold give an
+indescribable richness of effect.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 84.--PLAN OF THE ALHAMBRA.
+ A, _Hall of Ambassadors_; a, _Mosque_; b, _Court of Mosque_;
+ c, _Sala della Barca_; _d, d_, _Baths_; e, _Hall of the
+ Two Sisters_; _f, f, f_, _Hall of the Tribunal_;
+ g, _Hall of the Abencerrages_.]
+
+The Moors also overran Sicily in the eighth century, but while their
+architecture there profoundly influenced that of the Christians who
+recovered Sicily in 1090, and copied the style of the conquered Moslems,
+there is too little of the original Moorish architecture remaining to
+claim mention here.
+
+
++SASSANIAN.+ The Sassanian empire, which during the four centuries from
+226 to 641 A.D. had withstood Rome and extended its own sway almost to
+India, left on Persian soil a number of interesting monuments which
+powerfully influenced the Mohammedan style of that region. The Sassanian
+buildings appear to have been principally palaces, and were all vaulted.
+With their long barrel-vaulted halls, combined with square domical
+chambers, as in Firouz-Abad and Serbistan, they exhibit reminiscences of
+antique Assyrian tradition. The ancient Persian use of columns was
+almost entirely abandoned, but doors and windows were still treated with
+the banded frames and cavetto-cornices of Persepolis and Susa. The
+Sassanians employed with these exterior details others derived perhaps
+from Syrian and Byzantine sources. A sort of engaged buttress-column and
+blind arches repeated somewhat aimlessly over a whole façade were
+characteristic features; still more so the huge arches, elliptical or
+horse-shoe shaped, which formed the entrances to these palaces, as in
+the Tâk-Kesra at Ctesiphon. Ornamental details of a debased Roman type
+appear, mingled with more gracefully flowing leaf-patterns resembling
+early Christian Syrian carving. The last great monument of this style
+was the palace at Mashita in Moab, begun by the last Chosroes (627), but
+never finished, an imposing and richly ornamented structure about 500 ×
+170 feet, occupying the centre of a great court.
+
+
++PERSIAN-MOSLEM ARCHITECTURE.+ These Sassanian palaces must have
+strongly influenced Persian architecture after the Arab conquest in 641.
+For although the architecture of the first six centuries after that date
+suffered almost absolute extinction at the hands of the Mongols under
+Genghis Khan, the traces of Sassanian influence are still perceptible in
+the monuments that rose in the following centuries. The dome and vault,
+the colossal portal-arches, and the use of brick and tile are evidences
+of this influence, bearing no resemblance to Byzantine or Arabic types.
+The Moslem monuments of Persia, so far as their dates can be
+ascertained, are all subsequent to 1200, unless tradition is correct in
+assigning to the time of Haroun Ar Rashid (786) certain curious tombs
+near Bagdad with singular pyramidal roofs. The ruined mosque at Tabriz
+(1300), and the beautiful domical +Tomb+ at +Sultaniyeh+ (1313) belong
+to the Mogul period. They show all the essential features of the later
+architecture of the Sufis (1499-1694), during whose dynastic period were
+built the still more splendid and more celebrated +Meidan+ or square,
+the great mosque of Mesjid Shah, the Bazaar and the College or Medress
+of Hussein Shah, all at Ispahan, and many other important monuments at
+Ispahan, Bagdad, and Teheran. In these structures four elements
+especially claim attention; the pointed bulbous dome, the round minaret,
+the portal-arch rising above the adjacent portions of the building, and
+the use of enamelled terra-cotta tiles as an external decoration. To
+these may be added the ogee arch (_ogee_ = double-reversed curve), as an
+occasional feature. The vaulting is most ingenious and beautiful, and
+its forms, whether executed in brick or in plaster, are sufficiently
+varied without resort to the perplexing complications of stalactite
+work. In Persian decoration the most striking qualities are the harmony
+of blended color, broken up into minute patterns and more subdued in
+tone than in the Hispano-Moresque, and the preference of flowing lines
+and floral ornament to the geometric puzzles of Arabic design. Persian
+architecture influenced both Turkish and Indo-Moslem art, which owe to
+it a large part of their decorative charm.
+
+
++INDO-MOSLEM.+ The Mohammedan architecture of India is so distinct from
+all the native Indian styles and so related to the art of Persia, if not
+to that of the Arabs, that it properly belongs here rather than in the
+later chapter on Oriental styles. It was in the eleventh century that
+the states of India first began to fall before Mohammedan invaders, but
+not until the end of the fifteenth century that the great Mogul dynasty
+was established in Hindostan as the dominant power. During the
+intervening period local schools of Moslem architecture were developing
+in the Pathan country of Northern India (1193-1554), in Jaunpore and
+Gujerat (1396-1572), in Scinde, where Persian influence predominated; in
+Kalburgah and Bidar (1347-1426). These schools differed considerably in
+spirit and detail; but under the Moguls (1494-1706) there was less
+diversity, and to this dynasty we owe many of the most magnificent
+mosques and tombs of India, among which those of Bijapur retain a marked
+and distinct style of their own.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 85.--TOMB OF MAHMUD, BIJAPUR. SECTION.]
+
+The Mohammedan monuments of India are characterized by a grandeur and
+amplitude of disposition, a symmetry and monumental dignity of design
+which distinguishes them widely from the picturesque but sometimes
+trivial buildings of the Arabs and Moors. Less dependent on color than
+the Moorish or Persian structures, they are usually built of marble, or
+of marble and sandstone, giving them an air of permanence and solidity
+wanting in other Moslem styles except the Turkish. The dome, the round
+minaret, the pointed arch, and the colossal portal-arch, are universal,
+as in Persia, and enamelled tiles are also used, but chiefly for
+interior decoration. Externally the more dignified if less resplendent
+decoration of surface carving is used, in patterns of minute and
+graceful scrolls, leaf forms, and Arabic inscriptions covering large
+surfaces. The Arabic stalactite pendentive star-panelling and
+geometrical interlace are rarely if ever seen. The dome on the square
+plan is almost universal, but neither the Byzantine nor the Arabic
+pendentive is used, striking and original combinations of vaulting
+surfaces, of corner squinches, of corbelling and ribs, being used in its
+place. Many of the Pathan domes and arches at Delhi, Ajmir, Ahmedabad,
+Shepree, etc., are built in horizontal or corbelled courses supported on
+slender columns, and exert no thrust at all, so that they are vaults
+only in form, like the dome of the Tholos of Atreus (Fig. 24). The most
+imposing and original of all Indian domes are those of the +Jumma
+Musjid+ and of the +Tomb of Mahmud+, both at Bijapur, the latter 137
+feet in span (Fig. 85). These two monuments, indeed, with the Mogul Taj
+Mahal at Agra, not only deserve the first rank among Indian monuments,
+but in constructive science combined with noble proportions and
+exquisite beauty are hardly, if at all, surpassed by the greatest
+triumphs of western art. The Indo-Moslem architects, moreover,
+especially those of the Mogul period, excelled in providing artistic
+settings for their monuments. Immense platforms, superb courts, imposing
+flights of steps, noble gateways, minarets to mark the angles of
+enclosures, and landscape gardening of a high order, enhance greatly the
+effect of the great mosques, tombs, and palaces of Agra, Delhi,
+Futtehpore Sikhri, Allahabad, Secundra, etc.
+
+The most notable monuments of the Moguls are the +Mosque of Akbar+
+(1556-1605) at Futtehpore Sikhri, the tomb of that sultan at Secundra,
+and his palace at Allahabad; the +Pearl Mosque+ at Agra and the +Jumma
+Musjid+ at Delhi, one of the largest and noblest of Indian mosques, both
+built by Shah Jehan about 1650; his immense but now ruined palace in the
+same city; and finally the unrivalled mausoleum, the +Taj Mahal+ at
+Agra, built during his lifetime as a festal hall, to serve as his tomb
+after death (Fig. 86). This last is the pearl of Indian architecture,
+though it is said to have been designed by a European architect, French
+or Italian. It is a white marble structure 185 feet square, centred in a
+court 313 feet square, forming a platform 18 feet high. The corners of
+this court are marked by elegant minarets, and the whole is dominated by
+the exquisite white marble dome, 58 feet in diameter, 80 feet high,
+internally rising over four domical corner chapels, and covered
+externally by a lofty marble bulb-dome on a high drum. The rich
+materials, beautiful execution, and exquisite inlaying of this mausoleum
+are worthy of its majestic design. On the whole, in the architecture of
+the Moguls in Bijapur, Agra, and Delhi, Mohammedan architecture reaches
+its highest expression in the totality and balance of its qualities of
+construction, composition, detail, ornament, and settings. The later
+monuments show the decline of the style, and though often rich and
+imposing, are lacking in refinement and originality.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 86.--TAJ MAHAL, AGRA.]
+
+
++TURKISH.+ The Ottoman Turks, who began their conquering career under
+Osman I. in Bithynia in 1299, had for a century been occupying the
+fairest portions of the Byzantine empire when, in 1453, they became
+masters of Constantinople. Hagia Sophia was at once occupied as their
+chief mosque, and such of the other churches as were spared, were
+divided between the victors and the vanquished. The conqueror, Mehmet
+II., at the same time set about the building of a new mosque, entrusting
+the design to a Byzantine, Christodoulos, whom he directed to reproduce,
+with some modifications, the design of the “Great Church”--Hagia Sophia.
+The type thus officially adopted has ever since remained the controlling
+model of Turkish mosque design, so far, at least, as general plan and
+constructive principles are concerned. Thus the conquering Turks,
+educated by a century of study and imitation of Byzantine models in
+Brusa, Nicomedia, Smyrna, Adrianople, and other cities earlier
+subjugated, did what the Byzantines had, during nine centuries, failed
+to do. The noble idea first expressed by Anthemius and Isidorus in the
+Church of Hagia Sophia had remained undeveloped, unimitated by later
+architects. It was the Turk who first seized upon its possibilities, and
+developed therefrom a style of architecture less sumptuous in color and
+decoration than the sister styles of Persia, Cairo, or India, but of
+great nobility and dignity, notwithstanding. The low-curved dome with
+its crown of buttressed windows, the plain spherical pendentives, the
+great apses at each end, covered by half-domes and penetrated by smaller
+niches, the four massive piers with their projecting buttress-masses
+extending across the broad lateral aisles, the narthex and the arcaded
+atrium in front--all these appear in the great Turkish mosques of
+Constantinople. In the Conqueror’s mosque, however, two apses with
+half-domes replace the lateral galleries and clearstory of Hagia Sophia,
+making a perfectly quadripartite plan, destitute of the emphasis and
+significance of a plan drawn on one main axis (Fig. 87). The same
+treatment occurs in the mosque of Ahmed I., the +Ahmediyeh+ (1608; Fig.
+88), and the +Yeni Djami+ (“New Mosque”) at the port (1665). In the
+mosque of +Osman III.+ (1755) the reverse change was effected; the
+mosque has no great apses, four clearstories filling the four arches
+under the dome, as also in several of the later and smaller mosques. The
+greatest and noblest of the Turkish mosques, the +Suleimaniyeh+, built
+in 1553 by Soliman the Magnificent, returned to the Byzantine
+combination of two half-domes with two clearstories (Fig. 89).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 87.--MOSQUE OF MEHMET II., CONSTANTINOPLE.
+ PLAN.
+ (The dimensions figured in metres.)]
+
+In none of these monuments is there the internal magnificence of marble
+and mosaic of the Byzantine churches. These are only in a measure
+replaced by Persian tile-wainscoting and stained-glass windows of the
+Arabic type. The division into stories and the treatment of scale are
+less well managed than in the Hagia Sophia; on the other hand, the
+proportion of height to width is generally admirable. The exterior
+treatment is unique and effective, far superior to the Byzantine
+practice. The massing of domes and half-domes and roofs is more
+artistically arranged; and while there is little of that minute carved
+detail found in Egypt and India, the composition of the lateral arcades,
+the simple but impressive domical peristyles of the courts, and the
+graceful forms of the pointed arches, with alternating voussoirs of
+white and black marble, are artistic in a high degree. The minarets are,
+however, inferior to those of Indian, Persian, and Arabic art, though
+graceful in their proportions.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 88.--EXTERIOR AHMEDIYEH MOSQUE.]
+
+Nearly all the great mosques are accompanied by the domical tombs
+(_turbeh_) of their imperial founders. Some of these are of noble size
+and great beauty of proportion and decoration. The +Tomb of Roxelana+
+(Khourrem), the favorite wife of Soliman the Magnificent (1553), is the
+most beautiful of all, and perhaps the most perfect gem of Turkish
+architecture, with its elegant arcade surrounding the octagonal domical
+mausoleum-chamber. The +monumental fountains+ of Constantinople also
+deserve mention. Of these, the one erected by Ahmet III. (1710), near
+Hagia Sophia, is the most beautiful. They usually consist of a
+rectangular marble reservoir with pagoda-like roof and broad eaves, the
+four faces of the fountain adorned each with a niche and basin, and
+covered with relief carving and gilded inscriptions.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 89.--INTERIOR OF SULEIMANIYEH,
+ CONSTANTINOPLE.]
+
+
++PALACES.+ In this department the Turks have done little of importance.
+The buildings in the Seraglio gardens are low and insignificant. The
++Tchinli Kiosque+, now the Imperial Museum, is however, a simple but
+graceful two-storied edifice, consisting of four vaulted chambers in the
+angles of a fine cruciform hall, with domes treated like those of
+Bijapur on a small scale; the tiling and the veranda in front are
+particularly elegant; the design suggests Persian handiwork. The later
+palaces, designed by Armenians, are picturesque white marble and stucco
+buildings on the water’s edge; they possess richly decorated halls, but
+the details are of a debased European rococo style, quite unworthy of an
+Oriental monarch.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS.+ ARABIAN: “Mosque of Omar,” or Dome of the Rock, 638;
+ El Aksah, by ’Abd-el-Melek, 691, both at Jerusalem; Mosque ’Amrou
+ at Cairo, 642; mosques at Cyrene, 665; great mosque of El Walîd,
+ Damascus, 705-717. Bagdad built, 755. Great mosque at Kairouân,
+ 737. At Cairo, Ibn Touloun, 876; Gama-El-Azhar, 971; Barkouk,
+ 1149; “Tombs of Khalîfs” (Karafah), 1250-1400; Moristan Kalaoun,
+ 1284; Medresseh Sultan Hassan, 1356; El Azhar enlarged; El Mûayed,
+ 1415; Kaïd Bey, 1463; Sinan Pacha, 1468; “Tombs of Mamelukes,”
+ 16th century. Also palaces, baths, fountains, mosques, and tombs.
+ MORESQUE: Mosque at Saragossa, 713; mosque and arsenal at Tunis,
+ 742; great mosque at Cordova, 786, 876, 975; sanctuary, 14th
+ century. Mosques, baths, etc., at Cordova, Tarragona, Segovia,
+ Toledo, 960-980; mosque of Sobeiha at Cordova, 981. Palaces and
+ mosques at Fez; great mosque at Seville, 1172. Extensive building
+ in Morocco close of 12th century. Giralda at Seville, 1160;
+ Alcazars in Malaga and Seville, 1225-1300; Alhambra and Generalife
+ at Granada, 1248, 1279, 1306; also mosques, baths, etc. Yussuf
+ builds palace at Malaga, 1348; palaces at Granada. PERSIAN: Tombs
+ near Bagdad, 786 (?); mosque at Tabriz, 1300; tomb of Khodabendeh
+ at Sultaniyeh, 1313; Meidan Shah (square) and Mesjid Shah (mosque)
+ at Ispahan, 17th century; Medresseh (school) of Sultan Hussein,
+ 18th century; palaces of Chehil Soutoun (forty columns) and Aineh
+ Khaneh (Palace of Mirrors). Baths, tombs, bazaars, etc., at
+ Cashan, Koum, Kasmin, etc. Aminabad Caravanserai between Shiraz
+ and Ispahan; bazaar at Ispahan.
+
+ INDIAN: Mosque and “Kutub Minar” (tower) _cir._ 1200; Tomb of
+ Altumsh, 1236; mosque at Ajmir, 1211-1236; tomb at Old Delhi;
+ Adina Mosque, Maldah, 1358. Mosques Jumma Musjid and Lal Durwaza
+ at Jaunpore, first half of 15th century. Mosque and bazaar,
+ Kalburgah, 1435 (?). Mosques at Ahmedabad and Sirkedj, middle 15th
+ century. Mosque Jumma Musjid and Tomb of Mahmûd, Bijapur, _cir._
+ 1550. Tomb of Humayûn, Delhi; of Mohammed Ghaus, Gwalior; mosque
+ at Futtehpore Sikhri; palace at Allahabad; tomb of Akbar at
+ Secundra, all by Akbar, 1556-1605. Palace and Jumma Musjid at
+ Delhi; Muti Musjid (Pearl mosque) and Taj Mahal at Agra, by Shah
+ Jehan, 1628-1658.
+
+ TURKISH: Tomb of Osman, Brusa, 1326; Green Mosque (Yeshil Djami)
+ Brusa, _cir._ 1350. Mosque at Isnik (Nicæa), 1376. Mehmediyeh
+ (mosque Mehmet II.) Constantinople, 1453; mosque at Eyoub; Tchinli
+ Kiosque, by Mehmet II., 1450-60; mosque Bayazid, 1500; Selim I.,
+ 1520; Suleimaniyeh, by Sinan, 1553; Ahmediyeh by Ahmet I., 1608;
+ Yeni Djami, 1665; Nouri Osman, by Osman III., 1755; mosque
+ Mohammed Ali in Cairo, 1824. Mosque at Adrianople. KHANS,
+ cloistered courts for public business and commercial lodgers,
+ various dates, 16th and 17th centuries (Validé Khan, Vizir Khan),
+ vaulted bazaars, fountains, Seraskierat Tower, all at
+ Constantinople.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+EARLY MEDIÆVAL ARCHITECTURE
+
+IN ITALY AND FRANCE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Cattaneo, _L’Architecture en Italie_. Chapuy,
+ _Le moyen age monumental_. Corroyer, _Architecture romane_.
+ Cummings, _A History of Architecture in Italy_. Enlart, _Manuel
+ d’archéologie française_. Hübsch, _Monuments de l’architecture
+ chrétienne_. Knight, _Churches of Northern Italy_. Lenoir,
+ _Architecture monastique_. Osten, _Bauwerke in der Lombardei_.
+ Quicherat, _Mélanges d’histoire et d’archéologie_. Reber, _History
+ of Mediæval Architecture_. Révoil, _Architecture romane du midi de
+ la France_. Rohault de Fleury, _Monuments de Pise_. Sharpe,
+ _Churches of Charente_. De Verneilh, _L’Architecture byzantine en
+ France_. Viollet-le-Duc, _Dictionnaire raisonné de l’architecture
+ française_ (especially in Vol. I., Architecture religieuse);
+ _Discourses on Architecture_.
+
+
++EARLY MEDIÆVAL EUROPE.+ The fall of the Western Empire in 476 A.D.
+marked the beginning of a new era in architecture outside of the
+Byzantine Empire. The so-called Dark Ages which followed this event
+constituted the formative period of the new Western civilization, during
+which the Celtic and Germanic races were being Christianized and
+subjected to the authority and to the educative influences of the
+Church. Under these conditions a new architecture was developed, founded
+upon the traditions of the early Christian builders, modified in
+different regions by Roman or Byzantine influences. For Rome recovered
+early her antique prestige, and Roman monuments covering the soil of
+Southern Europe, were a constant object lesson to the builders of that
+time. To this new architecture of the West, which in the tenth and
+eleventh centuries first began to achieve worthy and monumental results,
+the generic name of +Romanesque+ has been commonly given, in spite of
+the great diversity of its manifestations in different countries.
+
+
++CHARACTER OF THE ARCHITECTURE.+ Romanesque architecture was
+pre-eminently ecclesiastical. Civilization and culture emanated from the
+Church, and her requirements and discipline gave form to the builder’s
+art. But the basilican style, which had so well served her purposes in
+the earlier centuries and on classic soil, was ill-suited to the new
+conditions. Corinthian columns, marble incrustations, and splendid
+mosaics were not to be had for the asking in the forests of Gaul or
+Germany, nor could the Lombards and Ostrogoths in Italy or their
+descendants reproduce them. The basilican style was complete in itself,
+possessing no seeds of further growth. The priests and monks of Italy
+and Western Europe sought to rear with unskilled labor churches of stone
+in which the general dispositions of the basilica should reappear in
+simpler, more massive dress, and, as far as possible, in a fireproof
+construction with vaults of stone. This problem underlies all the varied
+phases of Romanesque architecture; its final solution was not, however,
+reached until the Gothic period, to which the Romanesque forms the
+transition and stepping-stone.
+
+
++MEDIÆVAL ITALY.+ Italy in the Dark Ages stood midway between the
+civilization of the Eastern Empire and the semi-barbarism of the West.
+Rome, Ravenna, and Venice early became centres of culture and maintained
+continuous commercial relations with the East. Architecture did not lack
+either the inspiration or the means for advancing on new lines. But its
+advance was by no means the same everywhere. The unifying influence of
+the church was counterbalanced by the provincialism and the local
+diversities of the various Italian states, resulting in a wide variety
+of styles. These, however, may be broadly grouped in four divisions: the
++Lombard+, the +Tuscan-Romanesque+, the +Italo-Byzantine+, and the
+unchanged +Basilican+ or Early Christian, which last, as was shown in
+Chapter X., continued to be practised in Rome throughout the Middle
+Ages.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 90.--INTERIOR OF SAN AMBROGIO, MILAN.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 91.--WEST FRONT AND CAMPANILE OF CATHEDRAL,
+ PIACENZA.]
+
++LOMBARD STYLE.+ Owing to the general rebuilding of ancient churches
+under the more settled social conditions of the eleventh and twelfth
+centuries, little remains to us of the architecture of the three
+preceding centuries in Italy, except the Roman basilicas and a few
+baptisteries and circular churches, already mentioned in Chapter X. The
+so-called Lombard monuments belong mainly to the eleventh and twelfth
+centuries. They are found not only in Lombardy, but also in Venetia and
+the Æmilia. Milan, Pavia, Piacenza, Bologna, and Verona were important
+centres of development of this style. The churches were nearly all
+vaulted, but the plans were basilican, with such variations as resulted
+from efforts to meet the exigencies of vaulted construction. The nave
+was narrowed, and instead of rows of columns carrying a thin clearstory
+wall, a few massive piers of masonry, connected by broad pier-arches,
+supported the heavy ribs of the groined vaulting, as in S. Ambrogio,
+Milan (Fig. 90). To resist the thrust of the main vault, the clearstory
+was sometimes suppressed, the side aisle carried up in two stories
+forming galleries, and rows of chapels added at the sides, their
+partitions forming buttresses. The piers were often of clustered
+section, the better to receive the various arches and ribs they
+supported. The vaulting was in square divisions or _vaulting-bays_, each
+embracing two pier-arches which met upon an intermediate pier lighter
+than the others. Thus the whole aspect of the interior was
+revolutionized. The lightness, spaciousness, and decorative elegance of
+the basilicas were here exchanged for a sombre and massive dignity
+severe in its plainness. The Choir was sometimes raised a few feet above
+the nave, to allow of a crypt and _confessio_ beneath, reached by broad
+flights of steps from the nave. Sta. Maria della Pieve at Arezzo
+(9th-11th century), +S. Michele+ at Pavia (late 11th century), the
++Cathedral of Piacenza+ (1122), +S. Ambrogio+ at Milan (12th century),
+and +S. Zeno+ at Verona (1139) are notable monuments of this style.
+
+
++LOMBARD EXTERIORS.+ The few architectural embellishments employed on
+the simple exteriors of the Lombard churches were usually effective and
+well composed. Slender columnettes or long pilasters, blind arcades, and
+open arcaded galleries under the eaves gave light and shade to these
+exteriors. The façades were mere frontispieces with a single broad
+gable, the three aisles of the church being merely suggested by flat or
+round pilasters dividing the front (Fig 91). Gabled porches, with
+columns resting on the backs of lions or monsters, adorned the doorways.
+The carving was often of a fierce and grotesque character. Detached
+bell-towers or _campaniles_ adjoined many of these churches; square and
+simple in mass, but with well-distributed openings and well-proportioned
+belfries (Piacenza S. Zeno at Verona, etc.).[18]
+
+ [Footnote 18: See Appendix B.]
+
+
++THE TUSCAN ROMANESQUE.+ The churches of this style (sometimes called
+the +Pisan+) were less vigorous but more elegant and artistic in design
+than the Lombard. They were basilicas in plan, with timber ceilings and
+high clearstories on columnar arcades. In their decoration, both
+internal and external, they betray the influence of Byzantine
+traditions, especially in the use of white and colored marble in
+alternating bands or in panelled veneering. Still more striking is the
+external decorative application of wall-arcades, sometimes occupying the
+whole height of the wall and carried on flat pilasters, sometimes in
+superposed stages of small arches on slender columns standing free of
+the wall. In general the decorative element prevailed over the
+constructive in the design of these picturesquely beautiful churches,
+some of which are of noble size. The +Duomo+ (cathedral) of +Pisa+,
+built 1063-1118, is the finest monument of the style (Figs. 92, 93). It
+is 312 feet long and 118 wide, with long transepts and an elliptical
+dome of later date over the _crossing_ (the intersection of nave and
+transepts). Its richly arcaded front and banded flanks strikingly
+exemplify the illogical and unconstructive but highly decorative methods
+of the Tuscan Romanesque builders. The circular +Baptistery+ (1153),
+with its lofty domical central hall surrounded by an aisle, an imposing
+development of the type established by Constantine (p. 111), and the
+famous +Leaning Tower+ (1174), both designed with external arcading,
+combine with the Duomo to form the most remarkable group of
+ecclesiastical buildings in Italy, if not in Europe (Fig. 92).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 92.--BAPTISTERY, CATHEDRAL,
+ AND LEANING TOWER, PISA.]
+
+The same style appears in more flamboyant shape in some of the churches
+of Lucca. The cathedral +S. Martino+ (1060; façade, 1204; nave altered
+in fourteenth century) is the finest and largest of these; +S. Michele+
+(façade, 1288) and S. Frediano (twelfth century) have the most
+elaborately decorated façades. The same principles of design appear in
+the cathedral and several other churches in Pistoia and Prato; but these
+belong, for the most part, to the Gothic period.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 93.--INTERIOR OF PISA CATHEDRAL.]
+
+
++FLORENCE.+ The church of +S. Miniato+, in the suburbs of Florence, is a
+beautiful example of a modification of the Pisan style. It is in plan a
+basilica with two piers interrupting the colonnade on each side of the
+nave and supporting powerful transverse arches. The interior is
+embellished with bands and patterns in black and white, and the woodwork
+of the open-timber roof is elegantly decorated with fine patterns in
+red, green, blue, and gold--a treatment common in early mediæval
+churches, as at Messina, Orvieto, etc. The exterior is adorned with
+wall-arches of classic design and with panelled veneering in white and
+dark marble, instead of the horizontal bands of the Pisan churches. This
+system of external decoration, a blending of Pisan and Italo-Byzantine
+methods, became the established practice in Florence, lasting through
+the whole Gothic period. The +Baptistery+ of Florence, originally the
+cathedral, an imposing polygonal domical edifice of the tenth century,
+presents externally one of the most admirable examples of this practice.
+Its marble veneering in black and white, with pilasters and arches of
+excellent design, is attributed by Vasari to Arnolfo di Cambio, but is
+by many considered to be much older, although restored by that architect
+in 1294.
+
+Suggestions of the Pisan arcade system are found in widely scattered
+examples in the east and south of Italy, mingled with features of
+Lombard and Byzantine design. In Apulia, as at Bari, Caserta Vecchia
+(1100), Molfetta (1192), and in Sicily, the Byzantine influence is
+conspicuous in the use of domes and in many of the decorative details.
+Particularly is this the case at Palermo and Monreale, where the
+churches erected after the Norman conquest--some of them domical, some
+basilican--show a strange but picturesque and beautiful mixture of
+Romanesque, Byzantine, and Arabic forms. The +Cathedral+ of +Monreale+
+and the churches of the +Eremiti+ and +La Martorana+ at Palermo are the
+most important.
+
+The +Italo-Byzantine+ style has already found mention in the latter part
+of Chapter XI. Venice and Ravenna were its chief centres; while the
+influence, both of the parent style and of its Italian offshoot was, as
+we have just shown, very widespread.
+
+
++WESTERN ROMANESQUE ARCHITECTURE.+ In Western Europe the unrest and
+lawlessness which attended the unsettled relations of society under the
+feudal system long retarded the establishment of that social order
+without which architectural progress is impossible. With the eleventh
+century there began, however, a great activity in building, principally
+among the monasteries, which represented all that there was of culture
+and stability amid the prevailing disorder. Undisturbed by war, the only
+abodes of peaceful labor, learning, and piety, they had become rich and
+powerful, both in men and land. Probably the more or less general
+apprehension of the supposed impending end of the world in the year 1000
+contributed to this result by driving unquiet consciences to seek refuge
+in the monasteries, or to endow them richly.
+
+The monastic builders, with little technical training, but with plenty
+of willing hands, sought out new architectural paths to meet their
+special needs. Remote from classic and Byzantine models, and mainly
+dependent on their own resources, they often failed to realize the
+intended results. But skill came with experience, and with advancing
+civilization and a surer mastery of construction came a finer taste and
+greater elegance of design. Meanwhile military architecture developed a
+new science of building, and covered Europe with imposing castles,
+admirably constructed and often artistic in design as far as military
+exigencies would permit.
+
+
++CHARACTER OF THE STYLE.+ The Romanesque architecture of the eleventh
+and twelfth centuries in Western Europe (sometimes called the
++Round-Arched Gothic+) was thus predominantly though not exclusively
+monastic. This gave it a certain unity of character in spite of national
+and local variations. The problem which the wealthy orders set
+themselves was, like that of the Lombard church-builders in Italy, to
+adapt the basilica plan to the exigencies of vaulted construction.
+Massive walls, round arches stepped or recessed to lighten their
+appearance, heavy mouldings richly carved, clustered piers and
+jamb-shafts, capitals either of the _cushion_ type or imitated from the
+Corinthian, and strong and effective carving--all these are features
+alike of French, German, English, and Spanish Romanesque architecture.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 94.--PLAN OF ST. FRONT.]
+
++THE FRENCH ROMANESQUE.+ Though monasticism produced remarkable results
+in France, architecture there did not wholly depend upon the
+monasteries. Southern Gaul (Provence) was full of classic remains and
+classic traditions while at the same time it maintained close trade
+relations with Venice and the East.[19] The church of +St. Front+ at
+Perigueux, built in 1120, reproduced the plan of St. Mark’s with
+singular fidelity, but without its rich decoration, and with pointed
+instead of round arches (Figs. 94, 95). The domical cathedral of
++Cahors+ (1050-1100), an obvious imitation of S. Irene at
+Constantinople, and the later and more Gothic Cathedral of +Angoulême+
+display a notable advance in architectural skill outside of the
+monasteries. Among the abbeys, +Fontevrault+ (1101-1119) closely
+resembles Angoulême, but surpasses it in the elegance of its choir and
+chapels. In these and a number of other domical churches of the same
+Franco-Byzantine type in Aquitania, the substitution of the Latin cross
+in the plan for the Greek cross used in St. Front, evinces the Gallic
+tendency to work out to their logical end new ideas or new applications
+of old ones. These striking variations on Byzantine themes might have
+developed into an independent local style but for the overwhelming tide
+of Gothic influence which later poured in from the North.
+
+ [Footnote 19: See Viollet-le-Duc, _Dictionnaire raisonné_, article
+ ARCHITECTURE, vol. i., pp. 66 _et seq._; also de Verneilh,
+ _L’Architecture byzantine en France_.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 95.--INTERIOR OF ST. FRONT, PERIGUEUX.]
+
+Meanwhile, farther south (at Arles, Avignon, etc.), classic models
+strongly influenced the details, if not the plans, of an interesting
+series of churches remarkable especially for their porches rich with
+figure sculpture and for their elaborately carved details. The classic
+archivolt, the Corinthian capital, the Roman forms of enriched
+mouldings, are evident at a glance in the porches of Notre Dame des Doms
+at Avignon, of the church of St. Gilles, and of St. Trophime at Arles.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 96.--PLAN OF NOTRE DAME DU PORT, CLERMONT.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 97.--SECTION OF NOTRE DAME DU PORT, CLERMONT.]
+
++DEVELOPMENT OF VAULTING.+ It was in Central France, and mainly along
+the Loire, that the systematic development of vaulted church
+architecture began. Naves covered with barrel-vaults appear in a number
+of large churches built during the eleventh and twelfth centuries, with
+apsidal and transeptal chapels and aisles carried around the apse, as in
+St. Etienne, Nevers, +Notre Dame du Port+ at Clermont-Ferrand (Fig. 96),
+and +St. Paul+ at Issoire. The thrust of these ponderous vaults was
+clumsily resisted by half-barrel vaults over the side-aisles,
+transmitting the strain to massive side-walls (Fig. 97), or by high
+side-aisles with transverse barrel or groined vaults over each bay. In
+either case the clearstory was suppressed--a fact which mattered little
+in the sunny southern provinces. In the more cloudy North, in Normandy,
+Picardy, and the Royal Domain, the nave-vault was raised higher to admit
+of clearstory windows, and its section was in some cases made like a
+pointed arch, to diminish its thrust, as at +Autun+. But these
+eleventh-century vaults nearly all fell in, and had to be reconstructed
+on new principles. In this work the Clunisians seem to have led the way,
+as at +Cluny+ (1089) and +Vézelay+ (1100). In the latter church, one of
+the finest and most interesting French edifices of the twelfth century,
+a groined vault replaced the barrel-vault, though the oblong plan of the
+vaulting-bays, due to the nave being wider than the pier-arches, led to
+somewhat awkward twisted surfaces in the vaulting. But even here the
+vaults had insufficient lateral buttressing, and began to crack and
+settle; so that in the great ante-chapel, built thirty years later, the
+side-aisles were made in two stories, the better to resist the thrust,
+and the groined vaults themselves were constructed of pointed section.
+These seem to be the earliest pointed groined vaults in France. It was
+not till the second half of that century, however (1150-1200), that the
+flying buttress was combined with such vaults, so as to permit of high
+clearstories for the better lighting of the nave; and the problem of
+satisfactorily vaulting an oblong space with a groined vault was not
+solved until the following century.
+
+
++ONE-AISLED CHURCHES.+ In the Franco-Byzantine churches already
+described (p. 164) this difficulty of the oblong vaulting-bay did not
+occur, owing to the absence of side-aisles and pier-arches. Following
+this conception of church-planning, a number of interesting parish
+churches and a few cathedrals were built in various parts of France in
+which side-recesses or chapels took the place of side-aisles. The
+partitions separating them served as abutments for the groined or
+barrel-vaults of the nave. The cathedrals of +Autun+ (1150) and
++Langres+ (1160), and in the fourteenth century that of Alby, employed
+this arrangement, common in many earlier Provençal churches which have
+disappeared.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 98.--A SIX-PART RIBBED VAULT, SHOWING
+ TWO COMPARTMENTS WITH THE FILLINGS COMPLETE.
+ _a, a_, _Transverse ribs_ (_doubleaux_); _b, b_, _Wall-ribs_
+ (_formerets_); _c, c_, _Groin-ribs_ (_diagonaux_).
+ (All the ribs are semicircles.)]
+
++SIX-PART VAULTING.+ In the Royal Domain great architectural activity
+does not appear to have begun until the beginning of the Gothic period
+in the middle of the twelfth century. But in Normandy, and especially at
+Caen and Mont St. Michel, there were produced, between 1046 and 1120,
+some remarkable churches, in which a high clearstory was secured in
+conjunction with a vaulted nave, by the use of “six-part” vaulting (Fig.
+98). This was an awkward expedient, by which a square vaulting-bay was
+divided into six parts by the groins and by a middle transverse rib,
+necessitating two narrow skew vaults meeting at the centre. This
+unsatisfactory device was retained for over a century, and was common in
+early Gothic churches both in France and Great Britain. It made it
+possible to resist the thrust by high side-aisles, and yet to open
+windows above these under the cross-vaults. The abbey churches of +St.
+Etienne+ (the Abbaye aux Hommes) and +Ste. Trinité+ (Abbaye aux Dames),
+at Caen, built in the time of William the Conqueror, were among the most
+magnificent churches of their time, both in size and in the excellence
+and ingenuity of their construction. The great abbey church of +Mont St.
+Michel+ (much altered in later times) should also be mentioned here. At
+the same time these and other Norman churches showed a great advance in
+their internal composition. A well-developed triforium or subordinate
+gallery was introduced between the pier-arches and clearstory, and all
+the structural membering of the edifice was better proportioned and more
+logically expressed than in most contemporary work.
+
+
++ARCHITECTURAL DETAILS.+ The details of French Romanesque architecture
+varied considerably in the several provinces, according as classic,
+Byzantine, or local influences prevailed. Except in a few of the
+Aquitanian churches, the round arch was universal. The walls were heavy
+and built of rubble between facings of stones of moderate size dressed
+with the axe. Windows and doors were widely splayed to diminish the
+obstruction of the massive walls, and were treated with jamb-shafts and
+recessed arches. These were usually formed with large cylindrical
+mouldings, richly carved with leaf ornaments, zigzags, billets, and
+grotesques. Figure-sculpture was more generally used in the South than
+in the North. The interior piers were sometimes cylindrical, but more
+often clustered, and where square bays of four-part or six-part vaulting
+were employed, the piers were alternately lighter and heavier. Each
+shaft had its independent capital either of the block type or of a form
+resembling somewhat that of the Corinthian order. During the eleventh
+century it became customary to carry up to the main vaulting one or more
+shafts of the compound pier to support the vaulting ribs. Thus the
+division of the nave into _bays_ was accentuated, while at the same time
+the horizontal three-fold division of the height by a well-defined
+triforium between the pier-arches and clearstory began to be likewise
+emphasized.
+
+
++VAULTING.+ The vaulting was also divided into bays by transverse ribs,
+and where it was groined the groins themselves began in the twelfth
+century to be marked by groin-ribs. These were constructed independently
+of the vaulting, and the four or six compartments of each vaulting-bay
+were then built in, the ribs serving, in part at least, to support the
+centrings for this purpose. This far-reaching principle, already applied
+by the Romans in their concrete vaults (see p. 84), appears as a
+re-discovery, or rather an independent invention, of the builders of
+Normandy at the close of the eleventh century. The flying buttress was a
+later invention; in the round-arched buildings of the eleventh and
+twelfth centuries the buttressing was mainly internal, and was
+incomplete and timid in its arrangement.
+
+
++EXTERIORS.+ The exteriors were on this account plain and flat. The
+windows were small, the mouldings simple, and towers were rarely
+combined with the body of the church until after the beginning of the
+twelfth century. Then they appeared as mere belfries of moderate height,
+with pyramidal roofs and effectively arranged openings, the germs of the
+noble Gothic spires of later times. Externally the western porches and
+portals were the most important features of the design, producing an
+imposing effect by their massive arches, clustered piers, richly carved
+mouldings, and deep shadows.
+
+
++CLOISTERS, ETC.+ Mention should be made of the other monastic buildings
+which were grouped around the abbey churches of this period. These
+comprised refectories, chapter-halls, cloistered courts surrounded by
+the conventual cells, and a large number of accessory structures for
+kitchens, infirmaries, stores, etc. The whole formed an elaborate and
+complex aggregation of connected buildings, often of great size and
+beauty, especially the refectories and cloisters. Most of these
+conventual buildings have disappeared, many of them having been
+demolished during the Gothic period to make way for more elegant
+structures in the new style. There remain, however, a number of fine
+cloistered courts in their original form, especially in Southern France.
+Among the most remarkable of these are those of +Moissac+, +Elne+, and
++Montmajour+.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS.+ ITALY. (For basilicas and domical churches of
+ 6th-12th centuries see pp. 118, 119.)--Before 11th century: Sta.
+ Maria at Toscanella, altered 1206; S. Donato, Zara; chapel at
+ Friuli; baptistery at Boella. 11th century: S. Giovanni, Viterbo;
+ Sta. Maria della Pieve, Arezzo; S. Antonio, Piacenza, 1014;
+ Eremiti, 1132, and La Martorana, 1143, both at Palermo; Duomo at
+ Bari, 1027 (much altered); Duomo and baptistery, Novara, 1030;
+ Duomo at Parma, begun 1058; Duomo at Pisa, 1063-1118; S. Miniato,
+ Florence, 1063-12th century; S. Michele at Pavia and Duomo at
+ Modena, late 11th century.--12th century: in Calabria and Apulia,
+ cathedrals of Trani, 1100; Caserta, Vecchia, 1100-1153; Molfetta,
+ 1162; Benevento; churches S. Giovanni at Brindisi, S. Niccolo at
+ Bari, 1139. In Sicily, Duomo at Monreale, 1174-1189. In Northern
+ Italy, S. Tomaso in Limine, Bergamo, 1100 (?); Sta. Giulia,
+ Brescia; S. Lorenzo, Milan, rebuilt 1119; Duomo at Piacenza, 1122;
+ S. Zeno at Verona, 1139; S. Ambrogio, Milan, 1140, vaulted in 13th
+ century; baptistery at Pisa, 1153-1278; Leaning Tower, Pisa,
+ 1174.--14th century: S. Michele, Lucca, 1188; S. Giovanni and
+ S. Frediano, Lucca. In Dalmatia, cathedral at Zara, 1192-1204.
+ Many castles and early town-halls, as at Bari, Brescia, Lucca,
+ etc.
+
+ FRANCE: Previous to 11th century: St. Germiny-des-Prés,
+ 806, Chapel of the Trinity, St. Honorat-des-Lérins; Ste. Croix de
+ Montmajour.--11th century: Cérisy-la-Forêt and abbey church of
+ Mont St. Michel, 1020 (the latter altered in 12th and 16th
+ centuries); Vignory; St. Genou; porch of St. Bénoit-sur-Loire,
+ 1030; St. Sépulchre at Neuvy, 1045; Ste. Trinité (Abbaye aux
+ Dames) at Caen, 1046, vaulted 1140; St. Etienne (Abbaye aux
+ Hommes) at Caen, same date; St. Front at Perigueux, 1120; Ste.
+ Croix at Quimperlé, 1081; cathedral, Cahors, 1050-1110; abbey
+ churches of Cluny (demolished) and Vézelay, 1089-1100; circular
+ church of Rieux-Mérinville, church of St. Savin in Auvergne, the
+ churches of St. Paul at Issoire and Notre-Dame-du-Port at
+ Clermont, St. Hilaire and Notre-Dame-la-Grande at Poitiers; also
+ St. Sernin (Saturnin) at Toulouse, all at close of 11th and
+ beginning of 12th century.--12th century: Domical churches of
+ Aquitania and vicinity; Solignac and Fontévrault, 1120; St.
+ Etienne (Périgueux), St. Avit-Sénieur; Angoulême, Souillac,
+ Broussac, etc., early 12th century; St. Trophime at Arles, 1110,
+ cloisters later; church of Vaison; abbeys and cloisters at
+ Montmajour, Tarascon, Moissac (with fragments of a 10th-century
+ cloister built into present arcades); St. Paul-du-Mausolée;
+ Puy-en-Vélay, with fine church. Many other abbeys, parish
+ churches, and a few cathedrals in Central and Northern France
+ especially.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+EARLY MEDIÆVAL ARCHITECTURE.--_Continued._
+
+IN GERMANY, GREAT BRITAIN, AND SPAIN.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Hübsch and Reber. Bond, _Gothic
+ Architecture in England_. Also Brandon, _Analysis of Gothic
+ Architecture_. Boisserée, _Nieder Rhein_. Ditchfield, _The
+ Cathedrals of England_. Hasak, _Die romanische und die gotische
+ Baukunst_ (in _Handbuch d. Arch._). Lübke, _Die Mittelalterliche
+ Kunst in Westfalen_. Möller, _Denkmäler der deutschen Baukunst_.
+ Puttrich, _Baukunst des Mittelalters in Sachsen_. Rickman, _An
+ Attempt to Discriminate the Styles of Architecture_. Scott,
+ _English Church Architecture_. Van Rensselaer, _English
+ Cathedrals_.
+
+
++MEDIÆVAL GERMANY.+ Architecture developed less rapidly and
+symmetrically in Germany than in France, notwithstanding the strong
+centralized government of the empire. The early churches were of wood,
+and the substitution of stone for wood proceeded slowly. During the
+Carolingian epoch (800-919), however, a few important buildings were
+erected, embodying Byzantine and classic traditions. Among these the
+most notable was the +Minster+ or palatine chapel of Charlemagne at
++Aix-la-Chapelle+, an obvious imitation of San Vitale at Ravenna. It
+consisted of an octagonal domed hall surrounded by a vaulted aisle in
+two stories, but without the eight niches of the Ravenna plan. It was
+preceded by a porch flanked by turrets. The Byzantine type thus
+introduced was repeated in later churches, as in the Nuns’ Choir at
+Essen (947) and at Ottmarsheim (1050). In the great monastery at Fulda a
+basilica with transepts and with an apsidal choir at either end was
+built in 803. These choirs were raised above the level of the nave, to
+admit of crypts beneath them, as in many Lombard churches; a practice
+which, with the reduplication of the choir and apse just mentioned,
+became very common in German Romanesque architecture.
+
+
++EARLY CHURCHES.+ It was in Saxony that this architecture first entered
+upon a truly national development. The early churches of this province
+and of Hildesheim (where architecture flourished under the favor of the
+bishops, as elsewhere under the royal influence) were of basilican plan
+and destitute of vaulting, except in the crypts. They were built with
+massive piers, sometimes rectangular, sometimes clustered, the two kinds
+often alternating in the same nave. Short columns were, however,
+sometimes used instead of piers, either alone, as at Paulinzelle and
+Limburg-on-the-Hardt (1024-39), or alternating with piers, as at
+Hecklingen, +Gernrode+ (958-1050), and +St. Godehard+ at Hildesheim
+(1133). A triple eastern apse, with apsidal chapels projecting eastward
+from the transepts, were common elements in the plans, and a second
+apse, choir, and crypt at the west end were not infrequent. Externally
+the most striking feature was the association of two, four, or even six
+square or circular towers with the mass of the church, and the elevation
+of square or polygonal turrets or cupolas over the crossing. These
+adjuncts gave a very picturesque aspect to edifices otherwise somewhat
+wanting in artistic interest.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 99.--PLAN OF MINSTER AT WORMS.]
+
++RHENISH CHURCHES.+ It was in the Rhine provinces that vaulting was
+first applied to the naves of German churches, nearly a half century
+after its general adoption in France. Cologne possesses an interesting
+trio of churches in which the Byzantine dome on squinches or on
+pendentives, with three apses or niches opening into the central area,
+was associated with a long three aisled nave (+St. Mary-in-the-Capitol+,
+begun in 9th century; +Great St. Martin’s+, 1150-70; +Apostles’ Church+,
+1160-99: the naves vaulted later). The double chapel at
++Schwarz-Rheindorf+, near Bonn (1151), also has the crossing covered by
+a dome on pendentives.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 100.--ONE BAY OF CATHEDRAL AT SPIRES.]
+
+The vaulting of the nave itself was developed in another series of
+edifices of imposing size, the cathedrals of +Mayence+ (1036), +Spires+
+(Speyer), and +Worms+, and the +Abbey of Laach+, all built in the 11th
+century and vaulted early in the 12th. In the first three the main
+vaulting is in square bays, each covering two bays of the nave, the
+piers of which are alternately lighter and heavier (Figs. 99, 100). At
+Laach the vaulting-bays are oblong, both in nave and aisles. There was
+no triforium gallery, and stability was secured only by excessive
+thickness in the piers and clearstory walls, and by bringing down the
+main vault as near to the side-aisle roofs as possible.
+
+
++RHENISH EXTERIORS.+ These great churches, together with those of +Bonn+
+and +Limburg-on-the-Lahn+ and the cathedral of +Treves+ (Trier, 1047),
+are interesting, not only by their size and dignity of plan and the
+somewhat rude massiveness of their construction, but even more so by the
+picturesqueness of their external design (Fig. 101). Especially
+successful is the massing of the large and small turrets with the lofty
+nave-roof and with the apses at one or both ends. The systematic use of
+arcading to decorate the exterior walls, and the introduction of open
+arcaded dwarf galleries under the cornices of the apses, gables, and
+dome-turrets, gave to these Rhenish churches an external beauty hardly
+equalled in other contemporary edifices. This method of exterior design,
+and the system of vaulting in square bays over double bays of the nave,
+were probably derived from the Lombard churches of Northern Italy, with
+which the Hohenstauffen emperors had many political relations.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 101.--EAST END OF CHURCH OF THE APOSTLES,
+ COLOGNE.]
+
+The Italian influence is also encountered in a number of circular
+churches of early date, as at Fulda (9th-11th century), Drügelte, Bonn
+(baptistery, demolished), and in façades like that at Rosheim, which is
+a copy in little of San Zeno at Verona.
+
+Elsewhere in Germany architecture was in a backward state, especially in
+the southern provinces. Outside of Saxony, Franconia, and the Rhine
+provinces, very few works of importance were erected until the
+thirteenth century.
+
+
++SECULAR ARCHITECTURE.+ Little remains to us of the secular architecture
+of this period in Germany, if we except the great feudal castles,
+especially those of the Rhine, which were, after all, rather works of
+military engineering than of architectural art. The palace of
+Charlemagne at Aix (the chapel of which was mentioned on p. 172) is
+known to have been a vast and splendid group of buildings, partly, at
+least of marble; but hardly a vestige of it remains. Of the extensive
++Palace of Henry III.+ at +Goslar+ there remain well-defined ruins of an
+imposing hall of assembly in two aisles with triple-arched windows. At
+Brunswick the east wing of the +Burg Dankwargerode+ displays, in spite
+of modern alterations, the arrangement of the chapel, great hall, two
+fortified towers, and part of the residence of Henry the Lion. The
++Wartburg+ palace (Ludwig III., _cir._ 1150) is more generally
+known--a rectangular hall in three stories, with windows effectively
+grouped to form arcades; while at Gelnhausen and Münzenberg are ruins of
+somewhat similar buildings. A few of the Romanesque monasteries of
+Germany have left partial remains, as at +Maulbronn+, which was almost
+entirely rebuilt in the Gothic period, and isolated buildings in Cologne
+and elsewhere. There remain also in Cologne a number of Romanesque
+private houses with coupled windows and stepped gables.
+
+
++GREAT BRITAIN.+ Previous to the Norman conquest (1066) there was in the
+British Isles little or no architecture worthy of mention. The few
+extant remains of Saxon and Celtic buildings reveal a singular poverty
+of ideas and want of technical skill. These scanty remains are mostly of
+towers (those in Ireland nearly all round and tapering, with conical
+tops, their use and date being the subjects of much controversy) and
+crypts. The tower of Earl’s Barton is the most important and best
+preserved of those in England. With the Norman conquest, however, began
+an extraordinary activity in the building of churches and abbeys.
+William the Conqueror himself founded a number of these, and his Norman
+ecclesiastics endeavored to surpass on British soil the contemporary
+churches of Normandy. The new churches differed somewhat from their
+French prototypes; they were narrower and lower, but much longer,
+especially as to the choir and transepts. The cathedrals of +Durham+
+(1096-1133) and +Norwich+ (same date) are important examples (Fig. 102).
+They also differed from the French churches in two important particulars
+externally; a huge tower rose usually over the crossing, and the western
+portals were small and insignificant. Lateral entrances near the west
+end were given greater importance and called _Galilees_. At Durham a
+Galilee chapel (not shown in the plan), takes the place of a porch at
+the west end, like the ante-churches of St. Benoît-sur-Loire and
+Vézelay.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 102.--PLAN OF DURHAM CATHEDRAL.]
+
+
++THE NORMAN STYLE.+ The Anglo-Norman builders employed the same general
+features as the Romanesque builders of Normandy, but with more of
+picturesqueness and less of refinement and technical elegance. Heavy
+walls, recessed arches, round mouldings, cubic cushion-caps, clustered
+piers, and in doorways a jamb-shaft for each stepping of the arch were
+common to both styles. But in England the Corinthian form of capital is
+rare, its place being taken by simpler forms.
+
+
++NORMAN INTERIORS.+ The interior design of the larger churches of this
+period shows a close general analogy to contemporaneous French Norman
+churches, as appears by comparing the nave of Waltham or Peterboro’ with
+that of Cérisy-la-Forêt, in Normandy. Although the massiveness of the
+Anglo-Norman piers and walls plainly suggests the intention of vaulting
+the nave, this intention seems never to have been carried out except in
+small churches and crypts. All the existing abbeys and cathedrals of
+this period had wooden ceilings or were, like Durham, Norwich, and
+Gloucester, vaulted at a later date. Completed as they were with wooden
+nave-roofs, the clearstory was, without danger, made quite lofty and
+furnished with windows of considerable size. These were placed near the
+outside of the thick wall, and a passage was left between them and
+a triple arch on the inner face of the wall--a device imitated
+from the abbeys at Caen. The vaulted side-aisles were low, with
+disproportionately wide pier-arches, above which was a high triforium
+gallery under the side-roofs. Thus a nearly equal height was assigned
+to each of the three stories of the bay, disregarding that subordination
+of minor to major parts which gives interest to an architectural
+composition. The piers were quite often round, as at Gloucester,
+Hereford, and Bristol. Sometimes round piers alternated with clustered
+piers, as at Durham and Waltham; and in some cases clustered piers alone
+were employed, as at Peterboro’ and in the transepts of Winchester (Fig.
+103).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 103.--ONE BAY OF TRANSEPT,
+ WINCHESTER CATHEDRAL.]
+
+
++FAÇADES AND DOORWAYS.+ All the details were of the simplest character,
+except in the doorways. These were richly adorned with clustered
+jamb-shafts and elaborately carved mouldings, but there was little
+variety in the details of this carving. The zigzag was the most common
+feature, though birds’ heads with the beaks pointing toward the centre
+of the arch were not uncommon. In the smaller churches (Fig. 104) the
+doorways were better proportioned to the whole façade than in the larger
+ones, in which they appear as relatively insignificant features. Very
+few examples remain of important Norman façades in their original form,
+nearly all of these having been altered after the round arch was
+displaced by the pointed arch in the latter part of the twelfth century.
+Iffley church (Fig. 104) is a good example of the style.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 104.--FRONT OF IFFLEY CHURCH.]
+
+
++SPAIN.+ During the Romanesque period a large part of Spain was under
+Moorish dominion. The capture of Toledo, in 1062, by the Christians,
+began the gradual emancipation of the country from Moslem rule, and in
+the northern provinces a number of important churches were erected under
+the influence of French Romanesque models. The use of domical
+pendentives (as in the +Panteon+ of +S. Isidoro+, at Leon, and in the
+_cimborio_ or dome over the choir at the intersection of nave and
+transepts in old Salamanca cathedral) was probably derived from the
+domical churches of Aquitania and Anjou. Elsewhere the northern
+Romanesque type prevailed under various modifications, with long nave
+and transepts, a short choir, and a complete _chevet_ with apsidal
+chapels. The church of +St. Iago+ at Compostella (1078) is the finest
+example of this class. These churches nearly all had groined vaulting
+over the side-aisles and barrel-vaults over the nave, the constructive
+system being substantially that of the churches of Auvergne and the
+Loire Valley (p. 165). They differed, however, in the treatment of the
+crossing of nave and transepts, over which was usually erected a dome or
+cupola or pendentives or squinches, covered externally by an imposing
+square lantern or tower, as in the +Old Cathedral+ at +Salamanca+,
+already mentioned (1120-78) and the +Collegiate Church+ at +Toro+.
+Occasional exceptions to these types are met with, as in the basilican
+wooden-roofed church of S. Millan at Segovia; in +S. Isidoro+ at Leon,
+with chapels and a later-added square eastern end, and the circular
+church of the Templars at Segovia.
+
+The architectural details of these Spanish churches did not differ
+radically from contemporary French work. As in France and England, the
+doorways were the most ornate parts of the design, the mouldings being
+carved with extreme richness and the jambs frequently adorned with
+statues, as in +S. Vincente+ at Avila. There was no such logical and
+reasoned-out system of external design as in France, and there is
+consequently greater variety in the façades. Perhaps the most remarkable
+thing about the architecture of this period is its apparent exemption
+from the influence of the Moorish monuments which abounded on every
+hand. This may be explained by the hatred which was felt by the
+Christians for the Moslems and all their works.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS.+ GERMANY: Previous to 11th century: Circular churches
+ of Holy Cross at Münster, and of Fulda; palace chapel of
+ Charlemagne at Aix-la-Chapelle, 804; St. Stephen, Mayence, 990;
+ primitive nave and crypt of St. Gereon, Cologne, 10th century;
+ Lorsch.--11th century: Churches of Gernrode, Goslar, and Merseburg
+ in Saxony; cathedral of Bremen; first restoration of cathedral of
+ Treves (Trier), 1010, west front, 1047; Limburg-on-Hardt, 1024;
+ St. Willibrod, Echternach, 1031; east end of Mayence Cathedral,
+ 1036; Church of Apostles and nave St. Mary-in-Capitol at Cologne,
+ 1036; cathedral of Spires (Speyer) begun 1040; Cathedral
+ Hildesheim, 1061; St. Joseph, Bamberg, 1073; Abbey of Laach,
+ 1093-1156; round churches of Bonn, Drügelte, Nimeguen; cathedrals
+ of Paderborn and Minden.--12th century: Churches of Klus,
+ Paulinzelle, Hamersleben, 1100-1110; Johannisberg, 1130; St.
+ Godehard. Hildesheim, 1133; Worms, the Minster, 1118-83; Jerichau,
+ 1144-60; Schwarz-Rheindorf, 1151; St. Michael, Hildesheim, 1162;
+ Cathedral Brunswick, 1172-94; Lubeck, 1172; also churches of
+ Gaudersheim, Würzburg, St. Matthew at Treves, Limburg-on-Lahn,
+ Sinzig, St. Castor at Coblentz, Diesdorf, Rosheim; round churches
+ of Ottmarsheim and Rippen (Denmark); cathedral of Basle, cathedral
+ and cloister of Zurich (Switzerland).
+
+ ENGLAND: Previous to 11th century: Scanty vestiges of Saxon church
+ architecture, as tower of Earl’s Barton, round towers and small
+ chapels in Ireland.--11th century: Crypt of Canterbury Cathedral,
+ 1070; chapel St. John in Tower of London, 1070; Winchester
+ Cathedral, 1076-93 (nave and choir rebuilt later); Gloucester
+ Cathedral nave, 1089-1100 (vaulted later); Rochester Cathedral
+ nave, west front cloisters, and chapter-house, 1090-1130; Carlisle
+ Cathedral nave, transepts, 1093-1130; Durham Cathedral, 1095-1133,
+ vaulted 1233; Galilee and chapter-house, 1133-53; Norwich
+ Cathedral, 1096, largely rebuilt 1118-93; Hereford Cathedral, nave
+ and choir, 1099-1115.--12th century: Ely Cathedral, nave, 1107-33;
+ St. Alban’s Abbey, 1116; Peterboro’ Cathedral, 1117-45; Waltham
+ Abbey, early 12th century; Church of Holy Sepulchre, Cambridge,
+ 1130-35; Worcester Cathedral chapter-house, 1140 (?); Oxford
+ Cathedral (Christ Church), 1150-80; Bristol Cathedral
+ chapter-house (square), 1155; Canterbury Cathedral, choir of
+ present structure by William of Sens, 1175; Chichester Cathedral,
+ 1180-1204; Romsey Abbey, late 12th century; St. Cross Hospital
+ near Winchester, 1190 (?). Many more or less important parish
+ churches in various parts of England.
+
+ SPAIN. For principal monuments of 9th-12th centuries, see text,
+ latter part of this chapter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Adamy, _Architektonik des gotischen Stils_.
+ Corroyer, _L’Architecture gothique_. Enlart, _Manuel d’archéologie
+ française_. Hasak, _Einzelheiten des Kirchenbaues_ (in _Hdbuch d.
+ Arch._). Moore, _Development and Character of Gothic
+ Architecture_. Parker, _Introduction to Gothic Architecture._
+ Scott, _Mediæval Architecture_. Viollet-le-Duc, _Discourses on
+ Architecture_; _Dictionnaire raisonné de l’architecture
+ française_.
+
+
++INTRODUCTORY.+ The architectural styles which were developed in Western
+Europe during the period extending from about 1150 to 1450 or 1500,
+received in an unscientific age the wholly erroneous and inept name of
+Gothic. This name has, however, become so fixed in common usage that it
+is hardly possible to substitute for it any more scientific designation.
+In reality the architecture to which it is applied was nothing more than
+the sequel and outgrowth of the Romanesque, which we have already
+studied. Its fundamental principles were the same; it was concerned with
+the same problems. These it took up where the Romanesque builders left
+them, and worked out their solution under new conditions, until it had
+developed out of the simple and massive models of the early twelfth
+century the splendid cathedrals of the thirteenth and fourteenth
+centuries in England, France, Germany, the Low Countries and Spain.
+
+
++THE CHURCH AND ARCHITECTURE.+ The twelfth century was an era of
+transition in society, as in architecture. The ideas of Church and State
+were becoming more clearly defined in the common mind. In the conflict
+between feudalism and royalty the monarchy was steadily gaining ground.
+The problem of human right was beginning to present itself alongside of
+the problem of human might. The relations between the crown, the feudal
+barons, the pope, bishops, and abbots, differed widely in France,
+Germany, England, and other countries. The struggle among them for
+supremacy presented itself, therefore, in varied aspects; but the
+general outcome was essentially the same. The church began to appear as
+something behind and above abbots, bishops, kings, and barons. The
+supremacy of the papal authority gained increasing recognition, and the
+episcopacy began to overshadow the monastic institutions; the bishops
+appearing generally, but especially in France, as the champions of
+popular rights. The prerogatives of the crown became more firmly
+established, and thus the Church and the State emerged from the social
+confusion as the two institutions divinely appointed for the government
+of men.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 105.--CONSTRUCTIVE SYSTEM OF GOTHIC CHURCH,
+ ILLUSTRATING PRINCIPLES OF ISOLATED SUPPORTS AND BUTTRESSING.]
+
+Under these influences ecclesiastical architecture advanced with rapid
+strides. No longer hampered by monastic restrictions, it called into its
+service the laity, whose guilds of masons and builders carried from one
+diocese to another their constantly increasing stores of constructive
+knowledge. By a wise division of labor, each man wrought only such parts
+as he was specially trained to undertake. The master-builder--bishop,
+abbot, or mason--seems to have planned only the general arrangement and
+scheme of the building, leaving the precise form of each detail to be
+determined as the work advanced, according to the skill and fancy of the
+artisan to whom it was intrusted. Thus was produced that remarkable
+variety in unity of the Gothic cathedrals; thus, also, those singular
+irregularities and makeshifts, those discrepancies and alterations in
+the design, which are found in every great work of mediæval
+architecture. Gothic architecture was constantly changing, attacking new
+problems or devising new solutions of old ones. In this character of
+constant flux and development it contrasts strongly with the classic
+styles, in which the scheme and the principles were easily fixed and
+remained substantially unchanged for centuries.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 106.--PLAN OF SAINTE CHAPELLE, PARIS,
+ SHOWING SUPPRESSION OF SIDE-WALLS.]
+
++STRUCTURAL PRINCIPLES.+ The pointed arch, so commonly regarded as the
+most characteristic feature of the Gothic styles, was merely an
+incidental feature of their development. What really distinguished them
+most strikingly was the systematic application of two principles which
+the Roman and Byzantine builders had recognized and applied, but which
+seem to have been afterward forgotten until they were revived by the
+later Romanesque architects. The first of these was the _concentration
+of strains_ upon isolated points of support, made possible by the
+substitution of groined for barrel vaults. This led to a corresponding
+concentration of the masses of masonry at these points; the building was
+constructed as if upon legs (Fig. 105). The wall became a mere
+filling-in between the piers or buttresses, and in time was, indeed,
+practically suppressed, immense windows filled with stained glass taking
+its place. This is well illustrated in the +Sainte Chapelle+ at Paris,
+built 1242-47 (Figs. 106, 122). In this remarkable edifice, a series of
+groined vaults spring from slender shafts built against deep buttresses
+which receive and resist all the thrusts. The wall-spaces between them
+are wholly occupied by superb windows filled with stone tracery and
+stained glass. It would be impossible to combine the materials used more
+scientifically or effectively. The cathedrals of Gerona (Spain) and of
+Alby (France; Fig. 123) illustrate the same principle, though in them
+the buttresses are internal and serve to separate the flanking chapels.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 107.--EARLY GOTHIC FLYING BUTTRESS.]
+
+The second distinctive principle of Gothic architecture was that of
+_balanced thrusts_. In Roman buildings the thrust of the vaulting was
+resisted wholly by the inertia of mass in the abutments. In Gothic
+architecture thrusts were as far as possible resisted by
+counter-thrusts, and the final resultant pressure was transmitted by
+flying half-arches across the intervening portions of the structure to
+external buttresses placed at convenient points. This combination of
+flying half-arches and buttresses is called the _flying-buttress_ (Fig.
+107). It reached its highest development in the thirteenth and
+fourteenth centuries in the cathedrals of central and northern France.
+
+
++RIBBED VAULTING.+ These two principles formed the structural basis of
+the Gothic styles. Their application led to the introduction of two
+other elements, second only to them in importance, _ribbed vaulting_ and
+the _pointed arch_.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 108.--RIBBED VAULT, ENGLISH TYPE,
+ WITH DIVIDED GROIN-RIBS AND RIDGE-RIBS.]
+
+The first of these resulted from the effort to overcome certain
+practical difficulties encountered in the building of large groined
+vaults. As ordinarily constructed, a groined vault like that in Fig. 47,
+must be built as one structure, upon wooden centrings supporting its
+whole extent. The Romanesque architects conceived the idea of
+constructing an independent skeleton of ribs. Two of these were built
+against the wall (_wall-ribs_), two across the nave (transverse ribs);
+and two others were made to coincide with the groins (Figs. 98, 108).
+The _groin-ribs_, intersecting at the centre of the vault, divided each
+bay into four triangular portions, or _compartments_, each of which was
+really an independent vault which could be separately constructed upon
+light centrings supported by the groin-ribs themselves. This principle,
+though identical in essence with the Roman system of brick skeleton-ribs
+for concrete vaults, was, in application and detail, superior to it,
+both from the scientific and artistic point of view. The ribs, richly
+moulded, became, in the hands of the Gothic architects, important
+decorative features. In practice the builder gave to each set of ribs
+independently the curvature he desired. The vaulting-surfaces were then
+easily twisted or warped so as to fit the various ribs, which, being
+already in place, served as guides for their construction.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 109.--PENETRATIONS AND INTERSECTIONS
+ OF VAULTS.
+ _a, a_, _Penetrations by small semi-circular vaults sprung from
+ same level_. b, _Intersection by small semi-circular vault sprung
+ from higher level; groins form wavy lines_. c, _Intersection by
+ narrow pointed vault sprung from same level; groins are plane
+ curves_.]
+
++THE POINTED ARCH+ was adopted to remedy the difficulties encountered in
+the construction of oblong vaults. It is obvious that where a narrow
+semi-cylindrical vault intersects a wide one, it produces either what
+are called _penetrations_, as at a (Fig. 109), or intersections like
+that at b, both of which are awkward in aspect and hard to construct.
+If, however, one or both vaults be given a pointed section, the narrow
+vault may be made as high as the wide one. It is then possible, with but
+little warping of the vaulting surfaces, to make them intersect in
+groins c, which are vertical plane curves instead of wavy loops like a
+and b.
+
+The Gothic architects availed themselves to the full of these two
+devices. They built their groin-ribs of semi-circular or pointed form,
+but the wall-ribs and the transverse ribs were, without exception,
+pointed arches of such curvature as would bring the apex of each nearly
+or quite to the level of the groin intersection. The pointed arch, thus
+introduced as the most convenient form for the vaulting-ribs, was soon
+applied to other parts of the structure. This was a necessity with the
+windows and pier-arches, which would not otherwise fit well the
+wall-spaces under the wall-ribs of the nave and aisle vaulting.
+
+
++TRACERY AND GLASS.+ With the growth in the size of the windows and the
+progressive suppression of the lateral walls of vaulted structures,
+stained glass came more and more generally into use. Its introduction
+not only resulted in a notable heightening and enriching of the colors
+and scheme of the interior decoration, but reacted on the architecture,
+intensifying the very causes which led to its introduction. It
+stimulated the increase in the size of windows, and the suppression of
+the walls, and contributed greatly to the development of _tracery_. This
+latter feature was an absolute necessity for the support of the glass.
+Its evolution can be traced (Figs, 110, 111, 112) from the simple
+coupling of twin windows under a single hood-mould, or discharging arch,
+to the florid net-work of the fifteenth century. In its earlier forms it
+consisted merely of decorative openings, circles, and quatrefoils,
+pierced through slabs of stone (_plate-tracery_), filling the
+window-heads over coupled windows. Later attention was bestowed upon the
+form of the stonework, which was made lighter and richly moulded
+(_bar-tracery_), rather than upon that of the openings (Fig. 111). Then
+the circular and geometric patterns employed were abandoned for more
+flowing and capricious designs (_Flamboyant_ tracery, Fig. 112) or (in
+England) for more rigid and rectangular arrangements (_Perpendicular_,
+Fig. 134). It will be shown later that the periods and styles of Gothic
+architecture are more easily identified by the tracery than by any other
+feature.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 110.--PLATE TRACERY, CHARLTON-ON-OXMORE.]
+
+
++CHURCH PLANS.+ The original basilica-plan underwent radical
+modifications during the 12th-15th centuries. These resulted in part
+from the changes in construction which have been described, and in part
+from altered ecclesiastical conditions and requirements. Gothic church
+architecture was based on cathedral design; and the requirements of the
+cathedral differed in many respects from those of the monastic churches
+of the preceding period.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 111--BAR TRACERY, ST. MICHAEL’S, WARFIELD.]
+
+The most important alterations in the plan were in the choir and
+transepts. The choir was greatly lengthened, the transepts often
+shortened. The choir was provided with two and often four side-aisles,
+and one or both of these was commonly carried entirely around the
+apsidal termination of the choir, forming a single or double
+_ambulatory_. This combination of choir, apse, and ambulatory was
+called, in French churches, the _chevet_.
+
+Another advance upon Romanesque models was the multiplication of
+chapels--a natural consequence of the more popular character of the
+cathedral as compared with the abbey. Frequently lateral chapels were
+built at each bay of the side-aisles, filling up the space between the
+deep buttresses, flanking the nave as well as the choir. They were also
+carried around the _chevet_ in most of the French cathedrals (Paris,
+Bourges, Reims, Amiens, Beauvais, and many others); in many of those in
+Germany (Magdeburg, Cologne, Frauenkirche at Treves), Spain (Toledo,
+Leon, Barcelona, Segovia, etc.), and Belgium (Tournay, Antwerp). In
+England the choir had more commonly a square eastward termination.
+Secondary transepts occur frequently, and these peculiarities, together
+with the narrowness and great length of most of the plans, make of the
+English cathedrals a class by themselves.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 112.--ROSE WINDOW, CHURCH OF ST. OUEN, ROUEN.]
+
++PROPORTIONS AND COMPOSITION.+ Along with these modifications of the
+basilican plan should be noticed a great increase in the height and
+slenderness of all parts of the structure. The lofty clearstory, the
+arcaded triforium-passage or gallery beneath it, the high pointed
+pier-arches, the multiplication of slender clustered shafts, and the
+reduction in the area of the piers, gave to the Gothic churches an
+interior aspect wholly different from that of the simpler, lower, and
+more massive Romanesque edifices. The perspective effects of the plans
+thus modified, especially of the complex choir and _chevet_ with their
+lateral and radial chapels, were remarkably enriched and varied.
+
+The exterior was even more radically transformed by these changes, and
+by the addition of towers and spires to the fronts, and sometimes to the
+transepts and to their intersection with the nave. The deep buttresses,
+terminating in pinnacles, the rich traceries of the great lateral
+windows, the triple portals profusely sculptured, rose-windows of great
+size under the front and transept gables, combined to produce effects of
+marvellously varied light and shadow, and of complex and elaborate
+structural beauty, totally unlike the broad simplicity of the Romanesque
+exteriors.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 113.--FLAMBOYANT DETAIL FROM PULPIT
+ IN STRASBURG CATHEDRAL.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 114.--EARLY GOTHIC CARVING.]
+
++DECORATIVE DETAIL.+ The mediæval designers aimed to enrich every
+constructive feature with the most effective play of lights and shades,
+and to embody in the decorative detail the greatest possible amount of
+allegory and symbolism, and sometimes of humor besides. The deep jambs
+and soffits of doors and pier-arches were moulded with a rich succession
+of hollow and convex members, and adorned with carvings of saints,
+apostles, martyrs, and angels. Virtues and vices, allegories of reward
+and punishment, and an extraordinary world of monstrous and grotesque
+beasts, devils, and goblins filled the capitals and door-arches, peeped
+over tower-parapets, or leered and grinned from gargoyles and corbels.
+Another source of decorative detail was the application of tracery like
+that of the windows to wall-panelling, to balustrades, to open-work
+gables, to spires, to choir-screens, and other features, especially in
+the late fourteenth and fifteenth centuries (cathedrals of York, Rouen,
+Cologne; Henry VII.’s Chapel, Westminster). And finally in the carving
+of capitals and the ornamentation of mouldings the artists of the
+thirteenth century and their successors abandoned completely the classic
+models and traditions which still survived in the early twelfth century.
+The later monastic builders began to look directly to nature for
+suggestions of decorative form. The lay builders who sculptured the
+capitals and crockets and finials of the early Gothic cathedrals adopted
+and followed to its finality this principle of recourse to nature,
+especially to plant life. At first the budding shoots of early spring
+were freely imitated or skilfully conventionalized, as being by their
+thick and vigorous forms the best adapted for translation into stone
+(Fig. 114). During the thirteenth century the more advanced stages of
+plant growth, and leaves more complex and detailed, furnished the models
+for the carver, who displayed his skill in a closer and more literal
+imitation of their minute veinings and indentations (Fig. 115). This
+artistic adaptation of natural forms to architectural decoration
+degenerated later into a minutely realistic copying of natural foliage,
+in which cleverness of execution took the place of original invention.
+The spirit of display is characteristic of all late Gothic work.
+Slenderness, minuteness of detail, extreme complexity and intricacy of
+design, an unrestrained profusion of decoration covering every surface,
+a lack of largeness and vigor in the conceptions, are conspicuous traits
+of Gothic design in the fifteenth century, alike in France, England,
+Germany, Spain, and the Low Countries. Having worked out to their
+conclusion the structural principles bequeathed to them by the preceding
+centuries, the authors of these later works seemed to have devoted
+themselves to the elaboration of mere decorative detail, and in
+technical finish surpassed all that had gone before (Fig. 113).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 115.--CARVING, DECORATED PERIOD,
+ FROM SOUTHWELL MINSTER.]
+
+
++CHARACTERISTICS SUMMARIZED.+ In the light of the preceding explanations
+Gothic architecture may be defined as that system of structural design
+and decoration which grew up out of the effort to combine, in one
+harmonious and organic conception, the basilican plan with a complete
+and systematic construction of groined vaulting. Its development was
+controlled throughout by considerations of stability and structural
+propriety, but in the application of these considerations the artistic
+spirit was allowed full scope for its exercise. Refinement, good taste,
+and great fertility of imagination characterize the details and
+ornaments of Gothic structures. While the Greeks in harmonizing the
+requirements of utility and beauty in architecture approached the
+problem from the æsthetic side, the Gothic architects did the same from
+the structural side. Their admirably reasoned structures express as
+perfectly the idea of vastness, mystery, and complexity as do the Greek
+temples that of simplicity and monumental repose.
+
+The excellence of Gothic architecture lay not so much in its individual
+details as in its perfect adaptation to the purposes for which it was
+developed--its triumphs were achieved in the building of cathedrals and
+large churches. In the domain of civil and domestic architecture it
+produced nothing comparable with its ecclesiastical edifices, because it
+was the requirements of the cathedral and not of the palace, town-hall,
+or dwelling, that gave it its form and character.
+
+
++PERIODS.+ The history of Gothic architecture is commonly divided into
+three periods, which are most readily distinguished by the character of
+the window-tracery. These periods were not by any means synchronous in
+the different countries; but the order of sequence was everywhere the
+same. They are here given, with a summary of the characteristics of
+each.
+
+EARLY POINTED PERIOD. [_Early French_; _Early English_ or _Lancet_
+Period in England; _Early German_, etc.] Simple groined vaults; general
+simplicity and vigor of design and detail; conventionalized foliage of
+small plants; plate tracery, and narrow windows coupled under pointed
+arch with circular foiled openings in the window-head. (In France, 1160
+to 1275.)
+
+MIDDLE POINTED PERIOD. [_Rayonnant_ in France; _Decorated_ or
+_Geometric_ in England.] Vaults more perfect; in England multiple ribs
+and liernes; greater slenderness and loftiness of proportions;
+decoration much richer, less vigorous; more naturalistic carving of
+mature foliage; walls nearly suppressed, windows of great size, bar
+tracery with slender moulded or columnar mullions and geometric
+combinations (circles and cusps) in window-heads, circular (rose)
+windows. (In France, 1275 to 1375.)
+
+FLORID GOTHIC PERIOD. [_Flamboyant_ in France; _Perpendicular_ in
+England.] Vaults of varied and richly decorated design; fan-vaulting and
+pendants in England, vault-ribs curved into fanciful patterns in Germany
+and Spain; profuse and minute decoration and cleverness of technical
+execution substituted for dignity of design; highly realistic carving
+and sculpture, flowing or flamboyant tracery in France; perpendicular
+bars with horizontal transoms and four-centred arches in England;
+“branch-tracery” in Germany. (In France, 1375 to 1525.)
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE IN FRANCE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Adamy, Corroyer, Enlart, Hasak,
+ Moore, Reber, Viollet-le-Duc.[20] Also Chapuy, _Le moyen age
+ monumental_. Chateau, _Histoire et caractères de l’architecture
+ française_. Davies, _Architectural Studies in France_. Ferree,
+ _The Chronology of the Cathedral Churches of France_. Johnson,
+ _Early French Architecture_. King, _The Study book of Mediæval
+ Architecture and Art_. Lassus and Viollet-le-Duc, _Notre Dame de
+ Paris_. Nesfield, _Specimens of Mediæval Architecture_. Pettit,
+ _Architectural Studies in France_.
+
+ [Footnote 20: Consult especially articles ARCHITECTURE,
+ CATHÉDRALE, CHAPELLE, CONSTRUCTION, ÉGLISE, MAISON, VOÛTE.]
+
+
++CATHEDRAL-BUILDING IN FRANCE.+ In the development of the principles
+outlined in the foregoing chapter the church-builders of France led the
+way. They surpassed all their contemporaries in readiness of invention,
+in quickness and directness of reasoning, and in artistic refinement.
+These qualities were especially manifested in the extraordinary
+architectural activity which marked the second half of the twelfth
+century and the first half of the thirteenth. This was the great age of
+cathedral-building in France. The adhesion of the bishops to the royal
+cause, and their position in popular estimation as the champions of
+justice and human rights, led to the rapid advance of the episcopacy in
+power and influence. The cathedral, as the throne-church of the bishop,
+became a truly popular institution. New cathedrals were founded on every
+side, especially in the Royal Domain and the adjoining provinces of
+Normandy, Burgundy, and Champagne, and their construction was warmly
+seconded by the people, the communes, and the municipalities. “Nothing
+to-day,” says Viollet-le-Duc,[21] “unless it be the commercial movement
+which has covered Europe with railway lines, can give an idea of the
+zeal with which the urban populations set about building cathedrals; ...
+a necessity at the end of the twelfth century because it was an
+energetic protest against feudalism.” The collapse of the unscientific
+Romanesque vaulting of some of the earlier cathedrals and the
+destruction by fire of others stimulated this movement by the necessity
+for their immediate rebuilding. The entire reconstruction of the
+cathedrals of Bayeux, Bayonne, Cambray, Evreux, Laon, Lisieux, Le Mans,
+Noyon, Poitiers, Senlis, Soissons, and Troyes was begun between 1130 and
+1200.[22] The cathedrals of Bourges, Chartres, Paris, and Tours, and the
+abbey of St. Denis, all of the first importance, were begun during the
+same period, and during the next quarter-century those of Amiens,
+Auxerre, Rouen, Reims, Séez, and many others. After 1250 the movement
+slackened and finally ceased. Few important cathedrals were erected
+during the latter half of the thirteenth century, the chief among them
+being at Beauvais (actively begun 1247), Clermont, Coutances, Limoges,
+Narbonne, and Rodez. During this period, and through the fourteenth and
+fifteenth centuries, French architecture was concerned rather with the
+completion and remodelling of existing cathedrals than the founding of
+new ones. There were, however, many important parish churches and civil
+or domestic edifices erected within this period.
+
+ [Footnote 21: _Dictionnaire raisonné de l’architecture française_,
+ vol. ii., pp. 280, 281.]
+
+ [Footnote 22: See Ferree, _Chronology of Cathedral Churches of
+ France_.]
+
+
++STRUCTURAL DEVELOPMENT: VAULTING.+ By the middle of the twelfth century
+the use of barrel-vaulting over the nave had been generally abandoned
+and groined vaulting with its isolated points of support and resistance
+had taken its place. The timid experiments of the Clunisian architects
+at Vézelay in the use of the pointed arch and vault-ribs also led, in
+the second half of the twelfth century, to far-reaching results. The
+builders of the great +Abbey Church+ of +St. Denis+, near Paris, begun
+in 1140 by the Abbot Suger, appear to have been the first to develop
+these tentative devices into a system. In the original choir of this
+noble church all the arches, alike of the vault-ribs (except the
+groin-ribs, which were semi-circles) and of the openings, were pointed
+and the vaults were throughout constructed with cross-ribs, wall-ribs,
+and groin-ribs. Of this early work only the chapels remain. In other
+contemporary monuments, as for instance in the cathedral of Sens, the
+adoption of these devices was only partial and hesitating.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 116--PLAN OF NOTRE DAME, PARIS.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 117.--INTERIOR OF NOTRE DAME, PARIS.]
+
++NOTRE DAME AT PARIS.+ The next great step in advance was taken in the
+cathedral of +Notre Dame+[23] at Paris (Figs. 116, 117, 125). This was
+begun, under Maurice de Sully in 1163, on the site of the twin
+cathedrals of Ste. Marie and St. Étienne, and the choir was, as usual,
+the first portion erected. By 1196 the choir, transepts, and one or two
+bays of the nave were substantially finished. The completeness, harmony,
+and vigor of conception of this remarkable church contrast strikingly
+with the makeshifts and hesitancy displayed in many contemporary
+monuments in other provinces. The difficult vaulting over the radiating
+bays of the double ambulatory was here treated with great elegance. By
+doubling the number of supports in the exterior circuit of each aisle
+(Fig. 116) each trapezoidal bay of the vaulting was divided into three
+easily managed triangular compartments. Circular shafts were used
+between the central and side aisles. The side aisles were doubled and
+those next the centre were built in two stories, providing ample
+galleries behind a very open triforium. The nave was unusually lofty and
+covered with six-part vaults of admirable execution. The vault-ribs were
+vigorously moulded and each made to spring from a distinct
+vaulting-shaft, of which three rested upon the cap of each of the
+massive piers below (Fig. 117). The +Cathedral+ of +Bourges+, begun
+1190, closely resembled that of Paris in plan. Both were designed to
+accommodate vast throngs in their exceptionally broad central aisles and
+double side aisles, but Bourges has no side-aisle galleries, though the
+inner aisles are much loftier than the outer ones. Though later in date
+the vaulting of Bourges is inferior to that of Notre Dame, especially in
+the treatment of the trapezoidal bays of the ambulatory.
+
+ [Footnote 23: This cathedral will be hereafter referred to, for
+ the sake of brevity, by the name of _Notre Dame_. Other cathedrals
+ having the same name will be distinguished by the addition of the
+ name of the city, as “Notre Dame at Clermont-Ferrand.”]
+
+The masterly examples set by the vault-builders of St. Denis and Notre
+Dame were not at once generally followed. Noyon, Senlis, and Soissons,
+contemporary with these, are far less completely Gothic in style. At +Le
+Mans+ the groined vaulting which in 1158 was substituted for the
+original barrel-vault of the cathedral is of very primitive design,
+singularly heavy and awkward, although nearly contemporary with that of
+Notre Dame (Fig. 118).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 118.--LE MANS CATHEDRAL. NAVE.]
+
+
++DOMICAL GROINED VAULTING.+ The builders of the South and West,
+influenced by Aquitanian models, adhered to the square plan and domical
+form of vaulting-bay, even after they had begun to employ groin-ribs.
+The latter, as at first used by them in imitation of Northern examples,
+had no organic function in the vault, which was still built like a dome.
+About 1145-1160 the cathedral of +St. Maurice+ at +Angers+ was vaulted
+with square, groin-ribbed vaults, domical in form but not in
+construction. The joints no longer described horizontal circles as in a
+dome, but oblique lines perpendicular to the groins and meeting in
+zigzag lines at the ridge (Fig. 119). This method became common in the
+West and was afterward generally adopted by the English architects. The
++Cathedrals+ of +Poitiers+ (1162) and +Laval+ (La Trinité, 1180-1185)
+are examples of this system, which at Le Mans met with the Northern
+system and produced in the cathedral the awkward compromise described
+above.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 119.--GROINED VAULT WITH ZIG-ZAG RIDGE-JOINTS.
+ _a_ shows a small section of filling with courses parallel to
+ the ridge, for comparison with the other compartments.]
+
++THIRTEENTH-CENTURY VAULTING.+ Early in the thirteenth century the
+church-builders of Northern France abandoned the use of square
+vaulting-bays and six-part vaults. By the adoption of groin-ribs and the
+pointed arch, the building of vaults in oblong bays was greatly
+simplified. Each bay of the nave could now be covered with its own
+vaulting-bay, thus doing away with all necessity for alternately light
+and heavy piers. It is not quite certain when and where this system was
+first adopted for the complete vaulting of a church. It is, however,
+probable that the +Cathedral+ of +Chartres+, begun in 1194 and completed
+before 1240, deserves this distinction, although it is possible that the
+vaults of Soissons and Noyon may slightly antedate it. +Troyes+
+(1170-1267), +Rouen+ (1202-1220), +Reims+ (1212-1242), +Auxerre+
+(1215-1234, nave fourteenth century), +Amiens+ (1220-1288), and nearly
+all the great churches and chapels begun after 1200, employ the fully
+developed oblong vault.
+
+
++BUTTRESSING.+ Meanwhile the increasing height of the clearstories and
+the use of double aisles compelled the bestowal of especial attention
+upon the buttressing. The nave and choir of Chartres, the choirs of
+Notre Dame, Bourges, Rouen, and Reims, the chevet and later the choir of
+St. Denis, afford early examples of the flying-buttress (Fig. 107).
+These were at first simple and of moderate height. Single half-arches
+spanned the side aisles; in Notre Dame they crossed the double aisles in
+a single leap. Later the buttresses were given greater stability by the
+added weight of lofty pinnacles. An intermediate range of buttresses and
+pinnacles was built over the intermediate piers where double aisles
+flanked the nave and choir, thus dividing the single flying arch into
+two arches. At the same time a careful observation of statical defects
+in the earlier examples led to the introduction of subordinate arches
+and of other devices to stiffen and to beautify the whole system. At
++Reims+ and +Amiens+ these features received their highest development,
+though later examples are frequently much more ornate.
+
+
++INTERIOR DESIGN.+ The progressive change outlined in the last chapter,
+by which the wall was practically suppressed, the windows
+correspondingly enlarged, and every part of the structure made loftier
+and more slender, resulted in the evolution of a system of interior
+design well represented by the nave of Amiens. The second story or
+gallery over the side aisle disappeared, but the aisle itself was very
+high. The triforium was no longer a gallery, but a richly arcaded
+passage in the thickness of the wall, corresponding to the roofing-space
+over the aisle, and generally treated like a lower stage of the
+clearstory. Nearly the whole space above it was occupied in each bay by
+the vast clearstory window filled with simple but effective geometric
+tracery over slender mullions. The side aisles were lighted by windows
+which, like those in the clearstory, occupied nearly the whole available
+wall-space under the vaulting. The piers and shafts were all clustered
+and remarkably slender. The whole construction of this vast edifice,
+which covers nearly eighty thousand square feet, is a marvel of
+lightness, of scientific combinations, and of fine execution. Its great
+vault rises to a height of one hundred and forty feet. The nave of St.
+Denis, though less lofty, resembles it closely in style (Fig. 120).
+Earlier cathedrals show less of the harmony of proportion, the perfect
+working out of the relation of all parts of the composition of each bay,
+so conspicuous in the Amiens type, which was followed in most of the
+later churches.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 120.--ONE BAY, ABBEY OF ST. DENIS.]
+
++WINDOWS: TRACERY.+ The clearstory windows of Noyon, Soissons, Sens, and
+the choir of Vézelay (1200) were simple arched openings arranged singly,
+in pairs, or in threes. In the cathedral of Chartres (1194-1220) they
+consist of two arched windows with a circle above them, forming a sort
+of plate tracery under a single arch. In the chapel windows of the choir
+at Reims (1215) the tracery of mullions and circles was moulded inside
+and out, and the intermediate triangular spaces all pierced and glazed.
+Rose windows were early used in front and transept façades. During the
+thirteenth and fourteenth centuries they were made of vast size and
+great lightness of tracery, as in the transepts of Notre Dame (1257) and
+the west front of Amiens (1288). From the design of these windows is
+derived the name _Rayonnant_, often applied to the French Gothic style
+of the period 1275-1375.
+
+
++THE SAINTE CHAPELLE.+ In this beautiful royal chapel at Paris, built
+1242-47, Gothic design was admirably exemplified in the noble windows 15
+by 50 feet in size, which perhaps furnished the models for those of
+Amiens and St. Denis. Each was divided by slender mullions into four
+lancet-like lights gathered under the rich tracery of the window-head.
+They were filled with stained glass of the most brilliant but harmonious
+hues. They occupy the whole available wall-space, so that the ribbed
+vault internally seems almost to rest on walls of glass, so slender are
+the visible supports and so effaced by the glow of color in the windows.
+Certainly lightness of construction and the suppression of the
+wall-masonry could hardly be carried further than here (Fig. 121). Among
+other chapels of the same type are those in the palace of St.
+Germain-en-Laye (1240), and a later example in the château of Vincennes,
+begun by Charles VI., but not finished till 1525.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 121.--THE STE. CHAPELLE, PARIS.]
+
+
++PLANS.+ The most radical change from the primitive basilican type was,
+as already explained in the last chapter, the continuation of the side
+aisles around the apse to form a _chevet_; and later, the addition of
+chapels between the external buttresses. Radiating chapels, usually
+semi-octagons or semi-decagons in plan, early appeared as additions to
+the _chevet_ (Fig. 122). These may have originated in the apsidal
+chapels of Romanesque churches in Auvergne and the South, as at Issoire,
+Clermont-Ferrand, Le Puy, and Toulouse. They generally superseded the
+transept-chapels of earlier churches, and added greatly to the beauty of
+the interior perspective, especially when the encircling aisles of the
+chevet were doubled. Notre Dame, as at first erected, had a double
+ambulatory, but no chapels. Bourges has only five very small
+semicircular chapels. Chartres (choir 1220) and Le Mans, as
+reconstructed about the same date, have double ambulatories and radial
+chapels. After 1220 the second ambulatory no longer appears. Noyon,
+Soissons, Reims, Amiens, Troyes, and Beauvais, Tours, Bayeux, and
+Coutances, Clermont, Limoges, and Narbonne all have the single
+ambulatory and radiating chevet-chapels. The Lady-chapel in the axis of
+the church was often made longer and more important than the other
+chapels, as at Amiens, Le Mans, Rouen, Bayeux, and Coutances. Chapels
+also flanked the choir in most of the cathedrals named above, and Notre
+Dame and Tours also have side chapels to the nave. The only cathedrals
+with complete double side aisles alike to nave, choir, and chevet, were
+Notre Dame and Bourges. It is somewhat singular that the German
+cathedral of Cologne is the only one in which all these various
+characteristic French features were united in one design (see Fig. 140).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 122.--PLAN OF AMIENS CATHEDRAL.]
+
+Local considerations had full sway in France, in spite of the tendency
+toward unity of type. Thus Dol, Laon, and Poitiers have square eastward
+terminations; Châlons has no ambulatory; Bourges no transept. In Notre
+Dame the transept was almost suppressed. At Soissons one transept, at
+Noyon both, had semicircular ends. +Alby+, a late cathedral of brick,
+founded in 1280, but mostly built during the fourteenth century, has
+neither side aisles nor transepts, its wide nave being flanked by
+chapels separated by internal buttresses (Fig. 123).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 123.--PLAN OF CATHEDRAL OF ALBY.]
+
+
++SCALE.+ The French cathedrals were nearly all of imposing dimensions.
+Noyon, one of the smallest, is 333 feet long; Sens measures 354. Laon,
+Bourges, Troyes, Notre Dame, Le Mans, Rouen, and Chartres vary from 396
+to 437 feet in extreme length; Reims measures 483, and Amiens, the
+longest of all, 521 feet. Notre Dame is 124 feet wide across the five
+aisles of the nave; Bourges, somewhat wider. The central aisles of these
+two cathedrals, and of Laon, Amiens, and Beauvais, have a span of not
+far from 40 feet from centre to centre of the piers; while the ridge of
+the vaulting, which in Notre Dame is 108 feet above the pavement, and in
+Bourges 125, reaches in Amiens a height of 140 feet, and of nearly 160
+in Beauvais. This emphasis of the height, from 3 to 3½ times the clear
+width of the nave or choir, is one of the most striking features of the
+French cathedrals. It produces an impressive effect, but tends to dwarf
+the great width of the central aisle.
+
+
++EXTERIOR DESIGN.+ Here, as in the interior, every feature had its
+constructive _raison d’être_, and the total effect was determined by the
+fundamental structural scheme. This was especially true of the lateral
+elevations, in which the pinnacled buttresses, the flying arches, and
+the traceried windows of the side aisle and clearstory, repeated
+uniformly at each bay, were the principal elements of the design. The
+transept façades and main front allowed greater scope for invention and
+fancy, but even here the interior membering gave the key to the
+composition. Strong buttresses marked the division of the aisles and
+resisted the thrust of the terminal pier arches, and rose windows filled
+the greater part of the wall space under the end of the lofty vaulting.
+The whole structure was crowned by a steep-pitched roof of wood, covered
+with lead, copper, or tiles, to protect the vault from damage by snow
+and moisture. This roof occasioned the steep gables which crowned the
+transept and main façades. The main front was frequently adorned, above
+the triple portal, with a gallery of niches or tabernacles filled with
+statues of kings. Different types of composition are represented by
+Chartres, Notre Dame, Amiens, Reims, and Rouen, of which Notre Dame
+(Fig. 124) and Reims are perhaps the finest. Notre Dame is especially
+remarkable for its stately simplicity and the even balancing of
+horizontal and vertical elements.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 124.--WEST FRONT OF NOTRE DAME, PARIS.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 125.--WEST FRONT OF ST. MACLOU, ROUEN.]
+
++PORCHES.+ In most French church façades the porches were the most
+striking features, with their deep shadows and sculptured arches. The
+Romanesque porches were usually limited in depth to the thickness of the
+front wall. The Gothic builders secured increased depth by projecting
+the portals out beyond the wall, and crowned them with elaborate gables.
+The vast central door was divided in two by a pier adorned with a niche
+and statue. Over this the tympanum of the arch was carved with
+scriptural reliefs; the jambs and arches were profusely adorned with
+figures of saints, apostles, martyrs, and angels, under elaborate
+canopies. The porches of Laon, Bourges, Amiens, and Reims are especially
+deep and majestic in effect, the last-named (built 1380) being the
+richest of all. Some of the transept façades also had imposing portals.
+Those of +Chartres+ (1210-1245) rank among the finest works of Gothic
+decorative architecture, the south porch in some respects surpassing
+that of the north transept. The portals of the fifteenth and early
+sixteenth centuries were remarkable for the extraordinary richness and
+minuteness of their tracery and sculpture, as at Abbeville, Alençon, the
+cathedral and St. Maclou at Rouen (Fig. 125), Tours, Troyes, Vendôme,
+etc.
+
+
++TOWERS AND SPIRES.+ The emphasizing of vertical elements reached its
+fullest expression in the towers and spires of the churches. What had
+been at first merely a lofty belfry roof was rapidly developed into the
+spire, rising three hundred feet or more into the air. This development
+had already made progress in the Romanesque period, and the south spire
+of Chartres is a notable example of late twelfth-century steeple design.
+The transition from the square tower to the slender octagonal pyramid
+was skilfully effected by means of corner pinnacles and dormers. During
+and after the thirteenth century the development was almost wholly in
+the direction of richness and complexity of detail, not of radical
+constructive modification. The northern spire of Chartres (1515) and the
+spires of Bordeaux, Coutances, Senlis, and the Flamboyant church of St.
+Maclou at Rouen, illustrate this development. In Normandy central spires
+were common, rising over the crossing of nave and transepts. In some
+cases the designers of cathedrals contemplated a group of towers; this
+is evident at Chartres, Coutances, and Reims. This intention was,
+however, never realized; it demanded resources beyond even the
+enthusiasm of the thirteenth century. Only in rare instances were the
+spires of any of the towers completed, and the majority of the French
+towers have square terminations, with low-pitched wooden roofs,
+generally invisible from below. In general, French towers are marked by
+their strong buttresses, solid lower stories, twin windows in each side
+of the belfry proper--these windows being usually of great size--and a
+skilful management of the transition to an octagonal plan for the belfry
+or the spire.
+
+
++CARVING AND SCULPTURE.+ The general superiority of French Gothic work
+was fully maintained in its decorative details. Especially fine is the
+figure sculpture, which in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
+attained true nobility of expression, combined with great truthfulness
+and delicacy of execution. Some of its finest productions are found in
+the great doorway jambs of the west portals of the cathedrals, and in
+the ranks of throned and adoring angels which adorned their deep arches.
+These reach their highest beauty in the portals of Reims (1380). The
+_tabernacles_ or carved niches in which such statues were set were
+important elements in the decoration of the exteriors of churches.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 126.--FRENCH GOTHIC CAPITALS.
+ _a_, From Sainte Chapelle, Paris, 13th century. _b_, 14th-century
+ capital from transept of Notre Dame, Paris. _c_, 15th-century
+ capital from north spire of Chartres.]
+
+Foliage forms were used for nearly all the minor carved ornaments,
+though grotesque and human figures sometimes took their place. The
+gargoyles through which the roof-water was discharged clear of the
+building, were almost always composed in the form of hideous monsters;
+and symbolic beasts, like the oxen in the towers of Laon, or monsters
+like those which peer from the tower balustrades of Notre Dame, were
+employed with some mystical significance in various parts of the
+building. But the capitals corbels, crockets, and finials were mostly
+composed of floral or foliage forms. Those of the twelfth and thirteenth
+centuries were for the most part simple in mass, and crisp and vigorous
+in design, imitating the strong shoots of early spring. The +capitals+
+were tall and slender, concave in profile, with heavy square or
+octagonal abaci. With the close of the thirteenth century this simple
+and forcible style of detail disappeared. The carving became more
+realistic; the leaves, larger and more mature, were treated as if
+applied to the capital or moulding, not as if they grew out of it. The
+execution and detail were finer and more delicate, in harmony with the
+increasing slenderness and lightness of the architecture (Fig. 126 a,
+b). +Tracery forms+ now began to be profusely applied to all manner of
+surfaces, and open-work gables, wholly unnecessary from the structural
+point of view, but highly effective as decorations, adorned the portals
+and crowned the windows.
+
+
++LATE GOTHIC MONUMENTS.+ So far our attention has been mainly occupied
+with the masterpieces erected previous to 1250. Among the cathedrals,
+relatively few in number, whose construction is referable to the second
+half of the century, that of +Beauvais+ stands first in importance.
+Designed on a colossal scale, its foundations were laid in 1225, but it
+was never completed, and the portion built--the choir and
+chapels--belonged really to the second half of the century, having been
+completed in 1270. But the collapse in 1284 of the central tower and
+vaulting of this incomplete cathedral, owing to the excessive loftiness
+and slenderness of its supports, compelled its entire reconstruction,
+the number of the piers being doubled and the span of the pier arches
+correspondingly reduced. As thus rebuilt, the cathedral aisle was 47
+feet wide from centre to centre of opposite piers, and 163 feet high to
+the top of the vault. Transepts were added after 1500. +Limoges+ and
++Narbonne+, begun in 1272 on a large scale (though not equal in size to
+Beauvais), were likewise never completed. Both had choirs of admirable
+plan, with well-designed chevet-chapels. Many other cathedrals begun
+during this period were completed only after long delays, as, for
+instance, Meaux, Rodez (1277), Toulouse (1272), and Alby (1282),
+finished in the sixteenth century, and Clermont (1248), completed under
+Napoleon III. But between 1260 or 1275 and 1350, work was actively
+prosecuted on many still incomplete cathedrals. The choirs of Beauvais
+(rebuilding), Limoges, and Narbonne were finished after 1330; and
+towers, transept-façades, portals, and chapels added to many others of
+earlier date.
+
+The style of this period is sometimes designated as +Rayonnant+, from
+the characteristic wheel tracery of the rose-windows, and the prevalence
+of circular forms in the lateral arched windows, of the late thirteenth
+and early fourteenth centuries. The great rose windows in the transepts
+of Notre Dame, dating from 1257, are typical examples of the style.
+Those of Rouen cathedral belong to the same category, though of later
+date. The façade of Amiens, completed by 1288, is one of the finest
+works of this style, of which an early example is the elaborate parish
+church of +St. Urbain+ at Troyes.
+
+
++THE FLAMBOYANT STYLE.+ The geometric treatment of the tracery and the
+minute and profuse decoration of this period gradually merged into the
+fantastic and unrestrained extravagances of the +Flamboyant+ style,
+which prevailed until the advent of the Renaissance--say 1525. The
+continuous logical development of forms ceased, and in its place caprice
+and display controlled the arts of design. The finest monument of this
+long period is the fifteenth-century nave and central tower of the
+church of +St. Ouen+ at Rouen, a parish church of the first rank, begun
+in 1318, but not finished until 1515. The tracery of the lateral windows
+is still chiefly geometric, but the western rose window (Fig. 112) and
+the magnificent central tower or lantern, exhibit in their tracery the
+florid decoration and wavy, flame-like lines of this style. Slenderness
+of supports and the suppression of horizontal lines are here carried to
+an extreme; and the church, in spite of its great elegance of detail,
+lacks the vital interest and charm of the earlier Gothic churches. The
+cathedral of Alençon and the church of +St. Maclou+ at Rouen, have
+portals with unusually elaborate detail of tracery and carving; while
+the façade of Rouen cathedral (1509) surpasses all other examples in the
+lace-like minuteness of its open-work and its profusion of ornament. The
+churches of +St. Jacques+ at Dieppe, and of +St. Wulfrand+ at Abbeville,
+the façades of Tours and Troyes, are among the masterpieces of the
+style. The upper part of the façade of Reims (1380-1428) belongs to the
+transition from the Rayonnant to the Flamboyant. While some works of
+this period are conspicuous for the richness of their ornamentation,
+others are noticeably bare and poor in design, like St. Merri and St.
+Séverin in Paris.
+
+
++SECULAR AND MONASTIC ARCHITECTURE.+ The building of cathedrals did not
+absorb all the architectural activity of the French during the Gothic
+period, nor did it by any means put an end to monastic building. While
+there are few Gothic cloisters to equal the Romanesque cloisters of
+Puy-en-Vélay, Montmajour, Elne, and Moissac, many of the abbeys either
+rebuilt their churches in the Gothic style after 1150, or extended and
+remodelled their conventual buildings. The cloisters of Fontfroide,
+Chaise-Dieu, and the Mont St. Michel rival those of Romanesque times,
+while many new refectories and chapels were built in the same style with
+the cathedrals. The most complete of these Gothic monastic
+establishments, that of the +Mont St. Michel+ in Normandy, presented a
+remarkable aggregation of buildings clustering around the steep isolated
+rock on which stands the abbey church. This was built in the eleventh
+century, and the choir and chapels remodelled in the sixteenth. The
+great refectory and dormitory, the cloisters, lodgings, and chapels,
+built in several vaulted stories against the cliffs, are admirable
+examples of the vigorous pointed-arch design of the early thirteenth
+century.
+
++Hospitals+ like that of St. Jean at Angers (late twelfth century), or
+those of Chartres, Ourscamps, Tonnerre, and Beaune, illustrate how
+skilfully the French could modify and adapt the details of their
+architecture to the special requirements of civil architecture. Great
+numbers of charitable institutions were built in the middle
+ages--asylums, hospitals, refuges, and the like--but very few of those
+in France are now extant. Town halls were built in the fifteenth century
+in some places where a certain amount of popular independence had been
+secured. The florid fifteenth-century +Palais de Justice+ at +Rouen+
+(1499-1508) is an example of another branch of secular Gothic
+architecture. In all these monuments the adaptation of means to ends is
+admirable. Wooden ceilings and roofs replaced stone, wherever required
+by great width of span or economy of construction. There was little
+sculpture; the wall-spaces were not suppressed in favor of stained glass
+and tracery; while the roofs were usually emphasized and adorned with
+elaborate crestings and finials in lead or terra-cotta.
+
+
++DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE.+ These same principles controlled the designing
+of houses, farm buildings, barns, granaries, and the like. The common
+closely-built French city house of the twelfth and thirteenth century is
+illustrated by many extant examples at Cluny, Provins, and other towns.
+A shop opening on the street by a large arch, a narrow stairway, and two
+or three stories of rooms lighted by clustered, pointed-arched windows,
+constituted the common type. The street front was usually gabled and the
+roof steep. In the fourteenth or fifteenth century half-timbered
+construction began to supersede stone for town houses, as it permitted
+of encroaching upon the street by projecting the upper stories. Many of
+the half-timbered houses of the fifteenth century were of elaborate
+design. The heavy oaken uprights were carved with slender colonnettes;
+the horizontal sills, bracketed out over the street, were richly
+moulded; picturesque dormers broke the sky-line, and the masonry filling
+between the beams was frequently faced with enamelled tiles.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 127.--HOUSE OF JACQUES CŒUR, BOURGES.
+ (After Viollet-le-Duc.)]
+
+The more considerable houses or palaces of royalty, nobles, and wealthy
+citizens rivalled, and in time surpassed, the monastic buildings in
+richness and splendor. The earlier examples retain the military aspect,
+with moat and donjon, as in the Louvre of Charles V., demolished in the
+sixteenth century. The finest palaces are of late date, and the type is
+well represented by the Ducal Palace at Nancy (1476), the +Hotel de
+Cluny+ (1485) at Paris, the +Hotel Jacques Cœur+ at Bourges (Fig. 127),
+and the east wing of Blois (1498-1515). These palaces are not only
+excellently and liberally planned, with large halls, many staircases,
+and handsome courts; they are also extremely picturesque with their
+square and circular towers, slender turrets, elaborate dormers, and rich
+carved detail.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS+: (C. = cathedral; A. = abbey; trans. = transept; each
+ edifice is given under the date of its commencement; subsequent
+ alterations in parentheses.) Between 1130 and 1200: Vézelay A.,
+ ante-chapel, 1130; St. Germer-de-Fly C., 1130-1150 (chapel later);
+ St. Denis A., choir, 1140 (choir rebuilt, nave and trans., 1240);
+ Sens C., 1140-68 (W. front, 13th century; chapels, spire, 14th);
+ Senlis C., 1145-83 (trans., spire, 13th century); Noyon C.,
+ 1149-1200 (W. front, vaults, 13th century); St. Germain-des-Prés A.,
+ Paris, choir, 1150 (Romanesque nave); Angers C., 1150 (choir,
+ trans., 1274); Langres, 1150-1200; Laon C., 1150-1200; Le Mans C.,
+ nave, 1150-58 (choir, 1217-54); Soissons C., 1160-70 (choir, 1212;
+ nave chapels, 14th century); Poitiers C., 1162-1204; Notre Dame,
+ Paris, choir, 1163-96 (nave, W. front finished, 1235; trans.
+ fronts, and chapels, 1257-75); Chartres C., W. end, 1170; rest,
+ mainly 1194-98 (trans. porches, W. rose, 1210-1260; N. spire,
+ 1506); Tours C., 1170 (rebuilt, 1267; trans., portals, 1375; W.
+ portals, chapels, 15th century; towers finished, 1507-47);
+ Laval C., 1180-85 (choir, 16th century); Mantes, church Notre
+ Dame, 1180-1200; Bourges C., 1190-95 (E. end, 1210; W. end, 1275);
+ St. Nicholas at Caen, 1190 (vaults, 15th century); Reims, church
+ St. Rémy, choir, end of 12th century (Romanesque nave); church St.
+ Leu d’Esserent, choir late 12th century (nave, 13th century);
+ Lyons C., choir, end of 12th century (nave, 13th and 14th
+ centuries); Etampes, church Notre Dame, 12th and 13th
+ centuries.--13th century: Evreux C., 1202-75 (trans., central
+ tower, 1417; W. front rebuilt, 16th century); Rouen C., 1202-20
+ (trans. portals, 1280; W. front, 1507); Nevers, 1211, N. portal,
+ 1280 (chapels, S. portal, 15th century); Reims C., 1212-42 (W.
+ front, 1380; W. towers, 1420); Bayonne C., 1213 (nave, vaults, W.
+ portal, 14th century); Troyes C., choir, 1214 (central tower,
+ nave, W. portal, and towers, 15th century); Auxerre C., 1215-34
+ (nave, W. end, trans., 14th century); Amiens C., 1220-88; St.
+ Etienne at Chalons-sur-Marne, 1230 (spire, 1520); Séez C., 1230,
+ rebuilt 1260 (remodelled 14th century); Notre Dame de Dijon, 1230;
+ Reims, Lady chapel of Archbishop’s palace, 1230; Chapel Royal at
+ St. Germain-en-Laye, 1240; Ste. Chapelle at Paris, 1242-47 (W.
+ rose, 15th century); Coutances C., 1254-74; Beauvais C., 1247-72
+ (rebuilt 1337-47; trans. portals, 1500-48); Notre Dame de Grace at
+ Clermont, 1248 (finished 1350); Dôl C., 13th century; St.
+ Martin-des-Champs at Paris, nave 13th century (choir Romanesque);
+ Bordeaux C., 1260; Narbonne C., 1272-1320; Limoges, 1273 (finished
+ 16th century); St. Urbain, Troyes, 1264; Rodez C., 1277-1385
+ (altered, completed 16th century); church St. Quentin, 1280-1300;
+ St. Benigne at Dijon, 1280-91; Alby C., 1282 (nave, 14th; choir,
+ 15th century; S. portal, 1473-1500); Meaux C., mainly rebuilt 1284
+ (W. end much altered 15th, finished 16th century); Cahors C.,
+ rebuilt 1285-93 (W. front, 15th century); Orléans, 1287-1328
+ (burned, rebuilt 1601-1829).--14th century: St. Bertrand de
+ Comminges, 1304-50; St. Nazaire at Carcassonne, choir and trans.
+ on Romanesque nave; Montpellier C., 1364; St. Ouen at Rouen,
+ choir, 1318-39 (trans., 1400-39; nave, 1464-91; W. front, 1515);
+ Royal Chapel at Vincennes, 1385 (?)-1525.--15th and 16th century:
+ St. Nizier at Lyons rebuilt; St. Séverin, St. Merri, St. Germain
+ l’Auxerrois, all at Paris; Notre Dame de l’Epine at
+ Chalons-sur-Marne; choir of St. Etienne at Beauvais; Saintes C.,
+ rebuilt, 1450; St. Maclou at Rouen (finished 16th century); church
+ at Brou; St. Wulfrand at Abbeville; abbey of St. Riquier--these
+ three all early 16th century.--HOUSES, CASTLES, AND PALACES:
+ Bishop’s palace at Paris, 1160 (demolished); castle of Coucy,
+ 1220-30; Louvre at Paris (the original château), 1225-1350; Palais
+ de Justice at Paris, originally the royal residence, 1225-1400;
+ Bishop’s palace at Laon, 1245 (addition to Romanesque hall);
+ castle Montargis, 13th century; castle Pierrefonds, Bishop’s
+ palace at Narbonnne, palace of Popes at Avignon--all 14th century;
+ donjon of palace at Poitiers, 1395; Hôtel des Ambassadeurs at
+ Dijon, 1420; house of Jacques Cœur at Bourges, 1443; Palace,
+ Dijon, 1467; Ducal palace at Nancy, 1476; Hôtel Cluny at Paris,
+ 1490; castle of Creil, late 15th century, finished in 16th; E.
+ wing palace of Blois, 1498-1515, for Louis XII.; Palace de Justice
+ at Rouen, 1499-1508.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE IN GREAT BRITAIN.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Corroyer, Parker, Reber. Also,
+ Bell’s Series of _Handbooks of English Cathedrals_. Billings, _The
+ Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland_. Bond,
+ _Gothic Architecture in England_. Brandon, _Analysis of Gothic
+ Architecture_. Britton, _Cathedral Antiquities of Great Britain_.
+ Ditchfield, _The Cathedrals of England_. Murray, _Handbooks of the
+ English Cathedrals_. Parker, _Introduction to Gothic
+ Architecture_; _Glossary of Architectural Terms_; _Companion to
+ Glossary_, etc. Rickman, _An Attempt to Discriminate the Styles of
+ English Architecture_. Sharpe, _Architectural Parallels_; _The
+ Seven Periods of English Architecture_. Van Rensselaer, _English
+ Cathedrals_. Winkles and Moule, _Cathedral Churches of England and
+ Wales_. Willis, _Architectural History of Canterbury Cathedral_;
+ ditto _of Winchester Cathedral_; _Treatise on Vaults_.
+
+
++GENERAL CHARACTER.+ Gothic architecture was developed in England under
+a strongly established royal power, with an episcopate in no sense
+hostile to the abbots or in arms against the barons. Many of the
+cathedrals had monastic chapters, and not infrequently abbots were
+invested with the episcopal rank.
+
+English Gothic architecture was thus by no means predominantly an
+architecture of cathedrals. If architectural activity in England was on
+this account less intense and widespread in the twelfth and thirteenth
+centuries than in France, it was not, on the other hand, so soon
+exhausted. Fewer new cathedrals were built, but the progressive
+rebuilding of those already existing seems not to have ceased until the
+middle or end of the fifteenth century. Architecture in England
+developed more slowly, but more uniformly than in France. It contented
+itself with simpler problems; and if it failed to rival Amiens in
+boldness of construction and in lofty majesty, it at least never
+perpetrated a folly like Beauvais. In richness of internal decoration,
+especially in the mouldings and ribbed vaulting, and in the picturesque
+grouping of simple masses externally, the British builders went far
+toward atoning for their structural timidity.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 128.--PLAN OF SALISBURY CATHEDRAL.]
+
+
++EARLY GOTHIC BUILDINGS.+ The pointed arch and ribbed vault were
+importations from France. Early examples appear in the Cistercian abbeys
+of Furness and Kirkstall, and in the Temple Church at London (1185). But
+it was in the +Choir of Canterbury+, as rebuilt by William of Sens,
+after the destruction by fire in 1170 of Anselm’s Norman choir, that
+these French Gothic features were first applied in a thoroughgoing
+manner. In plan this choir resembled that of the cathedral of Sens; and
+its coupled round piers, with capitals carved with foliage, its pointed
+arches, its six-part vaulting, and its _chevet_, were distinctly French.
+The Gothic details thus introduced slowly supplanted the round arch and
+other Norman features. For fifty years the styles were more or less
+mingled in many buildings, though +Lincoln Cathedral+, as rebuilt in
+1185-1200, retained nothing of the earlier round-arched style. But the
+first church to be designed and built from the foundations in the new
+style was the cathedral of +Salisbury+ (1220-1258; Fig. 128).
+Contemporary with Amiens, it is a homogeneous and typical example of the
+Early English style. The predilection for great length observable in the
+Anglo-Norman churches (as at Norwich and Durham) still prevailed, as it
+continued to do throughout the Gothic period; Salisbury is 480 feet
+long. The double transepts, the long choir, the square east end, the
+relatively low vault (84 feet to the ridge), the narrow grouped windows,
+all are thoroughly English. Only the simple four-part vaulting recalls
+French models. +Westminster Abbey+ (1245-1269), on the other hand,
+betrays in a marked manner the French influence in its internal
+loftiness (100 feet), its polygonal _chevet_ and chapels, and its
+strongly accented exterior flying-buttresses (Fig. 137).
+
+
++MIXTURE OF STYLES.+ Very few English cathedrals are as homogeneous as
+the two just mentioned, nearly all having undergone repeated
+remodellings in successive periods. Durham, Norwich, and Oxford are
+wholly Norman but for their Gothic vaults. Ely, Rochester, Gloucester,
+and Hereford have Norman naves and Gothic choirs. Peterborough has an
+early Gothic façade and late Gothic retro-choir added to an otherwise
+completely Norman structure. Winchester is a Norman church remodelled
+with early Perpendicular details. The purely Gothic churches and
+cathedrals, except parish churches--in which England is very rich--are
+not nearly as numerous in England as in France.
+
+
++PERIODS.+ The development of English Gothic architecture followed the
+same general sequence as the French, and like it the successive stages
+were most conspicuously characterized by the forms of the tracery.
+
+The EARLY ENGLISH or LANCET period extended roundly from 1175 or 1180 to
+1280, and was marked by simplicity, dignity, and purity of design.
+
+The DECORATED or GEOMETRIC period covered another century, 1280 to 1380,
+and was characterized by its decorative richness and greater lightness
+of construction.
+
+The PERPENDICULAR period extended from 1380, or thereabout, well into
+the sixteenth century. Its salient features were the use of
+fan-vaulting, four-centred arches, and tracery of predominantly vertical
+and horizontal lines. The tardy introduction of Renaissance forms
+finally put an end to the Gothic style in England, after a long period
+of mixed and transitional architecture.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 129.--RIBBED VAULTING,
+ CHOIR OF EXETER CATHEDRAL.]
+
++VAULTING.+ The richness and variety of English vaulting contrast
+strikingly with the persistent uniformity of the French. A few of the
+early Gothic vaults, as in the aisles of Peterborough, and later the
+naves of Durham, Salisbury, and Gloucester, were simple four-part,
+ribbed vaults substantially like the French. But the English disliked
+and avoided the twisted and dome-like surfaces of the French vaults,
+preferring horizontal ridges, and, in the filling-masonry, straight
+courses meeting at the ridge in zigzag lines, as in southwest France
+(see p. 200). This may be seen in Westminster Abbey. The idea of ribbed
+construction was then seized upon and given a new application. By
+springing a large number of ribs from each point of support, the
+vaulting-surfaces were divided into long, narrow, triangles, the filling
+of which was comparatively easy (Fig. 129). The ridge was itself
+furnished with a straight rib, decorated with carved rosettes or
+_bosses_ at each intersection with a vaulting-rib. The naves and choirs
+of Lincoln, Lichfield, Exeter, and the nave of Westminster illustrate
+this method. The logical corollary of this practice was the introduction
+of minor ribs called _liernes_, connecting the main ribs and forming
+complex reticulated and star-shaped patterns. Vaults of this description
+are among the most beautiful in England. One of the richest is in the
+choir of Gloucester (1337-1377). Less correct constructively is that
+over the choir of Wells, while the choir of Ely, the nave of Tewkesbury
+Abbey (Fig. 130), and all the vaulting of Winchester as rebuilt by
+William of Wykeham (1390), illustrate the same system. Such vaults are
+called _lierne_ or _star_ vaults.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 130.--NET OR LIERNE VAULTING,
+ TEWKESBURY ABBEY.]
+
+
++FAN-VAULTING.+ The next step in the process may be observed in the
+vaults of the choir of Oxford Cathedral (Christ Church), of the
+retro-choir of Peterborough, of the cloisters of Gloucester, and many
+other examples. The diverging ribs being made of uniform curvature, the
+_severeys_ (the inverted pyramidal vaulting-masses springing from each
+support) became a species of concave conoids, meeting at the ridge in
+such a way as to leave a series of flat lozenge-shaped spaces at the
+summit of the vault (Fig. 136). The ribs were multiplied indefinitely,
+and losing thus in individual and structural importance became a mere
+decorative pattern of tracery on the severeys. To conceal the awkward
+flat lozenges at the ridge, elaborate panelling was resorted to; or, in
+some cases, long stone pendents were inserted at those points--a device
+highly decorative but wholly unconstructive. At Cambridge, in +King’s
+College Chapel+, at Windsor, in +St. George’s Chapel+, and in the
++Chapel of Henry VII.+ at Westminster, this sort of vaulting received
+its most elaborate development. The _fan-vault_, as it is called,
+illustrates the logical evolution of a decorative element from a
+structural starting--point, leading to results far removed from the
+original conception. Rich and sumptuous as are these ceilings, they are
+with all their ornament less satisfactory than the ribbed vaults of the
+preceding period.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 131.--VAULT OF CHAPTER-HOUSE, WELLS.]
+
++CHAPTER-HOUSES.+ One of the most beautiful forms of ribbed vaulting was
+developed in the polygonal halls erected for the deliberations of the
+cathedral chapters of Lincoln (1225), Westminster (1250), Salisbury
+(1250), and Wells (1292), in which the vault-ribs radiated from a
+central column to the sides and angles of the polygon (Fig. 131). If
+these vaults were less majestic than domes of the same diameter, they
+were far more decorative and picturesque, while the chapter-houses
+themselves were the most original and striking products of English
+Gothic art. Every feature was designed with strict regard for the
+structural system determined by the admirable vaulting, and the Sainte
+Chapelle was not more logical in its exemplification of Gothic
+principles. To the four above-mentioned examples should be added that of
+York (1280-1330), which differs from them in having no central column:
+by some critics it is esteemed the finest of them all. Its ceiling is a
+Gothic dome, 57 feet in diameter, but unfortunately executed in wood.
+Its geometrical window-tracery and richly canopied stalls are admirable.
+
+
++OCTAGON AT ELY.+ The magnificent +Octagon+ of Ely Cathedral, at the
+intersection of the nave and transepts, belongs in the same category
+with these polygonal chapter-house vaults. It was built by Alan of
+Walsingham in 1337, after the fall of the central tower and the
+destruction of the adjacent bays of the choir. It occupies the full
+width of the three aisles, and covers the ample space thus enclosed with
+a simple but beautiful groined and ribbed vault of wood reaching to a
+central octagonal lantern, which rises much higher and shows externally
+as well as internally. Unfortunately, this vault is of wood, and would
+require important modifications of detail if carried out in stone. But
+it is so noble in general design and total effect, that one wonders the
+type was not universally adopted for the crossing in all cathedrals,
+until one observes that no cathedral of importance was built after
+Walsingham’s time, nor did any other central towers opportunely fall to
+the ground.
+
+
++WINDOWS AND TRACERY.+ In the Early English Period (1200-1280 or 1300)
+the windows were tall and narrow (_lancet_ windows), and generally
+grouped by twos and threes, though sometimes four and even five are seen
+together (as the “Five Sisters” in the N. transept of York). In the nave
+of Salisbury and the retro-choir of Ely the side aisles are lighted by
+coupled windows and the clearstory by triple windows, the central one
+higher than the others--a surviving Norman practice. Plate-tracery was,
+as in France, an intermediate step leading to the development of
+bar-tracery (see Fig. 110). The English followed here the same reasoning
+as the French. At first the openings constituted the design, the
+intervening stonework being of secondary importance. Later the forms of
+the openings were subordinated to the pattern of the stone framework of
+bars, arches, circles, and cusps. Bar-tracery of this description
+prevailed in England through the greater part of the Decorated Period
+(1280-1380), and somewhat resembled the contemporary French geometric
+tracery, though more varied and less rigidly constructive in design. An
+early example of this tracery occurs in the cloisters of Salisbury (Fig.
+132); others in the clearstories of the choirs of Lichfield, Lincoln,
+and Ely, the nave of York, and the chapter-houses mentioned above,
+where, indeed, it seems to have received its earliest development. After
+the middle of the fourteenth century lines of double curvature were
+introduced, producing what is called _flowing_ tracery, somewhat
+resembling the French flamboyant, though earlier in date (Fig. 111).
+Examples of this style are found in Wells, in the side aisles and
+triforium of the choir of Ely, and in the S. transept rose-window of
+Lincoln.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 132.--CLOISTERS, SALISBURY CATHEDRAL
+ (SHOWING UPPER PART OF CHAPTER-HOUSE).]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 133.--PERPENDICULAR TRACERY,
+ WEST WINDOW OF ST. GEORGE’S, WINDSOR.]
+
++THE PERPENDICULAR STYLE.+ Flowing tracery was, however, a transitional
+phase of design, and was soon superseded by _Perpendicular_ tracery, in
+which the mullions were carried through to the top of the arch and
+intersected by horizontal transoms. This formed a very rigid and
+mechanically correct system of stone framing, but lacked the grace and
+charm of the two preceding periods. The earliest examples are seen in
+the work of Edington and of Wykeham in the reconstructed cathedral of
+Winchester (1360-1394), where the tracery was thus made to harmonize
+with the accentuated and multiplied vertical lines of the interior
+design. It was at this late date that the English seem first to have
+fully appropriated the Gothic ideas of emphasized vertical elements and
+wall surfaces reduced to a minimum. The development of fan-vaulting had
+led to the adoption of a new form of arch, the four-centred or _Tudor
+arch_ (Fig. 133), to fit under the depressed apex of the vault. The
+whole design internally and externally was thenceforward controlled by
+the form of the vaulting and of the openings. The windows were made of
+enormous size, especially at the east end of the choir, which was square
+in nearly all English churches, and in the west windows over the
+entrance. These windows had already reached, in the Decorated Period, an
+enormous size, as at York; in the Perpendicular Period the two ends of
+the church were as nearly as possible converted into walls of glass. The
+East Window of Gloucester reaches the prodigious dimensions of 38 by 72
+feet. The most complete examples of the Perpendicular tracery and of the
+style in general are the three chapels already mentioned (p. 223);
+those, namely, of +King’s College+ at Cambridge, of +St. George+ at
+Windsor, and of +Henry VII.+ in Westminster Abbey.
+
+
++CONSTRUCTIVE DESIGN.+ The most striking peculiarity of English Gothic
+design was its studious avoidance of temerity or venturesomeness in
+construction. Both the height and width of the nave were kept within
+very moderate bounds, and the supports were never reduced to extreme
+slenderness. While much impressiveness of effect was undoubtedly lost
+thereby, there was some gain in freedom of design, and there was less
+obtrusion of constructive elements in the exterior composition. The
+flying-buttress became a feature of minor importance where the
+clearstory was kept low, as in most English churches. In many cases the
+flying arches were hidden under the aisle roofs. The English cathedrals
+and larger churches are long and low, depending for effect mainly upon
+the projecting masses of their transepts, the imposing square central
+towers which commonly crown the crossing, and the grouping of the main
+structure with chapter-houses, cloisters, and Lady-chapels.
+
+
++FRONTS.+ The sides and east ends were, in most cases, more successful
+than the west fronts. In these the English displayed a singular
+indifference or lack of creative power. They produced nothing to rival
+the majestic façades of Notre Dame, Amiens, or Reims, and their portals
+are almost ridiculously small. The front of +York+ Cathedral is the most
+notable in the list for its size and elaborate decoration. Those of
++Lincoln+ and +Peterborough+ are, however, more interesting in the
+picturesqueness and singularity of their composition. The first-named
+forms a vast arcaded screen, masking the bases of the two western
+towers, and pierced by three huge Norman arches, retained from the
+original façade. The west front of Peterborough is likewise a mask or
+screen, mainly composed of three colossal recessed arches, whose vast
+scale completely dwarfs the little porches which give admittance to the
+church. Salisbury has a curiously illogical and ineffective façade.
+Those of +Lichfield+ and +Wells+ are, on the other hand, imposing and
+beautiful designs, the first with its twin spires and rich arcading
+(Fig. 134), the second with its unusual wealth of figure-sculpture, and
+massive square towers.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 134.--WEST FRONT, LICHFIELD CATHEDRAL.]
+
+
++CENTRAL TOWERS.+ These are the most successful features of English
+exterior design. Most of them form lanterns internally over the
+crossing, giving to that point a considerable increase of dignity.
+Externally they are usually massive and lofty square towers, and having
+been for the most part completed during the fourteenth and fifteenth
+centuries they are marked by great richness and elegance of detail.
+Durham, York, Ely, Canterbury, Lincoln, and Gloucester maybe mentioned
+as notable examples of such square towers; that of Canterbury is the
+finest. Two or three have lofty spires over the lantern. Among these,
+that of Salisbury is chief, rising 424 feet from the ground, admirably
+designed in every detail. It was not completed till the middle of the
+fourteenth century, but most fortunately carries out with great felicity
+the spirit of the earlier style in which it was begun. Lichfield and
+Chichester have somewhat similar central spires, but less happy in
+proportion and detail than the beautiful Salisbury example.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 135.--ONE BAY OF CHOIR, LICHFIELD CATHEDRAL.]
+
+
++INTERIOR DESIGN.+ In the Norman churches the pier-arches, triforium,
+and clearstory were practically equal. In the Gothic churches the
+pier-arches generally occupy the lower half of the height, the upper
+half being divided nearly equally between the triforium and clearstory,
+as in Lincoln, Lichfield (nave), Ely (choir). In some cases, however (as
+at Salisbury, Westminster, Winchester, choir of Lichfield), the
+clearstory is magnified at the expense of the triforium (Fig. 135).
+Three peculiarities of design sharply distinguish the English treatment
+of these features from the French. The first is the multiplicity of fine
+mouldings in the pier-arches; the second is the decorative elaboration
+of design in the triforium; the third, the variety in the treatment of
+the clearstory. In general the English interiors are much more ornate
+than the French. Black Purbeck marble is frequently used for the shafts
+clustered around the central core of the pier, giving a striking and
+somewhat singular effect of contrasted color. The rich vaulting, the
+highly decorated triforium, the moulded pier-arches, and at the end of
+the vista the great east window, produce an impression very different
+from the more simple and lofty stateliness of the French cathedrals. The
+great length and lowness of the English interiors combine with this
+decorative richness to give the impression of repose and grace, rather
+than of majesty and power. This tendency reached its highest expression
+in the Perpendicular churches and chapels, in which every surface was
+covered with minute panelling.
+
+
++CARVING.+ In the Early English Period the details were carved with a
+combined delicacy and vigor deserving of the highest praise. In the
+capitals and corbels, crockets and finials, the foliage was crisp and
+fine, curling into convex masses and seeming to spring from the surface
+which it decorated. Mouldings were frequently ornamented with foliage of
+this character in the hollows, and another ornament, the _dog-tooth_ or
+_pyramid_, often served the same purpose, introducing repeated points of
+light into the shadows of the mouldings. These were fine and complex,
+deep hollows alternating with round mouldings (_bowtels_) sometimes made
+pear-shaped in section by a fillet on one side. _Cusping_--the
+decoration of an arch or circle by triangular projections on its inner
+edge--was introduced during this period, and became an important
+decorative resource, especially in tracery design. In the Decorated
+Period the foliage was less crisp; sea-weed and oak-leaves, closely and
+confusedly bunched, were used in the capitals, while crockets were
+larger, double-curved, with leaves swelling into convexities like
+oak-galls. Geometrical and flowing tracery were developed, and the
+mouldings of the tracery-bars, as of other features, lost somewhat in
+vigor and sharpness. The _ball-flower_ or button replaced the
+dog’s-tooth, and the hollows were less frequently adorned with foliage.
+
+In the Perpendicular Period nearly all flat surfaces were panelled in
+designs resembling the tracery of the windows. The capitals were less
+important than those of the preceding periods, and the mouldings weaker
+and less effective. The Tudor rose appears as an ornament in square
+panels and on flat surfaces; and moulded battlements, which first
+appeared in Decorated work, now become a frequent crowning motive in
+place of a cornice. There is less originality and variety in the
+ornament, but a great increase in its amount (Fig. 136).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 136.--FAN-VAULTING, HENRY VII.’S CHAPEL,
+ WESTMINSTER ABBEY.]
+
+
++PLANS.+ English church plans underwent, during the Gothic Period, but
+little change from the general types established previous to the
+thirteenth century. The Gothic cathedrals and abbeys, like the Norman,
+were very long and narrow, with choirs often nearly as long as the nave,
+and almost invariably with square eastward terminations. There is no
+example of double side aisles and side chapels, and apsidal chapels are
+very rare. Canterbury and Westminster (Fig. 137) are the chief
+exceptions to this, and both show clearly the French influence. Another
+striking peculiarity of the English plans is the frequent occurrence of
+secondary transepts, adding greatly to the external picturesqueness.
+These occur in rudimentary form in Canterbury, and at Durham the Chapel
+of the Nine Altars, added 1242-1290 to the eastern end, forms in reality
+a secondary transept. This feature is most perfectly developed in the
+cathedral of Salisbury (Fig. 128), and appears also at Lincoln,
+Worcester, Wells, and a few other examples. The English cathedral plans
+are also distinguished by the retention or incorporation of many
+conventual features, such as cloisters, libraries, and halls, and by the
+grouping of chapter-houses and Lady-chapels with the main edifice. Thus
+the English cathedral plans and those of the great abbey churches
+present a marked contrast with those of France and the Continent
+generally. While Amiens, the greatest of French cathedrals, is 521 feet
+long, and internally 140 feet high, Ely measures 565 feet in length, and
+less than 75 feet in height. Notre Dame is 148 feet wide; the English
+naves are usually under 80 feet in total width of the three aisles.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 137.--EASTERN HALF OF WESTMINSTER ABBEY. PLAN.
+ a, _Henry VII.’s chapel._]
+
+
++PARISH CHURCHES.+ Many of these were of exceptional beauty of
+composition and detail. They display the greatest variety of plan,
+churches with two equal-gabled naves side by side being not uncommon.
+A considerable proportion of them date from the fourteenth and fifteenth
+centuries, and are chiefly interesting for their square, single, west
+towers and their carved wooden ceilings (see below). The tower was
+usually built over the central western porch; broad and square, with
+corner buttresses terminating in pinnacles, it was usually finished
+without spires. Crenelated battlements crowned the upper story. When
+spires were added the transition from the square tower to the octagonal
+spire was effected by _broaches_ or portions of a square pyramid
+intersecting the base of the spire, or by corner pinnacles and
+flying-buttresses.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 138.--ROOF OF NAVE, ST. MARY’S,
+ WESTONZOYLAND.]
+
++WOODEN CEILINGS.+ The English treated woodwork with consummate skill.
+They invented and developed a variety of forms of roof-truss in which
+the proper distribution of the strains was combined with a highly
+decorative treatment of the several parts by carving, moulding, and
+arcading. The ceiling surfaces between the trusses were handled
+decoratively, and the oaken open-timber ceilings of many of the English
+churches and civic or academic halls (Christ Church Hall, Oxford;
+Westminster Hall, London) are such noble and beautiful works as quite to
+justify the substitution of wooden for vaulted ceilings (Fig. 138). The
+_hammer-beam_ truss was in its way as highly scientific, and
+æsthetically as satisfactory, as any feature of French Gothic stone
+construction. Without the use of tie-rods to keep the rafters from
+spreading, it brought the strain of the roof upon internal brackets low
+down on the wall, and produced a beautiful effect by the repetition of
+its graceful curves in each truss.
+
+
++CHAPELS AND HALLS.+ Many of these rival the cathedrals in beauty and
+dignity of design. The royal chapels at Windsor and Westminster have
+already been mentioned, as well as King’s College Chapel at Cambridge,
+and Christ Church Hall at Oxford. To these college halls should be added
+the chapel of Merton College at Oxford, and the beautiful chapel of St.
+Stephen at Westminster, most unfortunately demolished when the present
+Parliament House was erected. The Lady-chapels of Gloucester and Ely,
+though connected with the cathedrals, are really independent designs of
+late date, and remarkable for the richness of their decoration, their
+great windows, and elaborate ribbed vaulting. Some of the halls in
+mediæval castles and manor-houses are also worthy of note, especially
+for their timber ceilings.
+
+
++MINOR MONUMENTS.+ The student of Gothic architecture should also give
+attention to the choir-screens, tombs, and chantries which embellish
+many of the abbeys and cathedrals. The rood-screen at York is a notable
+example of the first; the tomb of De Gray in the same cathedral, and
+tombs and chantries in Canterbury, Winchester, Westminster Abbey, Ely,
+St. Alban’s Abbey, and other churches are deservedly admired. In these
+the English love for ornament, for minute carving, and for the contrast
+of white and colored marble, found unrestrained expression. To these
+should be added the market-crosses of Salisbury and Winchester, and
+Queen Eleanor’s Cross at Waltham.
+
+
++DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE.+ The mediæval castles of Great Britain belong to
+the domain of military engineering rather than of the history of art,
+though occasionally presenting to view details of considerable
+architectural beauty. The growth of peace and civic order is marked by
+the erection of manor-houses, the residences of wealthy landowners. Some
+of these houses are of imposing size, and show the application to
+domestic requirements, of the late Gothic style which prevailed in the
+period to which most of them belong. The windows are square or
+Tudor-arched, with stone mullions and transoms of the Perpendicular
+style, and the walls terminate in merlons or crenelated parapets,
+recalling the earlier military structures. The palace of the bishop or
+archbishop, adjoining the cathedral, and the residences of the dean,
+canons, and clergy, together with the libraries, schools, and gates of
+the cathedral enclosure, illustrate other phases of secular Gothic work.
+Few of these structures are of striking architectural merit, but they
+possess a picturesque charm which is very attractive.
+
+Not many stone houses of the smaller class remain from the Gothic period
+in England. But there is hardly an old town that does not retain many of
+the half-timbered dwellings of the fifteenth or even fourteenth century,
+some of them in excellent preservation. They are for the most part wider
+and lower than the French houses of the same class, but are built on the
+same principle, and, like them, the woodwork is more or less richly
+carved.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS+: (A. = abbey church; C. = cathedral; r. = ruined;
+ trans. = transept; each monument is given under the date of the
+ earliest extant Gothic work upon it, with additions of later
+ periods in parentheses.)
+
+ EARLY ENGLISH: Kirkstall A., 1152-82, first pointed arches;
+ Canterbury C., choir, 1175-84 (nave, 1378-1411; central tower,
+ 1500); Lincoln C., choir, trans., 1192-1200 (vault, 1250; nave and
+ E. end, 1260-80); Lichfield C., 1200-50 (W. front, 1275;
+ presbytery, 1325); Worcester C., choir, 1203-18, nave partly
+ Norman (W. end, 1375-95); Chichester C., 1204-44 (spire rebuilt
+ 17th century); Fountains A., 1205-46; Salisbury C., 1220-58
+ (cloister, chapter-h., 1263-84; spire, 1331); Elgin C., 1224-44;
+ Wells C., 1175-1206 (W. front 1225, choir later, chapter-h.,
+ 1292); Rochester C., 1225-39 (nave Norman); York C., S. trans.,
+ 1225; N. trans., 1260 (nave, chapter-h., 1291-1345; W. window,
+ 1338; central tower, 1389-1407; E. window, 1407); Southwell
+ Minster, 1233-94 (nave Norman); Ripon C., 1233-94 (central tower,
+ 1459); Ely C., choir, 1229-54 (nave Norman; octagon and
+ presbytery, 1323-62); Peterborough C., W. front, 1237 (nave
+ Norman; retro-choir, late 14th century); Netley A., 1239 (r.);
+ Durham C., “Nine Altars” and E. end choir, 1235-90 (nave, choir,
+ Norman; W. window, 1341; central tower finished, 1480);
+ Glasgow C., (with remarkable Early English crypt), 1242-77;
+ Gloucester C., nave vaulted, 1239-42 (nave mainly Norman; choir,
+ 1337-51; cloisters, 1375-1412; W. end, 1420-37; central tower,
+ 1450-57); Westminster A., 1245-69; St. Mary’s A., York, 1272-92
+ (r.).
+
+ DECORATED: Merton College Chapel, Oxford, 1274-1300; Hereford C.,
+ N. trans., chapter-h., cloisters, vaulting, 1275-92 (nave, choir,
+ Norman); Exeter C., choir, trans., 1279-91; nave, 1331-50 (E. end
+ remodelled, 1390); Lichfield C., Lady-chapel, 1310; Ely C.,
+ Lady-chapel, 1321-49; Melrose A., 1327-99 (nave, 1500; r.); St.
+ Stephen’s Chapel, Westminster, 1349-64 (demolished); Edington
+ church, 1352-61; Carlisle C., E. end and upper parts, 1352-95
+ (nave in part and S. trans. Norman; tower finished, 1419);
+ Winchester C., W. end remodelled, 1360-66 (nave and aisles,
+ 1394-1410; trans., partly Norman); York C., Lady-chapel, 1362-72;
+ churches of Patrington and Hull, late 14th century.
+
+ PERPENDICULAR: Holy Cross Church, Canterbury, 1380; St. Mary’s,
+ Warwick, 1381-91; Manchester C., 1422; St. Mary’s, Bury St.
+ Edmunds, 1424-33; Beauchamp Chapel, Warwick, 1439; King’s College
+ Chapel, Cambridge, 1440; vaults, 1508-15; St. Mary’s Redcliffe,
+ Bristol, 1442; Roslyn Chapel, Edinburgh, 1446-90; Gloucester C.,
+ Lady-chapel, 1457-98; St. Mary’s, Stratford-on-Avon, 1465-91;
+ Norwich C., upper part and E. end of choir, 1472-99 (the rest
+ mainly Norman); St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, 1481-1508; choir
+ vaulted, 1507-20; Bath A., 1500-39; Chapel of Henry VII.,
+ Westminster, 1503-20.
+
+ ACADEMIC AND SECULAR BUILDINGS: Winchester Castle Hall, 1222-35;
+ Merton College Chapel, Oxford, 1274-1300; Library Merton College,
+ 1354-78; Norborough Hall, 1356; Windsor Castle, upper ward,
+ 1359-73; Winchester College, 1387-93; Wardour Castle, 1392;
+ Westminster Hall, rebuilt, 1397-99; St. Mary’s Hall, Coventry,
+ 1401-14; Warkworth Castle, 1440; St. John’s College, All Soul’s
+ College, Oxford, 1437; Eton College, 1441-1522; Divinity Schools,
+ Oxford, 1445-54; Magdalen College, Oxford, 1475-80, tower, 1500;
+ Christ Church Hall, Oxford, 1529.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE IN GERMANY, THE NETHERLANDS, AND SPAIN.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Corroyer, Reber. Also, Adler,
+ _Mittelalterliche Backstein-Bauwerke des preussischen Staates_.
+ Essenwein (_Hdbuch. d. Arch._), _Die romanische und die gothische
+ Baukunst; der Wohnbau_. Hasak, _Die romanische und die gothische
+ Baukunst; Kirchenbau_; _Einzelheiten des Kirchenbaues_ (both in
+ _Hdbuch. d. Arch._). Hase and others, _Die mittelalterlichen
+ Baudenkmäler Niedersachsens_. Kallenbach, _Chronologie der
+ deutschen mittelalterlichen Baukunst_. Lübke, _Ecclesiastical Art
+ in Germany during the Middle Ages_. Redtenbacher, _Leitfaden zum
+ Studium der mittelalterlichen Baukunst_. Street, _Gothic
+ Architecture in Spain_. Uhde, _Baudenkmäler in Spanien_.
+ Ungewitter, _Lehrbuch der gothischen Constructionen_. Villa Amil,
+ _Hispania Artistica y Monumental_.
+
+
++EARLY GOTHIC WORKS.+ The Gothic architecture of Germany is less
+interesting to the general student than that of France and England, not
+only because its development was less systematic and more provincial,
+but also because it produced fewer works of high intrinsic merit. The
+introduction into Germany of the pointed style was tardy, and its
+progress slow. Romanesque architecture had created imposing types of
+ecclesiastical architecture, which the conservative Teutons were slow to
+abandon. The result was a half-century of transition and a mingling of
+Romanesque and Gothic forms. St. Castor, at Coblentz, built as late as
+1208, is wholly Romanesque. Even when the pointed arch and vault had
+finally come into general use, the plan and the constructive system
+still remained predominantly Romanesque. The western apse and short
+sanctuary of the earlier plans were retained. There was no triforium,
+the clearstory was insignificant, and the whole aspect low and massive.
+The Germans avoided, at first, as did the English, the constructive
+audacities and difficulties of the French Gothic, but showed less of
+invention and grace than their English neighbors. When, however, through
+the influence of foreign models, especially of the great French
+cathedrals, and through the employment of foreign architects, the Gothic
+styles were at last thoroughly domesticated, a spirit of ostentation
+took the place of the earlier conservatism. Technical cleverness,
+exaggerated ingenuity of detail, and constructive _tours de force_
+characterize most of the German Gothic work of the late fourteenth and
+of the fifteenth century. This is exemplified in the slender mullions of
+Ulm, the lofty and complicated spire of Strasburg, and the curious
+traceries of churches and houses in Nuremberg.
+
+
++PERIODS.+ The periods of German mediæval architecture corresponded in
+sequence, though not in date, with the movement elsewhere. The maturing
+of the true Gothic styles was preceded by more than a half-century of
+transition. Chronologically the periods may be broadly stated as
+follows:
+
+THE TRANSITIONAL, 1170-1225.
+
+THE EARLY POINTED, 1225-1275.
+
+THE MIDDLE OR DECORATED, 1275-1350.
+
+THE FLORID, 1350-1530.
+
+These divisions are, however, far less clearly defined than in France
+and England. The development of forms was less logical and
+consequential, and less uniform in the different provinces, than in
+those western lands.
+
+
++CONSTRUCTION.+ As already remarked, a tenacious hold of Romanesque
+methods is observable in many German Gothic monuments. Broad
+wall-surfaces with small windows and a general massiveness and lowness
+of proportions were long preferred to the more slender and lofty
+forms of true Gothic design. Square vaulting-bays were persistently
+adhered to, covering two aisle-bays. The six-part system was only
+rarely resorted to, as at Schlettstadt, and in St. George at
+Limburg-on-the-Lahn (Fig. 139). The ribbed vault was an imported idea,
+and was never systematically developed. Under the final dominance of
+French models in the second half of the thirteenth century, vaulting in
+oblong bays became more general, powerfully influenced by buildings like
+Freiburg, Cologne, Oppenheim, and Ratisbon cathedrals. In the fourteenth
+century the growing taste for elaboration and rich detail led to the
+introduction of multiplied decorative ribs. These, however, did not come
+into use, as in England, through a logical development of constructive
+methods, but purely as decorative features. The German multiple-ribbed
+vaulting is, therefore, less satisfying than the English, though often
+elegant. Conspicuous examples of its application are found in the
+cathedrals of Freiburg, Ulm, Prague, and Vienna; in St. Barbara at
+Kuttenberg, and many other important churches. But with all the richness
+and complexity of these net-like vaults the Germans developed nothing
+like the fan-vaulting or chapter-house ceilings of England.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 139.--ONE BAY OF CATHEDRAL OF ST. GEORGE,
+ LIMBURG.]
+
+
++SIDE AISLES.+ The most notable structural innovation of the Germans was
+the raising of the side aisles to the same height as the central aisle
+in a number of important churches. They thus created a distinctly new
+type, to which German writers have given the name of _hall-church_. The
+result of this innovation was to transform completely the internal
+perspective of the church, as well as its structural membering. The
+clearstory disappeared; the central aisle no longer dominated the
+interior; the pier-arches and side-walls were greatly increased in
+height, and flying buttresses were no longer required. The whole design
+appeared internally more spacious, but lost greatly in variety and in
+interest. The cathedral of +St. Stephen+ at Vienna is the most imposing
+instance of this treatment, which first appeared in the church of St.
+Elizabeth at Marburg (1235-83; Fig. 140). St. Barbara at Kuttenberg, St.
+Martin’s at Landshut (1404), and the cathedral of Munich are others
+among many examples of this type.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 140.--SECTION OF ST. ELIZABETH, MARBURG.]
+
+
++TOWERS AND SPIRES.+ The same fondness for spires which had been
+displayed in the Rhenish Romanesque churches produced in the Gothic
+period a number of strikingly beautiful church steeples, in which
+openwork tracery was substituted for the solid stone pyramids of earlier
+examples. The most remarkable of these spires are those of Freiburg
+(1300), Strasburg, and Cologne cathedrals, of the church at Esslingen,
+St. Martin’s at Landshut, and the cathedral of Vienna. In these the
+transition from the simple square tower below to the octagonal belfry
+and spire is generally managed with skill. In the remarkable tower of
+the cathedral at Vienna (1433) the transition is too gradual, so that
+the spire seems to start from the ground and lacks the vigor and accent
+of a simpler square lower portion. The over-elaborate spire of
++Strasburg+ (1429, by Junckher of Cologne; lower parts and façade,
+1277-1365, by _Erwin von Steinbach_ and his sons) reaches a height of
+468 feet; the spires of Cologne, completed in 1883 from the original
+fourteenth-century drawings, long lost but recovered by a happy
+accident, are 500 feet high. The spires of +Ratisbon+ and +Ulm+
+cathedrals have also been recently completed in the original style.
+
+
++DETAILS.+ German window tracery was best where it most closely followed
+French patterns, but it tended always towards the faults of mechanical
+stiffness and of technical display in over-slenderness of shafts and
+mullions. The windows, especially in the “hall-churches,” were apt to be
+too narrow for their height. In the fifteenth century ingenuity of
+geometrical combinations took the place of grace of line, and later the
+tracery was often tortured into a stone caricature of rustic-work of
+interlaced and twisted boughs and twigs, represented with all their bark
+and knots (_branch-tracery_). The execution was far superior to the
+design. The carving of foliage in capitals, finials, etc., calls for no
+special mention for its originality or its departure from French types.
+
+
++PLANS.+ In these there was more variety than in any other part of
+Europe except Italy. Some churches, like Naumburg, retained the
+Romanesque system of a second western apse and short choir. The
+Cistercian churches generally had square east ends, while the polygonal
+eastern apse without ambulatory is seen in St. Elizabeth at Marburg, the
+cathedrals of Ratisbon, Ulm and Vienna, and many other churches. The
+introduction of French ideas in the thirteenth century led to the
+adoption in a number of cases of the chevet with a single ambulatory and
+a series of radiating apsidal chapels. +Magdeburg+ cathedral (1208-11)
+was the first erected on this plan, which was later followed at
+Altenburg, Cologne, Freiburg, Lübeck, Prague and Zwettl, in St. Francis
+at Salzburg and some other churches. Side chapels to nave or choir
+appear in the cathedrals of Lübeck, Munich, Oppenheim, Prague and
+Zwettl. +Cologne+ +Cathedral+, by far the largest and most magnificent
+of all, is completely French in plan, uniting in one design the leading
+characteristics of the most notable French churches (Fig. 141). It has
+complete double aisles in both nave and choir, three-aisled transepts,
+radial chevet-chapels and twin western towers. The ambulatory is,
+however, single, and there are no lateral chapels. A typical German
+treatment was the eastward termination of the church by polygonal
+chapels, one in the axis of each aisle, the central one projecting
+beyond its neighbors. Where there were five aisles, as at Xanten, the
+effect was particularly fine. The plan of the curious polygonal church
+of +Our Lady+ (Liebfrauenkirche; 1227-43) built on the site of the
+ancient circular baptistery at Treves, would seem to have been produced
+by doubling such an arrangement on either side of the transverse axis
+(Fig. 142).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 141.--COLOGNE CATHEDRAL. PLAN.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 142.--CHURCH OF OUR LADY, TREVES.]
+
++HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT.+ The so-called +Golden Portal+ of +Freiburg+ in
+the Erzgebirge is perhaps the first distinctively Gothic work in
+Germany, dating from 1190. From that time on, Gothic details appeared
+with increasing frequency, especially in the Rhine provinces, as shown
+in many transitional structures. +Gelnhausen+ and Aschaffenburg are
+early 13th-century examples; pointed arches and vaults appear in the
+Apostles’ and St. Martin’s churches at Cologne; and the great church of
++St. Peter and St. Paul+ at Neuweiler in Alsace has an almost purely
+Gothic nave of the same period. The churches of +Bamberg+, +Fritzlar+,
+and +Naumburg+, and in Westphalia those of +Münster+ and +Osnabrück+,
+are important examples of the transition. The French influence,
+especially the Burgundian, appears as early as 1212 in the cathedral of
+Magdeburg, imitating the choir of Soissons, and in the structural design
+of the Liebfrauenkirche at Treves as already mentioned; it reached
+complete ascendancy in Alsace at +Strasburg+ (nave 1240-75), in Baden at
++Freiburg+ (nave 1270) and in Prussia at +Cologne+ (1248-1320).
+Strasburg Cathedral is especially remarkable for its façade, the work of
+Erwin von Steinbach and his sons (1277-1346), designed after French
+models, and its north spire, built in the fifteenth century. Cologne
+Cathedral, begun in 1248 by _Gerhard of Riel_ in imitation of the newly
+completed choir of Amiens, was continued by Master _Arnold_ and his son
+_John_, and the choir was consecrated in 1322. The nave and W. front
+were built during the first half of the 14th century, though the towers
+were not completed till 1883. In spite of its vast size and slow
+construction, it is in style the most uniform of all great Gothic
+cathedrals, as it is the most lofty (excepting the choir of Beauvais)
+and the largest excepting Milan and Seville. Unfortunately its details,
+though pure and correct, are singularly dry and mechanical, while its
+very uniformity deprives it of the picturesque and varied charm which
+results from a mixture of styles recording the labors of successive
+generations. The same criticism may be raised against the late cathedral
+of +Ulm+ (choir, 1377-1449; nave, 1477; Fig. 143). The Cologne influence
+is observable in the widely separated cathedrals of Utrecht in the
+Netherlands, Metz in the W., Minden and +Halberstadt+ (begun 1250;
+mainly built after 1327) in Saxony, and in the S. in the church of +St.
+Catherine+ at Oppenheim. To the E. and S., in the cathedrals of +Prague+
+(Bohemia) by _Matthew of Arras_ (1344-52) and +Ratisbon+ (or Regensburg,
+1275) the French influence predominates, at least in the details and
+construction. The last-named is one of the most dignified and beautiful
+of German Gothic churches--German in plan, French in execution. The
+French influence also manifests itself in the details of many of the
+peculiarly German churches with aisles of equal height (see p. 240).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 143.--PLAN OF ULM CATHEDRAL.]
+
+More peculiarly German are the brick churches of North Germany, where
+stone was almost wholly lacking. In these, flat walls, square towers,
+and decoration by colored tiles and bricks are characteristic, as at
+Brandenburg (St. Godehard and +St. Catherine+, 1346-1400), at
++Prentzlau+, Tängermünde, Königsberg, &c. Lübeck possesses notable
+monuments of brick architecture in the churches of +St. Mary+ and St.
+Catherine, both much alike in plan and in the flat and barren simplicity
+of their exteriors. +St. Martin’s+ at +Landshut+ in the South is also a
+notable brick church.
+
+
++LATE GOTHIC.+ As in France and England, the fourteenth and fifteenth
+centuries were mainly occupied with the completion of existing churches,
+many of which, up to that time, were still without naves. The works of
+this period show the exaggerated attenuation of detail already alluded
+to, though their richness and elegance sometimes atone for their
+mechanical character. The complicated ribbed vaults of this period are
+among its most striking features (see p. 239). Spire-building was as
+general as was the erection of central square towers in England, during
+the same period. To this time also belong the overloaded traceries and
+minute detail of the +St. Sebald+ and St. Lorenz churches and of several
+secular buildings at Nuremberg, the façade of Chemnitz Cathedral, and
+similar works. The nave and tower of St. Stephen at Vienna (1359-1433),
+the church of Sta. Maria in Gestade in the same city, and the cathedral
+of Kaschau in Hungary, are Austrian masterpieces of late Gothic design.
+
+
++SECULAR BUILDINGS.+ Germany possesses a number of important examples of
+secular Gothic work, chiefly municipal buildings (gates and town halls)
+and castles. The first completely Gothic castle or palace was not built
+until 1280, at +Marienburg+ (Prussia), and was completed a century
+later. It consists of two courts, the earlier of the two forming a
+closed square and containing the chapel and chapter-house of the Order
+of the German knights. The later and larger court is less regular, its
+chief feature being the +Great Hall+ of the Order, in two aisles. All
+the vaulting is of the richest multiple-ribbed type. Other castles are
+at Marienwerder, Heilsberg (1350) in E. Prussia, Karlstein in Bohemia
+(1347), and the +Albrechtsburg+ at Meissen in Saxony (1471-83).
+
+Among town halls, most of which date from the fourteenth and fifteenth
+centuries may be mentioned those of Ratisbon (Regensburg), Münster and
+Hildesheim, Halberstadt, +Brunswick+, Lübeck, and Bremen--the last two
+of brick. These, and the city gates, such as the +Spahlenthor+ at Basle
+(Switzerland) and others at Lübeck and Wismar, are generally very
+picturesque edifices. Many fine guildhalls were also built during the
+last two centuries of the Gothic style; and dwelling-houses of the same
+period, of quaint and effective design, with stepped or traceried
+gables, lofty roofs, openwork balconies and corner turrets, are to be
+found in many cities. Nuremberg is especially rich in these.
+
+
++THE NETHERLANDS+, as might be expected from their position, underwent
+the influences of both France and Germany. During the thirteenth
+century, largely through the intimate monastic relations between Tournay
+and Noyon, the French influence became paramount in what is now Belgium,
+while Holland remained more strongly German in style. Of the two
+countries Belgium developed by far the most interesting architecture.
+Some of its cathedrals, notably those of Tournay, Antwerp, Brussels,
+Malines (Mechlin), Mons and Louvain, rank high among structures of their
+class, both in scale and in artistic treatment. The Flemish town halls
+and guildhalls merit particular attention for their size and richness,
+exemplifying in a worthy manner the wealth, prosperity, and independence
+of the weavers and merchants of Antwerp, Ypres, Ghent (Gand), Louvain,
+and other cities in the fifteenth century.
+
+
++CATHEDRALS AND CHURCHES.+ The earliest purely Gothic edifice in Belgium
+was the choir of +Ste. Gudule+ (1225) at Brussels, followed in 1242 by
+the choir and transepts of +Tournay+, designed with pointed vaults, side
+chapels, and a complete _chevet_. The transept-ends are round, as at
+Noyon. It was surpassed in splendor by the +Cathedral+ of +Antwerp+
+(1352-1422), remarkable for its seven-aisled nave and narrow transepts.
+It covers some 70,000 square feet, but its great size is not as
+effective internally as it should be, owing to the poverty of the
+details and the lack of finely felt proportion in the various parts. The
+late west front (1422-1518) displays the florid taste of the wealthy
+Flemish burgher population of that period, but is so rich and elegant,
+especially its lofty and slender north spire, that its over-decoration
+is pardonable. The cathedral of +St. Rombaut+ at Malines (choir, 1366;
+nave, 1454-64) is a more satisfactory church, though smaller and with
+its western towers incomplete. The cathedral of +Louvain+ belongs to the
+same period (1373-1433). +St. Wandru+ at Mons (1450-1528) and +St.
+Jacques+ at Liège (1522-58) are interesting parish churches of the first
+rank, remarkable especially for the use of color in their internal
+decoration, for their late tracery and ribbed vaulting, and for the
+absence of Renaissance details at that late period.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 144.--TOWN HALL, LOUVAIN.]
+
++TOWN HALLS: GUILDHALLS.+ These were really the most characteristic
+Flemish edifices, and are in most cases the most conspicuous monuments
+of their respective cities. The +Cloth Hall+ of +Ypres+ (1304) is the
+earliest and most imposing among them; similar halls were built not much
+later at +Bruges+, +Louvain+, +Malines+ and +Ghent+. The town halls were
+mostly of later date, the earliest being that of +Bruges+ (1377). The
+town halls of +Brussels+ with its imposing and graceful tower, of
++Louvain+ (1448-63; Fig. 144) and of +Oudenärde+ (early 16th century)
+are conspicuous monuments of this class.
+
+In general, the Gothic architecture of Belgium presents the traits of a
+borrowed style, which did not undergo at the hands of its borrowers any
+radically novel or fundamental development. The structural design is
+usually lacking in vigor and organic significance, but the details are
+often graceful and well designed, especially on the exterior. The
+tendency was often towards over-elaboration, particularly in the later
+works.
+
+The Gothic architecture of +Holland+ and of the +Scandinavian+ countries
+offers so little that is highly artistic or inspiring in character, that
+space cannot well be given in this work, even to an enumeration of its
+chief monuments.
+
+
++SPAIN AND PORTUGAL.+ The beginnings of Gothic architecture in Spain
+followed close on the series of campaigns from 1217 to 1252, which began
+the overthrow of the Moorish dominion. With the resulting spirit of
+exultation and the wealth accruing from booty, came a rapid development
+of architecture, mainly under French influence. Gothic architecture was
+at this date, under St. Louis, producing in France some of its noblest
+works. The great cathedrals of +Toledo+ and +Burgos+, begun between 1220
+and 1230, were the earliest purely Gothic churches in Spain. +San
+Vincente+ at Avila and the +Old Cathedral+ at Salamanca, of somewhat
+earlier date, present a mixture of round- and pointed-arched forms, with
+the Romanesque elements predominant. +Toledo Cathedral+, planned in
+imitation of Notre Dame and Bourges, but exceeding them in width, covers
+75,000 square feet, and thus ranks among the largest of European
+cathedrals. Internally it is well proportioned and well detailed,
+recalling the early French masterworks, but its exterior is less
+commendable.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 145.--FAÇADE OF BURGOS CATHEDRAL.]
+
+In the contemporary cathedral of Burgos the exterior is at least as
+interesting as the interior. The west front, of German design, suggests
+Cologne by its twin openwork spires (Fig. 145); while the crossing is
+embellished with a sumptuous dome and lantern or _cimborio_, added as
+late as 1567. The chapels at the east end, especially that of the
+Condestabile (1487), are ornate to the point of overloading, a fault to
+which late Spanish Gothic work is peculiarly prone. Other
+thirteenth-century cathedrals are those of +Leon+ (1260), +Valencia+
+(1262), and +Barcelona+ (1298), all exhibiting strongly the French
+influence in the plan, vaulting, and vertical proportions. The models of
+Bourges and Paris with their wide naves, lateral chapels and
+semicircular chevets were followed in the cathedral of Barcelona, in a
+number of fourteenth-century churches both there and elsewhere, and in
+the sixteenth-century cathedral of Segovia. In Sta. Maria del Pi at
+Barcelona, in the collegiate church at Manresa, and in the imposing nave
+of the +Cathedral+ of +Gerona+ (1416, added to choir of 1312, the latter
+by a Southern French architect, Henri de Narbonne), the influence of
+Alby in southern France (see p. 206) is discernible. These are
+one-aisled churches with internal buttresses separating the lateral
+chapels. The nave of Gerona is 73 feet wide, or double the average clear
+width of French or English cathedral naves. The resulting effect is not
+commensurate with the actual dimensions, and shows the inappropriateness
+of Gothic details for compositions so Roman in breadth and simplicity.
+
+
++SEVILLE.+ The largest single edifice in Spain, and the largest church
+built during the Middle Ages in Europe, is the +Cathedral of Seville+,
+begun in 1401 on the site of a Moorish mosque. It covers 124,000 square
+feet, measuring 415 × 298 feet, and is a simple rectangle comprising
+five aisles with lateral chapels. The central aisle is 56 ft. wide and
+145 high; the side aisles and chapels diminish gradually in height, and
+with the uniform piers in six rows produce an imposing effect, in spite
+of the lack of transepts or chevet. The somewhat similar +New Cathedral+
+of Salamanca (1510-1560) shows the last struggles of the Gothic style
+against the incoming tide of the Renaissance.
+
+
++LATER MONUMENTS.+ These all partake of the over-decoration which
+characterized the fifteenth century throughout Europe. In Spain this
+decoration was even less constructive in character, and more purely
+fanciful and arbitrary, than in the northern lands; but this very
+rejection of all constructive pretense gives it a peculiar charm and
+goes far to excuse its extravagance (Fig. 146). Decorative vaulting-ribs
+were made to describe geometric patterns of great elegance. Some of the
+late Gothic vaults by the very exuberance of imagination shown in their
+designs, almost disarm criticism. Instead of suppressing the walls as
+far as possible, and emphasizing all the vertical lines, as was done in
+France and England, the later Gothic architects of Spain delighted in
+broad wall-surfaces and multiplied horizontal lines. Upon these surfaces
+they lavished carving without restraint and without any organic relation
+to the structure of the building. The arcades of cloisters and interior
+courts (_patios_) were formed with arches of fantastic curves resting on
+twisted columns; and internal chapels in the cathedrals were covered
+with minute carving of exquisite workmanship, but wholly irrational
+design. Probably the influence of Moorish decorative art accounts in
+part for these extravagances. The eastern chapels in Burgos cathedral,
+the votive church of +San Juan de los Reyes+ at Toledo and many portals
+of churches, convents and hospitals illustrate these tendencies.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 146.--DETAIL, PORTAL S. GREGORIO, VALLADOLID.]
+
+
++PORTUGAL+ is an almost unknown land architecturally. It seems to have
+adopted the Gothic styles very late in its history. Two monuments,
+however, are conspicuous, the convent churches of Batalha (1390-1520)
+and +Belem+, both marked by an extreme overloading of carved ornament.
+The +Mausoleum of King Manoel+ in the rear of the church at Batalha is,
+however, a noble creation, possibly by an English master. It is a
+polygonal domed edifice, some 67 feet in diameter, and well designed,
+though covered with a too profuse and somewhat mechanical decoration of
+panels, pinnacles, and carving.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS+: GERMANY (C = cathedral; A = abbey; tr. =
+ transepts).--13th century: Transitional churches: Bamberg C.;
+ Naumburg C.; Collegiate Church, Fritzlar; St. George,
+ Limburg-on-Lahn; St. Castor, Coblentz; Heisterbach A.;--all in
+ early years of 13th century. St. Gereon, Cologne, choir 1212-27;
+ Liebfrauenkirche, Treves, 1227-44; St. Elizabeth, Marburg,
+ 1235-83; Sts. Peter and Paul, Neuweiler, 1250; Cologne C., choir
+ 1248-1322 (nave 14th century; towers finished 1883); Strasburg C.,
+ 1250-75 (E. end Romanesque; façade 1277-1365; tower 1429-39);
+ Halberstadt C., nave 1250 (choir 1327; completed 1490);
+ Altenburg C., choir 1255-65 (finished 1379); Wimpfen-im-Thal
+ church 1259-78; St. Lawrence, Nuremberg, 1260 (choir 1439-77); St.
+ Catherine, Oppenheim, 1262-1317 (choir 1439); Xanten, Collegiate
+ Church, 1263; Freiburg C., 1270 (W. tower 1300; choir 1354);
+ Toul C., 1272; Meissen C., choir 1274 (nave 1312-42); Ratisbon C.,
+ 1275; St. Mary’s, Lübeck, 1276; Dominican churches at Coblentz,
+ Gebweiler; and in Switzerland at Basle, Berne, and Zurich.--14th
+ century: Wiesenkirche, Söst, 1313; Osnabrück C., 1318 (choir
+ 1420); St. Mary’s, Prentzlau, 1325; Augsburg C., 1321-1431;
+ Metz C., 1330 rebuilt (choir 1486); St. Stephen’s C., Vienna, 1340
+ (nave 15th century; tower 1433); Zwette C., 1343; Prague C., 1344;
+ church at Thann, 1351 (tower finished 16th century);
+ Liebfrauenkirche, Nuremberg, 1355-61; St. Sebaldus Church,
+ Nuremberg, 1361-77 (nave Romanesque); Minden C., choir 1361;
+ Ulm C., 1377 (choir 1449; nave vaulted 1471; finished 16th
+ century); Sta. Barbara, Kuttenberg, 1386 (nave 1483); Erfurt C.;
+ St. Elizabeth, Kaschau; Schlettstadt C.--15th century: St.
+ Catherine’s, Brandenburg, 1401; Frauenkirche, Esslingen, 1406
+ (finished 1522); Minster at Berne, 1421; Peter-Paulskirche,
+ Görlitz, 1423-97; St. Mary’s, Stendal, 1447; Frauenkirche, Munich,
+ 1468-88; St. Martin’s, Landshut, 1473.
+
+ SECULAR MONUMENTS. Schloss Marienburg, 1341; Moldau-bridge and
+ tower, Prague, 1344; Karlsteinburg, 1348-57; Albrechtsburg,
+ Meissen, 1471-83; Nassau House, Nuremberg, 1350; Council houses
+ (Rathhaüser) at Brunswick, 1393; Cologne, 1407-15; Basle; Breslau;
+ Lübeck; Münster; Prague; Ulm; City Gates of Basle, Cologne,
+ Ingolstadt, Lucerne.
+
+ THE NETHERLANDS. Brussels C. (Ste. Gudule), 1226-80; Tournai C.,
+ choir 1242 (nave finished 1380); Notre Dame, Bruges, 1239-97;
+ Notre Dame, Tongres, 1240; Utrecht C., 1251; St. Martin, Ypres,
+ 1254; Notre Dame, Dinant, 1255; church at Dordrecht; church at
+ Aerschot, 1337; Antwerp C., 1352-1411 (W. front 1422-1518); St.
+ Rombaut, Malines, 1355-66 (nave 1456-64); St. Wandru, Mons,
+ 1450-1528; St. Lawrence, Rotterdam, 1472; other 15th century
+ churches--St. Bavon, Haarlem; St. Catherine, Utrecht; St.
+ Walpurgis, Sutphen; St. Bavon, Ghent (tower 1461); St. Jaques,
+ Antwerp; St. Pierre, Louvain; St. Jacques, Bruges; churches at
+ Arnheim, Breda, Delft; St. Jacques, Liège, 1522.--SECULAR:
+ Cloth-hall, Ypres, 1200-1304; cloth-hall, Bruges, 1284; town hall,
+ Bruges, 1377; town hall, Brussels, 1401-55; town hall, Louvain,
+ 1448-63; town hall, Ghent, 1481; town hall, Oudenarde, 1527;
+ Standehuis, Delft, 1528; cloth-halls at Louvain, Ghent, Malines.
+
+ SPAIN.--13th century: Burgos C., 1221 (façade 1442-56; chapels
+ 1487; cimborio 1567); Toledo C., 1227-90 (chapels 14th and 15th
+ centuries); Tarragona C., 1235; Leon C., 1250 (façade 14th
+ century); Valencia C., 1262 (N. transept 1350-1404; façade
+ 1381-1418); Avila C., vault and N. portal 1292-1353 (finished 14th
+ century); St. Esteban, Burgos; church at Las Huelgas.--14th
+ century: Barcelona C., choir 1298-1329 (nave and transepts 1448;
+ façade 16th century); Gerona C., 1312-46 (nave added 1416); S. M.
+ del Mar, Barcelona, 1328-83; S. M. del Pino, Barcelona, same date;
+ Collegiate Church, Manresa, 1328; Oviedo C., 1388 (tower very
+ late); Pampluna C., 1397 (mainly 15th century).--15th century:
+ Seville C., 1403 (finished 16th century; cimborio 1517-67); La
+ Seo, Saragossa (finished 1505); S. Pablo, Burgos, 1415-35; El
+ Parral, Segovia, 1459; Astorga C., 1471; San Juan de los Reyes,
+ Toledo, 1476; Carthusian church, Miraflores, 1488; San Juan, and
+ La Merced, Burgos.--16th century: Huesca C., 1515; Salamanca New
+ Cathedral, 1510-60; Segovia C., 1522; S. Juan de la Puerta,
+ Zamorra.
+
+ SECULAR.--Porta Serraños, Valencia, 1349; Casa Consistorial,
+ Barcelona, 1369-78; Casa de la Disputacion, same city; Casa de las
+ Lonjas, Valencia, 1482.
+
+ PORTUGAL. At Batalha, church and mausoleum of King Manoel,
+ finished 1515; at Belem, monastery, late Gothic.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED; As before, Corroyer, Reber. Also, Cummings,
+ _A History of Architecture in Italy_. De Fleury, _La Toscane au
+ moyen âge_. Gruner, _The Terra Cotta Architecture of Northern
+ Italy_. Mothes, _Die Baukunst des Mittelalters in Italien_.
+ Norton, _Historical Studies of Church Building in the Middle
+ Ages_. Osten, _Bauwerke der Lombardei_. Street, _Brick and Marble
+ Architecture of Italy_. Willis, _Remarks on the Architecture of
+ the Middle Ages, especially of Italy_.
+
+
++GENERAL CHARACTER.+ The various Romanesque styles which had grown up in
+Italy before 1200 lacked that unity of principle out of which alone a
+new and homogeneous national style could have been evolved. Each
+province practised its own style and methods of building, long after the
+Romanesque had given place to the Gothic in Western Europe. The Italians
+were better decorators than builders, and cared little for Gothic
+structural principles. Mosaic and carving, sumptuous altars and tombs,
+veneerings and inlays of colored marble, broad flat surfaces to be
+covered with painting and ornament--to secure these they were content to
+build crudely, to tie their insufficiently buttressed vaults with
+unsightly iron tie-rods, and to make their church façades mere
+screen-walls, in form wholly unrelated to the buildings behind them.
+
+When, therefore, under foreign influences pointed arches, tracery,
+clustered shafts, crockets and finials came into use, it was merely as
+an imported fashion. Even when foreign architects (usually Germans) were
+employed, the composition, and in large measure the details, were still
+Italian and provincial. The church of St. Francis at Assisi (1228-53, by
+_Jacobus of Meruan_, a German, superseded later by an Italian,
+Campello), and the cathedral of Milan (begun 1389, perhaps by _Henry of
+Gmund_), are conspicuous illustrations of this. Rome built basilicas all
+through the Middle Ages. Tuscany continued to prefer flat walls veneered
+with marble to the broken surfaces and deep buttresses of France and
+Germany. Venice developed a Gothic style of façade-design wholly her own
+(see p. 267). Nowhere but in Italy could two such utterly diverse
+structures as the Certosa at Pavia and the cathedral at Milan have been
+erected at the same time.
+
+
++CLIMATE AND TRADITION.+ Two further causes militated against the
+domestication of Gothic art in Italy. The first was the brilliant
+atmosphere, which made the vast traceried windows of Gothic design, and
+its suppression of the wall-surfaces, wholly undesirable. Cool, dim
+interiors, thick walls, small windows and the exclusion of sunlight, all
+necessary to Italian comfort, were incompatible with Gothic ideals and
+methods. The second obstacle was the persistence of classic traditions
+of form, both in construction and decoration. The spaciousness and
+breadth of interior planning which characterized Roman design, and its
+amplitude of scale in every feature, seem never to have lost their hold
+on the Italians. The narrow lofty aisles, multiplied supports and minute
+detail of the Gothic style were repugnant to the classic predilections
+of the Italian builders. The Roman acanthus and Corinthian capital were
+constantly imitated in their Gothic buildings, and the round arch
+continued all through the Middle Ages to be used in conjunction with the
+pointed arch (Figs. 149, 150).
+
+
++EARLY BUILDINGS.+ It is hard to determine how and by whom Gothic forms
+were first introduced into Italy, but it was most probably through the
+agency of the monastic orders. Cistercian churches like that at
+Chiaravalle near Milan (1208-21), and most of those erected by the
+mendicant orders of the Franciscans (founded 1210) and Dominicans
+(1216), were built with ribbed vaults and pointed arches. The example
+set by these orders contributed greatly to the general adoption of the
+foreign style. +S. Francesco+ at +Assisi+, already mentioned, was the
+first completely Gothic Franciscan church, although +S. Francesco+ at
++Bologna+, begun a few years later, was finished a little earlier. The
+Dominican church of +SS. Giovanni e Paolo+ and the great Franciscan
+church of +Sta. Maria Gloriosa dei Frari+, both at Venice, were built a
+little later. +Sta. Maria Novella+ at Florence (1278), and +Sta. Maria
+sopra Minerva+ at Rome (1280), both by the brothers _Sisto_ and
+_Ristoro_, and +S. Anastasia+ at Verona (1261) are the masterpieces of
+the Dominican builders. +S. Andrea+ at +Vercelli+ in North Italy, begun
+in 1219 under a foreign architect, is an isolated early example of lay
+Gothic work. Though somewhat English in its plan, and (unlike most
+Italian churches) provided with two western spires in the English
+manner, it is in all other respects thoroughly Italian in aspect. The
+church at Asti, begun in 1229, suggests German models by its high side
+walls and narrow windows.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 147.--DUOMO AT FLORENCE. PLAN.
+ a, _Campanile_.]
+
+
++CATHEDRALS.+ The greatest monuments of Italian Gothic design are the
+cathedrals, in which, even more than was the case in France, the highly
+developed civic pride of the municipalities expressed itself. Chief
+among these half civic, half religious monuments are the cathedrals of
++Sienna+ (begun in 1243), +Arezzo+ (1278), +Orvieto+ (1290), +Florence+
+(the +Duomo+, Sta. Maria del Fiore, begun 1294 by Arnolfo di Cambio),
++Lucca+ (S. Martino, 1350), +Milan+ (1389-1418), and +S. Petronio+ at
+Bologna (1390). They are all of imposing size; Milan is the largest of
+all Gothic cathedrals except Seville. S. Petronio was planned to be 600
+feet long, the present structure with its three broad aisles and
+flanking chapels being merely the nave of the intended edifice. The
+Duomo at Florence (Fig. 147) is 500 feet long and covers 82,000 square
+feet, while the octagon at the crossing is 143 feet in diameter. The
+effect of these colossal dimensions is, however, as in a number of these
+large Italian interiors, singularly belittled by the bareness of the
+walls, by the great size of the constituent parts of the composition,
+and by the lack of architectural subdivisions and multiplied detail to
+serve as a scale by which to gauge the scale of the _ensemble_.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 148.--NAVE OF DUOMO AT FLORENCE.]
+
+
++INTERIOR TREATMENT.+ It was doubtless intended to cover these large
+unbroken wall-surfaces and the vast expanse of the vaults over naves of
+extraordinary breadth, with paintings and color decoration. This would
+have remedied their present nakedness and lack of interest, but it was
+only in a very few instances carried out. The double church of
+S. Francesco at Assisi, decorated by Cimabue, Giotto, and other early
+Tuscan painters, the Arena Chapel at Padua, painted by Giotto, the
++Spanish Chapel+ of S. M. Novella, Florence, and the east end of
+S. Croce, Florence, are illustrations of the splendor of effect possible
+by this method of decoration. The bareness of effect in other, unpainted
+interiors was emphasized by the plainness of the vaults destitute of
+minor ribs. The transverse ribs were usually broad arches with flat
+soffits, and the vaulting was often sprung from so low a point as to
+leave no room for a triforium. Mere bull’s-eyes often served for
+clearstory windows, as in S. Anastasia at Verona, S. Petronio at
+Bologna, and the Florentine Duomo. The cathedral of +S. Martino+ at
+Lucca (Fig. 149) is one of the most complete and elegant of Italian
+Gothic interiors, having a genuine triforium with traceried arches. Even
+here, however, there are round arches without mouldings, flat pilasters,
+broad transverse ribs recalling Roman arches, and insignificant
+bull’s-eyes in the clearstory.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 149.--ONE BAY, NAVE OF CATHEDRAL OF
+ SAN MARTINO, LUCCA.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 150.--INTERIOR OF SIENNA CATHEDRAL.]
+
+The failure to produce adequate results of scale in the interiors of the
+larger Italian churches, has been already alluded to. It is strikingly
+exemplified in the Duomo at Florence, the nave of which is 72 feet wide,
+with four pier-arches each over 55 feet in span. The immense vault, in
+square bays, starts from the level of the tops of these arches. The
+interior (Fig. 148) is singularly naked and cold, giving no conception
+of its vast dimensions. The colossal dome is an early work of the
+Renaissance (see p. 276). It is not known how _Fr. Talenti_, who in 1357
+enlarged and vaulted the nave and planned the east end, proposed to
+cover the great octagon. The east end is the most effective part of the
+design both internally and externally, owing to the relatively moderate
+scale of the 15 chapels which surround the apsidal arms of the cross. In
+S. Petronio at Bologna, begun 1390 by _Master Antonio_, the scale is
+better handled. The nave, 300 feet long, is divided into six bays, each
+embracing two side chapels. It is 46 feet wide and 132 feet high,
+proportions which approximate those of the French cathedrals, and
+produce an impression of size somewhat unusual in Italian churches.
++Orvieto+ has internally little that suggests Gothic architecture; like
+many Franciscan and Dominican churches it is really a timber-roofed
+basilica with a few pointed windows. The mixed Gothic and Romanesque
+interior of +Sienna Cathedral+ (Fig. 150), with its round arches and
+six-sided dome, unsymmetrically placed over the crossing, is one of the
+most impressive creations of Italian mediæval art. Alternate courses of
+black and white marble add richness but not repose to the effect of this
+interior: the same is true of Orvieto, and of some other churches. The
+basement baptistery of +S. Giovanni+, under the east end of Sienna
+Cathedral, is much more purely Gothic in detail.
+
+In these, and indeed in most Italian interiors, the main interest
+centres less in the excellence of the composition than in the
+accessories of pavements, pulpits, choir-stalls, and sepulchral
+monuments. In these the decorative fancy and skill of the Italians found
+unrestrained exercise, and produced works of surpassing interest and
+merit.
+
+
++EXTERNAL DESIGN.+ The greatest possible disparity generally exists
+between the sides and west fronts of the Italian churches. With few
+exceptions the flanks present nothing like the variety of sky-line and
+of light and shade customary in northern and western lands. The side
+walls are high and flat, plain, or striped with black and white masonry
+(Sienna, Orvieto), or veneered with marble (Duomo at Florence) or
+decorated with surface-ornament of thin pilasters and arcades (Lucca).
+The clearstory is low; the roof low--pitched and hardly visible from
+below. Color, rather than structural richness, is generally sought for:
+Milan Cathedral is almost the only exception, and goes to the other
+extreme, with its seemingly countless buttresses, pinnacles and statues.
+
+The façades, on the other hand, were treated as independent decorative
+compositions, and were in many cases remarkably beautiful works, though
+having little or no organic relation to the main structure. The most
+celebrated are those of +Sienna+ (cathedral begun 1243; façade 1284 by
+_Giovanni Pisano_; Fig. 151) and +Orvieto+ (begun 1290 by _Lorenzo
+Maitani_; façade 1310). Both of these are sumptuous polychromatic
+compositions in marble, designed on somewhat similar lines, with three
+high gables fronting the three aisles, with deeply recessed portals,
+pinnacled turrets flanking nave and aisles, and a central circular
+window. That of Orvieto is furthermore embellished with mosaic pictures,
+and is the more brilliant in color of the two. The mediæval façades of
+the Florentine Gothic churches were never completed; but the elegance of
+the panelling and of the tracery with twisted shafts in the flanks of
+the cathedral, and the florid beauty of its side doorways (late 14th
+century) would doubtless if realized with equal success on the façades,
+have produced strikingly beautiful results. The modern façade of the
+Duomo, by the late _De Fabris_ (1887) is a correct if not highly
+imaginative version of the style so applied. The front of Milan
+cathedral (soon to be replaced by a new façade), shows a mixture of
+Gothic and Renaissance forms. +Ferrara Cathedral+, although internally
+transformed in the last century, retains its fine 13th-century
+three-gabled and arcaded screen front; one of the most Gothic in spirit
+of all Italian façades. The +Cathedral+ of +Genoa+ presents Gothic
+windows and deeply recessed portals in a façade built in black and white
+bands, like Sienna cathedral and many churches in Pistoia and Pisa.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 151.--FAÇADE OF SIENNA CATHEDRAL.]
+
+Externally the most important feature was frequently a cupola or dome
+over the crossing. That of Sienna has already been mentioned; that of
+Milan is a sumptuous many-pinnacled structure terminating in a spire 300
+feet high. The +Certosa+ at Pavia (Fig. 152) and the earlier Carthusian
+church of Chiaravalle have internal cupolas or domes covered externally
+by many-storied structures ending in a tower dominating the whole
+edifice. These two churches, like many others in Lombardy, the Æmilia
+and Venetia, are built of brick, moulded terra-cotta being effectively
+used for the cornices, string-courses, jambs and ornaments of the
+exterior. The Certosa at Pavia is contemporary with the cathedral of
+Milan, to which it offers a surprising contrast, both in style and
+material. It is wholly built of brick and terra-cotta, and, save for its
+ribbed vaulting, possesses hardly a single Gothic feature or detail. Its
+arches, mouldings, and cloisters suggest both the Romanesque and the
+Renaissance styles by their semi-classic character.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 152.--EXTERIOR OF THE CERTOSA, PAVIA.]
+
+
++PLANS.+ The wide diversity of local styles in Italian architecture
+appears in the plans as strikingly as in the details In general one
+notes a love of spaciousness which expresses itself in a sometimes
+disproportionate breadth, and in the wide spacing of the piers. The
+polygonal chevet with its radial chapels is but rarely seen;
++S. Lorenzo+ at Naples, Sta. Maria dei Servi and S. Francesco at Bologna
+are among the most important examples. More frequently the chapels form
+a range along the east side of the transepts, especially in the
+Franciscan churches, which otherwise retain many basilican features.
+A comparison of the plans of S. Andrea at Vercelli, the Duomo at
+Florence, the cathedrals of Sienna and Milan, S. Petronio at Bologna and
+the Certosa at Pavia (Fig. 153), sufficiently illustrates the variety of
+Italian Gothic plan-types.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 153.--PLAN OF CERTOSA AT PAVIA.]
+
+
++ORNAMENT.+ Applied decoration plays a large part in all Italian Gothic
+designs. Inlaid and mosaic patterns and panelled veneering in colored
+marble are essential features of the exterior decoration of most Italian
+churches. Florence offers a fine example of this treatment in the Duomo,
+and in its accompanying +Campanile+ or bell-tower, designed by _Giotto_
+(1335), and completed by _Gaddi_ and _Talenti_. This beautiful tower is
+an epitome of Italian Gothic art. Its inlays, mosaics, and veneering are
+treated with consummate elegance, and combined with incrusted reliefs of
+great beauty. The tracery of this monument and of the side windows of
+the adjoining cathedral is lighter and more graceful than is common in
+Italy. Its beauty consists, however, less in movement of line than in
+richness and elegance of carved and inlaid ornament. In the +Or San
+Michele+--a combined chapel and granary in Florence dating from
+1330--the tracery is far less light and open. In general, except in
+churches like the Cathedral of Milan, built under German influences, the
+tracery in secular monuments is more successful than in ecclesiastical
+structures. Venice developed the designing of tracery to greater
+perfection in her palaces than any other Italian city (see below).
+
+
++MINOR WORKS.+ Italian Gothic art found freer expression in
+semi-decorative works, like tombs, altars and votive chapels, than in
+more monumental structures. The fourteenth century was particularly rich
+in canopy tombs, mostly in churches, though some were erected in the
+open air, like the celebrated +Tombs of the Scaligers+ in Verona
+(1329-1380). Many of those in churches in and near Rome, and others in
+south Italy, are especially rich in inlay of _opus Alexandrinum_ upon
+their twisted columns and panelled sarcophagi. The family of the
+_Cosmati_ acquired great fame for work of this kind during the
+thirteenth century.
+
+The little marble chapel of +Sta. Maria della Spina+, on the Arno, at
+Pisa, is an instance of the successful decorative use of Gothic forms in
+minor buildings.
+
+
++TOWERS.+ The Italians always preferred the square tower to the spire,
+and in most cases treated it as an independent campanile. Following
+Early Christian and Romanesque traditions, these square towers were
+usually built with plain sides unbroken by buttresses, and terminated in
+a flat roof or a low and inconspicuous cone or pyramid. The Campanile at
+Florence already mentioned is by far the most beautiful of these designs
+(Fig. 154). The campaniles of Sienna, Lucca, and Pistoia are built in
+alternate white and black courses, like the adjoining cathedrals. Verona
+and Mantua have towers with octagonal lanterns. In general, these Gothic
+towers differ from the earlier Romanesque models only in the forms of
+their openings. Though dignified in their simplicity and size, and
+usually well proportioned, they lack the beauty and interest of the
+French, English, and German steeples and towers.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 154.--UPPER PART OF CAMPANILE, FLORENCE.]
+
+
++SECULAR MONUMENTS.+ In their public halls, open _loggias_, and domestic
+architecture the Italians were able to develop the application of Gothic
+forms with greater freedom than in their church-building, because
+unfettered by traditional methods of design. The early and vigorous
+growth of municipal and popular institutions led, as in the Netherlands,
+to the building of two classes of public halls--the town hall proper or
+_Podestà_, and the council hall, variously called _Palazzo Communale_,
+_Pubblico_, or _del Consiglio_. The town halls, as the seat of
+authority, usually have a severe and fortress-like character; the
++Palazzo Vecchio+ at Florence is the most important example (1298, by
+Arnolfo di Cambio; Fig. 155). It is especially remarkable for its tower,
+which, rising 308 feet in the air, overhangs the street nearly 6 feet,
+its front wall resting on the face of the powerfully corbelled cornice
+of the palace. The court and most of the interior were remodelled in the
+sixteenth century. At Sienna is a somewhat similar structure in brick,
+the +Palazzo Pubblico+. At Pistoia the Podestà and the Communal Palace
+stand opposite each other; in both of these the courtyards still retain
+their original aspect. At Perugia, Bologna, and Viterbo are others of
+some importance; while in Lombardy, Bergamo, Como, Cremona, Piacenza and
+other towns possess smaller halls with open arcades below, of a more
+elegant and pleasing aspect. More successful still are the open loggias
+or tribunes erected for the gatherings of public bodies. The +Loggia dei
+Lanzi+ at Florence (1376, by _Benci di Cione_ and _Simone di Talenti_)
+is the largest and most famous of these open vaulted halls, of which
+several exist in Florence and Sienna. Gothic only in their minor
+details, they are Romanesque or semi-classic in their broad round arches
+and strong horizontal lines and cornices (Fig. 156).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 155.--UPPER PART OF PALAZZO VECCHIO,
+ FLORENCE.]
+
+
++PALACES AND HOUSES: VENICE.+ The northern cities, especially Pisa,
+Florence, Sienna, Bologna, and Venice, are rich in mediæval public and
+private palaces and dwellings in brick or marble, in which pointed
+windows and open arcades are used with excellent effect. In Bologna and
+Sienna brick is used, in conjunction with details executed in moulded
+terra-cotta, in a highly artistic and effective way. Viterbo, nearer
+Rome, also possesses many interesting houses with street arcades and
+open stairways or stoops leading to the main entrance.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 156.--LOGGIA DEI LANZI, FLORENCE.]
+
+The security and prosperity of Venice in the Middle Ages, and the ever
+present influence of the sun-loving East, made the massive and
+fortress-like architecture of the inland cities unnecessary. Abundant
+openings, large windows full of tracery of great lightness and elegance,
+projecting balconies and the freest use of marble veneering and
+inlay--a survival of Byzantine traditions of the 12th century (see
+p. 133)--give to the Venetian houses and palaces an air of gayety and
+elegance found nowhere else. While there are few Gothic churches of
+importance in Venice, the number of mediæval houses and palaces is very
+large. Chief among these is the +Doge’s Palace+ (Fig. 157), adjoining
+the church of St. Mark. The two-storied arcades of the west and south
+fronts date from 1354, and originally stood out from the main edifice,
+which was widened in the next century, when the present somewhat heavy
+walls, laid up in red, white and black marble in a species of
+quarry-pattern, were built over the arcades. These arcades are beautiful
+designs, combining massive strength and grace in a manner quite foreign
+to Western Gothic ideas. Lighter and more ornate is the +Ca d’Oro+, on
+the Grand Canal; while the Foscari, Contarini-Fasan, Cavalli, and Pisani
+palaces, among many others, are admirable examples of the style. In most
+of these a traceried loggia occupies the central part, flanked by walls
+incrusted with marble and pierced by Gothic windows with carved
+mouldings, borders, and balconies. The Venetian Gothic owes its success
+largely to the absence of structural difficulties to interfere with the
+purely decorative development of Gothic details.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 157.--WEST FRONT VIEW OF DOGE’S PALACE,
+ VENICE.]
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS.+ 13th Century: Cistercian abbeys Fossanova and
+ Casamari, _cir._ 1208; S. Andrea, Vercelli, 1209; S. Francesco,
+ Assisi, 1228-53; Church at Asti, 1229; Sienna C., 1243-59 (cupola
+ 1259-64; façade 1284); S. M. Gloriosa dei Frari, Venice, 1250-80
+ (finished 1388); Sta. Chiara, Assisi, 1250; Sta. Trinità,
+ Florence, 1250; S. Antonio, Padua, begun 1256; SS. Giovanni e
+ Paolo, Venice, 1260 (?)-1400; Sta. Anastasia, Verona, 1261;
+ Naples C., 1272-1314 (façade 1299; portal 1407; much altered
+ later); S. Lorenzo, Naples, 1275; Campo Santo, Pisa, 1278-83;
+ Arezzo C., 1278; S. M. Novella, Florence, 1278; S. Eustorgio,
+ Milan, 1278; S. M. sopra Minerva, Rome, 1280; Orvieto C., 1290
+ (façade 1310; roof 1330); Sta. Croce, Florence, 1294 (façade
+ 1863); S. M. del Fiore, or C., Florence, 1294-1310 (enlarged 1357;
+ E. end 1366; dome 1420-64; façade 1887); S. Francesco,
+ Bologna.--14th century: Genoa C., early 14th century;
+ S. Francesco, Sienna, 1310; San Domenico, Sienna, about same date;
+ S. Giovanni in Fonte, Sienna, 1317; S. M. della Spina, Pisa, 1323;
+ Campanile, Florence, 1335; Or San Michele, Florence, 1337;
+ Milan C., 1386 (cupola 16th century; façade 16th-19th century; new
+ façade building 1895); S. Petronio, Bologna, 1390; Certosa, Pavia,
+ 1396 (choir, transepts, cupola, cloisters, 15th and 16th
+ centuries); Como C., 1396 (choir and transepts 1513); Lucca C.
+ (S. Martino), Romanesque building remodelled late in 14th century;
+ Verona C.; S. Fermo, Maggiore; S. Francesco, Pisa; S. Lorenzo,
+ Vicenza.--15th century: Perugia C.; S. M. delle Grazie, Milan,
+ 1470 (cupola and exterior E. part later).
+
+ SECULAR BUILDINGS: Pal. Pubblico, Cremona, 1245; Pal. Podestà
+ (Bargello), Florence, 1255 (enlarged 1333-45); Pal. Pubblico,
+ Sienna, 1289-1305 (many later alterations); Pal. Giureconsulti,
+ Cremona, 1292; Broletto, Monza, 1293; Loggia dei Mercanti,
+ Bologna, 1294; Pal. Vecchio, Florence, 1298; Broletto, Como; Pal.
+ Ducale (Doge’s Palace), Venice, 1310-40 (great windows 1404;
+ extended 1423-38; courtyard 15th and 16th centuries); Loggia dei
+ Lanzi, Florence, 1335; Loggia del Bigallo, 1337; Broletto,
+ Bergamo, 14th century; Loggia dei Nobili, Sienna, 1407; Pal.
+ Pubblico, Udine, 1457; Loggia dei Mercanti, Ancona; Pal. del
+ Governo, Bologna; Pal. Pepoli, Bologna; Palaces Conte Bardi,
+ Davanzati, Capponi, all at Florence; at Sienna, Pal. Tolomei,
+ 1205; Pal. Saracini, Pal. Buonsignori; at Venice, Pal.
+ Contarini-Fasan, Cavalli, Foscari, Pisani, and many others; others
+ in Padua and Vicenza.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+EARLY RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Anderson, _Architecture of the Renaissance in
+ Italy_. Burckhardt, _The Civilization of the Renaissance_;
+ _Geschichte der Renaissance in Italien_; _Der Cicerone_. Cellesi,
+ _Sei Fabbriche di Firenze_. Cicognara, _Le Fabbriche più cospicue
+ di Venezia_. Durm, _Die Baukunst der Renaissance in Italien_ (in
+ _Hdbuch. d. Arch._). Fergusson, _History of Modern Architecture_.
+ Geymüller, _La Renaissance en Toscane_. Montigny et Famin,
+ _Architecture Toscane_. Moore, _Character of Renaissance
+ Architecture_. Müntz, _La Renaissance en Italie et en France à
+ l’époque de Charles VIII._ Palustre, _L’Architecture de la
+ Renaissance_. Pater, _Studies in the Renaissance_. Symonds, _The
+ Renaissance of the Fine Arts in Italy_. Tosi and Becchio, _Altars,
+ Tabernacles, and Tombs_.
+
+
++THE CLASSIC REVIVAL.+ The abandonment of Gothic architecture in Italy
+and the substitution in its place of forms derived from classic models
+were occasioned by no sudden or merely local revolution. The Renaissance
+was the result of a profound and universal intellectual movement, whose
+roots may be traced far back into the Middle Ages, and which manifested
+itself first in Italy simply because there the conditions were most
+propitious. It spread through Europe just as rapidly as similar
+conditions appearing in other countries prepared the way for it.
+The essence of this far-reaching movement was the protest of the
+individual reason against the trammels of external and arbitrary
+authority--a protest which found its earliest organized expression in
+the Humanists. In its assertion of the intellectual and moral rights
+of the individual, the Renaissance laid the foundations of modern
+civilization. The same spirit, in rejecting the authority and teachings
+of the Church in matters of purely secular knowledge, led to the
+questionings of the precursors of modern science and the discoveries of
+the early navigators. But in nothing did the reaction against mediæval
+scholasticism and asceticism display itself more strikingly than in the
+joyful enthusiasm which marked the pursuit of classic studies. The
+long-neglected treasures of classic literature were reopened, almost
+rediscovered, in the fourteenth century by the immortal trio--Dante,
+Petrarch, and Boccaccio. The joy of living, the hitherto forbidden
+delight in beauty and pleasure for their own sakes, the exultant
+awakening to the sense of personal freedom, which came with the bursting
+of mediæval fetters, found in classic art and literature their most
+sympathetic expression. It was in Italy, where feudalism had never fully
+established itself, and where the municipalities and guilds had
+developed, as nowhere else, the sense of civic and personal freedom,
+that these symptoms first manifested themselves. In Italy, and above all
+in the Tuscan cities, they appeared throughout the fourteenth century in
+the growing enthusiasm for all that recalled the antique culture, and in
+the rapid advance of luxury and refinement in both public and private
+life.
+
+
++THE RENAISSANCE OF THE ARTS.+ Classic Roman architecture had never lost
+its influence on the Italian taste. Gothic art, already declining in the
+West, had never been in Italy more than a borrowed garb, clothing
+architectural conceptions classic rather than Gothic in spirit. The
+antique monuments which abounded on every hand were ever present models
+for the artist, and to the Florentines of the early fifteenth century
+the civilization which had created them represented the highest ideal of
+human culture. They longed to revive in their own time the glories of
+ancient Rome, and appropriated with uncritical and undiscriminating
+enthusiasm the good and the bad, the early and the late forms of Roman
+art, Naïvely unconscious of the disparity between their own
+architectural conceptions and those they fancied they imitated, they
+were, unknown to themselves, creating a new style, in which the details
+of Roman art were fitted in novel combinations to new requirements. In
+proportion as the Church lost its hold on the culture of the age, this
+new architecture entered increasingly into the service of private luxury
+and public display. It created, it is true, striking types of church
+design, and made of the dome one of the most imposing of external
+features; but its most characteristic products were palaces, villas,
+council halls, and monuments to the great and the powerful. The personal
+element in design asserted itself as never before in the growth of
+schools and the development of styles. Thenceforward the history of
+Italian architecture becomes the history of the achievements of
+individual artists.
+
+
++EARLY BEGINNINGS.+ Already in the 13th century the pulpits of Niccolo
+Pisano at Sienna and Pisa had revealed that master’s direct recourse to
+antique monuments for inspiration and suggestion. In the frescoes of
+Giotto and his followers, and in the architectural details of many
+nominally Gothic buildings, classic forms had appeared with increasing
+frequency during the fourteenth century. This was especially true in
+Florence, which was then the artistic capital of Italy. Never, perhaps,
+since the days of Pericles, had there been another community so
+permeated with the love of beauty in art, and so endowed with the
+capacity to realize it. Nowhere else in Europe at that time was there
+such strenuous life, such intense feeling, or such free course for
+individual genius as in Florence. Her artists, with unexampled
+versatility, addressed themselves with equal success to goldsmiths’
+work, sculpture, architecture and engineering--often to painting and
+poetry as well; and they were quick to catch in their art the spirit of
+the classic revival. The new movement achieved its first architectural
+triumph in the dome of the cathedral of Florence (1420-64); and it was
+Florentine--or at least Tuscan--artists who planted in other centres the
+seeds of the new art that were to spring up in the local and provincial
+schools of Sienna, Milan, Pavia, Bologna, and Venice, of Brescia, Lucca,
+Perugia, and Rimini, and many other North Italian cities. The movement
+asserted itself late in Rome and Naples, as an importation from Northern
+Italy, but it bore abundant fruit in these cities in its later stages.
+
+
++PERIODS.+ The classic styles which grew up out of the Renaissance may
+be divided for convenience into four periods.
+
+THE EARLY RENAISSANCE or FORMATIVE PERIOD, 1420-90; characterized by
+the grace and freedom of the decorative detail, suggested by Roman
+prototypes and applied to compositions of great variety and originality.
+
+THE HIGH RENAISSANCE or FORMALLY CLASSIC PERIOD, 1490-1550. During this
+period classic details were copied with increasing fidelity, the orders
+especially appearing in almost all compositions; decoration meanwhile
+losing somewhat in grace and freedom.
+
+THE EARLY BAROQUE (or BAROCO), 1550-1600; a period of classic formality
+characterized by the use of colossal orders, engaged columns and rather
+scanty decoration.
+
+THE DECLINE or LATER BAROQUE, marked by poverty of invention in the
+composition and a predominance of vulgar sham and display in the
+decoration. Broken pediments, huge scrolls, florid stucco-work and a
+general disregard of architectural propriety were universal.
+
+During the eighteenth century there was a reaction from these
+extravagances, which showed itself in a return to the servile copying of
+classic models, sometimes not without a certain dignity of composition
+and restraint in the decoration.
+
+By many writers the name Renaissance is confined to the first period.
+This is correct from the etymological point of view; but it is
+impossible to dissociate the first period historically from those which
+followed it, down to the final exhaustion of the artistic movement to
+which it gave birth, in the heavy extravagances of the Rococo.
+
+Another division is made by the Italians, who give the name of the
+_Quattrocento_ to the period which closed with the end of the fifteenth
+century, _Cinquecento_ to the sixteenth century, and _Seicento_ to the
+seventeenth century or Rococo. It has, however, become common to confine
+the use of the term Cinquecento to the first half of the sixteenth
+century.
+
+
++CONSTRUCTION AND DETAIL.+ The architects of the Renaissance occupied
+themselves more with form than with construction, and rarely set
+themselves constructive problems of great difficulty. Although the new
+architecture began with the colossal dome of the cathedral of Florence,
+and culminated in the stupendous church of St. Peter at Rome, it was
+pre-eminently an architecture of palaces and villas, of façades and of
+decorative display. Constructive difficulties were reduced to their
+lowest terms, and the constructive framework was concealed, not
+emphasized, by the decorative apparel of the design. Among the
+masterpieces of the early Renaissance are many buildings of small
+dimensions, such as gates, chapels, tombs and fountains. In these the
+individual fancy had full sway, and produced surprising results by the
+beauty of enriched mouldings, of carved friezes with infant genii,
+wreaths of fruit, griffins, masks and scrolls; by pilasters covered with
+arabesques as delicate in modelling as if wrought in silver; by inlays
+of marble, panels of glazed terra-cotta, marvellously carved doors, fine
+stucco-work in relief, capitals and cornices of wonderful richness and
+variety. The Roman orders appeared only in free imitations, with
+panelled and carved pilasters for the most part instead of columns, and
+capitals of fanciful design, recalling remotely the Corinthian by their
+volutes and leaves (Fig. 158). Instead of the low-pitched classic
+pediments, there appears frequently an arched cornice enclosing a
+sculptured lunette. Doors and windows were enclosed in richly carved
+frames, sometimes arched and sometimes square. Façades were flat and
+unbroken, depending mainly for effect upon the distribution and
+adornment of the openings, and the design of doorways, courtyards and
+cornices. Internally vaults and flat ceilings of wood and plaster were
+about equally common, the barrel vault and dome occurring far more
+frequently than the groined vault. Many of the ceilings of this period
+are of remarkable richness and beauty.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 158.--EARLY RENAISSANCE CAPITAL, PAL. ZORZI,
+ VENICE.]
+
+
++THE EARLY RENAISSANCE IN FLORENCE: THE DUOMO.+ In the year 1417 a
+public competition was held for completing the cathedral of Florence by
+a dome over the immense octagon, 143 feet in diameter. _Filippo
+Brunelleschi_, sculptor and architect (1377-1446), who with Donatello
+had journeyed to Rome to study there the masterworks of ancient art,
+after demonstrating the inadequacy of all the solutions proposed by the
+competitors, was finally permitted to undertake the gigantic task
+according to his own plans. These provided for an octagonal dome in two
+shells, connected by eight major and sixteen minor ribs, and crowned by
+a lantern at the top (Fig. 159). This wholly original conception, by
+which for the first time (outside of Moslem art) the dome was made an
+external feature fitly terminating in the light forms and upward
+movement of a lantern, was carried out between the years 1420 and 1464.
+Though in no wise an imitation of Roman forms, it was classic in its
+spirit, in its vastness and its simplicity of line, and was made
+possible solely by Brunelleschi’s studies of Roman design and
+construction (Fig. 160).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 159.--SECTION OF DOME OF DUOMO, FLORENCE.]
+
+
++OTHER CHURCHES.+ From Brunelleschi’s designs were also erected the
++Pazzi Chapel+ in Sta. Croce, a charming design of a Greek cross covered
+with a dome at the intersection, and preceded by a vestibule with a
+richly decorated vault; and the two great churches of +S. Lorenzo+
+(1425) and +S. Spirito+ (1433-1476, Fig. 161). Both reproduced in a
+measure the plan of the Pisa Cathedral, having a three-aisled nave and
+transepts, with a low dome over the crossing. The side aisles were
+covered with domical vaults and the central aisles with flat wooden or
+plaster ceilings. All the details of columns, arches and mouldings were
+imitated from Roman models, and yet the result was something entirely
+new. Consciously or unconsciously, Brunelleschi was reviving Byzantine
+rather than Roman conceptions in the planning and structural design of
+these domical churches, but the garb in which he clothed them was Roman,
+at least in detail. The +Old Sacristy+ of S. Lorenzo was another domical
+design of great beauty.
+
+From this time on the new style was in general use for church designs.
+_L. B. Alberti_ (1404-73), who had in Rome mastered classic details more
+thoroughly than Brunelleschi, remodelled the church of +S. Francesco+ at
++Rimini+ with Roman pilasters and arches, and with engaged orders in the
+façade, which, however, was never completed. His great work was the
+church of +S. Andrea+ at +Mantua+, a Latin cross in plan, with a dome at
+the intersection (the present high dome dating however, only from the
+18th century) and a façade to which the conception of a Roman triumphal
+arch was skilfully adapted. His façade of incrusted marbles for the
+church of S. M. Novella at Florence was a less successful work, though
+its flaring consoles over the side aisles established an unfortunate
+precedent frequently imitated in later churches.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 160.--EXTERIOR OF DOME OF DUOMO, FLORENCE.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 161.--INTERIOR OF S. SPIRITO, FLORENCE.]
+
+A great activity in church-building marked the period between 1475 and
+1490. The plans of the churches erected about this time throughout north
+Italy display an interesting variety of arrangements, in nearly all of
+which the dome is combined with the three-aisled cruciform plan, either
+as a central feature at the crossing or as a domical vault over each
+bay. Bologna and Ferrara possess a number of churches of this kind.
+Occasionally the basilican arrangement was followed, with columnar
+arcades separating the aisles. More often, however, the pier-arches were
+of the Roman type, with engaged columns or pilasters between them. The
+interiors, presumably intended to receive painted decorations, were in
+most cases somewhat bare of ornament, pleasing rather by happy
+proportions and effective vaulting or rich flat ceilings, panelled,
+painted and gilded, than by elaborate architectural detail. A similar
+scantiness of ornament is to be remarked in the exteriors, excepting the
+façades, which were sometimes highly ornate; the doorways, with columns,
+pediments, sculpture and carving, receiving especial attention. High
+external domes did not come into general use until the next period. In
+Milan, Pavia, and some other Lombard cities, the internal cupola over
+the crossing was, however, covered externally by a lofty structure in
+diminishing stages, like that of the Certosa at Pavia (Fig. 152), or
+that erected by Bramante for the church of S. M. delle Grazie at Milan.
+At Prato, in the church of the +Madonna delle Carceri+ (1495-1516), by
+_Giuliano da S. Gallo_, the type of the Pazzi chapel reappears in a
+larger scale; the plan is cruciform, with equal or nearly equal arms
+covered by barrel vaults, at whose intersection rises a dome of moderate
+height on pendentives. This charming edifice, with its unfinished
+exterior of white marble, its simple and dignified lines, and internal
+embellishments in della-Robbia ware, is one of the masterpieces of the
+period.
+
+In the designing of chapels and oratories the architects of the early
+Renaissance attained conspicuous success, these edifices presenting
+fewer structural limitations and being more purely decorative in
+character than the larger churches. Such façades as that of
++S. Bernardino+ at Perugia and of the +Frati di S. Spirito+ at Bologna
+are among the most delightful products of the decorative fancy of the
+15th century.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 162.--COURTYARD OF RICCARDI PALACE, FLORENCE.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 163.--FAÇADE OF STROZZI PALACE, FLORENCE.]
+
++FLORENTINE PALACES.+ While the architects of this period failed to
+develop any new and thoroughly satisfactory ecclesiastical type, they
+attained conspicuous success in palace-architecture. The +Riccardi+
+palace in Florence (1430) marks the first step of the Renaissance in
+this direction. It was built for the great Cosimo di Medici by
+_Michelozzi_ (1397-1473), a contemporary of Brunelleschi and Alberti,
+and a man of great talent. Its imposing rectangular façade, with widely
+spaced mullioned windows in two stories over a massive basement, is
+crowned with a classic cornice of unusual and perhaps excessive size. In
+spite of the bold and fortress-like character of the rusticated masonry
+of these façades, and the mediæval look they seem to present to modern
+eyes, they marked a revolution in style and established a type
+frequently imitated in later years. The courtyard, in contrast with this
+stern exterior, appears light and cheerful (Fig. 162). Its wall is
+carried on round arches borne by columns with Corinthianesque capitals,
+and the arcade is enriched with sculptured medallions. +The Pitti
+Palace+, by Brunelleschi (1435), embodies the same ideas on a more
+colossal scale, but lacks the grace of an adequate cornice. A lighter
+and more ornate style appeared in 1460 in the +P. Rucellai+, by Alberti,
+in which for the first time classical pilasters in superposed stages
+were applied to a street façade. To avoid the dilemma of either
+insufficiently crowning the edifice or making the cornice too heavy for
+the upper range of pilasters, Alberti made use of brackets, occupying
+the width of the upper frieze, and converting the whole upper
+entablature into a cornice. But this compromise was not quite
+successful, and it remained for later architects in Venice, Verona, and
+Rome to work out more satisfactory methods of applying the orders to
+many-storied palace façades. In the great +P. Strozzi+ (Fig. 163),
+erected in 1490 by _Benedetto da Majano_ and _Cronaca_, the architects
+reverted to the earlier type of the P. Riccardi, treating it with
+greater refinement and producing one of the noblest palaces of Italy.
+
+
++COURTYARDS; ARCADES.+ These palaces were all built around interior
+courts, whose walls rested on columnar arcades, as in the P. Riccardi
+(Fig. 162). The origin of these arcades may be found in the arcaded
+cloisters of mediæval monastic churches, which often suggest classic
+models, as in those of St. Paul-beyond-the-Walls and St. John Lateran at
+Rome. Brunelleschi not only introduced columnar arcades into a number of
+cloisters and palace courts, but also used them effectively as exterior
+features in the +Loggia S. Paolo+ and the Foundling Hospital (+Ospedale
+degli Innocenti+) at Florence. The chief drawback in these light arcades
+was their inability to withstand the thrust of the vaulting over the
+space behind them, and the consequent recourse to iron tie-rods where
+vaulting was used. The Italians, however, seemed to care little about
+this disfigurement.
+
+
++MINOR WORKS.+ The details of the new style were developed quite as
+rapidly in purely decorative works as in monumental buildings. Altars,
+mural monuments, tabernacles, pulpits and _ciboria_ afforded scope for
+the genius of the most distinguished artists. Among those who were
+specially celebrated in works of this kind should be named _Lucca della
+Robbia_ (1400-82) and his successors, _Mino da Fiesole_ (1431-84) and
+_Benedetto da Majano_ (1442-97). Possessed of a wonderful fertility of
+invention, they and their pupils multiplied their works in extraordinary
+number and variety, not only throughout north Italy, but also in Rome
+and Naples. Among the most famous examples of this branch of design may
+be mentioned a pulpit in Sta. Croce by B. da Majano; a terra-cotta
+fountain in the sacristy of S. M. Novella, by the della Robbias; the
+Marsupini tomb in Sta. Croce, by _Desiderio da Settignano_ (all in
+Florence); the della Rovere tomb in S. M. del Popolo, Rome, by Mino da
+Fiesole, and in the Cathedral at Lucca the Noceto tomb and the
+Tempietto, by _Matteo Civitali_. It was in works of this character that
+the Renaissance oftenest made its first appearance in a new centre, as
+was the case in Sienna, Pisa, Lucca, Naples, etc.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 164.--TOMB OF PIETRO DI NOCETO, LUCCA.]
+
+
++NORTH ITALY.+ Between 1450 and 1490 the Renaissance presented in
+Sienna, in a number of important palaces, a sharp contrast to the
+prevalent Gothic style of that city. The +P. Piccolomini+--a somewhat
+crude imitation of the P. Riccardi in Florence--dates from 1463; the
++P. del Governo+ was built 1469, and the +Spannocchi Palace+ in 1470. In
+1463 _Ant. Federighi_ built there the +Loggia del Papa+. About the same
+time _Bernardo di Lorenzo_ was building for Pope Pius II. (Æneas Sylvius
+Piccolomini) an entirely new city, +Pienza+, with a cathedral,
+archbishop’s palace, town hall and Papal residence (the
++P. Piccolomini+), which are interesting if not strikingly original
+works. Pisa possesses few early Renaissance structures, owing to the
+utter prostration of her fortunes in the 15th century, and the dominance
+of Pisan Gothic traditions. In Lucca, besides a wealth of minor
+monuments (largely the work of Matteo Civitali, 1435-1501) in various
+churches, a number of palaces date from this period, the most important
+being the +P. Pretorio+ and P. Bernardini. To Milan the Renaissance was
+carried by the Florentine masters _Michelozzi_ and _Filarete_, to whom
+are respectively due the +Portinari Chapel+ in S. Eustorgio (1462) and
+the earlier part of the great +Ospedale Maggiore+ (1457). In the latter,
+an edifice of brick with terra-cotta enrichments, the windows were
+Gothic in outline--an unusual mixture of styles, even in Italy. The
+munificence of the Sforzas, the hereditary tyrants of the province,
+embellished the semi-Gothic +Certosa+ of Pavia with a new marble façade,
+begun 1476 or 1491, which in its fanciful and exuberant decoration, and
+the small scale of its parts, belongs properly to the early Renaissance.
+Exquisitely beautiful in detail, it resembles rather a magnified
+altar-piece than a work of architecture, properly speaking. Bologna and
+Ferrara developed somewhat late in the century a strong local school of
+architecture, remarkable especially for the beauty of its courtyards,
+its graceful street arcades, and its artistic treatment of brick and
+terra-cotta (+P. Bevilacqua+, +P. Fava+, at Bologna; +P. Scrofa+,
++P. Roverella+, at Ferrara). About the same time palaces with interior
+arcades and details in the new style were erected in Verona, Vicenza,
+Mantua, and other cities.
+
+
++VENICE.+ In this city of merchant princes and a wealthy _bourgeoisie_,
+the architecture of the Renaissance took on a new aspect of splendor and
+display. It was late in appearing, the Gothic style with its tinge of
+Byzantine decorative traditions having here developed into a style well
+suited to the needs of a rich and relatively tranquil community. These
+traditions the architects of the new style appropriated in a measure, as
+in the marble incrustations of the exquisite little church of +S. M. dei
+Miracoli+ (1480-89), and the façade of the +Scuola di S. Marco+
+(1485-1533), both by _Pietro Lombardo_. Nowhere else, unless on the
+contemporary façade of the Certosa at Pavia, were marble inlays and
+delicate carving, combined with a framework of thin pilasters, finely
+profiled entablatures and arched pediments, so lavishly bestowed upon
+the street fronts of churches and palaces. The family of the _Lombardi_
+(Martino, his sons Moro and Pietro, and grandsons Antonio and Tullio),
+with _Ant. Bregno_ and _Bart. Buon_, were the leaders in the
+architectural Renaissance of this period, and to them Venice owes her
+choicest masterpieces in the new style. Its first appearance is noted in
+the later portions of the church of +S. Zaccaria+ (1456-1515), partly
+Gothic internally, with a façade whose semicircular pediment and small
+decorative arcades show a somewhat timid but interesting application of
+classic details. In this church, and still more so in S. Giobbe
+(1451-93) and the Miracoli above mentioned, the decorative element
+predominates throughout. It is hard to imagine details more graceful in
+design, more effective in the swing of their movement, or more delicate
+in execution than the mouldings, reliefs, wreaths, scrolls, and capitals
+one encounters in these buildings. Yet in structural interest, in scale
+and breadth of planning, these early Renaissance Venetian buildings hold
+a relatively inferior rank.
+
+
++PALACES.+ The great +Court+ of the +Doge’s Palace+, begun 1483 by _Ant.
+Rizzio_, belongs only in part to the first period. It shows, however,
+the lack of constructive principle and of largeness of composition just
+mentioned, but its decorative effect and picturesque variety elicit
+almost universal admiration. Like the neighboring façade of St. Mark’s,
+it violates nearly every principle of correct composition, and yet in a
+measure atones for this capital defect by its charm of detail. Far more
+satisfactory from the purely architectural point of view is the façade
+of the +P. Vendramini+ (Vendramin-Calergi), by Pietro Lombardo (1481).
+The simple, stately lines of its composition, the dignity of its broad
+arched and mullioned windows, separated by engaged columns--the earliest
+example in Venice of this feature, and one of the earliest in Italy--its
+well-proportioned basement and upper stories, crowned by an adequate but
+somewhat heavy entablature, make this one of the finest palaces in Italy
+(Fig. 165) It established a type of large-windowed, vigorously modelled
+façades which later architects developed, but hardly surpassed. In the
+smaller contemporary, P. Dario, another type appears, better suited for
+small buildings, depending for effect mainly upon well-ordered openings
+and incrusted panelling of colored marble.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 165.--VENDRAMINI PALACE, VENICE.]
+
+
++ROME.+ Internal disorders and the long exile of the popes had by the
+end of the fourteenth century reduced Rome to utter insignificance. Not
+until the second half of the fifteenth century did returning prosperity
+and wealth afford the Renaissance its opportunity in the Eternal City.
+Pope Nicholas V. had, indeed, begun the rebuilding of St. Peter’s from
+designs by B. Rossellini, in 1450, but the project lapsed shortly after
+with the death of the pope. The earliest Renaissance building in Rome
+was the +P. di Venezia+, begun in 1455, together with the adjoining
+porch of S. Marco. In this palace and the adjoining unfinished
+Palazzetto we find the influence of the old Roman monuments clearly
+manifested in the court arcades, built like those of the Colosseum, with
+superposed stages of massive piers and engaged columns carrying
+entablatures. The proportions are awkward, the details coarse; but the
+spirit of Roman classicism is here seen in the germ. The exterior of
+this palace is, however, still Gothic in spirit. The architects are
+unknown; _Giuliano da Majano_ (1452-90), _Giacomo di Pietrasanta_, and
+_Meo del Caprino_ (1430-1501) are known to have worked upon it, but it
+is not certain in what capacity.
+
+The new style, reaching, and in time overcoming, the conservatism of the
+Church, overthrew the old basilican traditions. In +S. Agostino+
+(1479-83), by _Pietrasanta_, and +S. M. del Popolo+, by Pintelli (?),
+piers with pilasters or half-columns and massive arches separate the
+aisles, and the crossing is crowned with a dome. To the same period
+belong the Sistine chapel and parts of the Vatican palace, but the
+interest of these lies rather in their later decorations than in their
+somewhat scanty architectural merit.
+
+The architectural renewal of Rome, thus begun, reached its culmination
+in the following period.
+
+
++OTHER MONUMENTS.+ The complete enumeration of even the most important
+Early Renaissance monuments of Italy is impossible within our limits.
+Two or three only can here be singled out as suggesting types. Among
+town halls of this period the first place belongs to the +P. del
+Consiglio+ at Verona, by _Fra Giocondo_ (1435-1515). In this beautiful
+edifice the façade consists of a light and graceful arcade supporting a
+wall pierced with four windows, and covered with elaborate frescoed
+arabesques (recently restored). Its unfortunate division by pilasters
+into four bays, with a pier in the centre, is a blemish avoided in the
+contemporary +P. del Consiglio+ at Padua. The +Ducal Palace+ at Urbino,
+by _Luciano da Laurano_ (1468), is noteworthy for its fine arcaded
+court, and was highly famed in its day. At Brescia +S. M. dei Miracoli+
+is a remarkable example of a cruciform domical church dating from the
+close of this period, and is especially celebrated for the exuberant
+decoration of its porch and its elaborate detail. Few campaniles were
+built in this period; the best of them are at Venice. Naples possesses
+several interesting Early Renaissance monuments, chief among which are
+the +Porta Capuana+ (1484), by _Giul. da Majano_, the triumphal +Arch of
+Alphonso+ of Arragon, by _Pietro di Martino_, and the +P. Gravina+, by
+_Gab. d’Agnolo_. Naples is also very rich in minor works of the early
+Renaissance, in which it ranks with Florence, Venice, and Rome.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY--_Continued_.
+
+THE ADVANCED RENAISSANCE AND DECLINE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Burckhardt, Cicognara, Fergusson,
+ Palustre. Also, Gauthier, _Les plus beaux edifices de Gênes_.
+ Geymüller, _Les projets primitifs pour la basilique de St. Pierre
+ de Rome_. Gurlitt, _Geschichte des Barockstiles in Italien_.
+ Letarouilly, _Édifices de Rome Moderne_; _Le Vatican_. Palladio,
+ _The Works of A. Palladio_.
+
+
++CHARACTER OF THE ADVANCED RENAISSANCE.+ It was inevitable that the
+study and imitation of Roman architecture should lead to an increasingly
+literal rendering of classic details and a closer copying of antique
+compositions. Toward the close of the fifteenth century the symptoms
+began to multiply of the approaching reign of formal classicism.
+Correctness in the reproduction of old Roman forms came in time to be
+esteemed as one of the chief of architectural virtues, and in the
+following period the orders became the principal resource of the
+architect. During the so-called Cinquecento, that is, from the close of
+the fifteenth century to nearly or quite 1550, architecture still
+retained much of the freedom and refinement of the Quattrocento. There
+was meanwhile a notable advance in dignity and amplitude of design,
+especially in the internal distribution of buildings. Externally the
+orders were freely used as subordinate features in the decoration of
+doors and windows, and in court arcades of the Roman type. The
+lantern-crowned dome upon a high drum was developed into one of the
+noblest of architectural forms. Great attention was bestowed upon all
+subordinate features; doors and windows were treated with frames and
+pediments of extreme elegance and refinement; all the cornices and
+mouldings were proportioned and profiled with the utmost care, and the
+balustrade was elaborated into a feature at once useful and highly
+ornate. Interior decoration was even more splendid than before, if
+somewhat less delicate and subtle; relief enrichments in stucco were
+used with admirable effect, and the greatest artists exercised their
+talents in the painting of vaults and ceilings, as in P. del Té at
+Mantua, by _Giulio Romano_ (1492-1546), and the Sistine Chapel at Rome,
+by Michael Angelo. This period is distinguished by an exceptional number
+of great architects and buildings. It was ushered in by _Bramante
+Lazzari_, of Urbino (1444-1514), and closed during the career of
+_Michael Angelo Buonarotti_ (1475-1564); two names worthy to rank with
+that of Brunelleschi. Inferior only to these in architectural genius
+were _Raphael_ (1483-1520), _Baldassare Peruzzi_ (1481-1536), _Antonio
+da San Gallo the Younger_ (1485-1546), and _G. Barozzi da Vignola_
+(1507-1572), in Rome; _Giacopo Tatti Sansovino_ (1479-1570), in Venice,
+and others almost equally illustrious. This period witnessed the
+erection of an extraordinary series of palaces, villas, and churches,
+the beginning and much of the construction of St. Peter’s at Rome, and a
+complete transformation in the aspect of that city.
+
+
++BRAMANTE’S WORKS.+ While precise time limits cannot be set to
+architectural styles, it is not irrational to date this period from the
+maturing of Bramante’s genius. While his earlier works in Milan belong
+to the Quattrocento (S. M. delle Grazie, the sacristy of San Satiro, the
+extension of the Great Hospital), his later designs show the classic
+tendency very clearly. The charming +Tempietto+ in the court of
+S. Pietro in Montorio at Rome, a circular temple-like chapel (1502), is
+composed of purely classic elements. In the +P. Giraud+ (Fig. 166) and
+the great +Cancelleria+ Palace, pilasters appear in the external
+composition, and all the details of doors and windows betray the results
+of classic study, as well as the refined taste of their designer.[24]
+The beautiful courtyard of the Cancelleria combines the Florentine
+system of arches on columns with the Roman system of superposed arcades
+independent of the court wall. In 1506 Bramante began the rebuilding of
+St. Peter’s for Julius II. (see p. 294) and the construction of a new
+and imposing papal palace adjoining it on the Vatican hill. Of this
+colossal group of edifices, commonly known as the +Vatican+, he executed
+the greater Belvedere court (afterward divided in two by the Library and
+the Braccio Nuovo), the lesser octagonal court of the Belvedere, and the
+court of San Damaso, with its arcades afterward frescoed by Raphael and
+his school. Besides these, the cloister of S. M. della Pace, and many
+other works in and out of Rome, reveal the impress of Bramante’s genius,
+alike in their admirable plans and in the harmony and beauty of their
+details.
+
+ [Footnote 24: See Appendix C.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 166.--FAÇADE OF THE GIRAUD PALACE, ROME.]
+
+
++FLORENTINE PALACES.+ The P. Riccardi long remained the accepted type of
+palace in Florence. As we have seen, it was imitated in the Strozzi
+palace, as late as 1489, with greater perfection of detail, but with no
+radical change of conception. In the +P. Gondi+, however, begun in the
+following year by _Giuliano da San Gallo_ (1445-1516), a more pronounced
+classic spirit appears, especially in the court and the interior design.
+Early in the 16th century classic columns and pediments began to be used
+as decorations for doors and windows; the rustication was confined to
+basements and corner-quoins, and niches, loggias, and porches gave
+variety of light and shade to the façades (+P. Bartolini+, by _Baccio
+d’Agnolo_; +P. Larderel+, 1515, by _Dosio_; +P. Guadagni+, by _Cronaca_;
++P. Pandolfini+, 1518, attributed to Raphael). In the +P. Serristori+,
+by Baccio d’Agnolo (1510), pilasters were applied to the composition of
+the façade, but this example was not often followed in Florence.
+
+
++ROMAN PALACES.+ These followed a different type. They were usually of
+great size, and built around ample courts with arcades of classic model
+in two or three stories. The broad street façade in three stories with
+an attic or mezzanine was crowned with a rich cornice. The orders were
+sparingly used externally, and effect was sought principally in the
+careful proportioning of the stories, in the form and distribution of
+the square-headed and arched openings, and in the design of mouldings,
+string-courses, cornices, and other details. The _piano nobile_, or
+first story above the basement, was given up to suites of sumptuous
+reception-rooms and halls, with magnificent ceilings and frescoes by the
+great painters of the day, while antique statues and reliefs adorned the
+courts, vestibules, and niches of these princely dwellings. The
++Massimi+ palace, by Peruzzi, is an interesting example of this type.
+The Vatican, Cancelleria, and Giraud palaces have already been
+mentioned; other notable palaces are the Palma (1506) and Sacchetti
+(1540), by A. da San Gallo the Younger; the +Farnesina+, by Peruzzi,
+with celebrated fresco decorations designed by Raphael; and the Lante
+(1520) and Altemps (1530), by Peruzzi. But the noblest creation of this
+period was the
+
+
++FARNESE PALACE+, by many esteemed the finest in Italy. It was begun in
+1530 for Alex. Farnese (Paul III.) by A. da San Gallo the Younger, with
+Vignola’s collaboration. The simple but admirable plan is shown in Fig.
+167, and the courtyard, the most imposing in Italy, in Fig. 168. The
+exterior is monotonous, but the noble cornice by Michael Angelo
+measurably redeems this defect. The fine vaulted columnar entrance
+vestibule, the court and the _salons_, make up an _ensemble_ worthy of
+the great architects who designed it. The loggia toward the river was
+added by _G. della Porta_ in 1580.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 167.--PLAN OF FARNESE PALACE.]
+
+
++VILLAS.+ The Italian villa of this pleasure-loving period afforded full
+scope for the most playful fancies of the architect, decorator, and
+landscape gardener. It comprised usually a dwelling, a _casino_ or
+amusement-house, and many minor edifices, summer-houses, arcades, etc.,
+disposed in extensive grounds laid out with terraces, cascades, and
+shaded alleys. The style was graceful, sometimes trivial, but almost
+always pleasing, making free use of stucco enrichments, both internally
+and externally, with abundance of gilding and frescoing. The +Villa
+Madama+ (1516), by Raphael, with stucco-decorations by Giulio Romano,
+though incomplete and now dilapidated, is a noted example of the style.
+More complete, the +Villa of Pope Julius+, by Vignola (1550), belongs by
+its purity of style to this period; its façade well exemplifies the
+simplicity, dignity, and fine proportions of this master’s work. In
+addition to these Roman villas may be mentioned the +V. Medici+ (1540,
+by _Annibale Lippi_; now the French Academy of Rome); the +Casino del
+Papa+ in the Vatican Gardens, by _Pirro Ligorio_ (1560); the +V. Lante+,
+near Viterbo, and the +V. d’Este+, at Tivoli, as displaying among almost
+countless others the Italian skill in combining architecture and
+gardening.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 168.--ANGLE OF COURT OF FARNESE PALACE, ROME.]
+
+
++CHURCHES AND CHAPELS.+ This period witnessed the building of a few
+churches of the first rank, but it was especially prolific in memorial,
+votive, and sepulchral chapels added to churches already existing, like
+the +Chigi Chapel+ of S. M. del Popolo, by Raphael. The earlier churches
+of this period generally followed antecedent types, with the dome as the
+central feature dominating a cruciform plan, and simple, unostentatious
+and sometimes uninteresting exteriors. Among them may be mentioned: at
+Pistoia, S. M. del Letto and +S. M. dell’ Umiltà+, the latter a fine
+domical rotunda by _Ventura Vitoni_ (1509), with an imposing vestibule;
+at Venice, +S. Salvatore+, by _Tullio Lombardo_ (1530), an admirable
+edifice with alternating domical and barrel-vaulted bays; +S. Georgio
+dei Grechi+ (1536), by _Sansovino_, and S. M. Formosa; at Todi, the
++Madonna della Consolazione+ (1510), by _Cola da Caprarola_, a charming
+design with a high dome and four apses; at Montefiascone, the +Madonna
+delle Grazie+, by _Sammichele_ (1523), besides several churches at
+Bologna, Ferrara, Prato, Sienna, and Rome of almost or quite equal
+interest. In these churches one may trace the development of the dome as
+an external feature, while in +S. Biagio+, at Montepulciano, the effort
+was made by _Ant. da San Gallo the Elder_ to combine with it the
+contrasting lines of two campaniles, of which, however, but one was
+completed.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 169.--ORIGINAL PLAN OF ST. PETER’S, ROME.]
+
++ST. PETER’S.+ The culmination of Renaissance church architecture was
+reached in +St. Peter’s+, at Rome. The original project of Nicholas V.
+having lapsed with his death, it was the intention of Julius II. to
+erect on the same site a stupendous mausoleum over the monument he had
+ordered of Michael Angelo. The design of Bramante, who began its
+erection in 1506, comprised a Greek cross with apsidal arms, the four
+angles occupied by domical chapels and loggias within a square outline
+(Fig. 169). The too hasty execution of this noble design led to the
+collapse of two of the arches under the dome, and to long delays after
+Bramante’s death in 1514. Raphael, Giuliano da San Gallo, Peruzzi, and
+A. da San Gallo the Younger successively supervised the works under the
+popes from Leo X. to Paul III., and devised a vast number of plans for
+its completion. Most of these involved fundamental alterations of the
+original scheme, and were motived by the abandonment of the proposed
+monument of Julius II.; a church, and not a mausoleum, being in
+consequence required. In 1546 Michael Angelo was assigned by Paul III.
+to the works, and gave final form to the general design in a simplified
+version of Bramante’s plan with more massive supports, a square east
+front with a portico for the chief entrance, and the unrivalled +Dome+,
+which is its most striking feature. This dome, slightly altered and
+improved in curvature by della Porta after M. Angelo’s death in 1564,
+was completed by _D. Fontana_ in 1604. It is the most majestic creation
+of the Renaissance, and one of the greatest architectural conceptions of
+all history. It measures 140 feet in internal diameter, and with its two
+shells rises from a lofty drum, buttressed by coupled Corinthian
+columns, to a height of 405 feet to the top of the lantern. The church,
+as left by Michael Angelo, was harmonious in its proportions, though the
+single order used internally and externally dwarfed by its colossal
+scale the vast dimensions of the edifice. Unfortunately in 1606 _C.
+Maderna_ was employed by Paul V. to lengthen the nave by two bays,
+destroying the proportions of the whole, and hiding the dome from view
+on a near approach. The present tasteless façade was Maderna’s work. The
+splendid atrium or portico added (1629-67), by _Bernini_, as an
+approach, mitigates but does not cure the ugliness and pettiness of this
+front.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 170.--PLAN OF ST. PETER’S, ROME,
+ AS NOW STANDING.
+ The portion below the line A, B, and the side chapels C, D, were
+ added by Maderna. The remainder represents Michael Angelo’s plan.]
+
+St. Peter’s as thus completed (Fig. 170) is the largest church in
+existence, and in many respects is architecturally worthy of its
+pre-eminence. The central aisle, nearly 600 feet long, with its
+stupendous panelled and gilded vault, 83 feet in span, the vast central
+area and the majestic dome, belong to a conception unsurpassed in
+majestic simplicity and effectiveness. The construction is almost
+excessively massive, but admirably disposed. On the other hand the nave
+is too long, and the details not only lack originality and interest, but
+are also too large and coarse in scale, dwarfing the whole edifice. The
+interior (Fig. 171) is wanting in the sobriety of color that befits so
+stately a design; it suggests rather a pagan temple than a Christian
+basilica. These faults reveal the decline of taste which had already set
+in before Michael Angelo took charge of the work, and which appears even
+in the works of that master.
+
+
++THE PERIOD OF FORMAL CLASSICISM.+ With the middle of the 16th century
+the classic orders began to dominate all architectural design. While
+Vignola, who wrote a treatise upon the orders, employed them with
+unfailing refinement and judgment, his contemporaries showed less
+discernment and taste, making of them an end rather than a means. Too
+often mere classical correctness was substituted for the fundamental
+qualities of original invention and intrinsic beauty of composition. The
+innovation of colossal orders extending through several stories, while
+it gave to exterior designs a certain grandeur of scale, tended to
+coarseness and even vulgarity of detail. Sculpture and ornament began to
+lose their refinement; and while street-architecture gained in
+monumental scale, and public squares received a more stately adornment
+than ever before, the street-façades individually were too often bare
+and uninteresting in their correct formality. In the interiors of
+churches and large halls there appears a struggle between a cold and
+dignified simplicity and a growing tendency toward pretentious sham. But
+these pernicious tendencies did not fully mature till the latter part of
+the century, and the half-century after 1540 or 1550 was prolific of
+notable works in both ecclesiastical and secular architecture. The names
+of Michael Angelo and Vignola, whose careers began in the preceding
+period; of Palladio and della Porta (1541-1604) in Rome; of Sammichele
+and Sansovino in Verona and Venice, and of Galeazzo Alessi in Genoa,
+stand high in the ranks of architectural merit.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 171.--INTERIOR OF ST. PETER’S, ROME.]
+
+
++CHURCHES.+ The type established by St. Peter’s was widely imitated
+throughout Italy. The churches in which a Greek or Latin cross is
+dominated by a high dome rising from a drum and terminating in a
+lantern, and is treated both internally and externally with Roman
+Corinthian pilasters and arches, are almost numberless. Among the best
+churches of this type is the +Gesù+ at Rome, by Vignola (1568), with a
+highly ornate interior of excellent proportions and a less interesting
+exterior, the façade adorned with two stories of orders and great
+flanking volutes over the sides (see p. 277). Two churches at Venice, by
+_Palladio_--+S. Giorgio Maggiore+ (1560; façade by _Scamozzi_, 1575) and
+the +Redentore+--offer a strong contrast to the Gesù, in their cold and
+almost bare but pure and correct design. An imitation of Bramante’s plan
+for St. Peter’s appears in +S. M. di Carignano+, at Genoa, by _Galeazzo
+Alessi_ (1500-72), begun 1552, a fine structure, though inferior in
+scale and detail to its original. Besides these and other important
+churches there were many large domical chapels of great splendor added
+to earlier churches; of these the +Chapel of Sixtus V.+ in S. M.
+Maggiore, at Rome, by _D. Fontana_ (1543-1607), is an excellent example.
+
+
++PALACES: ROME.+ The palaces on the Capitoline Hill, built at different
+dates (1540-1644) from designs by Michael Angelo, illustrate the palace
+architecture of this period, and the imposing effect of a single
+colossal order running through two stories. This treatment, though well
+adapted to produce monumental effects in large squares, was dangerous in
+its bareness and heaviness of scale, and was better suited for buildings
+of vast dimensions than for ordinary street-façades. In other Roman
+palaces of this time the traditions of the preceding period still
+prevailed, as in the +Sapienza+ (University), by della Porta (1575),
+which has a dignified court and a façade of great refinement without
+columns or pilasters. The +Papal palaces+ built by Domenico Fontana on
+the Lateran, Quirinal, and Vatican hills, between 1574 and 1590,
+externally copying the style of the Farnese, show a similar return to
+earlier models, but are less pure and refined in detail than the
+Sapienza. The great pentagonal +Palace of Caprarola+, near Rome, by
+Vignola, is perhaps the most successful and imposing production of the
+Roman classic school.
+
+
++VERONA.+ Outside of Rome, palace-building took on various local and
+provincial phases of style, of which the most important were the closely
+related styles of Verona, Venice, and Vicenza. _Michele Sammichele_
+(1484-1549), who built in Verona the +Bevilacqua+, +Canossa+, +Pompei+,
+and +Verzi+ palaces and the four chief city gates, and in Venice the
++P. Grimani+, his masterpiece (1550), was a designer of great
+originality and power. He introduced into his military architecture, as
+in the gates of Verona, the use of rusticated orders, which he treated
+with skill and taste. The idea was copied by later architects and
+applied, with doubtful propriety, to palace-façades; though Ammanati’s
+garden-façade for the Pitti palace, in Florence (cir. 1560), is an
+impressive and successful design.
+
+
++VENICE.+ Into the development of the maturing classic style _Giacopo
+Tatti Sansovino_ (1477-1570) introduced in his Venetian buildings new
+elements of splendor. Coupled columns between arches themselves
+supported on columns, and a profusion of figure sculpture, gave to his
+palace-façades a hitherto unknown magnificence of effect, as in the
++Library of St. Mark+ (now the Royal Palace, Fig. 172), and the
++Cornaro+ palace (P. Corner de Cà Grande), both dating from about
+1530-40. So strongly did he impress upon Venice these ornate and
+sumptuous variations on classic themes, that later architects adhered,
+in a very debased period, to the main features and spirit of his work.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 172.--LIBRARY OF ST. MARK, VENICE.]
+
+
++VICENZA.+ Of _Palladio’s_ churches in Venice we have already spoken;
+his palaces are mainly to be found in his native city, Vicenza. In these
+structures he displayed great fertility of invention and a profound
+familiarity with the classic orders, but the degenerate taste of the
+Baroque period already begins to show itself in his work. There is far
+less of architectural propriety and grace in these pretentious palaces,
+with their colossal orders and their affectation of grandeur, than in
+the designs of Vignola or Sammichele. Wood and plaster, used to mimic
+stone, indicate the approaching reign of sham in all design
+(+P. Barbarano+, 1570; +Chieregati+, 1560; +Tiene+, +Valmarano+, 1556;
++Villa Capra+). His masterpiece is the two-storied arcade about the
+mediæval +Basilica+, in which the arches are supported on a minor order
+between engaged columns serving as buttresses. This treatment has in
+consequence ever since been known as the _Palladian Motive_.
+
+
++GENOA.+ During the second half of the sixteenth century a remarkable
+series of palaces was erected in Genoa, especially notable for their
+great courts and imposing staircases. These last were given unusual
+prominence owing to differences of level in the courts, arising from the
+slope of their sites on the hillside. Many of these palaces were by
+Galeazzo Alessi (1502-72); others by architects of lesser note; but
+nearly all characterized by their effective planning, fine stairs and
+loggias, and strong and dignified, if sometimes uninteresting, detail
+(+P. Balbi+, +Brignole+, +Cambiasi+, +Doria-Tursi+ [or Municipio],
++Durazzo+ [or Reale], +Pallavicini+, and +University+).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 173.--INTERIOR OF SAN SEVERO, NAPLES.]
+
+
++THE BAROQUE STYLE.+ A reaction from the cold _classicismo_ of the late
+sixteenth century showed itself in the following period, in the lawless
+and vulgar extravagances of the so-called _Baroque_ style. The wealthy
+Jesuit order was a notorious contributor to the debasement of
+architectural taste. Most of the Jesuit churches and many others not
+belonging to the order, but following its pernicious example, are
+monuments of bad taste and pretentious sham. Broken and contorted
+pediments, huge scrolls, heavy mouldings, ill-applied sculpture in
+exaggerated attitudes, and a general disregard for architectural
+propriety characterized this period, especially in its church
+architecture, to whose style the name _Jesuit_ is often applied. Sham
+marble and heavy and excessive gilding were universal (Fig. 173). _C.
+Maderna_ (1556-1629), _Lorenzo Bernini_ (1589-1680), and _F. Borromini_
+(1599-1667) were the worst offenders of the period, though Bernini was
+an artist of undoubted ability, as proved by his colonnades or atrium in
+front of St. Peter’s. There were, however, architects of purer taste
+whose works even in that debased age were worthy of admiration.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 174.--CHURCH OF S. M. DELLA SALUTE, VENICE.]
+
+
++BAROQUE CHURCHES.+ The Baroque style prevailed in church architecture
+for almost two centuries. The majority of the churches present varieties
+of the cruciform plan crowned by a high dome which is usually the best
+part of the design. Everywhere else the vices of the period appear in
+these churches, especially in their façades and internal decoration.
++S. M. della Vittoria+, by Maderna, and +Sta. Agnese+, by Borromini,
+both at Rome, are examples of the style. Naples is particularly full of
+Baroque churches (Fig. 173), a few of which, like the +Gesù Nuovo+
+(1584), are dignified and creditable designs. The domical church of
++S. M. della Salute+, at Venice (1631), by Longhena, is also a majestic
+edifice in excellent style (Fig. 174), and here and there other churches
+offer exceptions to the prevalent baseness of architecture. Particularly
+objectionable was the wholesale disfigurement of existing monuments by
+ruthless remodelling, as in S. John Lateran, at Rome, the cathedrals of
+Ferrara and Ravenna, and many others.
+
+
++PALACES.+ These were generally superior to the churches, and not
+infrequently impressive and dignified structures. The two best examples
+in Rome are the +P. Borghese+, by _Martino Lunghi the Elder_ (1590),
+with a fine court arcade on coupled Doric and Ionic columns, and the
++P. Barberini+, by Maderna and Borromini, with an elliptical staircase
+by Bernini, one of the few palaces in Italy with projecting lateral
+wings. In Venice, Longhena, in the +Rezzonico+ and +Pesaro+ palaces
+(1650-80), showed his freedom from the mannerisms of the age by
+reproducing successfully the ornate but dignified style of Sansovino
+(see p. 301). At Naples D. Fontana, whose works overlap the Baroque
+period, produced in the +Royal Palace+ (1600) and the +Royal Museum+
+(1586-1615) designs of considerable dignity, in some respects superior
+to his papal residences in Rome. In suburban villas, like the +Albani+
+and +Borghese+ villas near Rome, the ostentatious style of the Decline
+found free and congenial expression.
+
+
++LATER MONUMENTS.+ In the few eighteenth-century buildings which are
+worthy of mention there is noticeable a reaction from the extravagances
+of the seventeenth century, shown in the dignified correctness of the
+exteriors and the somewhat frigid splendor of the interiors. The most
+notable work of this period is the +Royal Palace+ at +Caserta+, by _Van
+Vitelli_ (1752), an architect of considerable taste and inventiveness,
+considering his time. This great palace, 800 feet square, encloses four
+fine courts, and is especially remarkable for the simple if monotonous
+dignity of the well proportioned exterior and the effective planning of
+its three octagonal vestibules, its ornate chapel and noble staircase.
+Staircases, indeed, were among the most successful features of late
+Italian architecture, as in the +Scala Regia+ of the Vatican, and in the
+Corsini, Braschi, and Barberini palaces at Rome, the Royal Palace at
+Naples, etc.
+
+In church architecture the +east front+ of +S. John Lateran+ in Rome, by
+_Galilei_ (1734), and the whole +exterior+ of +S. M. Maggiore+, by
+_Ferd. Fuga_ (1743), are noteworthy designs: the former an especially
+powerful conception, combining a colossal order with two smaller orders
+in superposed _loggie_, but marred by the excessive scale of the statues
+which crown it. The +Fountain+ of +Trevi+, conceived in much the same
+spirit (1735, by _Niccola Salvi_), is a striking piece of decorative
+architecture. The Sacristy of St. Peter’s, by _Marchionne_ (1775), also
+deserves mention as a monumental and not uninteresting work. In the
+early years of the present century the +Braccio Nuovo+ of the Vatican,
+by _Stern_, the imposing church of +S. Francesco di Paola+ at Naples, by
+_Bianchi_, designed in partial imitation of the Pantheon, and the great
++S. Carlo Theatre+ at Naples, show the same coldly classical spirit, not
+wholly without merit, but lacking in true originality and freedom of
+conception.
+
+
++CAMPANILES.+ The +campaniles+ of the Renaissance and Decline deserve at
+least passing reference, though they are neither numerous nor often of
+conspicuous interest. That of the +Campidoglio+ (Capitol) at Rome, by
+Martino Lunghi, is a good example of the classical type. Venetia
+possesses a number of graceful and lofty bell-towers, generally of brick
+with marble bell-stages, of which the upper part of the +Campanile+ of
++St. Mark+ and the tower of S. Giorgio Maggiore are the finest examples.
+
+The Decline attained what the early Renaissance aimed at--the revival of
+Roman forms. But it was no longer a Renaissance; it was a decrepit and
+unimaginative art, held in the fetters of a servile imitation, copying
+the letter rather than the spirit of antique design. It was the mistaken
+and abject worship of precedent which started architecture upon its
+downward path and led to the atrocious products of the seventeenth
+century.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS+ (mainly in addition to those mentioned in the text).
+ 15TH CENTURY--FLORENCE: Foundling Hospital (Innocenti), 1421; Old
+ Sacristy and Cloister S. Lorenzo; P. Quaratesi, 1440; cloisters at
+ Sta. Croce and Certosa, all by Brunelleschi; façade S. M. Novella,
+ by Alberti, 1456; Badia at Fiesole, from designs of Brunelleschi,
+ 1462; Court of P. Vecchio, by Michelozzi, 1464 (altered and
+ enriched, 1565); P. Guadagni, by Cronaca, 1490; Hall of 500 in
+ P. Vecchio, by same, 1495.--VENICE: S. Zaccaria, by Martino
+ Lombardo, 1457-1515; S. Michele, by Moro Lombardo, 1466; S. M. del
+ Orto, 1473; S. Giovanni Crisostomo, by Moro Lombardo, atrium of
+ S. Giovanni Evangelista, Procurazie Vecchie, all 1481; Scuola di
+ S. Marco, by Martino Lombardo, 1490; P. Dario;
+ P. Corner-Spinelli.--FERRARA: P. Schifanoja, 1469; P. Scrofa or
+ Costabili, 1485; S. M. in Vado, P. dei Diamanti, P. Bevilacqua,
+ S. Francesco, S. Benedetto, S. Cristoforo, all 1490-1500.--MILAN:
+ Ospedale Grande (or Maggiore), begun 1457 by Filarete, extended by
+ Bramante, cir. 1480-90 (great court by Richini, 17th century);
+ S. M. delle Grazie, E. end, Sacristy of S. Satiro, S. M. presso
+ S. Celso, all by Bramante, 1477-1499.--ROME: S. Pietro in
+ Montorio, 1472; S. M. del Popolo, 1475?; Sistine Chapel of
+ Vatican, 1475; S. Agostino, 1483.--SIENNA: Loggia del Papa and
+ P. Nerucci, 1460; P. del Governo, 1469-1500; P. Spannocchi, 1470;
+ Sta. Catarina, 1490, by di Bastiano and Federighi, church later by
+ Peruzzi; Library in cathedral by L. Marina, 1497; Oratory of
+ S. Bernardino, by Turrapili, 1496.--PIENZA: Cathedral, Bishop’s
+ Palace (Vescovado), P. Pubblico, all cir. 1460, by B. di Lorenzo
+ (or Rosselini?). ELSEWHERE (in chronological order): Arch of
+ Alphonso, Naples, 1443, by P. di Martino; Oratory S. Bernardino,
+ Perugia, by di Duccio, 1461; Church over Casa-Santa, Loreto,
+ 1465-1526; P. del Consiglio at Verona, by Fra Giocondo, 1476;
+ Capella Colleoni, Bergamo, 1476; S. M. in Organo, Verona, 1481;
+ Porta Capuana, Naples, by Giul. da Majano, 1484; Madonna della
+ Croce, Crema, by B. Battagli, 1490-1556; Madonna di Campagna and
+ S. Sisto, Piacenza, both 1492-1511; P. Bevilacqua, Bologna, by
+ Nardi, 1492 (?); P. Gravina, Naples; P. Fava, Bologna;
+ P. Pretorio, Lucca; S. M. dei Miracoli Brescia; all at close of
+ 15th century.
+
+ 16TH CENTURY--ROME: P. Sora, 1501; S. M. della Pace and cloister,
+ 1504, both by Bramante (façade of church by P. da Cortona, 17th
+ century); S. M. di Loreto, 1507, by A. da San Gallo the Elder;
+ P. Vidoni, by Raphael; P. Lante, 1520; Vigna Papa Giulio, 1534, by
+ Peruzzi; P. dei Conservatori, 1540, and P. del Senatore, 1563
+ (both on Capitol), by M. Angelo, Vignola, and della Porta; Sistine
+ Chapel in S. M. Maggiore, 1590; S. Andrea della Valle, 1591, by
+ Olivieri (façade, 1670, by Rainaldi).--FLORENCE: Medici Chapel of
+ S. Lorenzo, new sacristy of same, and Laurentian Library, all by
+ M. Angelo, 1529-40; Mercato Nuovo, 1547, by B. Tasso; P. degli
+ Uffizi, 1560-70, by Vasari; P. Giugni, 1560-8.--VENICE:
+ P. Camerlinghi, 1525, by Bergamasco; S. Francesco della Vigna, by
+ Sansovino, 1539, façade by Palladio, 1568; Zecca or Mint, 1536,
+ and Loggetta of Campanile, 1540, by Sansovino[25], Procurazie
+ Nuove, 1584, by Scamozzi.--VERONA: Capella Pellegrini in
+ S. Bernardino, 1514; City Gates, by Sammichele, 1530-40 (Porte
+ Nuova, Stuppa, S. Zeno, S. Giorgio).--VICENZA: P. Porto, 1552;
+ Teatro Olimpico, 1580; both by Palladio.--GENOA: P. Andrea Doria,
+ by Montorsoli, 1529; P. Ducale, by Pennone, 1550; P. Lercari,
+ P. Spinola, P. Sauli, P. Marcello Durazzo, all by Gal. Alessi,
+ cir. 1550; Sta. Annunziata, 1587, by della Porta; Loggia dei
+ Banchi, end of 16th century.--ELSEWHERE (in chronological order).
+ P. Roverella, Ferrara, 1508; P. del Magnifico, Sienna, 1508, by
+ Cozzarelli; P. Communale, Brescia, 1508, by Formentone;
+ P. Albergati, Bologna, 1510; P. Ducale, Mantua, 1520-40;
+ P. Giustiniani, Padua, by Falconetto, 1524; Ospedale del Ceppo,
+ Pistoia, 1525; Madonna delle Grazie, Pistoia, by Vitoni, 1535;
+ P. Buoncampagni-Ludovisi, Bologna, 1545; Cathedral, Padua, 1550,
+ by Righetti and della Valle, after M. Angelo; P. Bernardini, 1560,
+ and P. Ducale, 1578, at Lucca, both by Ammanati.
+
+ [Footnote 25: See Appendix B.]
+
+ 17TH CENTURY: Chapel of the Princes in S. Lorenzo, Florence, 1604,
+ by Nigetti; S. Pietro, Bologna, 1605; S. Andrea delle Fratte,
+ Rome, 1612; Villa Borghese, Rome, 1616, by Vasanzio; P. Contarini
+ delle Scrigni, Venice, by Scamozzi; Badia at Florence, rebuilt
+ 1625 by Segaloni; S. Ignazio, Rome, 1626-85; Museum of the
+ Capitol, Rome, 1644-50; Church of Gli Scalzi, Venice, 1649;
+ P. Pesaro, Venice, by Longhena, 1650; S. Moisé, Venice, 1668;
+ Brera Palace, Milan; S. M. Zobenigo, Venice, 1680; Dogana di Mare,
+ Venice, 1686, by Benone; Santi Apostoli, Rome.
+
+ 18TH AND EARLY 19TH CENTURY: Gesuati, at Venice, 1715-30;
+ S. Geremia, Venice, 1753, by Corbellini; P. Braschi, Rome, by
+ Morelli, 1790; Nuova Fabbrica, Venice, 1810.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE IN FRANCE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Fergusson, Müntz, Palustre. Also
+ Berty, _La Renaissance monumentale en France_. Château, _Histoire
+ et caractères de l’architecture en France_. Daly, _Motifs
+ historiques d’architecture et de sculpture_. De Laborde, _La
+ Renaissance des arts à la cour de France_. Du Cerceau, _Les plus
+ excellents bastiments de France_. Lübke, _Geschichte der
+ Renaissance in Frankreich_. Mathews, _The Renaissance under the
+ Valois Kings_. Palustre, _La Renaissance en France_. Pattison,
+ _The Renaissance of the Fine Arts in France_. Rouyer et Darcel,
+ _L’Art architectural en France_. Sauvageot, _Choix de palais,
+ châteaux, hôtels, et maisons de France_.
+
+
++ORIGIN AND CHARACTER.+ The vitality and richness of the Gothic style in
+France, even in its decline in the fifteenth century, long stood in the
+way of any general introduction of classic forms. When the Renaissance
+appeared, it came as a foreign importation, introduced from Italy by the
+king and the nobility. It underwent a protracted transitional phase,
+during which the national Gothic forms and traditions were picturesquely
+mingled with those of the Renaissance. The campaigns of Charles VIII.
+(1489), Louis XII. (1499), and Francis I. (1515), in vindication of
+their claims to the thrones of Naples and Milan, brought these monarchs
+and their nobles into contact with the splendid material and artistic
+civilization of Italy, then in the full tide of the maturing
+Renaissance. They returned to France, filled with the ambition to rival
+the splendid palaces and gardens of Italy, taking with them Italian
+artists to teach their arts to the French. But while these Italians
+successfully introduced many classic elements and details into French
+architecture, they wholly failed to dominate the French master-masons
+and _tailleurs de pierre_ in matters of planning and general
+composition. The early Renaissance architecture of France is
+consequently wholly unlike the Italian, from which it derived only minor
+details and a certain largeness and breadth of spirit.
+
+
++PERIODS.+ The French Renaissance and its sequent developments may be
+broadly divided into three periods, with subdivisions coinciding more or
+less closely with various reigns, as follows:
+
+I. THE VALOIS PERIOD, or Renaissance proper, 1483-1589, subdivided into:
+
+_a._ THE TRANSITION, comprising the reigns of Charles VIII. and Louis
+XII. (1483-1515), and the early years of that of Francis I.;
+characterized by a picturesque mixture of classic details with Gothic
+conceptions.
+
+_b._ THE STYLE OF FRANCIS I., or Early Renaissance, from about 1520 to
+that king’s death in 1547; distinguished by a remarkable variety and
+grace of composition and beauty of detail.
+
+_c._ THE ADVANCED RENAISSANCE, comprising the reigns of Henry II.
+(1547), Francis II. (1559), Charles IX. (1560), and Henry III.
+(1574-89); marked by the gradual adoption of the classic orders and a
+decline in the delicacy and richness of the ornament.
+
+II. THE BOURBON OR CLASSIC PERIOD (1589-1715):
+
+_a._ STYLE OF HENRY IV., covering his reign and partly that of Louis
+XIII. (1610-45), employing the orders and other classic forms with a
+somewhat heavy, florid style of ornament.
+
+_b._ STYLE OF LOUIS XIV., beginning in the preceding reign and extending
+through that of Louis XIV. (1645-1715); the great age of classic
+architecture in France, corresponding to the Palladian in Italy.
+
+III. THE DECLINE OR ROCOCO PERIOD, corresponding with the reign of Louis
+XV. (1715-74); marked by pompous extravagance and capriciousness.
+
+During this period a reaction set in toward a severer classicism,
+leading to the styles of Louis XVI. and of the Empire, to be treated of
+in a later chapter.
+
+
++THE TRANSITION.+ As early as 1475 the new style made its appearance in
+altars, tombs, and rood-screens wrought by French carvers with the
+collaboration of Italian artificers. The tomb erected by Charles of
+Anjou to his father in Le Mans cathedral (1475, by _Francesco Laurana_),
+the chapel of St. Lazare in the cathedral of Marseilles (1483), and the
+tomb of the children of Charles VIII. in Tours cathedral (1506), by
+_Michel Columbe_, the greatest artist of his time in France, are
+examples. The schools of Rouen and Tours were especially prominent in
+works of this kind, marked by exuberant fancy and great delicacy of
+execution. In church architecture Gothic traditions were long dominant,
+in spite of the great numbers of Italian prelates in France. It was in
+_châteaux_, palaces, and dwellings that the new style achieved its most
+notable triumphs.
+
+
++EARLY CHÂTEAUX.+ The castle of Charles VIII., at Amboise on the Loire,
+shows little trace of Italian influence. It was under Louis XII. that
+the transformation of French architecture really began. The +Château de
+Gaillon+ (of which unfortunately only fragments remain in the École des
+Beaux-Arts at Paris), built for the Cardinal George of Amboise, between
+1497 and 1509, by _Pierre Fain_, was the masterwork of the Rouen school.
+It presented a curious mixture of styles, with its irregular plan, its
+moat, drawbridge, and round corner-towers, its high roofs, turrets, and
+dormers, which gave it, in spite of many Renaissance details, a mediæval
+picturesqueness. The +Château de Blois+ (the east and south wings of the
+present group), begun for Louis XII. about 1500, was the first of a
+remarkable series of royal palaces which are the glory of French
+architecture. It shows the new influences in its horizontal lines and
+flat, unbroken façades of brick and stone, rather than in its
+architectural details (Fig. 175). The +Ducal Palace+ at Nancy and the
++Hôtel de Ville+ at Orléans, by _Viart_, show a similar commingling of
+the classic and mediæval styles.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 175.--BLOIS, COURT FAÇADE OF WING
+ OF LOUIS XII.]
+
+
++STYLE OF FRANCIS I.+ Early in the reign of this monarch, and partly
+under the lead of Italian artists, like il Rosso, Serlio, and
+Primaticcio, classic elements began to dominate the general composition
+and Gothic details rapidly disappeared. A simple and effective system of
+exterior design was adopted in the castles and palaces of this period.
+Finely moulded belt-courses at the sills and heads of the windows marked
+the different stories, and were crossed by a system of almost equally
+important vertical lines, formed by superposed pilasters flanking the
+windows continuously from basement to roof. The façade was crowned by a
+slight cornice and open balustrade, above which rose a steep and lofty
+roof, diversified by elaborate dormer windows which were adorned with
+gables and pinnacles (Fig. 178). Slender pilasters, treated like long
+panels ornamented with arabesques of great beauty, or with a species of
+baluster shaft like a candelabrum, were preferred to columns, and were
+provided with graceful capitals of the Corinthianesque type. The
+mouldings were minute and richly carved; pediments were replaced by
+steep gables, and mullioned windows with stone crossbars were used in
+preference to the simpler Italian openings. In the earlier monuments
+Gothic details were still used occasionally; and round corner-towers,
+high dormers, and numerous turrets and pinnacles appear even in the
+châteaux of later date.
+
+
++CHURCHES.+ Ecclesiastical architecture received but scant attention
+under Francis I., and, so far as it was practised, still clung
+tenaciously to Gothic principles. Among the few important churches of
+this period may be mentioned +St. Etienne du Mont+, at Paris (1517-38),
+in which classic and Gothic features appear in nearly equal proportions;
+the east end of +St. Pierre+, at Caen, with rich external carving; and
+the great parish church of +St. Eustache+, at Paris (1532, by
+_Lemercier_), in which the plan and construction are purely Gothic,
+while the details throughout belong to the new style, though with little
+appreciation of the spirit and proportions of classic art. New façades
+were also built for a number of already existing churches, among which
++St. Michel+, at Dijon, is conspicuous, with its vast portal arch and
+imposing towers. The Gothic towers of Tours cathedral were completed
+with Renaissance lanterns or belfries, the northern in 1507, the
+southern in 1547.
+
+
++PALACES.+ To the palace at Blois begun by his predecessor, Francis I.
+added a northern and a western wing, completing the court. The north
+wing is one of the masterpieces of the style, presenting toward the
+court a simple and effective composition, with a rich but slightly
+projecting cornice and a high roof with elaborate dormers. This façade
+is divided into two unequal sections by the open +Staircase Tower+ (Fig.
+176), a _chef-d’œuvre_ in boldness of construction as well as in
+delicacy and richness of carving. The outer façade of this wing is a
+less ornate but more vigorous design, crowned by a continuous open
+loggia under the roof. More extensive than Blois was +Fontainebleau+,
+the favorite residence of the king and of many of his successors.
+Following in parts the irregular plan of the convent it replaced, its
+other portions were more symmetrically disposed, while the whole was
+treated externally in a somewhat severe, semi-classic style, singularly
+lacking in ornament. Internally, however, this palace, begun in 1528 by
+_Gilles Le Breton_, was at that time the most splendid in France, the
+gallery of Francis I. being especially noted. The +Château+ of +St.
+Germain+, near Paris (1539, by _Pierre Chambiges_), is of a very
+different character. Built largely of brick, with flat balustraded roof
+and deep buttresses carrying three ranges of arches, it is neither
+Gothic nor classic, neither fortress nor palace in aspect, but a wholly
+unique conception.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 176.--STAIRCASE TOWER, BLOIS.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 177.--PLAN OF CHAMBORD.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 178.--VIEW OF CHAMBORD.]
+
+The rural châteaux and hunting-lodges erected by Francis I. display the
+greatest diversity of plan and treatment, attesting the inventiveness of
+the French genius, expressing itself in a new-found language, whose
+formal canons it disdained. Chief among them is the +Château of
+Chambord+ (Figs. 177, 178)--“a Fata Morgana in the midst of a wild,
+woody thicket,” to use Lübke’s language. This extraordinary edifice,
+resembling in plan a feudal castle with curtain-walls, bastions, moat,
+and donjon, is in its architectural treatment a palace with arcades,
+open-stair towers, a noble double spiral staircase terminating in a
+graceful lantern, and a roof of the most bewildering complexity of
+towers, chimneys, and dormers (1526, by _Pierre le Nepveu_). The
+hunting-lodges of La Muette and Chalvau, and the so-called +Château de
+Madrid+--all three demolished during or since the Revolution--deserve
+mention, especially the last. This consisted of two rectangular
+pavilions, connected by a lofty banquet-hall, and adorned externally
+with arcades in Florentine style, and with medallions and reliefs of
+della Robbia ware (1527, by _Gadyer_).
+
+
++THE LOUVRE.+ By far the most important of all the architectural
+enterprises of this reign, in ultimate results, if not in original
+extent, was the beginning of a new palace to replace the old Gothic
+fortified palace of the Louvre. To this task Pierre Lescot was summoned
+in 1542, and the work of erection actually begun in 1546. The new
+palace, in a sumptuous and remarkably dignified classic style, was to
+have covered precisely the area of the demolished fortress. Only the
+southwest half, comprising two sides of the court, was, however,
+undertaken at the outset (Fig. 179). It remained for later monarchs to
+amplify the original scheme, and ultimately to complete, late in the
+present century, the most extensive and beautiful of all the royal
+residences of Europe. (See Figs. 181, 208, 209.)
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 179.--DETAIL OF COURT OF LOUVRE, PARIS.]
+
+Want of space forbids more than a passing reference to the rural castles
+of the nobility, rivalling those of the king. Among them Bury, La
+Rochefoucauld, Bournazel, and especially +Azay-le-Rideau+ (1520) and
++Chenonceaux+ (1515-23), may be mentioned, all displaying that love of
+rural pleasure, that hatred of the city and its confinement, which so
+distinguish the French from the Italian Renaissance.
+
+
++OTHER BUILDINGS.+ The +Hôtel-de-Ville+ (town hall), of Paris, begun
+during this reign, from plans by _Domenico di Cortona_ (?), and
+completed under Henry IV., was the most important edifice of a class
+which in later periods numbered many interesting structures. The town
+hall of +Beaugency+ (1527) is one of the best of minor public buildings
+in France, and in its elegant treatment of a simple two-storied façade
+may be classed with the +Maison François I.+, at Paris. This stood
+formerly at Moret, whence it was transported to Paris and re-erected
+about 1830 in somewhat modified form. The large city houses of this
+period are legion; we can mention only the Hôtel Carnavalet at Paris;
+the Hôtel Bourgtheroude at Rouen; the Hôtel d’Écoville at Caen; the
+archbishop’s palace at Sens, and a number of houses in Orléans. The
++Tomb of Louis XII.+, at St. Denis, deserves especial mention for its
+fine proportions and beautiful arabesques.
+
+
++THE ADVANCED RENAISSANCE.+ By the middle of the sixteenth century the
+new style had lost much of its earlier charm. The orders, used with
+increasing frequency, were more and more conformed to antique
+precedents. Façades were flatter and simpler, cornices more pronounced,
+arches more Roman in treatment, and a heavier style of carving took the
+place of the delicate arabesques of the preceding age. The reigns of
+Henry II. (1547-59) and Charles IX. (1560-74) were especially
+distinguished by the labors of three celebrated architects: _Pierre
+Lescot_ (1515-78), who continued the work on the southwest angle of the
+Louvre; _Jean Bullant_ (1515-78), to whom are due the right wing of
+Ecouen and the porch of colossal Corinthian columns in the left wing of
+the same, built under Francis I.; and, finally, _Philibert de l’Orme_
+(1515-70). _Jean Goujon_ (1510-72) also executed during this period most
+of the remarkable architectural sculptures which have made his name one
+of the most illustrious in the annals of French art. Chief among the
+works of de l’Orme was the palace of the +Tuileries+, built under
+Charles IX. for Cathérine de Médicis, not far from the Louvre, with
+which it was ultimately connected by a long gallery. Of the vast plan
+conceived for this palace, and comprising a succession of courts and
+wings, only a part of one side was erected (1564-72). This consisted of
+a domical pavilion, flanked by low wings only a story and a half high,
+to which were added two stories under Henry IV., to the great advantage
+of the design. Another masterpiece was the +Château d’Anet+, built in
+1552 by Henry II. for Diane de Poitiers, of which, unfortunately, only
+fragments survive. This beautiful edifice, while retaining the
+semi-military moat and bastions of feudal tradition, was planned with
+classic symmetry, adorned with superposed orders, court arcades, and
+rectangular corner-pavilions, and provided with a domical cruciform
+chapel, the earliest of its class in France. All the details were
+unusually pure and correct, with just enough of freedom and variety to
+lend a charm wanting in later works of the period. To the reign of Henry
+II. belong also the châteaux of Ancy-le-Franc, Verneuil, Chantilly (the
+“petit château,” by Bullant), the banquet-hall over the bridge at
+Chenonceaux (1556), several notable residences at Toulouse, and the tomb
+of Francis I. at St. Denis. The châteaux of +Pailly+ and +Sully+,
+distinguished by the sobriety and monumental quality of their
+composition, in which the orders are important elements, belong to the
+reign of Charles IX., together with the Tuileries, already mentioned.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 180.--THE LUXEMBURG, PARIS.]
+
++THE CLASSIC PERIOD: HENRY IV.+ Under this energetic but capricious
+monarch (1589-1610) and his Florentine queen, Marie de Médicis,
+architecture entered upon a new period of activity and a new stage of
+development. Without the charm of the early Renaissance or the
+stateliness of the age of Louis XIV., it has a touch of the Baroque,
+attributable partly to the influence of Marie de Médicis and her Italian
+prelates, and partly to the Italian training of many of the French
+architects. The great work of this period was the extension of the
+Tuileries by _J. B. du Cerceau_, and the completion, by _Métézeau_ and
+others, of the long gallery next the Seine, begun under Henry II., with
+the view of connecting the Tuileries with the Louvre. In this part of
+the work colossal orders were used with indifferent effect. Next in
+importance was the addition to Fontainebleau of a great court to the
+eastward, whose relatively quiet and dignified style offers less
+contrast than one might expect to the other wings and courts dating from
+Francis I. More successful architecturally than either of the above was
+the +Luxemburg+ palace, built for the queen by _Salomon De Brosse_, in
+1616 (Fig. 180). Its plan presents the favorite French arrangement of a
+main building separated from the street by a garden or court, the latter
+surrounded on three sides by low wings containing the dependencies.
+Externally, rusticated orders recall the garden front of the Pitti at
+Florence; but the scale is smaller, and the projecting pavilions and
+high roofs give it a grace and picturesqueness wanting in the Florentine
+model. The +Place Royale+, at Paris, and the château of Beaumesnil,
+illustrate a type of brick-and-stone architecture much in vogue at this
+time, stone quoins decorating the windows and corners, and the orders
+being generally omitted.
+
+Under Louis XIII. the Tuileries were extended northward and the Louvre
+as built by Lescot was doubled in size by the architect _Lemercier_, the
+Pavillon de l’Horloge being added to form the centre of the enlarged
+court façade.
+
+
++CHURCHES.+ To this reign belong also the most important churches of the
+period. The church of +St. Paul-St. Louis+, at Paris (1627, by
+_Derrand_), displays the worst faults of the time, in the overloaded and
+meaningless decoration of its uninteresting front. Its internal dome is
+the earliest in Paris. Far superior was the chapel of the +Sorbonne+,
+a well-designed domical church by _Lemercier_, with a sober and
+appropriate exterior treated with superposed orders.
+
+
++PERIOD OF LOUIS XIV.+ This was an age of remarkable literary and
+artistic activity, pompous and pedantic in many of its manifestations,
+but distinguished also by productions of a very high order. Although
+contemporary with the Italian Baroque--Bernini having been the guest of
+Louis XIV.--the architecture of this period was free from the wild
+extravagances of that style. In its often cold and correct dignity it
+resembled rather that of Palladio, making large use of the orders in
+exterior design, and tending rather to monotony than to overloaded
+decoration. In interior design there was more of lightness and caprice.
+Papier-maché and stucco were freely used in a fanciful style of relief
+ornamentation by scrolls, wreaths, shells, etc., and decorative
+panelling was much employed. The whole was saved from triviality only by
+the controlling lines of the architecture which framed it. But it was
+better suited to cabinet-work or to the prettinesses of the boudoir than
+to monumental interiors. The +Galerie d’Apollon+, built during this
+reign over the Petite Galerie in the Louvre, escapes this reproach,
+however, by the sumptuous dignity of its interior treatment.
+
+
++VERSAILLES.+ This immense edifice, built about an already existing
+villa of Louis XIII., was the work of _Levau_ and _J. H. Mansart_
+(1647-1708). Its erection, with the laying out of its marvellous park,
+almost exhausted the resources of the realm, but with results quite
+incommensurate with the outlay. In spite of its vastness, its exterior
+is commonplace; the orders are used with singular monotony, which is not
+redeemed by the deep breaks and projections of the main front. There is
+no controlling or dominant feature; there is no adequate entrance or
+approach; the grand staircases are badly placed and unworthily treated,
+and the different elements of the plan are combined with singular lack
+of the usual French sense of monumental and rational arrangement. The
+chapel is by far the best single feature in the design.
+
+Far more successful was the completion of the Louvre, in 1688, from the
+designs of _Claude Perrault_, the court physician, whose plans were
+fortunately adopted in preference to those of Bernini. For the east
+front he designed a magnificent Corinthian colonnade nearly 600 feet
+long, with coupled columns upon a plain high basement, and with a
+central pediment and terminal pavilions (Fig. 181). The whole forms one
+of the most imposing façades in existence; but it is a mere decoration,
+having no practical relation to the building behind it. Its height
+required the addition of a third story to match it on the north and
+south sides of the court, which as thus completed quadrupled the
+original area proposed by Lescot. Fortunately the style of Lescot’s work
+was retained throughout in the court façades, while externally the
+colonnade was recalled on the south front by a colossal order of
+pilasters. The Louvre as completed by Louis XIV. was a stately and noble
+palace, as remarkable for the surpassing excellence of the sculptures of
+Jean Goujon as for the dignity and beauty of its architecture. Taken in
+connection with the Tuileries, it was unrivalled by any palace in Europe
+except the Vatican.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 181.--COLONNADE OF LOUVRE.]
+
+
++OTHER BUILDINGS.+ To Louis XIV. is also due the vast but uninteresting
++Hôtel des Invalides+ or veteran’s asylum, at Paris, by J. H. Mansart.
+To the chapel of this institution was added, in 1680-1706, the
+celebrated +Dome+ of the Invalides, a masterpiece by the same architect.
+In plan it somewhat resembles Bramante’s scheme for St. Peter’s--a Greek
+cross with domical chapels in the four angles and a dome over the
+centre. The exterior (Fig. 182), with the lofty gilded dome on a high
+drum adorned with engaged columns, is somewhat high for its breadth, but
+is a harmonious and impressive design; and the interior, if somewhat
+cold, is elegant and well proportioned. The chief innovation in the
+design was the wide separation of the interior stone dome from the lofty
+exterior decorative cupola and lantern of wood, this separation being
+designed to meet the conflicting demands of internal and external
+effect. To the same architect is due the formal monotony of the +Place
+Vendôme+, all the houses surrounding it being treated with a uniform
+architecture of colossal pilasters, at once monumental and
+inappropriate. One of the most pleasing designs of the time is the
++Château de Maisons+ (1658), by _F. Mansart_, uncle of J. H. Mansart. In
+this the proportions of the central and terminal pavilions, the mass and
+lines of the steep roof _à la Mansarde_, the simple and effective use of
+the orders, and the refinement of all the details impart a grace of
+aspect rare in contemporary works. The same qualities appear also in the
++Val-de-Grâce+, by F. Mansart and Lemercier, a domical church of
+excellent proportions begun under Louis XIII. The want of space forbids
+mention of other buildings of this period.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 182.--DOME OF THE INVALIDES.]
+
+
++THE DECLINE.+ Under Louis XV. the pedantry of the classic period gave
+place to a protracted struggle between license and the severest
+classical correctness. The exterior designs of this time were often even
+more uninteresting and bare than under Louis XIV.; while, on the other
+hand, interior decoration tended to the extreme of extravagance and
+disregard of constructive propriety. Contorted lines and crowded
+scrolls, shells, and palm-leaves adorned the mantelpieces, cornices, and
+ceilings, to the almost complete suppression of straight lines.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 183.--FAÇADE OF ST. SULPICE, PARIS.]
+
+While these tendencies prevailed in many directions, a counter-current
+of severe classicism manifested itself in the designs of a number of
+important public buildings, in which it was sought to copy the grandeur
+of the old Roman colonnades and arcades. The important church of +St.
+Sulpice+ at Paris (Fig. 183) is an excellent example of this. Its
+interior, dating from the preceding century, is well designed, but in no
+wise a remarkable composition, following Italian models. The façade,
+added in 1755 by _Servandoni_, is, on the other hand, one of the most
+striking architectural objects in the city. It is a correct and well
+proportioned classic composition in two stories--an Ionic arcade over a
+Doric colonnade, surmounted by two lateral turrets. Other monuments of
+this classic revival will be noticed in Chapter XXV.
+
+
++PUBLIC SQUARES.+ Much attention was given to the embellishment of open
+spaces in the cities, for which the classic style was admirably suited.
+The most important work of this kind was that on the north side of the
+Place de la Concorde, Paris. This splendid square, perhaps, on the
+whole, the finest in Europe (though many of its best features belong to
+a later date), was at this time adorned with the two monumental
+colonnades by _Gabriel_. These colonnades, which form the decorative
+fronts for blocks of houses, deserve praise for the beauty of their
+proportions, as well as for the excellent treatment of the arcade on
+which they rest, and of the pavilions at the ends.
+
+
++IN GENERAL.+ French Renaissance architecture is marked by good
+proportions and harmonious and appropriate detail. Its most interesting
+phase was unquestionably that of Francis I., so far, at least, as
+concerns exterior design. It steadily progressed, however, in its
+mastery of planning; and in its use of projecting pavilions crowned by
+dominant masses of roof, it succeeded in preserving, even in severely
+classic designs, a picturesqueness and variety otherwise impossible.
+Roofs, dormers, chimneys, and staircases it treated with especial
+success; and in these matters, as well as in monumental dispositions of
+plan, the French have largely retained their pre-eminence to our own
+day.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS.+ (Mainly supplementary to text. Ch. = château; P. =
+ palace; C. = cathedral; Chu. = church; H. = hôtel; T.H. = town
+ hall.)
+
+ TRANSITION: Blois, E. wing, 1499; Ch. Meillant; Ch. Chaumont; T.H.
+ Amboise, 1502-05.
+
+ FRANCIS I.: Ch. Nantouillet, 1517-25; Ch. Blois, W. wing
+ (afterward demolished) and N. wing, 1520-30; H. Lallemant,
+ Bourges, 1520; Ch. Villers-Cotterets, 1520-59; P. of Archbishop,
+ Sens, 1521-35; P. Fontainebleau (Cour Ovale, Cour d’Adieux,
+ Gallery Francis I., 1527-34; Peristyle, Chapel St. Saturnin,
+ 1540-47, by _Gilles le Breton_; Cour du Cheval Blanc, 1527-31, by
+ _P. Chambiges_); H. Bernuy, Toulouse, 1528-39; P. Granvelle,
+ Besançon, 1532-40; T.H. Niort, T.H. Loches, 1532-43: H. de Ligeris
+ (Carnavalet), Paris, 1544, by _P. Lescot_; churches of Gisors,
+ nave and façade, 1530; La Dalbade, Toulouse, portal, 1530; St.
+ Symphorien Tours, 1531; Chu. Tillières, 1534-46.
+
+ ADVANCED RENAISSANCE: Fontaine des Innocents, Paris, 1547-50, by
+ _P. Lescot_ and _J. Goujon_; tomb Francis I., at St. Denis, 1555,
+ by _Ph. de l’Orme_; H. Catelan, Toulouse, 1555; tomb Henry II., at
+ St. Denis, 1560; portal S. Michel, Dijon, 1564; Ch. Sully, 1567;
+ T.H. Arras, 1573; P. Fontainebleau (Cour du Cheval Blanc
+ remodelled, 1564-66, by _P. Girard_; Cour de la Fontaine, same
+ date); T.H. Besançon, 1582; Ch. Charleval, 1585, by, _J. B. du
+ Cerceau_.
+
+ STYLE OF HENRY IV.: P. Fontainebleau (Galerie des Cerfs, Chapel of
+ the Trinity, Baptistery, etc.); P. Tuileries (Pav. de Flore, by
+ _du Cerceau_, 1590-1610; long gallery continued); Hôtel Vogüé, at
+ Dijon, 1607; Place Dauphine, Paris, 1608; P. de Justice, Paris,
+ Great Hall, by _S. de Brosse_, 1618; H. Sully, Paris, 1624-39;
+ P. Royal, Paris, by _J. Lemercier_, for Cardinal Richelieu,
+ 1627-39; P. Louvre doubled in size, by the same; P. Tuileries (N.
+ wing, and Pav. Marsan, long gallery completed); H. Lambert, Paris;
+ T.H. Reims, 1627; Ch. Blois, W. wing for Gaston d’Orléans, by _F.
+ Mansart_, 1635; façade St. Étienne du Mont, Paris, 1610; of St.
+ Gervais, Paris, 1616-21, by _S. de Brosse_.
+
+ STYLE OF LOUIS XIV.: T.H. Lyons, 1646; P. Louvre, E. colonnade and
+ court completed, 1660-70; Tuileries altered by Le Vau, 1664;
+ observatory at Paris, 1667-72; arch of St. Denis, Paris, 1672, by
+ _Blondel_; Arch of St. Martin, 1674, by _Bullet_; Banque de
+ France, H. de Luyne, H. Soubise, all in Paris; Ch. Chantilly; Ch.
+ de Tanlay; P. St. Cloud; Place des Victoires, 1685; Chu. St.
+ Sulpice, Paris, by _Le Vau_ (façade, 1755); Chu. St. Roch, Paris,
+ 1653, by _Lemercier_ and _de Cotte_; Notre Dame des Victoires,
+ Paris, 1656, by _Le Muet_ and _Bruant_.
+
+ THE DECLINE: P. Bourbon, 1722; T.H. Rouen; Halle aux Blés
+ (recently demolished), 1748; École Militaire, 1752-58, by
+ _Gabriel_; P. Louvre, court completed, 1754, by the same;
+ Madeleine begun, 1764; H. des Monnaies (Mint), by _Antoine_; École
+ de Médecine, 1774, by _Gondouin_; P. Royal, Great Court, 1784, by
+ _Louis_; Théâtre Français, 1784 (all the above at Paris); Grand
+ Théâtre, Bordeaux, 1785-1800, by _Louis_; Préfecture at Bordeaux,
+ by the same; Ch. de Compiegne, 1770, by _Gabriel_; P. Versailles,
+ theatre by the same; H. Montmorency, Soubise, de Varennes, and the
+ Petit Luxembourg, all at Paris, by _de Cotte_; public squares at
+ Nancy, Bordeaux, Valenciennes, Rennes, Reims.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE IN GREAT BRITAIN AND THE NETHERLANDS.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Fergusson, Palustre. Also, Belcher
+ and Macartney, _Later Renaissance Architecture in England_.
+ Billings, _Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland_.
+ Blomfield, _A Short History of Renaissance Architecture in
+ England_. Britton, _Architectural Antiquities of Great Britain_.
+ Ewerbeck, _Die Renaissance in Belgien und Holland_. Galland,
+ _Geschichte der Hollandischen Baukunst im Zeitalter der
+ Renaissance_. Gotch and Brown, _Architecture of the Renaissance in
+ England_. Loftie, _Inigo Jones and Wren_. Nash, _Mansions of
+ England_. Papworth, _Renaissance and Italian Styles of
+ Architecture in Great Britain_. Richardson, _Architectural Remains
+ of the Reigns of Elizabeth and James I._ Schayes, _Histoire de
+ l’architecture en Belgique_.
+
+
++THE TRANSITION.+ The architectural activity of the sixteenth century in
+England was chiefly devoted to the erection of vast country mansions for
+the nobility and wealthy _bourgeoisie_. In these seignorial residences a
+degenerate form of the Gothic, known as the Tudor style, was employed
+during the reigns of Henry VII. and Henry VIII., and they still retained
+much of the feudal aspect of the Middle Ages. This style, with its
+broad, square windows and ample halls, was well suited to domestic
+architecture, as well as to collegiate buildings, of which a
+considerable number were erected at this time. Among the more important
+palaces and manor-houses of this period are the earlier parts of Hampton
+Court, Haddon and Hengreave Halls, and the now ruined castles of Raglan
+and Wolterton.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 184.--BURGHLEY HOUSE.]
+
++ELIZABETHAN STYLE.+ Under Elizabeth (1558-1603) the progress of classic
+culture and the employment of Dutch and Italian artists led to a gradual
+introduction of Renaissance forms, which, as in France, were at first
+mingled with others of Gothic origin. Among the foreign artists in
+England were the versatile Holbein, Trevigi and Torregiano from Italy,
+and Theodore Have, Bernard Jansen, and Gerard Chrismas from Holland. The
+pointed arch disappeared, and the orders began to be used as subordinate
+features in the decoration of doors, windows, chimneys, and mantels.
+Open-work balustrades replaced externally the heavy Tudor battlements,
+and a peculiar style of carving in flat relief-patterns, resembling
+_appliqué_ designs cut out with the jigsaw and attached by nails or
+rivets, was applied with little judgment to all possible features.
+Ceilings were commonly finished in plaster, with elaborate interlacing
+patterns in low relief; and this, with the increasing use of interior
+woodwork, gave to the mansions of this time a more homelike but less
+monumental aspect internally. English architects, like Smithson and
+Thorpe, now began to win the patronage at first monopolized by
+foreigners. In +Wollaton Hall+ (1580), by Smithson, the orders were used
+for the main composition with mullioned windows, much after the fashion
+of +Longleat House+, completed a year earlier by his master, John of
+Padua. During the following period, however (1590-1610), there was a
+reaction toward the Tudor practice, and the orders were again relegated
+to subordinate uses. Of their more monumental employment, the +Gate of
+Honor+ of Caius College, Cambridge, is one of the earliest examples.
+Hardwicke and Charlton Halls, and Burghley, Hatfield, and Holland Houses
+(Fig. 184), are noteworthy monuments of the style.
+
+
++JACOBEAN STYLE.+ During the reign of James I. (1603-25), details of
+classic origin came into more general use, but caricatured almost beyond
+recognition. The orders, though much employed, were treated without
+correctness or grace, and the ornament was unmeaning and heavy. It is
+not worth while to dwell further upon this style, which produced no
+important public buildings, and soon gave way to a more rigid
+classicism.
+
+
++CLASSIC PERIOD.+ If the classic style was late in its appearance in
+England, its final sway was complete and long-lasting. It was _Inigo
+Jones_ (1572-1652) who first introduced the correct and monumental style
+of the Italian masters of classic design. For Palladio, indeed, he seems
+to have entertained a sort of veneration, and the villa which he
+designed at Chiswick was a reduced copy of Palladio’s Villa Capra, near
+Vicenza. This and other works of his show a failure to appreciate the
+unsuitability of Italian conceptions to the climate and tastes of Great
+Britain; his efforts to popularize Palladian architecture, without the
+resources which Palladio controlled in the way of decorative sculpture
+and painting, were consequently not always happy in their results. His
+greatest work was the design for a new +Palace at Whitehall+, London. Of
+this colossal scheme, which, if completed, would have ranked as the
+grandest palace of the time, only the +Banqueting Hall+ (now used as a
+museum) was ever built (Fig. 185). It is an effective composition in two
+stories, rusticated throughout and adorned with columns and pilasters,
+and contains a fine vaulted hall in three aisles. The plan of the
+palace, which was to have measured 1,152 × 720 feet, was excellent,
+largely conceived and carefully studied in its details, but it was
+wholly beyond the resources of the kingdom. The garden-front of
++Somerset House+ (1632; demolished) had the same qualities of simplicity
+and dignity, recalling the works of Sammichele. Wilton House, Coleshill,
+the Villa at Chiswick, and St. Paul’s, Covent Garden, are the best known
+of his works, showing him to have been a designer of ability, but hardly
+of the consummate genius which his admirers attribute to him.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 185.--BANQUETING HALL, WHITEHALL.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 186.--PLAN OF ST. PAUL’S, LONDON.]
+
++ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL.+ The greatest of Jones’s successors was _Sir
+Christopher Wren_ (1632-1723), principally known as the architect of
++St. Paul’s Cathedral+, London, built to replace the earlier Gothic
+cathedral destroyed in the great fire of 1666. It was begun in 1675, and
+its designer had the rare good fortune to witness its completion in
+1710. The plan, as finally adopted, retained the general proportions of
+an English Gothic church, measuring 480 feet in length, with transepts
+250 feet long, and a grand rotunda 108 feet in diameter at the crossing
+(Fig. 186). The style was strictly Italian, treated with sobriety and
+dignity, if somewhat lacking in variety and inspiration. Externally two
+stories of the Corinthian order appear, the upper story being merely a
+screen to hide the clearstory and its buttresses. This is an
+architectural deception, not atoned for by any special beauty of detail.
+The dominant feature of the design is the dome over the central area. It
+consists of an inner shell, reaching a height of 216 feet, above which
+rises the exterior dome of wood, surmounted by a stone lantern, the
+summit of which is 360 feet from the pavement (Fig. 187). This exterior
+dome, springing from a high drum surrounded by a magnificent peristyle,
+gives to the otherwise commonplace exterior of the cathedral a signal
+majesty of effect. Next to the dome the most successful part of the
+design is the west front, with its two-storied porch and flanking
+bell-turrets. Internally the excessive relative length, especially that
+of the choir, detracts from the effect of the dome, and the poverty of
+detail gives the whole a somewhat bare aspect. It is intended to relieve
+this ultimately by a systematic use of mosaic decoration, especially in
+the dome. The central area itself, in spite of the awkward treatment of
+the four smaller arches of the eight which support the dome, is a noble
+design, occupying the whole width of the three aisles, like the Octagon
+at Ely, and producing a striking effect of amplitude and grandeur. The
+dome above it is constructively interesting from the employment of a
+cone of brick masonry to support the stone lantern which rises above the
+exterior wooden shell. The lower part of the cone forms the drum of the
+inner dome, its contraction upward being intended to produce a
+perspective illusion of increased height.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 187.--EXTERIOR OF ST. PAUL’S CATHEDRAL.]
+
+St. Paul’s ranks among the five or six greatest domical buildings of
+Europe, and is the most imposing modern edifice in England.
+
+
++WREN’S OTHER WORKS.+ Wren was conspicuously successful in the designing
+of parish churches in London. +St. Stephen’s+, Walbrook, is the most
+admired of these, with a dome resting on eight columns. Wren may be
+called the inventor of the English Renaissance type of steeple, in which
+a conical or pyramidal spire is harmoniously added to a belfry on a
+square tower with classic details. The steeple of +Bow Church+,
+Cheapside, is the most successful example of the type. In secular
+architecture Wren’s most important works were the plan for rebuilding
+London after the Great Fire; the new courtyard of Hampton Court, a quiet
+and dignified composition in brick and stone; the pavilions and
+colonnade of +Greenwich Hospital+; the Sheldonian Theatre at Oxford, and
+the Trinity College Library at Cambridge. Without profound originality,
+these works testify to the sound good taste and intelligence of their
+designer.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 188.--PLAN OF BLENHEIM.]
+
++THE 18TH CENTURY.+ The Anglo-Italian style as used by Jones and Wren
+continued in use through the eighteenth century, during the first half
+of which a number of important country-seats and some churches were
+erected. _Van Brugh_ (1666-1726), _Hawksmoor_ (1666-1736), and _Gibbs_
+(1683-1751) were then the leading architects. Van Brugh was especially
+skilful in his dispositions of plan and mass, and produced in the
+designs of Blenheim and Castle Howard effects of grandeur and variety of
+perspective hardly equalled by any of his contemporaries in France or
+Italy. +Blenheim+, with its monumental plan and the sweeping curves of
+its front (Fig. 188), has an unusually palatial aspect, though the
+striving for picturesqueness is carried too far. Castle Howard is
+simpler, depending largely for effect on a somewhat inappropriate dome.
+To Hawksmoor, his pupil, are due +St. Mary’s, Woolnoth+ (1715), at
+London, in which by a bold rustication of the whole exterior and by
+windows set in large recessed arches he was enabled to dispense wholly
+with the orders; St. George’s, Bloomsbury; the new quadrangle of All
+Souls at Oxford, and some minor works. The two most noted designs of
+James Gibbs are +St. Martin’s-in-the-Fields+, at London (1726), and the
++Radcliffe Library+, at Oxford (1747). In the former the use of a
+Corinthian portico--a practically uncalled-for but decorative
+appendage--and of a steeple mounted on the roof, with no visible lines
+of support from the ground, are open to criticism. But the excellence of
+the proportions, and the dignity and appropriateness of the composition,
+both internally and externally, go far to redeem these defects (Fig.
+189). The Radcliffe Library is a circular domical hall surrounded by a
+lower circuit of alcoves and rooms, the whole treated with
+straightforward simplicity and excellent proportions. Colin Campbell,
+Flitcroft, Kent and Wood, contemporaries of Gibbs, may be dismissed with
+passing mention.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 189.--ST. MARTIN’S-IN-THE-FIELDS, LONDON.]
+
+_Sir William Chambers_ (1726-96) was the greatest of the later
+18th-century architects. His fame rests chiefly on his _Treatise on
+Civil Architecture_, and the extension and remodelling of +Somerset
+House+, in which he retained the general _ordonnance_ of Inigo Jones’s
+design, adapting it to a frontage of some 600 feet. _Robert Adams_, the
+designer of Keddlestone Hall, _Robert Taylor_ (1714-88), the architect
+of the Bank of England, and _George Dance_, who designed the Mansion
+House and Newgate Prison, at London--the latter a vigorous and
+appropriate composition without the orders--close the list of noted
+architects of the eighteenth century. It was a period singularly wanting
+in artistic creativeness and spontaneity; its productions were nearly
+all dull and respectable, or at best dignified, but without charm.
+
+
++BELGIUM.+ As in all other countries where the late Gothic style had
+been highly developed, Belgium was slow to accept the principles of the
+Renaissance in art. Long after the dawn of the sixteenth century the
+Flemish architects continued to employ their highly florid Gothic alike
+for churches and town-halls, with which they chiefly had to do. The
+earliest Renaissance buildings date from 1530-40, among them being the
+Hôtel du Saumon, at Malines, at Bruges the Ancien Greffe, by _Jean
+Wallot_, and at Liège the +Archbishop’s Palace+, by _Borset_. The last
+named, in the singular and capricious form of the arches and
+baluster-like columns of its court, reveals the taste of the age for
+what was _outré_ and odd; a taste partly due, no doubt, to Spanish
+influences, as Belgium was in reality from 1506 to 1712 a Spanish
+province, and there was more or less interchange of artists between the
+two countries. The +Hôtel de Ville+, at Antwerp, by _Cornelius de
+Vriendt_ or _Floris_ (1518-75), erected in 1565, is the most important
+monument of the Renaissance in Belgium. Its façade, 305 feet long and
+102 feet high, in four stories, is an impressive creation in spite of
+its somewhat monotonous fenestration and the inartistic repetition in
+the third story of the composition and proportions of the second. The
+basement story forms an open arcade, and an open colonnade or loggia
+runs along under the roof, thus imparting to the composition a
+considerable play of light and shade, enhanced by the picturesque
+central pavilion which rises to a height of six stories in diminishing
+stages. The style is almost Palladian in its severity, but in general
+the Flemish architects disdained the restrictions of classic canons,
+preferring a more florid and fanciful effect than could be obtained by
+mere combinations of Roman columns, arches, and entablatures. De
+Vriendt’s other works were mostly designs for altars, tabernacles and
+the like; among them the rood screen in Tournay Cathedral. His influence
+may be traced in the Hôtel de Ville at Flushing (1594).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 190.--RENAISSANCE HOUSES, BRUSSELS.]
+
+The ecclesiastical architecture of the Flemish Renaissance is almost as
+destitute of important monuments as is the secular. +Ste. Anne+, at
+Bruges, fairly illustrates the type, which is characterized in general
+by heaviness of detail and a cold and bare aspect internally. The
+Renaissance in Belgium is best exemplified, after all, by minor works
+and ordinary dwellings, many of which have considerable artistic grace,
+though they are quaint rather than monumental (Fig. 190). Stepped
+gables, high dormers, and volutes flanking each diminishing stage of the
+design, give a certain piquancy to the street architecture of the
+period.
+
+
++HOLLAND.+ Except in the domain of realistic painting, the Dutch have
+never manifested pre-eminent artistic endowments, and the Renaissance
+produced in Holland few monuments of consequence. It began there, as in
+many other places, with minor works in the churches, due largely to
+Flemish or Italian artists. About the middle of the 16th century two
+native architects, _Sebastian van Noye_ and _William van Noort_, first
+popularized the use of carved pilasters and of gables or steep pediments
+adorned with carved scallop-shells, in remote imitation of the style of
+Francis I. The principal monuments of the age were town-halls, and,
+after the war of independence in which the yoke of Spain was finally
+broken (1566-79), local administrative buildings--mints, exchanges and
+the like. The +Town Hall+ of +The Hague+ (1565), with its stepped gable
+or great dormer, its consoles, statues, and octagonal turrets, may be
+said to have inaugurated the style generally followed after the war.
+Owing to the lack of stone, brick was almost universally employed, and
+stone imported by sea was only used in edifices of exceptional cost and
+importance. Of these the +Town Hall+ at Amsterdam holds the first place.
+Its façade is of about the same dimensions as the one at Antwerp, but
+compares unfavorably with it in its monotony and want of interest. The
++Leyden Town Hall+, by the Fleming, _Lieven de Key_ (1597), the Bourse
+or Exchange and the Hanse House at Amsterdam, by _Hendrik de Keyser_,
+are also worthy of mention, though many lesser buildings, built of brick
+combined with enamelled terra-cotta and stone, possess quite as much
+artistic merit.
+
+
++DENMARK.+ In Denmark the monuments of the Renaissance may almost be
+said to be confined to the reign of Christian IV. (1588-1648), and do
+not include a single church of any importance. The royal castles of the
++Rosenborg+ at Copenhagen (1610) and the +Fredericksborg+ (1580-1624),
+the latter by a Dutch architect, are interesting and picturesque in
+mass, with their fanciful gables, mullioned windows and numerous
+turrets, but can hardly lay claim to beauty of detail or purity of
+style. The Exchange at Copenhagen, built of brick and stone in the same
+general style (1619-40), is still less interesting both in mass and
+detail.
+
+The only other important Scandinavian monument deserving of special
+mention in so brief a sketch as this is the +Royal Palace+ at
++Stockholm+, Sweden (1698-1753), due to a foreign architect, _Nicodemus
+de Tessin_. It is of imposing dimensions, and although simple in
+external treatment, it merits praise for the excellent disposition of
+its plan, its noble court, imposing entrances, and the general dignity
+and appropriateness of its architecture.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS+ (in addition to those mentioned in text). ENGLAND,
+ TUDOR STYLE: Several palaces by Henry VIII., no longer extant;
+ Westwood, later rebuilt; Gosfield Hall; Harlaxton.--ELIZABETHAN:
+ Buckhurst, 1565; Kirby House, 1570, both by Thorpe; Caius College,
+ 1570-75, by Theodore Have; “The Schools,” Oxford, by Thomas Holt,
+ 1600; Beaupré Castle, 1600.--JACOBEAN: Tombs of Mary of Scotland
+ and of Elizabeth in Westminster Abbey; Audsley Inn; Bolsover
+ Castle, 1613; Heriot’s Hospital, Edinburgh, 1628.--CLASSIC or
+ ANGLO-ITALIAN: St. John’s College, Oxford; Queen’s House,
+ Greenwich; Coleshill; all by Inigo Jones, 1620-51; Amesbury, by
+ Webb; Combe Abbey; Buckingham and Montague Houses; The Monument,
+ London, 1670, by Wren; Temple Bar, by the same; Winchester Palace,
+ 1683; Chelsea College; Towers of Westminster Abbey, 1696; St.
+ Clement Dane’s; St. James’s, Westminster; St. Peter’s, Cornhill,
+ and many others, all by Wren.--18TH CENTURY: Seaton Delaval and
+ Grimsthorpe, by Van Brugh; Wanstead House, by Colin Campbell;
+ Treasury Buildings, by Kent.
+
+ The most important Renaissance buildings of BELGIUM and HOLLAND
+ have been mentioned in the text.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE IN GERMANY, SPAIN, AND PORTUGAL.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Fergusson, Palustre Also, von
+ Bezold, _Die Baukunst der Renaissance in Deutschland, Holland,
+ Belgien und Dänemark_ (in _Hdbuch. d. Arch._). Caveda (tr.
+ Kugler), _Geschichte der Baukunst in Spanien_. Fritsch, _Denkmäler
+ der deutschen Renaissance_ (plates). Junghändel, _Die Baukunst
+ Spaniens_. Lambert und Stahl, _Motive der deutschen Architektur_.
+ Lübke, _Geschichte der Renaissance in Deutschland_. Prentice,
+ _Renaissance Architecture and Ornament in Spain_. Uhde,
+ _Baudenkmäler in Spanien_. Verdier et Cattois, _Architecture
+ civile et domestique_. Villa Amil, _Hispania Artistica y
+ Monumental_.
+
+
++AUSTRIA+; +BOHEMIA+. The earliest appearance of the Renaissance in the
+architecture of the German states was in the eastern provinces. Before
+the close of the fifteenth century Florentine and Milanese architects
+were employed in Austria, Bohemia, and the Tyrol, where there are a
+number of palaces and chapels in an unmixed Italian style. The portal of
+the castle of Mahrisch-Trübau dates from 1492; while to the early years
+of the 16th century belong a cruciform chapel at Gran, the remodelling
+of the castle at Cracow, and the chapel of the Jagellons in the same
+city--the earliest domical structure of the German Renaissance, though
+of Italian design. The +Schloss Porzia+ (1510), at Spital in Carinthia,
+is a fine quadrangular palace, surrounding a court with arcades on three
+sides, in which the open stairs form a picturesque interruption with
+their rampant arches. But for the massiveness of the details it might be
+a Florentine palace. In addition to this, the famous +Arsenal+ at
+Wiener-Neustadt (1524), the portal of the Imperial Palace (1552), and
+the +Castle Schalaburg+ on the Danube (1530-1601), are attributed to
+Italian architects, to whom must also be ascribed a number of important
+works at Prague. Chief among these the +Belvedere+ (1536, by _Paolo
+della Stella_), a rectangular building surrounded by a graceful open
+arcade, above which it rises with a second story crowned by a curved
+roof; the Waldstein Palace (1621-29), by _Giov. Marini_, with its
+imposing loggia; +Schloss Stern+, built on the plan of a six-pointed
+star (1459-1565) and embellished by Italian artists with stucco
+ornaments and frescoes; and parts of the palace on the Hradschin, by
+_Scamozzi_, attest the supremacy of Italian art in Bohemia. The same is
+true of Styria, Carinthia, and the Tyrol; _e.g._ +Schloss Ambras+ at
+Innsbrück (1570).
+
+
++GERMANY: PERIODS.+ The earliest manifestation of the Renaissance in
+what is now the German Empire, appeared in the works of painters like
+Dürer and Burkmair, and in occasional buildings previous to 1525. The
+real transformation of German architecture, however, hardly began until
+after the Peace of Augsburg, in 1555. From that time on its progress was
+rapid, its achievements being almost wholly in the domain of secular
+architecture--princely and ducal castles, town halls or _Rathhäuser_,
+and houses of wealthy burghers or corporations. It is somewhat singular
+that the German emperors should not have undertaken the construction of
+a new imperial residence on a worthy scale, the palaces of Munich and
+Berlin being aggregations of buildings of various dates about a nucleus
+of mediæval origin, and with no single portion to compare with the
+stately châteaux of the French kings. Church architecture was neglected,
+owing to the Reformation, which turned to its own uses the existing
+churches, while the Roman Catholics were too impoverished to replace the
+edifices they had lost.
+
+The periods of the German Renaissance are less well marked than those of
+the French; but its successive developments follow the same general
+progression, divided into three stages:
+
+I. THE EARLY RENAISSANCE, 1525-1600, in which the orders were
+infrequently used, mainly for porches and for gable decoration. The
+conceptions and spirit of most monuments were still strongly tinged with
+Gothic feeling.
+
+II. THE LATE RENAISSANCE, 1600-1675, characterized by a dry, heavy
+treatment, in which too often neither the fanciful gayety of the
+previous period nor the simple and monumental dignity of classic design
+appears. Broken curves, large scrolls, obelisks, and a style of flat
+relief carving resembling the Elizabethan are common. Occasional
+monuments exhibit a more correct and classic treatment after Italian
+models.
+
+III. THE DECLINE OR BAROQUE PERIOD, 1675-1800, employing the orders in a
+style of composition oscillating between the extremes of bareness and of
+Rococo over-decoration. The ornament partakes of the character of the
+Louis XV. and Italian Jesuit styles, being most successful in interior
+decoration, but externally running to the extreme of unrestrained fancy.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 191.--SCHLOSS HÄMELSCHENBURG.]
+
++CHARACTERISTICS.+ In none of these periods do we meet with the sober,
+monumental treatment of the Florentine or Roman schools. A love of
+picturesque variety in masses and sky-lines, inherited from mediæval
+times, appears in the high roofs, stepped gables and lofty dormers which
+are universal. The roofs often comprise several stories, and are lighted
+by lofty gables at either end, and by dormers carried up from the side
+walls through two or three stories. Gables and dormers alike are built
+in diminishing stages, each step adorned with a console or scroll, and
+the whole treated with pilasters or colonnettes and entablatures
+breaking over each support (Fig. 191). These roofs, dormers, and gables
+contribute the most noticeable element to the general effect of most
+German Renaissance buildings, and are commonly the best-designed
+features in them. The orders are scantily used and usually treated with
+utter disregard of classic canons, being generally far too massive and
+overloaded with ornament. Oriels, bay-windows, and turrets, starting
+from corbels or colonnettes, or rarely from the ground, diversify the
+façade, and spires of curious bulbous patterns give added piquancy to
+the picturesque sky-line. The plans seldom had the monumental symmetry
+and largeness of Italian and French models; courtyards were often
+irregular in shape and diversified with balconies and spiral
+staircase-turrets. The national leaning was always toward the quaint and
+fantastic, as well in the decoration as in the composition. Grotesques,
+caryatids, _gaînes_ (half-figures terminating below in sheath-like
+supports), fanciful rustication, and many other details give a touch of
+the Baroque even to works of early date. The same principles were
+applied with better success to interior decoration, especially in the
+large halls of the castles and town-halls, and many of their ceilings
+were sumptuous and well-considered designs, deeply panelled, painted and
+gilded in wood or plaster.
+
+
++CASTLES.+ The _Schloss_ or _Burg_ of the German prince or duke retained
+throughout the Renaissance many mediæval characteristics in plan and
+aspect. A large proportion of these noble residences were built upon
+foundations of demolished feudal castles, reproducing in a new dress the
+ancient round towers and vaulted guard-rooms and halls, as in the
+Hartenfels at Torgau, the Heldburg (both in Saxony), and the castle of
+Trausnitz, in Bavaria, among many others. The +Castle+ at +Torgau+
+(1540) is one of the most imposing of its class, with massive round and
+square towers showing externally, and court façades full of picturesque
+irregularities. In the great +Castle+ at +Dresden+ the plan is more
+symmetrical, and the Renaissance appears more distinctly in the details
+of the Georgenflügel (1530-50), though at that early date the classic
+orders were almost ignored. The portal of the Heldburg, however, built
+in 1562, is a composition quite in the contemporary French vein, with
+superposed orders and a crowning pediment over a massive basement.
+
+Another important series of castles or palaces are of more regular
+design, in which the feudal traditions tend to disappear. The majority
+belong to the end of the 16th and beginning of the 17th centuries. They
+are built around large rectangular courts with arcades in two or three
+stories on one or more sides, but rarely surrounding it entirely. In
+these the segmental arch is more common than the semicircular, and
+springs usually from short and stumpy Ionic or Corinthian columns. The
+rooms and halls are arranged _en suite_, without corridors, and a large
+and lofty banquet hall forms the dominant feature of the series. The
+earliest of these regularly planned palaces are of Italian design. Chief
+among them is the +Residenz+ at +Landshut+ (1536-43), with a thoroughly
+Roman plan, by pupils of Giulio Romano, and exterior and court façades
+of great dignity treated with the orders. More German in its details,
+but equally interesting, is the +Fürstenhof+ at +Wismar+, in brick and
+terra-cotta, by _Valentino di Lira_ and _Van Aken_ (1553); while in the
++Piastenschloss+ at Brieg (1547-72), by Italian architects, the
+treatment in parts suggests the richest works of the style of Francis I.
+In other castles the segmental arch and stumpy columns or piers show the
+German taste, as in the +Plassenburg+, by _Kaspar Vischer_ (1554-64),
+the castle at Plagnitz, and the +Old Castle+ at +Stuttgart+, all dating
+from about 1550-55. +Heidelberg Castle+, in spite of its mediæval aspect
+from the river and its irregular plan, ranks as the highest achievement
+of the German Renaissance in palace design. The most interesting parts
+among its various wings built at different dates--the earlier portions
+still Gothic in design--are the +Otto Heinrichsbau+ (1554) and the
++Friedrichsbau+ (1601). The first of these appears somewhat simpler in
+its lines than the second, by reason of having lost its original
+dormer-gables. The orders, freely treated, are superposed in three
+stories, and twin windows, niches, statues, _gaînes_, medallions and
+profuse carving produce an effect of great gayety and richness. The
+Friedrichsbau (Fig. 192), less quiet in its lines, and with high
+scroll-gabled and stepped dormers, is on the other hand more soberly
+decorated and more characteristically German. The Schloss Hämelschenburg
+(Fig. 191) is designed in somewhat the same spirit, but with even
+greater simplicity of detail.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 192.--THE FRIEDRICHSBAU, HEIDELBERG.]
+
++TOWN HALLS.+ These constitute the most interesting class of Renaissance
+buildings in Germany, presenting a considerable variety of types, but
+nearly all built in solid blocks without courts, and adorned with towers
+or spires. A high roof crowns the building, broken by one or more high
+gables or many-storied dormers. The majority of these town halls present
+façades much diversified by projecting wings, as at Lemgo and Paderborn,
+or by oriels and turrets, as at +Altenburg+ (1562-64); and the towers
+which dominate the whole terminate usually in bell-shaped cupolas, or in
+more capricious forms with successive swellings and contractions, as at
+Dantzic (1587). A few, however, are designed with monumental simplicity
+of mass; of these that at +Bremen+ (1612) is perhaps the finest, with
+its beautiful exterior arcade on strong Doric columns. The town hall of
+Nuremberg is one of the few with a court, and presents a façade of
+almost Roman simplicity (1613-19); that at +Augsburg+ (1615) is equally
+classic and more pleasing; while at Schweinfurt, Rothenburg (1572),
+Mülhausen, etc., are others worthy of mention.
+
+
++CHURCHES.+ +St. Michael’s+, at Munich, is almost the only important
+church of the first period in Germany (1582), but it is worthy to rank
+with many of the most notable contemporary Italian churches. A wide nave
+covered by a majestic barrel vault, is flanked by side chapels,
+separated from each other by massive piers and forming a series of
+gallery bays above. There are short transepts and a choir, all in
+excellent proportion and treated with details which, if somewhat heavy,
+are appropriate and reasonably correct. The +Marienkirche+ at
+Wolfenbüttel (1608) is a fair sample of the parish churches of the
+second period. In the exterior of this church pointed arches and
+semi-Gothic tracery are curiously associated with heavy rococo carving.
+The simple rectangular mass, square tower, and portal with massive
+orders and carving are characteristic features. Many of the
+church-towers are well proportioned and graceful structures in spite of
+the fantastic outlines of their spires. One of the best and purest in
+style is that of the University Church at Würzburg (1587-1600).
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 193.--ZWINGER PALACE, DRESDEN.]
+
++HOUSES.+ Many of the German houses of the sixteenth and seventeenth
+centuries would merit extended notice in a larger work, as among the
+most interesting lesser monuments of the Renaissance. Nuremberg and
+Hildesheim are particularly rich in such houses, built either for
+private citizens or for guilds and corporations. Not a few of the
+half-timbered houses of the time are genuine works of art, though
+interest chiefly centres in the more monumental dwellings of stone. In
+this domestic architecture the picturesque quality of German design
+appears to better advantage than in more monumental edifices, and their
+broadly stepped gables, corbelled oriels, florid portals and want of
+formal symmetry imparting a peculiar and undeniable charm. The
+Kaiserhaus and Wedekindsches Haus at Hildesheim; +Fürstenhaus+ at
+Leipzig; Peller, Hirschvogel, and Funk houses at Nuremberg; the Salt
+House at Frankfurt, and Ritter House at Heidelberg, are a few of the
+most noted among these examples of domestic architecture.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 194.--CHURCH OF ST. MARY (MARIENKIRCHE),
+ DRESDEN.]
+
++LATER MONUMENTS.+ The +Zwinger Palace+ at Dresden (Fig. 193), is the
+most elaborate and wayward example of the German palace architecture of
+the third period. Its details are of the most exaggerated rococo type,
+like confectioner’s work done in stone; and yet the building has an air
+of princely splendor which partly atones for its details. Besides this
+palace, Dresden possesses in the domical +Marienkirche+ (Fig. 194)
+a very meritorious example of late design. The proportions are good, and
+the detail, if not interesting, is at least inoffensive, while the whole
+is a dignified and rational piece of work. At Vienna are a number of
+palaces of the third period, more interesting for their beautiful
+grounds and parks than for intrinsic architectural merit. As in Italy,
+this was the period of stucco, and although in Vienna this cheap and
+perishable material was cleverly handled, and the ornament produced was
+often quaint and effective, the results lack the permanence and dignity
+of true building in stone or brick, and may be dismissed without further
+mention.
+
+In minor works the Germans were far less prolific than the Italians or
+Spaniards. Few of their tombs were of the first importance, though one,
+the +Sebald Shrine+, in Nuremberg, by _Peter Vischer_ (1506-19), is a
+splendid work in bronze, in the transitional style; a richly decorated
+canopy on slender metal colonnettes covering and enclosing the
+sarcophagus of the saint. There are a large number of fountains in the
+squares of German and Swiss cities which display a high order of design,
+and are among the most characteristic minor products of German art.
+
+
++SPAIN.+ The flamboyant Gothic style sufficed for a while to meet the
+requirements of the arrogant and luxurious period which in Spain
+followed the overthrow of the Moors and the discovery of America. But it
+was inevitable that the Renaissance should in time make its influence
+felt in the arts of the Iberian peninsula, largely through the
+employment of Flemish artists. In jewelry and silverwork, arts which
+received a great impulse from the importation of the precious metals
+from the New World, the forms of the Renaissance found special
+acceptance, so that the new style received the name of the _Plateresque_
+(from _platero_, silversmith). This was a not inept name for the
+minutely detailed and sumptuous decoration of the early Renaissance,
+which lasted from 1500 to the accession of Philip II. in 1556. It was
+characterized by surface-decoration spreading over broad areas,
+especially around doors and windows, florid escutcheons and Gothic
+details mingling with delicately chiselled arabesques. Decorative
+pilasters with broken entablatures and carved baluster-shafts were
+employed with little reference to constructive lines, but with great
+refinement of detail, in spite of the exuberant profusion of the
+ornament.
+
+To this style, after the artistic inaction of Philip II.’s reign,
+succeeded the coldly classic style practised by _Berruguete_ and
+_Herrera_, and called the _Griego-Romano_. In spite of the attempt to
+produce works of classical purity, the buildings of this period are for
+the most part singularly devoid of originality and interest. This style
+lasted until the middle of the seventeenth century, and in the case of
+certain works and artists, until its close. It was followed, at least in
+ecclesiastical architecture, by the so-called _Churrigueresque_, a name
+derived from an otherwise insignificant architect, _Churriguera_, who
+like Maderna and Borromini in Italy, discarded all the proprieties of
+architecture, and rejoiced in the wildest extravagances of an untrained
+fancy and debased taste.
+
+
++EARLY MONUMENTS.+ The earliest ecclesiastical works of the Renaissance
+period, like the cathedrals of Salamanca, Toledo, and Segovia, were
+almost purely Gothic in style. Not until 1525 did the new forms begin to
+dominate in cathedral design. The cathedral at +Jaen+, by _Valdelvira_
+(1525), an imposing structure with three aisles and side chapels, was
+treated internally with the Corinthian order throughout. The Cathedral
+of +Granada+ (1529, by _Diego de Siloe_) is especially interesting for
+its great domical sanctuary 70 feet in diameter, and for the largeness
+and dignity of its conception and details. The cathedral of Malaga, the
+church of San Domingo at Salamanca, and the monastery of San Girolamo in
+the same city are either wholly or in part Plateresque, and provided
+with portals of especial richness of decoration. Indeed, the portal of
+S. Domingo practically forms the whole façade.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 195.--DOOR OF THE UNIVERSITY, SALAMANCA.]
+
+In secular architecture the +Hospital+ of +Santa Cruz+ at Toledo, by
+_Enrique de Egaz_ (1504-16), is one of the earliest examples of the
+style. Here, as also in the +University+ at +Salamanca+ (Fig. 195), the
+portal is the most notable feature, suggesting both Italian and French
+models in its details. The great +College+ at +Alcala de Heñares+ is
+another important early monument of the Renaissance (1500-17, by _Pedro
+Gumiel_). In most designs the preference was for long façades of
+moderate height, with a basement showing few openings, and a _bel étage_
+lighted by large windows widely spaced. Ornament was chiefly
+concentrated about the doors and windows, except for the roof
+balustrades, which were often exceedingly elaborate. Occasionally a
+decorative motive is spread over the whole façade, as in the +Casa de
+las Conchas+ at Salamanca, adorned with cockle-shells carved at
+intervals all over the front--a bold and effective device; or the
+Infantada palace with its spangling of carved diamonds. The courtyard or
+_patio_ was an indispensable feature of these buildings, as in all hot
+countries, and was surrounded by arcades frequently of the most fanciful
+design overloaded with minute ornament, as in the +Infantado+ at
+Guadalajara, the +Casa de Zaporta+, formerly at Saragossa (now removed
+to Paris; Fig. 196), and the Lupiana monastery. The patios in the
++Archbishop’s Palace+ at Alcala de Heñares and the +Collegio de los
+Irlandeses+ at Salamanca are of simpler design; that of the +Casa de
+Pilatos+ at Seville is almost purely Moorish. Salamanca abounds in
+buildings of this period.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 196.--CASA DE ZAPORTA: COURTYARD.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 197.--PALACE OF CHARLES V., GRANADA.]
+
++THE GRIEGO-ROMANO.+ The more classic treatment of architectural designs
+by the use of the orders was introduced by _Alonzo Berruguete_
+(1480-1560?), who studied in Italy after 1503. The Archbishop’s Palace
+and the Doric +Gate+ of +San Martino+, both at Toledo, were his work, as
+well as the first palace at Madrid. The Palladio of Spain was, however,
+by _Juan de Herrera_ (died 1597), the architect of +Valladolid
+Cathedral+, built under Philip V. This vast edifice follows the general
+lines of the earlier cathedrals of Jaen and Granada, but in a style of
+classical correctness almost severe in aspect, but well suited to the
+grand scale of the church. The masterpiece of this period was the
+monastery of the +Escurial+, begun by _Juan Battista_ of Toledo, in
+1563, but not completed until nearly one hundred and fifty years later.
+Its final architectural aspect was largely due to Herrera. It is a vast
+rectangle of 740 × 580 feet, comprising a complex of courts, halls, and
+cells, dominated by the huge mass of the chapel. This last is an
+imposing domical church covering 70,000 square feet, treated throughout
+with the Doric order, and showing externally a lofty dome and campaniles
+with domical lanterns, which serve to diversify the otherwise monotonous
+mass of the monastery. What the Escurial lacks in grace or splendor is
+at least in a measure redeemed by its majestic scale and varied
+sky-lines. The +Palace of Charles V.+ (Fig. 197), adjoining the Alhambra
+at Granada, though begun as early as 1527 by _Machuca_, was mainly due
+to Berruguete, and is an excellent example of the Spanish Palladian
+style. With its circular court, admirable proportions and well-studied
+details, this often maligned edifice deserves to be ranked among the
+most successful examples of the style. During this period the cathedral
+of Seville received many alterations, and the upper part of the
+adjoining Moorish tower of the +Giralda+, burned in 1395, was rebuilt by
+_Fernando Ruiz_ in the prevalent style, and with considerable elegance
+and appropriateness of design.
+
+Of the +Palace+ at +Madrid+, rebuilt by Philip V. after the burning of
+the earlier palace in 1734, and mainly the work of an Italian, _Ivara_;
+the Aranjuez palace (1739, by _Francisco Herrera_), and the Palace at
++San Ildefonso+, it need only be said that their chief merit lies in
+their size and the absence of those glaring violations of good taste
+which generally characterized the successors of Churriguera. In
+ecclesiastical design these violations of taste were particularly
+abundant and excessive, especially in the façades and in the
+sanctuary--huge aggregations of misplaced and vulgar detail, with hardly
+an unbroken pediment, column, or arch in the whole. Some extreme
+examples of this abominable style are to be found in the
+Spanish-American churches of the 17th and 18th centuries, as at
+Chihuahua (Mexico), Tucson (Arizona), and other places. The least
+offensive features of the churches of this period were the towers,
+usually in pairs at the west end, some of them showing excellent
+proportions and good composition in spite of their execrable details.
+
+Minor architectural works, such as the rood screens in the churches of
+Astorga and Medina de Rio Seco, and many tombs at Granada, Avila,
+Alcala, etc., give evidence of superior skill in decorative design,
+where constructive considerations did not limit the exercise of the
+imagination.
+
+
++PORTUGAL.+ The Renaissance appears to have produced few notable works
+in Portugal. Among the chief of these are the +Tower+, the church, and
+the +Cloister+, at Belem. These display a riotous profusion of minute
+carved ornament, with a free commingling of late Gothic details,
+wearisome in the end in spite of the beauty of its execution (1500-40?).
+The church of +Santa Cruz+ at Coimbra, and that of +Luz+, near Lisbon,
+are among the most noted of the religious monuments of the Renaissance,
+while in secular architecture the royal palace at +Mafra+ is worthy of
+mention.
+
+
+ +MONUMENTS.+ (Mainly supplementary to preceding text.) AUSTRIA,
+ BOHEMIA, etc.: At Prague, Schloss Stern, 1459-1565; Schwarzenburg
+ Palace, 1544; Waldstein Palace, 1629; Salvator Chapel, Vienna,
+ 1515; Schloss Schalaburg, near Mölk, 1530-1601; Standehaus, Gratz,
+ 1625. At Vienna: Imperial palace, various dates; Schwarzenburg and
+ Lichtenstein palaces, 18th century.
+
+ GERMANY, FIRST PERIOD: Schloss Baden, 1510-29 and part 1569-82;
+ Schloss Merseburg, 1514, with late 16th-century portals;
+ Fuggerhaus at Augsburg, 1516; castles of Neuenstein, 1530-64;
+ Celle, 1532-46 (and enlarged, 1665-70); Dessau, 1533; Leignitz,
+ portal, 1533; Plagnitz, 1550; Schloss Gottesau, 1553-88; castle of
+ Güstrow, 1555-65; of Oels, 1559-1616; of Bernburg, 1565; of
+ Heiligenburg, 1569-87; Münzhof at Munich, 1575; Lusthaus
+ (demolished) at Stuttgart, 1575; Wilhelmsburg Castle at
+ Schmalkald, 1584-90; castle of Hämelschenburg, 1588-1612.--SECOND
+ PERIOD: Zunfthaus at Basle, 1578, in advanced style; so also
+ Juleum at Helmstädt, 1593-1612; gymnasium at Brunswick, 1592-1613;
+ Spiesshof at Basle, 1600; castle at Berlin, 1600-1616, demolished
+ in great part; castle Bevern, 1603; Dantzic, Zeughaus, 1605;
+ Wallfahrtskirche at Dettelbach, 1613; castle Aschaffenburg,
+ 1605-13; Schloss Weikersheim, 1600-83.--THIRD PERIOD: Zeughaus at
+ Berlin, 1695; palace at Berlin by Schlüter, 1699-1706; Catholic
+ church, Dresden. (For Classic Revival, see next chapter.)--TOWN
+ HALLS: At Heilbronn, 1535; Görlitz, 1537; Posen, 1550; Mülhausen,
+ 1552; Cologne, porch with Corinthian columns and Gothic arches,
+ 1569; Lübeck (Rathhaushalle), 1570; Schweinfurt, 1570; Gotha,
+ 1574; Emden, 1574-76; Lemgo, 1589; Neisse, 1604; Nordhausen, 1610;
+ Paderborn, 1612-16; Gernsbach, 1617.
+
+ SPAIN, 16TH CENTURY: Monastery San Marcos at Leon; palace of the
+ Infanta, Saragossa; Carcel del Corte at Baez; Cath. of Malaga, W.
+ front, 1538, by de Siloë; Tavera Hospital, Toledo, 1541, by de
+ Bustamente; Alcazar at Toledo, 1548; Lonja (Town Hall) at
+ Saragossa, 1551; Casa de la Sal, Casa Monterey, and Collegio de
+ los Irlandeses, all at Salamanca; Town Hall, Casa de los Taveras
+ and upper part of Giralda, all at Seville.--17TH CENTURY:
+ Cathedral del Pilar, Saragossa, 1677; Tower del Seo, 1685.--18TH
+ CENTURY: palace at Madrid, 1735; at Aranjuez, 1739; cathedral of
+ Santiago, 1738; Lonja at Barcelona, 1772.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+THE CLASSIC REVIVALS IN EUROPE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Fergusson. Also Chateau, _Histoire
+ et caractères de l’architecture en France_; and Lübke, _Geschichte
+ der Architektur_. (For the most part, however, recourse must be
+ had to the general histories of architecture, and to monographs on
+ special cities or buildings.)
+
+
++THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.+ By the end of the seventeenth century the
+Renaissance, properly speaking, had run its course in Europe. The
+increasing servility of its imitation of antique models had exhausted
+its elasticity and originality. Taste rapidly declined before the growth
+of the industrial and commercial spirit in the eighteenth century. The
+ferment of democracy and the disquiet of far-reaching political changes
+had begun to preoccupy the minds of men to the detriment of the arts. By
+the middle of the eighteenth century, however, the extravagances of the
+Rococo, Jesuit, and Louis XV. styles had begun to pall upon the popular
+taste. The creative spirit was dead, and nothing seemed more promising
+as a corrective for these extravagances than a return to classic models.
+But the demand was for a literal copying of the arcades and porticos of
+Rome, to serve as frontispieces for buildings in which modern
+requirements should be accommodated to these antique exteriors, instead
+of controlling the design. The result was a manifest gain in the
+splendor of the streets and squares adorned by these highly decorative
+frontispieces, but at the expense of convenience and propriety in the
+buildings themselves. While this academic spirit too often sacrificed
+logic and originality to an arbitrary symmetry and to the supposed
+canons of Roman design, it also, on the other hand, led to a stateliness
+and dignity in the planning, especially in the designing of vestibules,
+stairs, and halls, which render many of the public buildings it produced
+well worthy of study. The architecture of the Roman Revival was pompous
+and artificial, but seldom trivial, and its somewhat affected grandeur
+was a welcome relief from the dull extravagance of the styles it
+replaced.
+
+
++THE GREEK REVIVAL.+ The Roman revival was, however, displaced in
+England and Germany by the Greek Revival, which set in near the close of
+the eighteenth century. This was the result of a newly awakened interest
+in the long-neglected monuments of Attic art which the discoveries of
+Stuart and Revett--sent out in 1732 by the London Society of
+Dilettanti--had once more made known to the world. It led to a veritable
+_furore_ in England for Greek Doric and Ionic columns, which were
+applied indiscriminately to every class of buildings, with utter
+disregard of propriety. The British taste was at this time at its lowest
+ebb, and failed to perceive the poverty of Greek architecture when
+deprived of its proper adornments of carving and sculpture, which were
+singularly lacking in the British examples. Nevertheless the Greek style
+in England had a long run of popular favor, yielding only during the
+reign of the present sovereign to the so-called Victorian Gothic,
+a revival of mediæval forms. In Germany the Greek Revival was
+characterized by a more cultivated taste and a more rational application
+of its forms, which were often freely modified to suit modern needs. In
+France, where the Roman Revival under Louis XV. had produced fairly
+satisfactory results, and where the influence of the Royal School of
+Fine Arts (_École des Beaux-Arts_) tended to perpetuate the principles
+of Roman design, the Greek Revival found no footing. The Greek forms
+were seen to be too severe and intractable for present requirements.
+About 1830, however, a modified style of design, known since as the
+_Néo-Grec_, was introduced by the exertions of a small coterie of
+talented architects; and though its own life was short, it profoundly
+influenced French art in the direction of freedom and refinement for a
+long time afterward. In Italy there was hardly anything in the nature of
+a true revival of either Roman or Greek forms. The few important works
+of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries were conceived in
+the spirit of the late Renaissance, and took from the prevalent revival
+of classicism elsewhere merely a greater correctness of detail, not any
+radical change of form or spirit.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 198.--BRITISH MUSEUM, LONDON.]
+
++ENGLAND.+ There was, strictly speaking, no Roman revival in Great
+Britain. The modified Palladian style of Wren and Gibbs and their
+successors continued until superseded by the Greek revival. The first
+fruit of the new movement seems to have been the +Bank of England+ at
+London, by _Sir John Soane_ (1788). In this edifice the Greco-Roman
+order of the round temple at Tivoli was closely copied, and applied to a
+long façade, too low for its length and with no sufficient stylobate,
+but fairly effective with its recessed colonnade and unpierced walls.
+The +British Museum+, by _Robert Smirke_ (Fig. 198), was a more
+ambitious essay in a more purely Greek style. Its colossal Ionic
+colonnade was, however, a mere frontispiece, applied to a badly planned
+and commonplace building, from which it cut off needed light. The more
+modest but appropriate columnar façade to the +Fitzwilliam Museum+ at
+Cambridge, by _Bassevi_, was a more successful attempt in the same
+direction, better proportioned and avoiding the incongruity of modern
+windows in several stories. These have always been the stumbling-block
+of the revived Greek style. The difficulties they raise are avoided,
+however, in buildings presenting but two stories, the order being
+applied to the upper story, upon a high stylobate serving as a basement.
+The +High School+ and the Royal Institution at Edinburgh, and the
+University at London, by _Wilkins_, are for this reason, if for no
+other, superior to the British Museum and other many-storied Anglo-Greek
+edifices. In spite of all difficulties, however, the English extended
+the applications of the style with doubtful success not only to all
+manner of public buildings, but also to country residences. Carlton
+House, Bowden Park, and Grange House are instances of this
+misapplication of Greek forms. Neither did it prove more tractable for
+ecclesiastical purposes. +St. Pancras’s+ Church at London, and several
+churches by _Thomson_ (1817-75), in Glasgow, though interesting as
+experiments in such adaptation, are not to be commended for imitation.
+The most successful of all British Greek designs is perhaps +St.
+George’s Hall+ at Liverpool (Fig. 199), whose imposing peristyle and
+porches are sufficiently Greek in spirit and detail to class it among
+the works of the Greek Revival. But its great hall and its interior
+composition are really Roman and not Greek, emphasizing the teaching of
+experience that Greek architecture does not lend itself to the
+exigencies of modern civilization to nearly the same extent as the
+Roman.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 199.--ST. GEORGE’S HALL, LIVERPOOL.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 200.--THE OLD MUSEUM, BERLIN.]
+
++GERMANY.+ During the eighteenth century the classic revival in Germany,
+which at first followed Roman precedents (as in the columns carved with
+spirally ascending reliefs in front of the church of +St. Charles
+Borromeo+, at Vienna), was directed into the channel of Greek imitation
+by the literary works of Winckelmann, Lessing, Goethe, and others, as
+well as by the interest aroused by the discoveries of Stuart and Revett.
+The +Brandenburg Gate+ at Berlin (1784, by Langhans) was an early
+example of this Hellenism in architecture, and one of its most
+successful applications to civic purposes. Without precisely copying any
+Greek structure, it was evidently inspired from the Athenian Propylæa,
+and nothing in its purpose is foreign to the style employed. The
+greatest activity in the style came later, however, and was greatly
+stimulated by the achievements of _Fr. Schinkel_ (1771-1841), one of the
+greatest of modern German architects. While in the domical church of St.
+Nicholas at Potsdam, he employed Roman forms in a modernized Roman
+conception, and followed in one or two other buildings the principles of
+the Renaissance, his predilections were for Greek architecture. His
+masterpiece was the +Museum+ at Berlin, with an imposing portico of 18
+Ionic columns (Fig. 200). This building with its fine rotunda was
+excellently planned, and forms, in conjunction with the +New Museum+ by
+_Stuhler_ (1843-55), a noble palace of art, to whose monumental
+requirements and artistic purpose the Greek colonnades and pediments
+were not inappropriate. Schinkel’s greatest successor was _Leo von
+Klenze_ (1784-1864), whose more textual reproductions of Greek models
+won him great favor and wide employment. The +Walhalla+ near Ratisbon is
+a modernized Parthenon, internally vaulted with glass; elegant
+externally, but too obvious a plagiarism to be greatly admired. The
++Ruhmeshalle+ at Munich, a double +L+ partly enclosing a colossal
+statue of Bavaria, and devoted to the commemoration of Bavaria’s great
+men, is copied from no Greek building, though purely Greek in design and
+correct to the smallest detail. In the +Glyptothek+ (Sculpture Gallery),
+in the same city, the one distinctively Greek feature introduced by
+Klenze, an Ionic portico, is also the one inappropriate note in the
+design. The +Propylæa+ at Munich, by the same (Fig. 201), and the +Court
+Theatre+ at Berlin, by Schinkel, are other important examples of the
+style. The latter is externally one of the most beautiful theatres in
+Europe, though less ornate than many. Schinkel’s genius was here
+remarkably successful in adapting Greek details to the exigent
+difficulties of theatre design, and there is no suggestion of copying
+any known Greek building.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 201.--THE PROPYLÆA, MUNICH.]
+
+In Vienna the one notable monument of the Classic Revival is the
++Reichsrathsgebäude+ or Parliament House, by _Th. Hansen_ (1843), an
+imposing two-storied composition with a lofty central colonnade and
+lower side-wings, harmonious in general proportions and pleasingly
+varied in outline and mass.
+
+In general, the Greek Revival in Germany presents the aspect of a
+sincere striving after beauty, on the part of a limited number of
+artists of great talent, misled by the idea that the forms of a dead
+civilization could be galvanized into new life in the service of modern
+needs. The result was disappointing, in spite of the excellent planning,
+admirable construction and carefully studied detail of these buildings,
+and the movement here as elsewhere was foredoomed to failure.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 202.--PLAN OF PANTHÉON, PARIS.]
+
++FRANCE.+ In France the Classic Revival, as we have seen, had made its
+appearance during the reign of Louis XV. in a number of important
+monuments which expressed the protest of their authors against the
+caprice of the Rococo style then in vogue. The colonnades of the
+Garde-Meuble, the façade of St. Sulpice, and the coldly beautiful
++Panthéon+ (Figs. 202, 203) testified to the conviction in the most
+cultured minds of the time that Roman grandeur was to be attained only
+by copying the forms of Roman architecture with the closest possible
+approach to correctness. In the Panthéon, the greatest ecclesiastical
+monument of its time in France (otherwise known as the church of Ste.
+Genéviève), the spirit of correct classicism dominates the interior as
+well as the exterior. It is a Greek cross, measuring 362 × 267 feet,
+with a dome 265 feet high, and internally 69 feet in diameter. The four
+arms have domical vaulting and narrow aisles separated by Corinthian
+columns. The whole interior is a cold but extremely elegant composition.
+The most notable features of the exterior are its imposing portico of
+colossal Corinthian columns and the fine peristyle which surrounds the
+drum of the dome, giving it great dignity and richness of effect.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 203.--EXTERIOR OF PANTHÉON, PARIS.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 204.--ARC DE L’ÉTOILE, PARIS.]
+
+The dome, which is of stone throughout, has three shells, the
+intermediate shell serving to support the heavy stone lantern. The
+architect was _Soufflot_ (1713-81). The +Grand Théâtre+, at Bordeaux
+(1773, by _Victor Louis_), one of the largest and finest theatres in
+Europe, was another product of this movement, its stately colonnade
+forming one of the chief ornaments of the city. Under Louis XVI. there
+was a temporary reaction from this somewhat pompous affectation of
+antique grandeur; but there were few important buildings erected during
+that unhappy reign, and the reaction showed itself mainly in a more
+delicate and graceful style of interior decoration. It was reserved for
+the Empire to set the seal of official approval on the Roman Revival.
+The Arch of Triumph of the Carrousel, behind the Tuileries, by _Percier
+and Fontaine_, the magnificent Arc de l’Étoile, at the summit of the
+Avenue of the Champs Elysées, by _Chalgrin_; the wing begun by Napoleon
+to connect the Tuileries with the Louvre on the land side, and the
+church of the Madeleine, by _Vignon_, erected as a temple to the heroes
+of the Grande Armée, were all designed, in accordance with the expressed
+will of the Emperor himself, in a style as Roman as the requirements of
+each case would permit. All these monuments, begun between 1806 and
+1809, were completed after the Restoration. The +Arch+ of the
++Carrousel+ is a close copy of Roman models; that of the +Étoile+ (Fig.
+204) was a much more original design, of colossal dimensions. Its
+admirable proportions, simple composition and striking sculptures give
+it a place among the noblest creations of its class. The +Madeleine+
+(Fig. 205), externally a Roman Corinthian temple of the largest size,
+presents internally an almost Byzantine conception with the three
+pendentive domes that vault its vast nave, but all the details are
+Roman. However suitable for a pantheon or mausoleum, it seems strangely
+inappropriate as a design for a Christian church. To these monuments
+should be added the +Bourse+ or Exchange, by _Brongniart_, heavy in
+spite of its Corinthian peristyle, and the river front of the +Corps
+Législatif+ or Palais Bourbon, by _Poyet_, the only extant example of a
+dodecastyle portico with a pediment. All of these designs are
+characterized by great elegance of detail and excellence of execution,
+and however inappropriate in style to modern uses, they add immensely to
+the splendor of the French capital. Unquestionably no feature can take
+the place of a Greek or Roman colonnade as an embellishment for broad
+avenues and open squares, or as the termination of an architectural
+vista.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 205.--THE MADELEINE, PARIS.]
+
+The Greek revival took little hold of the Parisian imagination. Its
+forms were too cold, too precise and fixed, too intractable to modern
+requirements to appeal to the French taste. It counts but one notable
+monument, the church of +St. Vincent de Paul+, by _Hittorff_, who sought
+to apply to this design the principles of Greek external polychromy; but
+the frescoes and ornaments failed to withstand the Parisian climate, and
+were finally erased. The Néo-Grec movement already referred to,
+initiated by Duc, Duban, and Labrouste about 1830, aimed only to
+introduce into modern design the spirit and refinement, the purity and
+delicacy of Greek art, not its forms (Fig. 206). Its chief monuments
+were the remodelling, by _Duc_, of the +Palais de Justice+, of which the
+new west façade is the most striking single feature; the beautiful
++Library of the École des Beaux-Arts+, by _Duban_; the library of +Ste.
+Genéviève+, by _Labrouste_, in which a long façade is treated without a
+pilaster or column, simple arches over a massive basement forming the
+dominant motive, while in the interior a system of iron construction
+with glazed domes controls the design; and the commemorative +Colonne
+Juillet+, by Duc, the most elegant and appropriate of all modern
+memorial columns. All these buildings, begun between 1830 and 1850 and
+completed at various dates, are distinguished by a remarkable purity and
+freedom of conception and detail, quite unfettered by the artificial
+trammels of the official academic style then prevalent.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 206.--DOORWAY, ÉCOLE DES BEAUX-ARTS, PARIS.]
+
+
++THE CLASSIC REVIVAL ELSEWHERE.+ The other countries of Europe have
+little to show in the way of imitations of classic monuments or
+reproductions of Roman colonnades. In Italy the church of +S. Francesco
+di Paola+, at Naples, in quasi-imitation of the Pantheon at Rome, with
+wing-colonnades, and the +Superga+, at Turin (1706, by _Ivara_); the
+façade of the San Carlo Theatre, at Naples, and the Braccio Nuovo of the
+Vatican (1817, by _Stern_) are the monuments which come the nearest to
+the spirit and style of the Roman Revival. Yet in each of these there is
+a large element of originality and freedom of treatment which renders
+doubtful their classification as examples of that movement.
+
+A reflection of the Munich school is seen in the modern public buildings
+of Athens, designed in some cases by German architects, and in others by
+native Greeks. The University, the Museum buildings, the Academy of Art
+and Science, and other edifices exemplify fairly successful efforts to
+adapt the severe details of classic Greek art to modern windowed
+structures. They suffer somewhat from the too liberal use of stucco in
+place of marble, and from the conscious affectation of an extinct style.
+But they are for the most part pleasing and monumental designs, adding
+greatly to the beauty of the modern city.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 207.--ST. ISAAC’S CATHEDRAL, ST. PETERSBURG.]
+
+In Russia, during and after the reign of Peter the Great (1689-1725),
+there appeared a curious mixture of styles. A style analogous to the
+Jesuit in Italy and the Churrigueresque in Spain was generally
+prevalent, but it was in many cases modified by Muscovite traditions
+into nondescript forms like those of the +Kremlin+, at Moscow, or the
+less extravagant Citadel Church and Smolnoy Monastery at St. Petersburg.
+Along with this heavy and barbarous style, which prevails generally in
+the numerous palaces of the capital, finished in stucco with atrocious
+details, a more severe and classical spirit is met with. The church of
+the +Greek Rite+ at St. Petersburg combines a Roman domical interior
+with an exterior of the Greek Doric order. The Church of +Our Lady of
+Kazan+ has a semicircular colonnade projecting from its transept,
+copying as nearly as may be the colonnades in front of St. Peter’s. But
+the greatest classic monument in Russia is the +Cathedral of St. Isaac+
+(Fig. 207), at St. Petersburg, a vast rectangular edifice with four
+Roman Corinthian pedimental colonnades projecting from its faces, and a
+dome with a peristyle crowning the whole. Despite many defects of
+detail, and the use of cast iron for the dome, which pretends to be of
+marble, this is one of the most impressive churches of its size in
+Europe. Internally it displays the costliest materials in extraordinary
+profusion, while externally its noble colonnades go far to redeem its
+bare attic and the material of its dome. The +Palace of the Grand Duke
+Michael+, which reproduces, with improvements, Gabriel’s colonnades of
+the Garde Meuble at Paris on its garden front, is a nobly planned and
+commendable design, agreeably contrasting with the debased architecture
+of many of the public buildings of the city. The Admiralty with its
+Doric pilasters, and the +New Museum+, by von Klenze of Munich, in a
+skilfully modified Greek style, with effective loggias, are the only
+other monuments of the classic revival in Russia which can find mention
+in a brief sketch like this. Both are notable and in many respects
+admirable buildings, in part redeeming the vulgarity which is
+unfortunately so prevalent in the architecture of St. Petersburg.
+
+The +MONUMENTS+ of the Classic Revival have been referred to in the
+foregoing text at sufficient length to preclude the necessity of further
+enumeration here.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+RECENT ARCHITECTURE IN EUROPE.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Chateau, Fergusson. Also Barqui,
+ _L’Architecture moderne en France_.--_Berlin und seine Bauten_
+ (and a series of similar works on the modern buildings of other
+ German cities). Daly, _Architecture privée du XIXe siècle_.
+ Garnier, _Le nouvel Opéra_. Gourlier, _Choix d’édifices publics_.
+ Licht, _Architektur Deutschlands_. Lübke, _Denkmäler der Kunst_.
+ Lützow und Tischler, _Wiener Neubauten_. Narjoux, _Monuments
+ élevés par la ville de Paris, 1850-1880_. Rückwardt, _Façaden und
+ Details modernen Bauten_.--_Sammelmappe hervorragenden
+ Concurrenz-Entwurfen._ Sédille, _L’Architecture moderne_.
+ Selfridge, _Modern French Architecture_. Statham, _Modern
+ Architecture_. Villars, _England, Scotland, and Ireland_ (tr.
+ Henry Frith). Consult also _Transactions of the Royal Institute of
+ British Architects_, and the leading architectural journals of
+ recent years.
+
+
++MODERN CONDITIONS.+ The nineteenth century has been pre-eminently an
+age of industrial progress. Its most striking advances have been along
+mechanical, scientific, and commercial lines. As a result of this
+material progress the general conditions of mankind in civilized
+countries have undoubtedly been greatly bettered. Popular education and
+the printing-press have also raised the intellectual level of society,
+making learning the privilege of even the poorest. Intellectual,
+scientific, and commercial pursuits have thus largely absorbed those
+energies which in other ages found exercise in the creation of artistic
+forms and objects. The critical and sceptical spirit, the spirit of
+utilitarianism and realism, has checked the free and general development
+of the creative imagination, at least in the plastic arts. While in
+poetry and music there have been great and noble achievements, the
+plastic arts, including architecture, have only of late years attained a
+position at all worthy of the intellectual advancement of the times.
+
+Nevertheless the artistic spirit has never been wholly crushed out by
+the untoward pressure of realism and commercialism. Unfortunately it has
+repeatedly been directed in wrong channels. Modern archæology and the
+publication of the forms of historic art by books and photographs have
+too exclusively fastened attention upon the details of extinct styles as
+a source of inspiration in design. The whole range of historic art is
+brought within our survey, and while this has on the one hand tended
+toward the confusion and multiplication of styles in modern work, it has
+on the other led to a slavish adherence to historic precedent or a
+literal copying of historic forms. Modern architecture has thus
+oscillated between the extremes of archæological servitude and of an
+unreasoning eclecticism. In the hands of men of inferior training the
+results have been deplorable travesties of all styles, or meaningless
+aggregations of ill-assorted forms.
+
+An important factor in this demoralization of architectural design has
+been the development of new constructive methods, especially in the use
+of iron and steel. It has been impossible for modern designers, in their
+treatment of style, to keep pace with the rapid changes in the
+structural use of metal in architecture. The roofs of vast span, largely
+composed of glass, which modern methods of trussing have made possible
+for railway stations, armories, and exhibition buildings; the immense
+unencumbered spaces which may be covered by them; the introduction and
+development, especially in the United States, of the post-and-girder
+system of construction for high buildings, in which the external walls
+are a mere screen or filling-in; these have revolutionized architecture
+so rapidly and completely that architects are still struggling and
+groping to find the solution of many of the problems of style, scale,
+and composition which they have brought forward.
+
+Within the last thirty years, however, architecture has, despite these
+new conditions, made notable advances. The artistic emulation of
+repeated international exhibitions, the multiplication of museums and
+schools of art, the general advance in intelligence and enlightenment,
+have all contributed to this artistic progress. There appears to be more
+of the artistic and intellectual quality in the average architecture of
+the present time, on both sides of the Atlantic, than at any previous
+period in this century. The futility of the archæological revival of
+extinct styles is generally recognized. New conditions are gradually
+procuring the solution of the very problems they raise. Historic
+precedent sits more lightly on the architect than formerly, and the
+essential unity of principle underlying all good design is coming to be
+better understood.[26]
+
+ [Footnote 26: See Appendix D.]
+
+
++FRANCE.+ It is in France, Germany (including Austria), and England that
+the architectural progress of this period in Europe has been most
+marked. We have already noticed the results of the classic revivals in
+these three countries. Speaking broadly, it may be said that in France
+the influence of the _École des Beaux-Arts_, while it has tended to give
+greater unity and consistency to the national architecture, and has
+exerted a powerful influence in behalf of refinement of taste and
+correctness of style, has also stood in the way of a free development of
+new ideas. French architecture has throughout adhered to the principles
+of the Renaissance, though the style has during this century been
+modified by various influences. The first of these was the Néo-Grec
+movement, alluded to in the last chapter, which broke the grip of Roman
+tradition in matters of detail and gave greater elasticity to the
+national style. Next should be mentioned the Gothic movement represented
+by Viollet-le-Duc, Lassus, Ballu, and their followers. Beginning about
+1845, it produced comparatively few notable buildings, but gave a great
+impulse to the study of mediæval archæology and the restoration of
+mediæval monuments. The churches of Ste. Clothilde and of St. Jean de
+Belleville, at Paris, and the reconstruction of the Château de
+Pierrefonds, were among its direct results. Indirectly it led to a freer
+and more rational treatment of constructive forms and materials than had
+prevailed with the academic designers. The church of +St. Augustin+, by
+_Baltard_, at Paris, illustrates this in its use of iron and brick for
+the dome and vaulting, and the +College Chaptal+, by _E. Train_, in its
+decorative treatment of brick and tile externally. The general adoption
+of iron for roof-trusses and for the construction of markets and similar
+buildings tended further in the same direction, the +Halles Centrales+
+at Paris, by _Baltard_, being a notable example.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 208.--PLAN OF LOUVRE AND TUILERIES, PARIS.
+ A, A, _the Old Louvre, so called_; B, B, _the New Louvre._]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 209.--PAVILION OF RICHELIEU, LOUVRE.]
+
++THE SECOND EMPIRE.+ The reign of Napoleon III. (1852-70) was a period
+of exceptional activity, especially in Paris. The greatest monument of
+his reign was the completion of the +Louvre+ and +Tuileries+, under
+_Visconti_ and _Lefuel_, including the remodelling of the pavilions de
+Flore and de Marsan. The new portions constitute the most notable
+example of modern French architecture, and the manner in which the two
+palaces were united deserves high praise. In spite of certain defects,
+this work is marked by a combination of dignity, richness, and
+refinement, such as are rarely found in palace architecture (Figs. 208,
+209). The +New Opera+ (1863-75), by _Garnier_ (d.  1898), stands next to
+the Louvre in importance as a national monument. It is by far the most
+sumptuous building for amusement in existence, but in purity of detail
+and in the balance and restraint of its design it is inferior to the
+work of Visconti and Lefuel (Fig. 210). To this reign belong the Palais
+de l’Industrie, by _Viel_, built for the exhibition of 1855, and several
+great railway stations (Gare du Nord, by Hitorff, Gare de l’Est, Gare
+d’Orléans, etc.), in which the modern French version of the Renaissance
+was applied with considerable skill to buildings largely constructed of
+iron and glass. Town halls and theatres were erected in great numbers,
+and in decorative works like fountains and monuments the French were
+particularly successful. The fountains of +St. Michel+, Cuvier, and
+Molière, at Paris, and of +Longchamps+, at Marseilles (Fig. 211),
+illustrate the fertility of resource and elegance of detailed treatment
+of the French in this department. Mention should also here be made of
+the extensive enterprises carried out by Napoleon III., in rectifying
+and embellishing the street-plan of Paris by new avenues and squares on
+a vast scale, adding greatly to the monumental splendor of the city.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 210.--GRAND STAIRCASE OF THE OPERA, PARIS.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 211.--FOUNTAIN OF LONGCHAMPS, MARSEILLES.]
+
++THE REPUBLIC.+ Since the disasters of 1870 a number of important
+structures have been erected, and French architecture has shown a
+remarkable vitality and flexibility under new conditions. Its
+productions have in general been marked by a refined taste and a
+conspicuous absence of eccentricity and excess; but it has for the most
+part trodden in well-worn paths. The most notable recent monuments are,
+in church architecture, the +Sacré-Cœur+, at Montmartre, by _Abadie_,
+a votive church inspired from the Franco-Byzantine style of Aquitania;
+in civil architecture the new +Hôtel de Ville+, at Paris, by _Ballu_ and
+_Déperthes_, recalling the original structure destroyed by the Commune,
+but in reality an original creation of great merit; in scholastic
+architecture the new École de Médecine, and the new +Sorbonne+, by
+_Nénot_, and in other branches of the art the metal-and-glass exhibition
+buildings of 1878, 1889, and 1900. In the last of these the striving for
+originality and the effort to discard traditional forms reached the
+extreme, although accompanied by much very clever detail and a masterly
+use of color-decoration. To these should be added many noteworthy
+theatres, town-halls, court-houses, and _préfectures_ in provincial
+cities, and commemorative columns and monuments almost without number.
+In street architecture there is now much more variety and originality
+than formerly, especially in private houses, and the reaction against
+the orders and against traditional methods of design has of late been
+growing stronger. The chief excellence of modern French architecture
+lies in its rational planning, monumental spirit, and refinement of
+detail (Fig. 212).
+
+
++GERMANY AND AUSTRIA.+ German architecture has been more affected during
+the past fifty years by the archæological spirit than has the French.
+A pronounced mediæval revival partly accompanied, partly followed the
+Greek revival in Germany, and produced a number of churches and a few
+secular buildings in the basilican, Romanesque, and Gothic styles.These
+are less interesting than those in the Greek style, because mediæval
+forms are even more foreign to modern needs than the classic, being
+compatible only with systems of design and construction which are no
+longer practicable. At Munich the Auekirche, by _Ohlmuller_, in an
+attenuated Gothic style; the Byzantine Ludwigskirche, and _Ziebland’s_
+Basilica following Early Christian models; the Basilica by _Hübsch _, at
+Bulach, and the Votive Church at Vienna (1856) by H. Von Ferstel
+(1828-1883) are notable neo-mediæval monuments. The last-named church
+may be classed with Ste. Clothilde at Paris (see p. 371), and St.
+Patrick’s Cathedral at New York, all three being of approximately the
+same size and general style, recalling St. Ouen at Rouen. They are
+correct and elaborate, but more or less cold and artificial.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 212.--MUSÉE GALLIÉRA, PARIS.]
+
+More successful are many of the German theatres and concert halls, in
+which Renaissance and classic forms have been freely used. In several of
+these the attempt has been made to express by the external form the
+curvilinear plan of the auditorium, as in the +Dresden Theatre+, by
+_Semper_ (1841; Fig. 213), the theatre at Carlsruhe, by Hübsch, and the
+double winter-summer +Victoria Theatre+, at Berlin, by _Titz_. But the
+practical and æsthetic difficulties involved in this treatment have
+caused its general abandonment. The +Opera House+ at Vienna, by
+_Siccardsburg_ and _Van der Null_ (1861-69), is rectangular in its
+masses, and but for a certain triviality of detail would rank among the
+most successful buildings of its kind. The new +Burgtheater+ in the same
+city is a more elaborately ornate structure in Renaissance style,
+somewhat florid and overdone.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 213.--THEATRE AT DRESDEN.]
+
+Modern German architecture is at its best in academic and residential
+buildings. The +Bauschule+, at Berlin, by Schinkel, in which brick is
+used in a rational and dignified design without the orders; the
+Polytechnic School, at Zürich, by Semper; university buildings, and
+especially buildings for technical instruction, at Carlsruhe, Stuttgart,
+Strasburg, Vienna, and other cities, show a monumental treatment of the
+exterior and of the general distribution, combined with a careful study
+of practical requirements. In administrative buildings the Germans have
+hardly been as successful; and the new +Parliament House+, at Berlin, by
+_Wallot_, in spite of its splendor and costliness, is heavy and
+unsatisfactory in detail. The larger cities, especially Berlin, contain
+many excellent examples of house architecture, mostly in the Renaissance
+style, sufficiently monumental in design, though usually, like most
+German work, inclined to heaviness of detail. The too free use of stucco
+in imitation of stone is also open to criticism.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 214.--BLOCK OF DWELLINGS (MARIE-THERESIENHOF),
+ VIENNA.]
+
++VIENNA.+ During the last thirty years Vienna has undergone a
+transformation which has made it the rival of Paris as a stately
+capital. The remodelling of the central portion, the creation of a
+series of magnificent boulevards and squares, and the grouping of the
+chief state and municipal buildings about these upon a monumental scheme
+of arrangement, have given the city an unusual aspect of splendor. Among
+the most important monuments in this group are the +Parliament House+,
+by Hansen (see p. 360), and the +Town Hall+, by _Schmidt_. This latter
+is a Neo-Gothic edifice of great size and pretentiousness, but strangely
+thin and meagre in detail, and quite out of harmony with its
+surroundings. The university and museums are massive piles in
+Renaissance style; and it is the Renaissance rather than the classic or
+Gothic revival which prevails throughout the new city. The great blocks
+of residences and apartments (Fig. 214) which line its streets are
+highly ornate in their architecture, but for the most part done in
+stucco, which fails after all to give the aspect of solidity and
+durability which it seeks to counterfeit.
+
+The city of +Buda-Pesth+ has also in recent years undergone a phenomenal
+transformation of a similar nature to that effected in Vienna, but it
+possesses fewer monuments of conspicuous architectural interest. The
++Synagogue+ is the most noted of these, a rich and pleasing edifice of
+brick in a modified Hispano-Moresque style.
+
+
++GREAT BRITAIN.+ During the closing years of the Anglo-Greek
+style a coterie of enthusiastic students of British mediæval
+monuments--archæologists rather than architects--initiated a movement
+for the revival of the national Gothic architecture. The first fruits
+of this movement, led by Pugin, Brandon, Rickman, and others (about
+1830-40), were seen in countless pseudo-Gothic structures in which
+the pointed arches, buttresses, and clustered shafts of mediæval
+architecture were imitated or parodied according to the designer’s
+ability, with frequent misapprehension of their proper use or
+significance. This unintelligent misapplication of Gothic forms was,
+however, confined to the earlier stages of the movement. With increasing
+light and experience came a more correct and consistent use of the
+mediæval styles, dominated by the same spirit of archæological
+correctness which had produced the _classicismo_ of the Late Renaissance
+in Italy. This spirit, stimulated by extensive enterprises in the
+restoration of the great mediæval monuments of the United Kingdom, was
+fatal to any free and original development of the style along new lines.
+But it rescued church architecture from the utter meanness and
+debasement into which it had fallen, and established a standard of taste
+which reacted on all other branches of design.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 215.--HOUSES OF PARLIAMENT, WESTMINSTER,
+ LONDON.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 216.--ASSIZE COURTS, MANCHESTER. DETAIL.]
+
++THE VICTORIAN GOTHIC.+ Between 1850 and 1870 the striving after
+archæological correctness gave place to the more rational effort to
+adapt Gothic principles to modern requirements, instead of merely
+copying extinct styles. This effort, prosecuted by a number of
+architects of great intelligence, culture, and earnestness (Sir Gilbert
+Scott, George Edmund Street, William Burges, and others), resulted in a
+number of extremely interesting buildings. Chief among these in size and
+cost stand the +Parliament Houses+ at Westminster, by _Sir Charles
+Barry_ (begun 1839), in the Perpendicular style. This immense structure
+(Fig. 215), imposing in its simple masses and refined in its carefully
+studied detail, is the most successful monument of the Victorian Gothic
+style. It suffers, however, from the want of proper relation of scale
+between its decorative elements and the vast proportions of the edifice,
+which belittle its component elements. It cannot, on the whole, be
+claimed as a successful vindication of the claims of the promoters of
+the style as to the adaptability of Gothic forms to structures planned
+and built after the modern fashion. The +Assize Courts+ at Manchester
+(Fig. 216), the +New Museum+ at Oxford, the gorgeous +Albert Memorial+
+at London, by _Scott_, and the +New Law Courts+ at London, by _Street_,
+are all conspicuous illustrations of the same truth. They are
+conscientious, carefully studied designs in good taste, and yet wholly
+unsuited in style to their purpose. They are like labored and scholarly
+verse in a foreign tongue, correct in form and language, but lacking the
+naturalness and charm of true and unfettered inspiration. A later essay
+of the same sort in a slightly different field is the +Natural History
+Museum+ at South Kensington, by _Waterhouse_ (1879), an imposing
+building in a modified Romanesque style (Fig. 217).
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 217.--NATURAL HISTORY MUSEUM, LONDON.]
+
+
++OTHER WORKS.+ The Victorian Gothic style responded to no deep and
+general movement of the popular taste, and, like the Anglo-Greek style,
+was doomed to failure from the inherent incongruity between modern needs
+and mediæval forms. Within the last twenty years there has been a quite
+general return to Renaissance principles, and the result is seen in a
+large number of town-halls, exchanges, museums, and colleges, in which
+Renaissance forms, with and without the orders, have been treated with
+increasing freedom and skilful adaptation to the materials and special
+requirements of each case. The Albert Memorial Hall (1863, by General
+Scott) may be taken as an early instance of this movement, and the
++Imperial Institute+ (Colonial offices), by Collcutt, and Oxford Town
+Hall, by Aston Webb, as among its latest manifestations. In domestic
+architecture the so-called Queen Anne style has been much in vogue, as
+practised by Norman Shaw, Ernest George, and others. It is really a
+modern style, originating in the imitation of the modified Palladian
+style as used in the brick architecture of Queen Anne’s time, but freely
+and often artistically altered to meet modern tastes and needs.
+
+In its emancipation from the mistaken principles of archæological
+revivals, and in its evidences of improved taste and awakened
+originality, contemporary British architecture shows promise of good
+things to come. It is still inferior to the French in the monumental
+quality, in technical resource and refinement of decorative detail.
+
+
++ELSEWHERE IN EUROPE.+ In other European countries recent architecture
+shows in general increasing freedom and improved good taste, but both
+its opportunities and its performance have been nowhere else as
+conspicuous as in France, Germany, and England. The costly Bourse and
+the vast but overloaded Palais de Justice at Brussels, by _Polaert_, are
+neither of them conspicuous for refined and cultivated taste. A few
+buildings of note in Switzerland, Russia, and Greece might find mention
+in a more extended review of architecture, but cannot here even be
+enumerated. In Italy, especially at Rome, Milan, Naples, and Turin,
+there has been a great activity in building since 1870, but with the
+exception of the +Monument to Victor Emmanuel+ and the National Museum
+at Rome, monumental arcades and passages at Milan and Naples, and _Campi
+Santi_ or monumental cemeteries at Bologna, Genoa, and one or two other
+places, there has been almost nothing of real importance built in Italy
+of late years.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+ARCHITECTURE IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: As before, Fergusson, Statham. Also, Chandler,
+ _The Colonial Architecture of Maryland, Pennsylvania, and
+ Virginia_. Cleaveland and Campbell, _American Landmarks_. Corner
+ and Soderholz, _Colonial Architecture in New England_. Crane and
+ Soderholz, _Examples of Colonial Architecture in Charleston and
+ Savannah_. Drake, _Historic Fields and Mansions of Middlesex_.
+ Everett, _Historic Churches of America_. King, _Handbook of
+ Boston_; _Handbook of New York_. Little, _Early New England
+ Interiors_. Schuyler, _American Architecture_. Van Rensselaer, _H.
+ H. Richardson and His Works_. Wallis, _Old Colonial Architecture
+ and Furniture_.
+
+
++GENERAL REMARKS.+ The colonial architecture of modern times presents a
+peculiar phenomenon. The colonizing nation, carrying into its new
+_habitat_ the tastes and practices of a long-established civilization,
+modifies these only with the utmost reluctance, under the absolute
+compulsion of new conditions. When the new home is virgin soil,
+destitute of cultivation, government, or civilized inhabitants, the
+accompaniments and activities of civilization introduced by the
+colonists manifest themselves at first in curious contrast to the
+primitive surroundings. The struggle between organized life and chaos,
+the laborious subjugation of nature to the requirements of our complex
+modern life, for a considerable period absorb the energies of the
+colonists. The amenities of culture, the higher intellectual life, the
+refinements of art can, during this period, receive little attention.
+Meanwhile a new national character is being formed; the people are
+undergoing the moral training upon which their subsequent achievements
+must depend. With the conquest of brute nature, however, and the gradual
+emergence of a more cultivated class, with the growth of commerce and
+wealth and the consequent increase of leisure, the humanities find more
+place in the colonial life. The fine arts appear in scattered centres
+determined by peculiarly favorable conditions. For a long time they
+retain the impress, and seek to reproduce the forms, of the art of the
+mother country. But new conditions impose a new development. Maturing
+commerce with other lands brings in foreign influences, to which the
+still unformed colonial art is peculiarly susceptible. Only with
+political and commercial independence, fully developed internal
+resources, and a high national culture do the arts finally attain, as it
+were, their majority, and enter upon a truly national growth.
+
+These facts are abundantly illustrated by the architectural history of
+the United States. The only one among the British colonies to attain
+political independence, it is the only one among them whose architecture
+has as yet entered upon an independent course of development, and this
+only within the last twenty-five or thirty years. Nor has even this
+development produced as yet a distinctive local style. It has, however,
+originated new constructive methods, new types of buildings, and a
+distinctively American treatment of the composition and the masses; the
+decorative details being still, for the most part, derived from historic
+precedents. The architecture of the other British colonies has retained
+its provincial character, though producing from time to time individual
+works of merit. In South America and Mexico the only buildings of
+importance are Spanish, French, or German in style, according to the
+nationality of the architects employed. The following sketch of American
+architecture refers, therefore, exclusively to its development in the
+United States.
+
+
++FORMATIVE PERIOD.+ Buildings in stone were not undertaken by the early
+English colonists. The more important structures in the Southern and
+Dutch colonies were of brick imported from Europe. Wood was, however,
+the material most commonly employed, especially in New England, and its
+use determined in large measure the form and style of the colonial
+architecture. There was little or no striving for architectural elegance
+until well into the eighteenth century, when Wren’s influence asserted
+itself in a modest way in the Middle and Southern colonies. The very
+simple and unpretentious town-hall at Williamsburg, Va., and St.
+Michael’s, Charleston, are attributed to him; but the most that can be
+said for these, as for the brick churches and manors of Virginia
+previous to 1725, is that they are simple in design and pleasing in
+proportion, without special architectural elegance. The same is true of
+the wooden houses and churches of New England of the period, except that
+they are even simpler in design.
+
+From 1725 to 1775 increased population and wealth along the coast
+brought about a great advance in architecture, especially in churches
+and in the dwellings of the wealthy. During this period was developed
+the _Colonial style_, based on that of the reigns of Anne and the first
+two Georges in England, and in church architecture on the models set by
+Wren and Gibbs. All the details were, however, freely modified by the
+general employment of wood. The scarcity of architects trained in Old
+World traditions contributed to this departure from classic precision of
+form. The style, especially in interior design, reflected the cultured
+taste of the colonial aristocracy in its refined treatment of the
+woodwork. But there was little or no architecture of a truly monumental
+character. Edifices of stone were singularly few, and administrative
+buildings were small and modest, owing to insufficient grants from the
+Crown, as well as to the poverty of the colonies.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 218.--CHRIST CHURCH, PHILADELPHIA.]
+
+The churches of this period include a number of interesting designs,
+especially pleasing in the forms of their steeples. The “+Old South+” at
+Boston (now a museum), Trinity at Newport, and +St. Paul’s+ at New
+York--one of the few built of stone (1764)--are good examples of the
+style. +Christ Church+ at Philadelphia (1727-35, by Dr. Kearsley) is
+another example, historically as well as architecturally interesting
+(Fig. 218); and there are scores of other churches almost equally
+noteworthy, scattered through New England, Maryland, Virginia, and the
+Middle States.
+
+
++DWELLINGS.+ These reflect better than the churches the varying tastes
+of the different colonies. Maryland and Virginia abound in fine brick
+manor-houses, set amid extensive grounds walled in and entered through
+iron gates of artistic design. The interior finish of these houses was
+often elaborate in conception and admirably executed. Westover (1737),
+Carter’s Grove (1737) in Virginia, and the Harwood and Hammond Houses at
+Annapolis, Md. (1770), are examples. The majority of the New England
+houses were of wood, more compact in plan, more varied and picturesque
+in design than those of the South, but wanting somewhat of their
+stateliness. The interior finish of wainscot, cornices, stairs, and
+mantelpieces shows, however, the same general style, in a skilful and
+artistic adaptation of classic forms to the slender proportions of wood
+construction. Externally the orders appear in porches and in colossal
+pilasters, with well designed entablatures, and windows of Italian
+model. The influence of the Adams and Sheraton furniture is doubtless to
+be seen in these quaint and often charming versions of classic motives.
+The Hancock House, Boston (of stone, demolished); the Sherburne House,
+Portsmouth (1730); Craigie House, Cambridge (1757, Fig. 219); and
+Rumford House, North Woburn (Mass.), are typical examples.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 219.--CRAIGIE (LONGFELLOW) HOUSE, CAMBRIDGE.]
+
+In the Middle States architectural activity was chiefly centred in
+Philadelphia and New York, and one or two other towns, where a number of
+manor-houses, still extant, attest the wealth and taste of the time. It
+is noticeable that the veranda or piazza was confined to the Southern
+States, but that the climate seems to have had little influence on the
+forms of roofs. These were gambrelled, hipped, gabled, or flat, alike in
+the North and South, according to individual taste.
+
+
++PUBLIC BUILDINGS.+ Of public and monumental architecture this period
+has little to show. Large cities did not exist; New York, Boston, and
+Philadelphia were hardly more than overgrown villages. The public
+buildings--court-houses and town-halls--were modest and inexpensive
+structures. The Old State House and Faneuil Hall at Boston, the Town
+Hall at Newport (R.I.), and Independence Hall at Philadelphia, the best
+known of those now extant, are not striking architecturally. Monumental
+design was beyond the opportunities and means of the colonies. It was in
+their churches, all of moderate size, and in their dwellings that the
+colonial builders achieved their greatest successes; and these works are
+quaint, charming, and refined, rather than impressive or imposing.
+
+To the latter part of the colonial period belong a number of interesting
+buildings which remain as monuments of Spanish rule in California,
+Florida, and the Southwest. The old Fort S. Marco, now Fort Marion
+(1656-1756), and the Catholic cathedral (1793; after the fire of 1887
+rebuilt in its original form with the original façade uninjured), both
+at St. Augustine, Fla.; the picturesque buildings of the California
+missions (mainly 1769-1800), the majority of them now in ruins;
+scattered Spanish churches in California, Arizona, and New Mexico, and a
+few unimportant secular buildings, display among their modern and
+American settings a picturesque and interesting Spanish aspect and
+character, though from the point of view of architectural detail they
+represent merely a crude phase of the Churrigueresque style.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 220.--NATIONAL CAPITOL, WASHINGTON.]
+
++EARLY REPUBLICAN PERIOD.+ Between the Revolution and the War of 1812,
+under the new conditions of independence and self-government,
+architecture took on a more monumental character. Buildings for the
+State and National administrations were erected with the rapidly
+increasing resources of the country. Stone was more generally used;
+colonnades, domes, and cupolas or bell-towers, were adopted as
+indispensable features of civic architecture. In church-building the
+Wren-Gibbs type continued to prevail, but with greater correctness of
+classic forms. The gambrel roof tended to disappear from the houses of
+this period, and there was some decline in the refinement and delicacy
+of the details of architecture. The influence of the Louis XVI. style is
+traceable in many cases, as in the New York City Hall (1803-12, by
+_McComb_ and _Mangin_), one of the very best designs of the time, and in
+the delicate stucco-work and interior finish of many houses, The
+original +Capitol+ at Washington--the central portion of the present
+edifice--by _Thornton_, _Hallet_, and _B. H. Latrobe_ (1793-1830; Fig.
+220), the +State House+ at Boston (1795, by _Bulfinch_), and the
+University of Virginia, at Charlotteville, by _Thomas Jefferson_ (1817;
+recently destroyed in part by fire), are the most interesting examples
+of the classic tendencies of this period. Their freedom from the rococo
+vulgarities generally prevalent at the time in Europe is noticeable.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 221.--CUSTOM HOUSE, NEW YORK.]
+
++THE CLASSIC REVIVAL.+ The influence of the classic revivals of Europe
+began to appear before the close of this period, and reached its
+culmination about 1830-40. It left its impress most strongly on our
+Federal architecture, although it invaded domestic architecture,
+producing countless imitations, in brick and wooden houses, of Grecian
+colonnades and porticos. One of its first-fruits was the White House, or
+Executive Mansion, at Washington, by _Hoban_ (1792), recalling the large
+English country houses of the time. The +Treasury+ and +Patent Office+
+buildings at Washington, the Philadelphia Mint, the +Sub-treasury+ and
++Custom House+ at New York (the latter erected originally for a bank;
+Fig. 221), and the +Boston Custom House+ are among the important Federal
+buildings of this period. Several State capitols were also erected under
+the same influence; and the Marine Exchange and +Girard College+ at
+Philadelphia should also be mentioned as conspicuous examples of the
+pseudo-Greek style. The last-named building is a Corinthian dormitory,
+its tiers of small windows contrasting strangely with its white marble
+columns. These classic buildings were solidly and carefully constructed,
+but lacked the grace, cheerfulness, and appropriateness of earlier
+buildings. The Capitol at Washington was during this period greatly
+enlarged by terminal wings with fine Corinthian porticos, of Roman
+rather than Greek design. The +Dome+, by _Walters_, was not added until
+1858-73; it is a successful and harmonious composition, nobly completing
+the building. Unfortunately, it is an afterthought, built of iron
+painted to simulate marble, the substructure being inadequate to support
+a dome of masonry. The Italian or Roman style which it exemplified, in
+time superseded the less tractable Greek style.
+
+
++THE WAR PERIOD.+ The period from 1850 to 1876 was one of intense
+political activity and rapid industrial progress. The former culminated
+in the terrible upheaval of the civil war; the latter in the completion
+of the Pacific Railroad (1869) and a remarkable development of the
+mining resources and manufactures of the country. It was a period of
+feverish commercial activity, but of artistic stagnation, and witnessed
+the erection of but few buildings of architectural importance. A number
+of State capitols, city halls and churches, of considerable size and
+cost but of inferior design, attest the decline of public taste and
+architectural skill during these years. The huge Municipal Building at
+Philadelphia and the still unfinished Capitol at Albany are full of
+errors of planning and detail which twenty-five years of elaboration
+have failed to correct. Next to the dome of the Capitol at Washington,
+completed during this period, of which it is the most signal
+architectural achievement, its most notable monument was the +St.
+Patrick’s Cathedral+ at New York, by _Renwick_; a Gothic church which,
+if somewhat cold and mechanical in detail, is a stately and
+well-considered design. Its west front and spires (completed 1886) are
+particularly successful. Trinity Church (1843, by _Upjohn_) and Grace
+Church (1840, by Renwick), though of earlier date, should be classed
+with this cathedral as worthy examples of modern Gothic design. Indeed,
+the churches designed in this style by a few thoroughly trained
+architects during this period are the most creditable and worthy among
+its lesser productions. In general an undiscriminating eclecticism of
+style prevailed, unregulated by sober taste or technical training. The
+Federal buildings by _Mullett_ were monuments of perverted design in a
+heavy and inartistic rendering of French Renaissance motives. The New
+York Post Office and the State, Army and Navy Department building at
+Washington are examples of this style.
+
+
++THE ARTISTIC AWAKENING.+ Between 1870 and 1880 a remarkable series of
+events exercised a powerful influence on the artistic life of the United
+States. Two terrible conflagrations in Chicago (1871) and Boston (1872)
+gave unexampled opportunities for architectural improvement and greatly
+stimulated the public interest in the art. The feverish and abnormal
+industrial activity which followed the war and the rapid growth of the
+parvenu spirit were checked by the disastrous “panic” of 1873. With the
+completion of the Pacific railways and the settlement of new communities
+in the West, industrial prosperity, when it returned, was established on
+a firmer basis. An extraordinary expansion of travel to Europe began to
+disseminate the seeds of artistic culture throughout the country. The
+successful establishment of schools of architecture in Boston (1866) and
+other cities, and the opening or enlargement of art museums in New York,
+Boston, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Detroit, Milwaukee, and elsewhere,
+stimulated the artistic awakening which now manifested itself. In
+architecture the personal influence of two men, trained in the Paris
+École des Beaux-Arts, was especially felt--of _R. M. Hunt_ (1827-95)
+through his words and deeds quite as much as through his works; and of
+_H. H. Richardson_ (1828-86) predominantly through his works. These two
+men, with others of less fame but of high ideals and thorough culture,
+did much to elevate architecture as an art in the public esteem. To all
+these influences new force was added by the Centennial Exhibition at
+Philadelphia (1876). Here for the first time the American people were
+brought into contact, in their own land, with the products of European
+and Oriental art. It was to them an artistic revelation, whose results
+were prompt and far-reaching. Beginning first in the domain of
+industrial and decorative art, its stimulating influence rapidly
+extended to painting and architecture, and with permanent consequences.
+American students began to throng the centres of Old World art, while
+the setting of higher standards of artistic excellence at home, and the
+development of important art-industries, were other fruits of this
+artistic awakening. The recent Columbian Exhibition at Chicago (1893),
+its latest and most important manifestation, has added a new impulse to
+the movement, especially in architecture.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 222.--TRINITY CHURCH, BOSTON.]
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 223.--LIBRARY AT WOBURN, MASS.]
+
++STYLE IN RECENT ARCHITECTURE.+ The rapid increase in the number of
+American architects trained in Paris or under the indirect influence of
+the École des Beaux-Arts has been an important factor in recent
+architectural progress. Yet it has by no means imposed the French
+academic formulæ upon American architecture. The conditions, materials,
+and constructive processes here prevailing, and above all the
+eclecticism of the public taste, have prevented this. The French
+influence is perceived rather in a growing appreciation of monumental
+design in the planning, composition, and setting of buildings, than in
+any direct imitation of French models. The Gothic revival which
+prevailed more or less widely from 1840 to 1875, as already noticed, and
+of which the +State Capitol+ at Hartford (Conn.; 1875-78), and the +Fine
+Arts Museum+ at Boston, were among the last important products, was
+generally confined to church architecture, for which Gothic forms are
+still largely employed, as in the Protestant +Cathedral+ of +All Saints+
+now building at Albany (N.Y.), by an English architect. For the most
+part the works of the last twenty years show a more or less judicious
+eclecticism, the choice of style being determined partly by the person
+and training of the designer, partly by the nature of the building. The
+powerfully conceived works of Richardson, in a free version of the
+French Romanesque, for a time exercised a wide influence, especially
+among the younger architects. +Trinity Church+, Boston (Fig. 222), his
+earliest important work; many public libraries and business buildings,
+and finally the impressive +County Buildings+ at Pittsburgh (Pa.), all
+treated in this style, are admirable rather for the strong individuality
+of their designer, displayed in their vigorous composition, than on
+account of the historic style he employed (Fig. 223). Yet it appeared in
+his hands so flexible and effective that it was widely imitated. But if
+easy to use, it is most difficult to use well; its forms are too massive
+for ordinary purposes, and in the hands of inferior designers it was so
+often travestied that it has now lost its wide popularity. While a
+number of able architects have continued to use it effectively in
+ecclesiastical, civic, and even commercial architecture, it is being
+generally superseded by various forms of the Renaissance. Here also a
+wide eclecticism prevails, the works of the same architect often varying
+from the gayest Francis I. designs in domestic architecture, or free
+adaptations of Quattrocento details for theatres and street
+architecture, to the most formal classicism in colossal
+exhibition-buildings, museums, libraries, and the like. Meanwhile there
+are many more or less successful ventures in other historic styles
+applied to public and private edifices. Underlying this apparent
+confusion, almost anarchy in the use of historic styles, the careful
+observer may detect certain tendencies crystallizing into definite form.
+New materials and methods of construction, increased attention to
+detail, a growing sense of monumental requirements, even the development
+of the elevator as a substitute for the grand staircase, are leaving
+their mark on the planning, the proportions, and the artistic
+composition of American buildings, irrespective of the styles used. The
+art is with us in a state of transition, and open to criticism in many
+respects; but it appears to be full of life and promise for the future.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 224.--“TIMES” BUILDING, NEW YORK.]
+
++COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS.+ This class of edifices has in our great cities
+developed wholly new types, which have taken shape under four imperative
+influences. These are the demand for fire-proof construction, the demand
+for well-lighted offices, the introduction of elevators, and the
+concentration of business into limited areas, within which land has
+become inordinately costly. These causes have led to the erection of
+buildings of excessive height (Fig. 224); the more recent among them
+constructed with a framework of iron or steel columns and beams, the
+visible walls being a mere filling-in. To render a building of twenty
+stories attractive to the eye, especially when built on an irregular
+site, is a difficult problem, of which a wholly satisfactory solution
+has yet to be found. There have been, however, some notable achievements
+in this line, in most of which the principle has been clearly recognized
+that a lofty building should have a well-marked basement or pedestal and
+a somewhat ornate crowning portion or capital, the intervening stories
+serving as a die or shaft and being treated with comparative simplicity.
+The difficulties of scale and of handling one hundred and fifty to three
+hundred windows of uniform style have been surmounted with conspicuous
+skill (+American Surety Building+ and Broadway Chambers, New York; Ames
+Building, Boston; Carnegie Building, Pittsburgh; Union Trust, St.
+Louis). In some cases, especially in Chicago and the Middle West, the
+metallic framework is suggested by slender piers between the windows,
+rising uninterrupted from the basement to the top story. In others,
+especially in New York and the East, the walls are treated as in
+ordinary masonry buildings. The Chicago school is marked by a more
+utilitarian and unconventional treatment, with results which are often
+extremely bold and effective, but rarely as pleasing to the eye as those
+attained by the more conservative Eastern school. In the details of
+American office-buildings every variety of style is to be met with; but
+the Romanesque and the Renaissance, freely modified, predominate. The
+tendency towards two or three well-marked types in the external
+composition of these buildings, as above suggested, promises, however,
+the evolution of a style in which the historic origin of the details
+will be a secondary matter. Certain Chicago architects have developed an
+original treatment of architectural forms by exaggerating some of the
+structural lines, by suppressing the mouldings and more familiar
+historic forms, and by the free use of flat surface ornament. The
+Schiller, Auditorium, and Fisher Buildings, all at Chicago, Guaranty
+Building, Buffalo, and Majestic Building, Detroit, are examples of this
+personal style, which illustrates the untrammelled freedom of the art in
+a land without traditions.[27]
+
+ [Footnote 27: See Appendix, D and E.]
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 225.--COUNTRY HOUSE, MASSACHUSETTS.]
+
++DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE.+ It is in this field that the most
+characteristic and original phases of American architecture are to be
+met with, particularly in rural and suburban residences. In these the
+peculiar requirements of our varying climates and of American domestic
+life have been studied and in large measure met with great frankness and
+artistic appreciation. The broad staircase-hall, serving often as a sort
+of family sitting-room, the piazza, and a picturesque massing of steep
+roofs, have been the controlling factors in the evolution of two or
+three general types which appear in infinite variations. The material
+most used is wood, but this has had less influence in the determination
+of form than might have been expected. The artlessness of the planning,
+which is arranged to afford the maximum of convenience rather than to
+conform to any traditional type, has been the element of greatest
+artistic success. It has resulted in exteriors which are the natural
+outgrowth of the interior arrangements, frankly expressed, without
+affectation of style (Fig. 225). The resulting picturesqueness has,
+however, in many cases been treated as an end instead of an incidental
+result, and the affectation of picturesqueness has in such designs
+become as detrimental as any affectation of style. In the internal
+treatment of American houses there has also been a notable artistic
+advance, harmony of color and domestic comfort and luxury being sought
+after rather than monumental effects. A number of large city and country
+houses designed on a palatial scale have, however, given opportunity for
+a more elaborate architecture; notably the Vanderbilt, Villard, and
+Huntington residences at New York, the great country-seat of +Biltmore+,
+near Asheville (N.C.), in the Francis I. style (by R. M. Hunt), and many
+others.
+
+
++OTHER BUILDINGS.+ American architects have generally been less
+successful in public, administrative, and ecclesiastical architecture
+than in commercial and domestic work. The preference for small parish
+churches, treated as audience-rooms rather than as places of worship,
+has interfered with the development of noble types of church-buildings.
+Yet there are signs of improvement; and the new +Cathedral+ of +St. John
+the Divine+ at New York, in a modified Romanesque style, promises to be
+a worthy and monumental building. In semi-public architecture, such as
+hotels, theatres, clubs, and libraries, there are many notable examples
+of successful design. The +Ponce de Leon Hotel+ at St. Augustine,
+a sumptuous and imposing pile in a free version of the Spanish
+Plateresco; the Auditorium Theatre at Chicago, the Madison Square Garden
+and the Casino at New York, may be cited as excellent in general
+conception and well carried out in detail, externally and internally.
+The Century and Metropolitan Clubs at New York, the +Boston Public
+Library+, the Carnegie Library at Pittsburgh, the +Congressional
+Library+ at Washington, and the recently completed Minnesota +State
+Capitol+ at St. Paul, exemplify in varying degrees of excellence the
+increasing capacity of American architects for monumental design. This
+was further shown in the buildings of the +Columbian Exposition+ at
+Chicago in 1893. These, in spite of many faults of detail, constituted
+an aggregate of architectural splendor such as had never before been
+seen or been possible on this side the Atlantic. They further brought
+architecture into closer union with the allied arts and formed an object
+lesson in the value of appropriate landscape gardening as a setting to
+monumental structures.
+
+It should be said, in conclusion, that with the advances of recent years
+in artistic design in the United States there has been at least as great
+improvement in scientific construction. The sham and flimsiness of the
+Civil War period are passing away, and solid and durable building is
+becoming more general throughout the country, but especially in the
+Northeast and in some of the great Western cities, notably in Chicago.
+In this onward movement the Federal buildings--post-offices,
+custom-houses, and other governmental edifices--have not, till lately,
+taken high rank. Although solidly and carefully constructed, those built
+during the period 1875-1895 were generally inferior to the best work
+produced by private enterprise, or by State and municipal governments.
+This was in large part due to enactments devolving upon the supervising
+architect at Washington the planning of all Federal buildings, as well
+as a burden of supervisory and clerical duties incompatible with the
+highest artistic results. Since 1898, however, a more enlightened policy
+has prevailed, and a number of notable designs for Federal buildings
+have been secured by carefully-conducted competitions.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+ORIENTAL ARCHITECTURE.
+
+INDIA, CHINA, AND JAPAN.
+
+
+ BOOKS RECOMMENDED: Cole, _Monographs of Ancient Monuments of
+ India_. Conder, _Notes on Japanese Architecture_ (in Transactions
+ of R.I.B.A., for 1886). Cunningham, _Archæological Survey of
+ India_. Fergusson, _Indian and Eastern Architecture_; _Picturesque
+ Illustrations of Indian Architecture_. Le Bon, _Les Monuments de
+ l’Inde_. Morse, _Japanese Houses_. Stirling, _Asiatic Researches_.
+ Consult also the _Journal_ and the _Transactions_ of the Royal
+ Asiatic Society.
+
+
++INTRODUCTORY NOTE.+ The architecture of the non-Moslem countries and
+races of Asia has been reserved for this closing chapter, in order not
+to interrupt the continuity of the history of European styles, with
+which it has no affinity and scarcely even a point of contact. Among
+them all, India alone has produced monuments of great architectural
+importance. The buildings of China and Japan, although interesting for
+their style, methods, and detail, and so deserving at least of brief
+mention, are for the most part of moderate size and of perishable
+materials. Outside of these three countries there is little to interest
+the general student of architecture.
+
+
++INDIA: PERIODS.+ It is difficult to classify the non-Mohammedan styles
+of India, owing to their frequently overlapping, both geographically and
+artistically; while the lack of precise dates in Indian literature makes
+the chronology of many of the monuments more or less doubtful. The
+divisions given below are a modification of those first established by
+Fergusson, and are primarily based on the three great religions, with
+geographical subdivisions, as follows:
+
+THE BUDDHIST STYLE, from the reign of Asoka, _cir._ 250 B.C., to the 7th
+century A.D. Its monuments occupy mainly a broad band running northeast
+and southwest, between the Indian Desert and the Dekkan. Offshoots of
+the style are found as far north as Gandhara, and as far south as
+Ceylon.
+
+THE JAINA STYLE, akin to the preceding if not derived from it, covering
+the same territory as well as southern India; from 1000 A.D. to the
+present time.
+
+THE BRAHMAN or HINDU STYLES, extending over the whole peninsula. They
+are sub-divided geographically into the NORTHERN BRAHMAN, the CHALUKYAN
+in the Dekkan, and the DRAVIDIAN in the south; this last style being
+coterminous with the populations speaking the Tamil and cognate
+languages. The monuments of these styles are mainly subsequent to the
+10th century, though a few date as far back as the 7th.
+
+The great majority of Indian monuments are religious--temples, shrines,
+and monasteries. Secular buildings do not appear until after the Moslem
+conquests, and most of them are quite modern.
+
+
++GENERAL CHARACTER.+ All these styles possess certain traits in common.
+While stone and brick are both used, sandstone predominating, the
+details are in large measure derived from wooden prototypes. Structural
+lines are not followed in the exterior treatment, purely decorative
+considerations prevailing. Ornament is equally lavished on all parts of
+the building, and is bewildering in its amount and complexity. Realistic
+and grotesque sculpture is freely used, forming multiplied horizontal
+bands of extraordinary richness and minuteness of execution. Spacious
+and lofty interiors are rarely attempted, but wonderful effects are
+produced by seemingly endless repetition of columns in halls, and
+corridors, and by external emphasis of important parts of the plan by
+lofty tower-like piles of masonry.
+
+The source of the various Indian styles, the origin of the forms used,
+the history of their development, are all wrapped in obscurity. All the
+monuments show a fully developed style and great command of technical
+resources from the outset. When, where, and how these were attained is
+as yet an unsolved mystery. In all its phases previous to the Moslem
+conquest Indian architecture appears like an indigenous art, borrowing
+little from foreign styles, and having no affinities with the arts of
+Occidental nations.
+
+
++BUDDHIST STYLE.+ Although Buddhism originated in the sixth century
+B.C., the earliest architectural remains of the style date from its wide
+promulgation in India under Asoka (272-236 B.C.). Buddhist monuments
+comprise three chief classes of structures: the _stupas_ or _topes_,
+which are mounds more or less domical in shape, enclosing relic-shrines
+of Buddha, or built to mark some sacred spot; _chaityas_, or temple
+halls, cut in the rock; and _viharas_, or monasteries. The style of the
+detail varies considerably in these three classes, but is in general
+simpler and more massive than in the other styles of India.
+
+
++TOPES.+ These are found in groups, of which the most important are at
+or near Bhilsa in central India, at Manikyala in the northwest, at
+Amravati in the south, and in Ceylon at Ruanwalli and Tuparamaya. The
+best known among them is the +Sanchi Tope+, near Bhilsa, 120 feet in
+diameter and 56 feet high. It is surrounded by a richly carved stone
+rail or fence, with gateways of elaborate workmanship, having three
+sculptured lintels crossing the carved uprights. The tope at Manikyala
+is larger, and dates from the 7th century. It is exceeded in size by
+many in Ceylon, that at Abayagiri measuring 360 feet in diameter. Few of
+the topes retain the _tee_, or model of a shrine, which, like a lantern,
+once crowned each of them.
+
+Besides the topes there are a few stupas of tower-like form, square in
+plan, of which the most famous is that at +Buddh Gaya+, near the sacred
+Bodhi tree, where Buddha attained divine light in 588 B.C.
+
+
++CHAITYA HALLS.+ The Buddhist speos-temples--so far as known the only
+extant halls of worship of that religion, except one at Sanchi--are
+mostly in the Bombay Presidency, at Ellora, Karli, Ajunta, Nassick, and
+Bhaja. The earliest, that at Karli, dates from 78 B.C., the latest (at
+Ellora), _cir._ 600 A.D. They consist uniformly of a broad nave ending
+in an apse, and covered by a roof like a barrel vault, and two narrow
+side aisles. In the apse is the _dagoba_ or relic-shrine, shaped like a
+miniature tope. The front of the cave was originally adorned with an
+open-work screen or frame of wood, while the face of the rock about the
+opening was carved into the semblance of a sumptuous structural façade.
+Among the finest of these caverns is that at +Karli+, whose massive
+columns and impressive scale recall Egyptian models, though the
+resemblance is superficial and has no historic significance. More
+suggestive is the affinity of many of the columns which stand before
+these caves to Persian prototypes (see Fig. 21). It is not improbable
+that both Persian and classic forms were introduced into India through
+the Bactrian kingdom 250 years B.C. Otherwise we must seek for the
+origin of nearly all Buddhist forms in a pre-existing wooden
+architecture, now wholly perished, though its traditions may survive in
+the wooden screens in the fronts of the caves. While some of these
+caverns are extremely simple, as at Bhaja, others, especially at
++Nassick+ and +Ajunta+, are of great splendor and complexity.
+
+
++VIHARAS.+ Except at Gandhara in the Punjab, the structural monasteries
+of the Buddhists were probably all of wood and have long ago perished.
+The Gandhara monasteries of Jamalgiri and Takht-i-Bahi present in plan
+three or four courts surrounded by cells. The centre of one court is in
+both cases occupied by a platform for an altar or shrine. Among the
+ruins there have been found a number of capitals whose strong
+resemblance to the Corinthian type is now generally attributed to
+Byzantine rather than Bactrian influences. These viharas may therefore
+be assigned to the 6th or 7th century A.D.
+
+The rock-cut viharas are found in the neighborhood of the chaityas
+already described. Architecturally, they are far more elaborate than the
+chaityas. Those at Salsette, Ajunta, and Bagh are particularly
+interesting, with pillared halls or courts, cells, corridors, and
+shrines. The hall of the +Great Vihara+ at +Bagh+ is 96 feet square,
+with 36 columns. Adjoining it is the school-room, and the whole is
+fronted by a sumptuous rock-cut colonnade 200 feet long. These caves
+were mostly hewn between the 5th and 7th centuries, at which time
+sculpture was more prevalent in Buddhist works than previously, and some
+of them are richly adorned with figures.
+
+
++JAINA STYLE.+ The religion and the architecture of the Jainas so
+closely resemble those of the Buddhists, that recent authorities are
+disposed to treat the Jaina style as a mere variation or continuation of
+the Buddhist. Chronologically they are separated by an interval of some
+three centuries, _cir._ 650-950 A.D., which have left us almost no
+monuments of either style. The Jaina is moreover easily distinguished
+from the Buddhist architecture by the great number and elaborateness of
+its structural monuments. The multiplication of statues of Tirthankhar
+in the cells about the temple courts, the exuberance of sculpture, the
+use of domes built in horizontal courses, and the imitation in stone of
+wooden braces or struts are among its distinguishing features.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 226.--PORCH OF TEMPLE ON MOUNT ABU.]
+
++JAINA TEMPLES.+ The earliest examples are on +Mount Abu+ in the Indian
+Desert. Built by Vimalah Sah in 1032, the chief of these consists of a
+court measuring 140 × 90 feet, surrounded by cells and a double
+colonnade. In the centre rises the shrine of the god, containing his
+statue, and terminating in a lofty tower or _sikhra_. An imposing
+columnar porch, cruciform in plan, precedes this cell (Fig. 226). The
+intersection of the arms is covered by a dome supported on eight columns
+with stone brackets or struts. The dome and columns are covered with
+profuse carving and sculptured figures, and the total effect is one of
+remarkable dignity and splendor. The temple of +Sadri+ is much more
+extensive, twenty minor domes and one of larger size forming cruciform
+porches on all four sides of the central _sikhra_. The cells about the
+court are each covered by a small _sikhra_, and these, with the
+twenty-one domes (four of which are built in three stories), all grouped
+about the central tower and adorned with an astonishing variety of
+detail, constitute a monument of the first importance. It was built by
+Khumbo Rana, about 1450. At +Girnar+ are several 12th-century temples
+with enclosed instead of open vestibules. One of these, that of
++Neminatha+, retains intact its court enclosure and cells, which in most
+other cases have perished. The temple at +Somnath+ resembles it, but is
+larger; the dome of its porch, 33 feet in diameter, is the largest Jaina
+dome in India. Other notable temples are at Gwalior, Khajuraho, and
+Parasnatha.
+
+In all the Jaina temples the salient feature is the sikhra or _vimana_.
+This is a tower of approximately square plan, tapering by a graceful
+curve toward a peculiar terminal ornament shaped like a flattened melon.
+Its whole surface is variegated by horizontal bands and vertical breaks,
+covered with sculpture and carving. Next in importance are the domes,
+built wholly in horizontal courses and resting on stone lintels carried
+by bracketed columns. These same traits appear in relatively modern
+examples, as at Delhi.
+
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 227.--TOWER OF VICTORY, CHITTORE.]
+
++TOWERS.+ A similar predilection for minutely broken surfaces marks the
+towers which sometimes adjoin the temples, as at Chittore (tower of +Sri
+Allat+, 13th century), or were erected as trophies of victory, like that
+of +Khumbo Rana+ in the same town (Fig. 227). The combination of
+horizontal and vertical lines, the distribution of the openings, and the
+rich ornamentation of these towers are very interesting, though lacking
+somewhat in structural propriety of design.
+
+
++HINDU STYLES: NORTHERN BRAHMAN.+ The origin of this style is as yet an
+unsolved problem. Its monuments were mainly built between 600 and 1200
+A.D., the oldest being in Orissa, at Bhuwanesevar, Kanaruk, and Puri. In
+northern India the temples are about equally divided between the two
+forms of Brahmanism--the worship of Vishnu or _Vaishnavism_, and that of
+Siva or _Shaivism_--and do not differ materially in style. As in the
+Jaina style, the _vimana_ is their most striking feature, and this is in
+most cases adorned with numerous reduced copies of its own form grouped
+in successive stages against its sides and angles. This curious system
+of design appears in nearly all the great temples, both of Vishnu and
+Siva. The Jaina melon ornament is universal, surmounted generally by an
+urn-shaped finial.
+
+In plan the vimana shrine is preceded by two or three chambers, square
+or polygonal, some with and some without columns. The foremost of these
+is covered by a roof formed like a stepped pyramid set cornerwise. The
+fine porch of the ruined temple at +Bindrabun+ is cruciform in plan and
+forms the chief part of the building, the shrine at the further end
+being relatively small and its tower unfinished or ruined. In some
+modern examples the antechamber is replaced by an open porch with a
+Saracenic dome, as at Benares; in others the old type is completely
+abandoned, as in the temple at +Kantonnuggur+ (1704-22). This is a
+square hall built of terra-cotta, with four three-arched porches and
+nine towers, more Saracenic than Brahman in general aspect.
+
+The +Kandarya Mahadeo+, at Khajuraho, is the most noted example of the
+northern Brahman style, and one of the most splendid structures extant.
+A strong and lofty basement supports an extraordinary mass of roofs,
+covering the six open porches and the antechamber and hypostyle hall,
+which precede the shrine, and rising in successive pyramidal masses
+until the vimana is reached which covers the shrine. This is 116 feet
+high, but seems much loftier, by reason of the small scale of its
+constituent parts and the marvellously minute decoration which covers
+the whole structure. The vigor of its masses and the grand stairways
+which lead up to it give it a dignity unusual for its size, 60 × 109
+feet in plan (_cir._ 1000 A.D.).
+
+At Puri, in Orissa, the +Temple+ of +Jugganat+, with its double
+enclosure and numerous subordinate shrines, the Teli-ka-Mandir at
+Gwalior, and temples at +Udaipur+ near Bhilsa, at +Mukteswara+ in
+Orissa, at Chittore, Benares, and Barolli, are important examples. The
+few tombs erected subsequent to the Moslem conquest, combining Jaina
+bracket columns with Saracenic domes, and picturesquely situated palaces
+at Chittore (1450), Oudeypore (1580), and Gwalior, should also be
+mentioned.
+
+
++CHALUKYAN STYLE.+ Throughout a central zone crossing the peninsula from
+sea to sea about the Dekkan, and extending south to Mysore on the west,
+the Brahmans developed a distinct style during the later centuries of
+the Chalukyan dynasty. Its monuments are mainly comprised between 1050
+and the Mohammedan conquest in 1310. The most notable examples of the
+style are found along the southwest coast, at Hullabid, Baillur, and
+Somnathpur.
+
+
++TEMPLES.+ Chalukyan architecture is exclusively religious and its
+temples are easily recognized. The plans comprise the same elements as
+those of the Jainas, but the Chalukyan shrine is always star-shaped
+externally in plan, and the vimana takes the form of a stepped pyramid
+instead of a curved outline. The Jaina dome is, moreover, wholly
+wanting. All the details are of extraordinary richness and beauty, and
+the breaking up of the surfaces by rectangular projections is skilfully
+managed so as to produce an effect of great apparent size with very
+moderate dimensions. All the known examples stand on raised platforms,
+adding materially to their dignity. Some are double temples, as at
+Hullabid (Fig. 228); others are triple in plan. A noticeable feature of
+the style is the deeply cut stratification of the lower part of the
+temples, each band or stratum bearing a distinct frieze of animals,
+figures or ornament, carved with masterly skill. Pierced stone slabs
+filling the window openings are also not uncommon.
+
+The richest exemplars of the style are the temples at +Baillur+ and
+Somnathpur, and at Hullabîd the +Kait Iswara+ and the incomplete +Double
+Temple+. The Kurti Stambha, or gate at Worangul, and the Great Temple at
++Hamoncondah+ should also be mentioned.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 228.--TEMPLE AT HULLABÎD. DETAIL.]
+
+
++DRAVIDIAN STYLE.+ The Brahman monuments of southern India exhibit a
+style almost as strongly marked as the Chalukyan. This appears less in
+their details than in their general plan and conception. The Dravidian
+temples are not single structures, but aggregations of buildings of
+varied size and form, covering extensive areas enclosed by walls and
+entered through gates made imposing by lofty pylons called _gopuras_. As
+if to emphasize these superficial resemblances to Egyptian models, the
+sanctuary is often low and insignificant. It is preceded by much more
+imposing porches (_mantapas_) and hypostyle halls or _choultries_, the
+latter being sometimes of extraordinary extent, though seldom lofty. The
+choultrie, sometimes called the Hall of 1,000 Columns, is in some cases
+replaced by pillared corridors of great length and splendor, as at
++Ramisseram+ and +Madura.+ The plans are in most cases wholly irregular,
+and the architecture, so far from resembling the Egyptian in its scale
+and massiveness, is marked by the utmost minuteness of ornament and
+tenuity of detail, suggesting wood and stucco rather than stone. The
++Great Hall+ at Chillambaram is but 10 to 12 feet high, and the
+corridors at Ramisseram, 700 feet long, are but 30 feet high. The effect
+of _ensemble_ of the Dravidian temples is disappointing. They lack the
+emphasis of dominant masses and the dignity of symmetrical and logical
+arrangement. The very loftiness of the gopuras makes the buildings of
+the group within seem low by contrast. In nearly every temple, however,
+some one feature attracts merited admiration by its splendor, extent, or
+beauty. Such are the +Choultrie+, built by Tirumalla Nayak at Madura
+(1623-45), measuring 333 × 105 feet; the corridors already mentioned at
+Ramisseram and in the +Great Temple+ at Madura; the gopuras at
++Tarputry+ and Vellore, and the +Mantapa+ of +Parvati+ at Chillambaram
+(1595-1685). Very noticeable are the compound columns of this style,
+consisting of square piers with slender shafts coupled to them and
+supporting brackets, as at Chillambaram, Peroor, and Vellore; the richly
+banded square piers, the grotesques of rampant horses and monsters, and
+the endless labor bestowed upon minute carving and ornament in
+superposed bands.
+
+
++OTHER MONUMENTS.+ Other important temples are at Tiruvalur, Seringham,
+Tinevelly, and Conjeveram, all alike in general scheme of design, with
+enclosures varying from 300 to 1,000 feet in length and width. At
++Tanjore+ is a magnificent temple with two courts, in the larger of
+which stands a _pagoda_ or shrine with a pyramidal vimana, unusual in
+Dravidian temples, and beside it the smaller +Shrine+ of +Soubramanya+
+(Fig. 229), a structure of unusual beauty of detail. In both, the
+vertical lower story with its pilasters and windows is curiously
+suggestive of Renaissance design. The pagoda dates from the 14th, the
+smaller temple from the 15th century.
+
+ [Illustration: FIG. 229.--SHRINE OF SOUBRAMANYA, TANJORE.]
+
+
++ROCK-CUT RATHS.+ All the above temples were built subsequently to the
+12th century. The rock-cut shrines date in some cases as far back as the
+7th century; they are called _kylas_ and _raths_, and are not caves, but
+isolated edifices, imitating structural designs, but hewn bodily from
+the rock. Those at Mahavellipore are of diminutive size; but at
++Purudkul+ there is an extensive temple with shrine, choultrie, and
+gopura surrounded by a court enclosure measuring 250 × 150 feet (9th
+century). More famous still is the elaborate +Kylas+ at +Ellora+, of
+about the same size as the above, but more complex and complete in its
+details.
+
+
++PALACES.+ At Madura, Tanjore, and Vijayanagar are Dravidian palaces,
+built after the Mohammedan conquest and in a mixed style. The domical
+octagonal throne-room and the +Great Hall+ at Madura (17th century), the
+most famous edifices of the kind, were evidently inspired from Gothic
+models, but how this came about is not known. The Great Hall with its
+pointed arched barrel vault of 67 feet span, its cusped arches, round
+piers, vaulting shafts, and triforium, appears strangely foreign to its
+surroundings.
+
+
++CAMBODIA.+ The subject of Indian architecture cannot be dismissed
+without at least brief mention of the immense temple of +Nakhon Wat+ in
+Cambodia. This stupendous creation covers an area of a full square mile,
+with its concentric courts, its encircling moat or lake, its causeways,
+porches, and shrines, dominated by a central structure 200 feet square
+with nine pagoda-like towers. The corridors around the inner court have
+square piers of almost classic Roman type. The rich carving, the perfect
+masonry, and the admirable composition of the whole leading up to the
+central mass, indicate architectural ability of a high order.
+
+
++CHINESE ARCHITECTURE.+ No purely Mongolian nation appears ever to have
+erected buildings of first-rate importance. It cannot be denied,
+however, that the Chinese are possessed of considerable decorative skill
+and mechanical ingenuity; and these qualities are the most prominent
+elements in their buildings. Great size and splendor, massiveness and
+originality of construction, they do not possess. Built in large measure
+of wood, cleverly framed and decorated with a certain richness of color
+and ornament, with a large element of the grotesque in the decoration,
+the Chinese temples, pagodas, and palaces are interesting rather than
+impressive. There is not a single architectural monument of imposing
+size or of great antiquity, so far as we know. The celebrated +Porcelain
+Tower+ of Nankin is no longer extant, having been destroyed in the
+Tæping rebellion in 1850. It was a nine-storied polygonal pagoda 236
+feet high, revetted with porcelain tiles, and was built in 1412. The
+largest of Chinese temples, that of the +Great Dragon+ at Pekin, is a
+circular structure of moderate size, though its enclosure is nearly a
+mile square. Pagodas with diminishing stories, elaborately carved
+entrance gates and successive terraces are mainly relied upon for
+effect. They show little structural art, but much clever ornament. Like
+the monasteries and the vast _lamaseries_ of Thibet, they belong to the
+Buddhist religion.
+
+Aside from the ingenious framing and bracketing of the carpentry, the
+most striking peculiarity of Chinese buildings is their broad-spreading
+tiled roofs. These invariably slope downward in a curve, and the tiling,
+with its hip-ridges, crestings, and finials in terra-cotta or metal,
+adds materially to the picturesqueness of the general effect. Color and
+gilding are freely used, and in some cases--as in a summer pavilion at
+Pekin--porcelain tiling covers the walls, with brilliant effect. The
+chief wonder is that this resource of the architectural decorator has
+not been further developed in China, where porcelain and earthenware are
+otherwise treated with such remarkable skill.
+
+
++JAPANESE ARCHITECTURE.+ Apparently associated in race with the Chinese
+and Koreans, the Japanese are far more artistic in temperament than
+either of their neighbors. The refinement and originality of their
+decorative art have given it a wide reputation. Unfortunately the
+prevalence of earthquakes has combined with the influence of the
+traditional habits of the people to prevent the maturing of a truly
+monumental architecture. Except for the terraces, gates, and enclosures
+of their palaces and temples, wood is the predominant building material.
+It is used substantially as in China, the framing, dovetailing,
+bracketing, broad eaves and tiled roofs of Japan closely resembling
+those of China. The chief difference is in the greater refinement and
+delicacy of the Japanese details and the more monumental disposition of
+the temple terraces, the beauty of which is greatly enhanced by skillful
+landscape gardening. The gateways recall somewhat those of the Sanchi
+Tope in India (p. 403), but are commonly of wood. Owing to the danger
+from earthquakes, lofty towers and pagodas are rarely seen.
+
+The domestic architecture of Japan, though interesting for its
+arrangements, and for its sensible and artistic use of the most flimsy
+materials, is too trivial in scale, detail, and construction to receive
+more than passing reference. Even the great palace at Tokio,[28]
+covering an immense area, is almost entirely composed of one-storied
+buildings of wood, with little of splendor or architectural dignity.
+
+ [Footnote 28: See Transactions R.I.B.A., 52d year, 1886, article
+ by R. J. Conder, pp. 185-214.]
+
+ +MONUMENTS+ (additional to those in text). BUDDHIST: Topes at
+ Sanchi, Sonari, Satdara, Andher, in Central India; at Sarnath,
+ near Benares; at Jelalabad and Salsette; in Ceylon at
+ Anuradhapura, Tuparamaya, Lankaramaya.--Grotto temples (chaityas),
+ mainly in Bombay and Bengal Presidencies; at Behar, especially the
+ Lomash Rishi, and Cuttack; at Bhaja, Bedsa, Ajunta, and Ellora
+ (Wiswakarma Cave); in Salsette, the Kenheri Cave.--Viharas:
+ Structural at Nalanda and Sarnath, demolished; rock-cut in Bengal,
+ at Cuttack, Udayagiri (the Ganesa); in the west, many at Ajunta,
+ also at Bagh, Bedsa, Bhaja, Nassick (the Nahapana, Vadnya Sri,
+ etc.), Salsette, Ellora (the Dekrivaria, etc.). In Nepâl, stupas
+ of Swayanbunath and Bouddhama.
+
+ JAINA: Temples at Aiwulli, Kanaruc (Black Pagoda), and Purudkul;
+ groups of temples at Palitana, Gimar, Mount Abu, Somnath,
+ Parisnath; the Sas Bahu at Gwalior, 1093; Parswanatha and Ganthai
+ (650) at Khajuraho; temple at Gyraspore, 7th century; modern
+ temples at Ahmedabad (Huttising), Delhi, and Sonaghur; in the
+ south at Moodbidri, Sravana Belgula; towers at Chittore.
+
+ NORTHERN BRAHMAN: Temples, Parasumareswara (500 A.D.), Mukteswara,
+ and Great Temple (600-650), all at Bhuwaneswar, among many others;
+ of Papanatha at Purudkul; grotto temples at Dhumnar, Ellora, and
+ Poonah; temples at Chandravati, Udaipur, and Amritsur (the last
+ modern); tombs of Singram Sing and others at Oudeypore; of Rajah
+ Baktawar at Ulwar, and others at Goverdhun; ghâts or landings at
+ Benares and elsewhere.
+
+ CHALUKYAN: Temples at Buchropully and Hamoncondah, 1163; ruins at
+ Kalyani; grottoes of Hazar Khutri.
+
+ DRAVIDIAN: Rock-cut temples (raths) at Mahavellipore; Tiger Cave
+ at Saluvan Kuppan; temples at Pittadkul (Purudkul), Tiruvalur,
+ Combaconum, Vellore, Peroor, Vijayanagar; pavilions at Tanjore and
+ Vijayanagar.
+
+ There are also many temples in the Kashmir Valley difficult of
+ assignment to any of the above styles and religions.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX.
+
+
+A. +PRIMITIVE GREEK ARCHITECTURE.+--The researches of Schliemann
+commented by Schuchardt, of Dörpfeld, Stamakis, Tsoundas, Perrot, and
+others, in Troy, Mycenæ, and Tiryns, and the more recent discoveries of
+Evans at Gnossus, in Crete, have greatly extended our knowledge of the
+prehistoric art of Greece and the Mediterranean basin, and established
+many points of contact on the one hand with ancient Egyptian and
+Phœnician art, and on the other, with the art of historic Greece. They
+have proved the existence of an active and flourishing commerce between
+Egypt and the Mediterranean shores and Aegean islands more than 2000
+B.C., and of a flourishing material civilization in those islands and on
+the mainland of Greece, borrowing much, but not everything, from Egypt.
+While the origin of the Doric order in the structural methods of the
+pre-Homeric architecture of Tiryns and Mycenæ, as set forth by Dörpfeld
+and by Perrot and Chipiez, can hardly be regarded as proved in all
+details, since much of the argument advanced for this derivation rests
+on more or less conjectural restorations of the existing remains, it
+seems to be fairly well established that the Doric order, and historic
+Greek architecture in general, trace their genesis in large measure back
+in direct line to this prehistoric art. The remarkable feature of this
+early architecture is the apparently complete absence of temples.
+Fortifications, houses, palaces, and tombs make up the ruins thus far
+discovered, and seem to indicate clearly the derivation of the
+temple-type of later Greek art from the primitive house, consisting of a
+hall or _megaron_ with four columns about the central hearth (whence no
+doubt, the atrium and peristyle of Roman houses, through their Greek
+intermediary prototypes) and a porch or _aithousa_, with or without
+columns _in antis_, opening directly into the _megaron_, or indirectly
+through an ante-room called the _prodomos_. Here we have the prototypes
+of the Greek temple _in antis_, with its _naos_ having interior columns,
+whether roofed over or hypæthral (see pp. 54, 55). It is probable also
+that the evidently liberal use of timber for many of the structural
+details led in time to many of the forms later developed in stone in the
+entablature of the Doric order. But it is hard to discover, as Dörpfeld
+would have it, in the slender Mycenæan columns with their inverted
+taper, the prototype of the massive Doric column with its upward taper.
+The Mycenæan column was evidently derived from wooden models; the sturdy
+Doric column--the earliest being the most massive--seems plainly derived
+from stone or rubble piers (see p. 50), and thus to have come from a
+different source from the Mycenæan forms.
+
+The _gynecæum_, or women’s apartments, the men’s apartments, and the
+bath were in these ancient palaces grouped in varying relations about
+the _megaron_: their plan, purpose, and arrangement are clearly revealed
+in the ruins of Tiryns, where they are more complete and perfect than
+either at Troy or Mycenæ.
+
+
+B. +CAMPANILES IN ITALY.+--Reference is made on page 264 to the towers
+or campaniles of the Italian Gothic style and period, and six of these
+are specifically mentioned; and on page 305 mention is also made of
+those of the Renaissance in Italy. The number and importance of the
+Italian campaniles and the interest attaching to their origin and
+design, warrant a more extended notice than has been assigned them in
+the pages cited.
+
+The oldest of these bell-towers appear to be those adjoining the two
+churches of San Apollinare in and near Ravenna (see p. 114), and date
+presumably from the sixth century. They are plain circular towers with
+few and small openings, except in the uppermost story, where larger
+arched openings permit the issue of the sound of the bells. This type,
+which might have been developed into a very interesting form of tower,
+does not seem to have been imitated. It was at Rome, and not till the
+ninth or tenth century, that the campanile became a recognized feature
+of church architecture. It was invariably treated as a structure
+distinct from the church, and was built of brick upon a square plan,
+rising with little or no architectural adornment to a height usually of
+a hundred feet or more, and furnished with but a few small openings
+below the belfry stage, where a pair of coupled arched windows separated
+by a simple column opened from each face of the tower. Above these
+windows a pyramidal roof of low pitch terminated the tower. In spite of
+their simplicity of design these Roman bell-towers often possess a
+noticeable grace of proportions, and furnish the prototype of many of
+the more elaborate campaniles erected during the Middle Ages in other
+central and north Italian cities. The towers of Sta. Maria in Cosmedin,
+Sta. Maria in Trastevere, and S. Giorgio in Velabro are examples of this
+type. Most of the Roman examples date from the eleventh and twelfth
+centuries.
+
+In other cities, the campanile was treated with some variety of form and
+decoration, as well as of material. In Lombardy and Venetia the square
+red-brick shaft of the tower is often adorned with long, narrow pilaster
+strips, as at Piacenza (p. 158, Fig. 91) and Venice, and an arcaded
+cornice not infrequently crowns the structure. The openings at the top
+may be three or four in number on each face, and even the plan is
+sometimes octagonal or circular. The brick octagonal campanile of
++S. Gottardo+ at Milan is one of the finest Lombard church towers. At
+Verona the brick tower on the Piazza dell’ Erbe and that of S. Zeno are
+conspicuous; but every important town of northern Italy possesses one or
+more examples of these structures dating from the eleventh, twelfth, or
+thirteenth century.
+
+Undoubtedly the three most noted bell-towers in Italy are those of
+Venice, Pisa, and Florence. The great +Campanile+ of +St. Mark+ at
+Venice, first begun in 874, carried higher in the twelfth and fourteenth
+centuries, and finally completed in the sixteenth century with the
+marble belvedere and wooden spire so familiar in pictures of Venice, was
+formerly the highest of all church campaniles in Italy, measuring
+approximately 325 feet to the summit. But this superb historic monument,
+weakened by causes not yet at this writing fully understood, fell in
+sudden ruin on the 14th of July, 1902, to the great loss not only of
+Venice, but of the world of art, though fortunately without injuring the
+neighboring buildings on the Piazza and Piazzetta of St. Mark. Since
+then the campanile of S. Stefano, in the same city, has been demolished
+to forestall another like disaster. The +Leaning Tower+ of Pisa (see
+p. 160, Fig. 92) dates from 1174, and is unique in its plan and its
+exterior treatment with superposed arcades. Begun apparently as a
+leaning tower, it seems to have increased this lean to a dangerous
+point, by the settling of its foundations during construction, as its
+upper stages were made to deviate slightly towards the vertical from the
+inclination of the lower portion. It has always served rather as a
+watch-tower and belvedere than as a bell-tower. The +Campanile+
+adjoining the Duomo at +Florence+ is described on p. 263 and illustrated
+in Fig. 154, and does not require further notice here. The
+black-and-white banded towers of Sienna, Lucca, and Pistoia, and the
+octagonal lanterns crowning those of Verona and Mantua, also referred to
+in the text on p. 264, need here only be mentioned again as illustrating
+the variety of treatment of these Italian towers.
+
+The Renaissance architects developed new types of campanile, and in such
+variety that they can only be briefly referred to. Some, like a brick
+tower at Perugia, are simple square towers with pilasters; more often
+engaged columns and entablatures mark the several stories, and the upper
+portion is treated either with an octagonal lantern or with diminishing
+stages, and sometimes with a spire. Of the latter class the best example
+is that of S. Biagio, at Montepulciano,--one of the two designed to
+flank the façade of Ant. da S. Gallo’s beautiful church of that name.
+One or two good late examples are to be found at Naples. Of the more
+massive square type there are examples in the towers of S. Michele,
+Venice; of the cathedral at Ferrara, Sta. Chiara at Naples, and Sta.
+Maria dell’ Anima--one of the earliest--at Rome. The most complete and
+perfect of these square belfries of the Renaissance is that of the
++Campidoglio+ at Rome, by Martino Lunghi, dating from the end of the
+sixteenth century, which groups so admirably with the palaces of the
+Capitol.
+
+
+C. +BRAMANTE’S WORKS.+--A more or less animated controversy has arisen
+regarding the authenticity of many of the works attributed to Bramante,
+and the tendency has of late been to deny him any part whatever in
+several of the most important of these works. The first of these to be
+given a changed assignment was the church of the Consolazione at Todi
+(p. 293), now believed to be by Cola di Caprarola; and it is now denied
+by many investigators that either the Cancelleria or the Giraud palace
+(p. 290) is his work, or any one of two or three smaller houses in Rome
+showing a somewhat similar architectural treatment. The evidence adduced
+in support of this denial is rather speculative and critical than
+documentary, but is not without weight. The date 1495 carved on a
+doorway of the Cancelleria palace is thought to forbid its attribution
+to Bramante, who is not known to have come to Rome till 1503; and there
+is a lack of positive evidence of his authorship of the Giraud palace
+and the other houses which seem to be by the same hand as the
+Cancelleria. To the advocates of this view there is not enough
+resemblance in style between this group of buildings and his
+acknowledged work either in Milan or in the Vatican to warrant their
+being attributed to him.
+
+It must, however, be remarked, that this notable group of works, stamped
+with the marks and even the mannerisms of a strong personality, reveal
+in their unknown author gifts amounting to genius, and heretofore deemed
+not unworthy of Bramante. It is almost inconceivable that they should
+have been designed by a mere beginner previously utterly unknown and
+forgotten soon after. It is incumbent upon those who deny the
+attribution to Bramante to find another name, if possible, on which to
+fasten the credit of these works. Accordingly, they have been variously
+attributed to Alberti (who died in 1472) or his followers; to Bernardo
+di Lorenzo, and to other later fifteenth-century artists. The difficulty
+here is to discover any name that fits the conditions even as well as
+Bramante’s; for the supposed author must have been in Rome between 1495
+and 1505, and his other works must be at least as much like these as
+were Bramante’s. No name has thus far been found satisfactory to careful
+critics; and the alternative theory, that there existed in Rome, before
+Bramante’s coming, a group of architects unknown to later fame, working
+in a common style and capable of such a masterpiece as the Cancelleria,
+does not harmonize with the generally accepted facts of Renaissance art
+history. Moreover, the comparison of these works with Bramante’s
+Milanese work on the one hand and his great Court of the Belvedere in
+the Vatican on the other, yields, to some critics, conclusions quite
+opposed to those of the advocates of another authorship than Bramante’s.
+
+The controversy must be considered for the present as still open. There
+are manifest difficulties with either of the two opposed views, and
+these can hardly be eliminated, except by the discovery of documents not
+now known to exist, whose testimony will be recognized as unimpeachable.
+
+
+D. +L’ART NOUVEAU.+--Since 1896, and particularly since the Paris
+Exposition of 1900, a movement has manifested itself in France and
+Belgium, and spread to Germany and Austria and even measurably to
+England, looking towards a more personal and original style of
+decorative and architectural design, in which the traditions and
+historic styles of the past shall be ignored. This movement has received
+from its adherents and the public the name of “L’Art Nouveau,” or,
+according to some, “L’Art Moderne”; but this name must not be held to
+connote either a really new style or a fundamentally new principle in
+art. Indeed, it may be questioned whether any clearly-defined body of
+principles whatever underlies the movement, or would be acknowledged
+equally by all its adherents. It appears to be a reaction against a too
+slavish adherence to traditional forms and methods of design (see pp.
+370, 375), a striving to ignore or forget the past rather than a
+reaching out after any well-understood, positive end; as such, it
+possesses the negative strength of protest rather than the affirmative
+strength of a vital principle. Its lack of cohesion is seen in the
+division of its adherents into groups, some looking to nature for
+inspiration, while others decry this as a mistaken quest; some seeking
+to emphasize structural lines, and others to ignore them altogether.
+All, however, are united in the avoidance of commonplace forms and
+historic styles, and this preoccupation has developed an amazing amount
+of originality and individualism of style, frequently reaching the
+extreme of eccentricity. The results have therefore been, as might be
+expected, extremely varied in merit, ranging from the most refined and
+reserved in style to the most harshly bizarre and extravagant. As a
+rule, they have been most successful in small and semi-decorative
+objects--jewelry, silverware, vases, and small furniture; and one most
+desirable feature of the movement has been the stimulus it has given
+(especially in France and England), to the organization and activity of
+“arts-and-crafts” societies which occupy themselves with the
+encouragement of the decorative and industrial arts and the diffusion of
+an improved taste. In the field of the larger objects of design, in
+which the dominance of traditional form and of structural considerations
+is proportionally more imperious, the struggle to evade these
+restrictions becomes more difficult, and results usually in more obvious
+and disagreeable eccentricities, which the greater size and permanence
+of the object tend further to exaggerate. The least successful
+achievements of the movement have accordingly been in architecture. The
+buildings designed by its most fervent disciples (_e.g._ the Pavillon
+Bleu at the Exposition of 1900, the Castel Béranger, Paris, by _H.
+Guimard_, the houses of the artist colony at Darmstadt, and others) are
+for the most part characterized by extreme stiffness, eccentricity, or
+ugliness. The requirements of construction and of human habitation
+cannot easily be met without sometimes using the forms which past
+experience has developed for the same ends; and the negation of
+precedent is not the surest path to beauty or even reasonableness of
+design. It is interesting to notice that in the intermediate field of
+furniture-design some of the best French productions recall the style of
+Louis XV., modified by Japanese ideas and spirit. This singular but not
+unpleasing combination is less surprising when we reflect that the style
+of Louis XV. was itself a protest against the formalism of the heavy
+classic architecture of preceding reigns, and achieved its highest
+successes in the domain of furniture and interior decoration.
+
+It may be fair to credit the new movement with one positive
+characteristic in its prevalent regard for line, especially for the
+effect of long and swaying lines, whether in the contours or
+ornamentation of an object. This is especially noticeable in the Belgian
+work, and in that of the Viennese “Secessionists,” who have, however,
+carried eccentricity to a further point of extravagance than any others.
+
+Whether “L’Art Nouveau” will ever produce permanent results time alone
+can show. Its present vogue is probably evanescent and it cannot claim
+to have produced a style; but it seems likely to exert on European
+architecture an influence, direct and indirect, not unlike that of the
+Néo-Grec movement of 1830 in France (p. 364), but even more lasting and
+beneficial. It has already begun to break the hold of rigid classical
+tradition in design; and recent buildings, especially in Germany and
+Austria, like the works of the brilliant _Otto Wagner_ in Vienna, show a
+pleasing freedom of personal touch without undue striving after
+eccentric novelty. Doubtless in French and other European architecture
+the same result will in time manifest itself.
+
+The search for novelty and the desire to dispense wholly with historic
+forms of design which are the chief marks of the Art Nouveau, were
+emphatically displayed in many of the remarkable buildings of the Paris
++Exhibition of 1900+, in which a striking fertility and facility of
+design in the decorative details made more conspicuous the failure to
+improve upon the established precedents of architectural style in the
+matters of proportion, scale, general composition, and contour. As usual
+the metallic construction of these buildings was almost without
+exception admirable, and the decorative details, taken by themselves,
+extremely clever and often beautiful, but the combined result was not
+satisfactory.
+
+In the United States the movement has not found a firm foothold because
+there has been no dominant, enslaving tradition to protest against. Not
+a few of the ideas, not a little of the spirit of the movement may be
+recognized in the work of individual architects and decorative artists
+in the United States, executed years before the movement took
+recognizable form in Europe: and American decorative design has
+generally been, at least since 1880 or 1885, sufficiently free,
+individual and personal, to render unnecessary and impossible any
+concerted movement of artistic revolt against slavery to precedent.
+
+
+E. +RECENT AMERICAN ARCHITECTURE.+--Architectural activity in the United
+States continues to share in the general prosperity which has marked the
+years since 1898, and this activity has by no means been confined to
+industrial and commercial architecture. Indeed, while the erection of
+“sky scrapers” or excessively lofty office-buildings has continued to be
+a feature of this activity in the great commercial centres, the most
+notable architectural enterprises of recent years have been in the field
+of educational buildings, both in the East and West. In 1898 a great
+international competition resulted in the selection of the design of Mr.
+_E. Bénard_ of Paris for a magnificent group of buildings for the
++University of California+ on a scale of unexampled grandeur, and the
+erection of this colossal project has been begun. An almost equally
+ambitious project, by a firm of Philadelphia architects, has been
+adopted for the Washington University at St. Louis; and many other
+universities and colleges have either added extensively to their
+existing buildings or planned an entire rebuilding on new designs. Among
+these the national military and naval academies at +West Point+ and
++Annapolis+ take the first rank in the extent and splendor of the
+projected improvements. Museums and libraries have also been erected or
+begun in various cities, and the +New York Public Library+, now
+building, will rank in cost and beauty with those already erected in
+Boston and Washington.
+
+In other departments mention should be made of recent Federal buildings
+(custom-houses, post-offices, and court-houses) erected under the
+provisions of the Tarsney act from designs secured by competition among
+the leading architects of the country; among those the +New York Custom
+House+ is the most important, but other buildings, at Washington,
+Indianapolis, and elsewhere, are also conspicuous, and many of them
+worthy of high praise. The tendency to award the designing of important
+public buildings, such as State capitols, county court houses, city
+halls, libraries, and hospitals, by competition instead of by personal
+and political favor, has resulted in a marked improvement in the quality
+of American public architecture.
+
+
+F. +THE ERECHTHEUM: RECENT INVESTIGATIONS.+--During the past two years,
+extensive repairs and partial restorations of the Erechtheum at Athens,
+undertaken by the Greek Archæological Society, have afforded
+opportunities for a new and thoroughgoing study of the existing portions
+of the building and of the surrounding ruins. In these investigations a
+prominent part has been borne by Mr. Gorham P. Stevens, representing the
+Archæological Institute of America, to whom must be credited, among
+other things, the demonstration of the existence, in the east wall of
+the original structure, of two windows previously unknown. Other
+peculiarities of design and construction were also discovered, which add
+greatly to the interest of the building. These investigations are
+reported in the _American Journal of Archæology_, Second Series;
+_Journal of the Archæological Institute of America_, Vol. X., No. 1, _et
+seq._ The illustrations, Figures 35 and 36, are, by Mr. Stevens’
+courtesy, based upon, though not reproductions of, his original
+drawings.
+
+
+
+
+GLOSSARY
+
+OF TERMS NOT DEFINED IN THE TEXT.
+
+
+ALCAZAR (Span., from Arabic _Al Kasr_), a palace or castle, especially
+of a governing official.
+
+ARCHIVOLT, a band or group of mouldings decorating the wall-face of an
+arch; or a transverse arch projecting slightly from the surface of a
+barrel or groined vault.
+
+ASTYLAR, without columns.
+
+
+BALNEA, a Roman bathing establishment, less extensive than the _thermæ_.
+
+BEL ETAGE, the principal story of a building, containing the reception
+rooms and saloons; usually the second story (first above the ground
+story).
+
+BROKEN ENTABLATURE, an entablature which projects forward over each
+column or pilaster, returning back to the wall and running along with
+diminished projection between the columns, as in the Arch of Constantine
+(Fig. 63).
+
+
+CANTONED PIERS, piers adorned with columns or pilasters at the corners
+or on the outer faces.
+
+CARTOUCHE (Fr.), an ornament shaped like a shield or oval. In Egyptian
+hieroglyphics, the oval encircling the name of a king.
+
+CAVETTO, a concave, quarter-round moulding.
+
+CHEVRON, a V-shaped ornament.
+
+CHRYSELEPHANTINE, of ivory and gold; used of statues in which the nude
+portions are of ivory and the draperies of gold.
+
+CONSOLE, a large scroll-shaped bracket or ornament, having its broadest
+curve at the bottom.
+
+CORINTHIANESQUE, resembling the Corinthian; used of capitals having
+corner-volutes and acanthus leaves, but combined otherwise than in the
+classic Corinthian type.
+
+
+EMPAISTIC, made of, or overlaid with, sheet-metal beaten or hammered
+into decorative patterns.
+
+EXEDRÆ, curved seats of stone; niches or recesses, sometimes of
+considerable size, provided with seats for the public.
+
+
+FENESTRATION, the whole system or arrangement of windows and openings in
+an architectural composition.
+
+FOUR-PART. A four-part vault is a groined vault formed by the
+intersection of two barrel vaults. Its diagonal edges or _groins_ divide
+it into four sections, triangular in plan, each called a _compartment_.
+
+
+GIGANTOMACHIA, a group or composition representing the mythical combat
+between the gods and the giants.
+
+
+HALF-TIMBERED, constructed with a timber framework showing externally,
+and filled in with masonry or brickwork.
+
+
+IMAUM, imâm, a Mohammedan priest.
+
+
+KAABAH, the sacred shrine at Meccah, a nearly cubical structure hung
+with black cloth.
+
+KARAFAH, a region in Cairo containing the so-called tombs of the
+Khalifs.
+
+
+LACONICUM, the sweat-room in a Roman bath; usually of domical design in
+the larger thermæ.
+
+
+MEZZANINE, a low, intermediate story.
+
+MUEDDIN, a Mohammedan mosque-official who calls to prayer.
+
+
+NARTHEX, a porch or vestibule running across the front of a basilica or
+church.
+
+NEO-GOTHIC, NEO-MEDIÆVAL, in a style which seeks to revive and adapt or
+apply to modern uses the forms of the Middle Ages.
+
+
+OCULUS, a circular opening, especially in the crown of a dome.
+
+OGEE ARCH, one composed of two juxtaposed S-shaped or wavy curves,
+meeting in a point at the top.
+
+
+PALÆSTRA, an establishment among the ancient Greeks for physical
+training.
+
+PAVILION (Fr. _pavillon_), ordinarily a light open structure of ornate
+design. As applied to architectural composition, a projecting section of
+a façade, usually rectangular in plan, and having its own distinct mass
+of roof.
+
+
+QUARRY ORNAMENT, any ornament covering a surface with two series of
+reticulated lines enclosing approximately quadrangular spaces or meshes.
+
+QUATREFOIL, with four leaves or _foils_; composed of four arcs of
+circles meeting in cusps pointing inward.
+
+QUOINS, slightly projecting blocks of stone, alternately long and short,
+decorating or strengthening a corner or angle of a façade.
+
+
+REVETMENT, a veneering or sheathing.
+
+RUSTICATION, treatment of the masonry with blocks having roughly broken
+faces, or with deeply grooved or bevelled joints.
+
+
+SOFFIT, the under-side of an architrave, beam, arch, or corona.
+
+SPANDRIL, the triangular wall-space between two contiguous arches.
+
+SQUINCH, a bit of conical vaulting filling in the angles of a square so
+as to provide an octagonal or circular base for a dome or lantern.
+
+STOA, an open colonnade for public resort.
+
+
+TEPIDARIUM, the hot-water hall or chamber of a Roman bath.
+
+TYMPANUM, the flat space comprised between the horizontal and raking
+cornices of a pediment, or between a lintel and the arch over it.
+
+
+VOUSSOIR, any one of the radial stones composing an arch.
+
+
+
+
+INDEX OF ARCHITECTS.
+
+The _surname_ is in all cases followed by a comma.
+
+ Abadie, 373
+ Adams, Robert 234
+ Agnolo, Baccio d’ 291
+ Agnolo, Gabriele d’ 287
+ Alberti, Leo Battista 277, 280
+ Alessi, Galeazzo 299, 302
+ Ammanati, Bartolomeo 300
+ Anselm, Prior 219
+ Anthemius of Tralles, 127
+ Antonio, Master 259
+ Arnold, Master 243
+ Arnolfo di Cambio, 162, 265
+
+ Baccio D’ Agnolo, 291
+ Ballu, 371, 373
+ Baltard, Victor 371
+ Barry, Sir Charles 380
+ Bassevi, 356
+ Battista, Juan 351
+ Benci di Cione, 266
+ Benedetto da Majano, 280, 281
+ Bernardo di Lorenzo, 282
+ Bernini, Lorenzo 295, 303, 319
+ Berruguete, Alonzo 348, 350
+ Bianchi, 305
+ Bondone, Giotto di 258, 263, 272
+ Boromini, Francesco 303, 304
+ Borset, 334
+ Bramante Lazzari, 289, 290, 294, 295, 321
+ Brandon, Richard 378
+ Bregno, Antonio 284
+ Brongniart, 363
+ Brunelleschi, Filippo 275, 276, 280, 281, 289
+ Bullant, Jean 316, 317
+ Bulfinch, Charles 390
+ Buon, Bartolomeo 284
+ Buonarotti, Michael Angelo 289, 292, 294, 295, 296, 299
+ Burges, William 380
+
+ Callicrates, 63
+ Cambio, Arnolfo di 162, 265
+ Campbell, Colin 333
+ Campello, 255
+ Caprarola, Cola da 293
+ Caprino, Meo del 286
+ Chalgrin, 362
+ Chambers, Sir William 333
+ Chambiges, Pierre 313
+ Chrismas, Gerard 327
+ Christodoulos, 150
+ Churriguera, 348, 352
+ Cimabue, 258
+ Civitale, Matteo 281, 283
+ Columbe, Michel 310
+ Cortona, Domenico di 316
+ Cossutius, 68
+ Cronaca, 280, 291
+
+ Dance, George 334
+ De Brosse, Salomon 318, 319
+ De Fabris, 261
+ De Key, Lieven 336
+ De Keyser, Hendrik 336
+ Della Porta, Giacomo 292, 299, 300
+ Della Robbia, Luca 281
+ De l’Orme, Philibert 316, 317
+ Déperthes, 373
+ Derrand, François 319
+ Desiderio da Settignano, 281
+ De Tessin, Nicodemus 337
+ De Vriendt (or Floris), Cornelius 334, 335
+ Diego de Siloë, 348
+ Domenico di Cortona, 316
+ Donatello, 275
+ Dosio, Giovanni Antonio 291
+ Duban, Félix 364
+ Duc, 364, 365
+ Du Cerceau, Jean Batiste 318
+
+ Edington, 226
+ Emerson, William 382
+ Enrique de Egaz, 349
+ Erwin von Steinbach, 241
+
+ Fain, Pierre 310
+ Federighi, Antonio 282
+ Ferstel, H. von 375
+ Fiesole, Mino da 281
+ Filarete, Antonio 283
+ Flitcroft, 333
+ Floris (De Vriendt), Cornelius 334, 335
+ Fontaine, 362
+ Fontana, Domenico 295, 299, 300, 304
+ Fra Giocondo, 286
+ Fra Ristoro, 256
+ Fra Sisto, 256
+ Fuga, Ferdinando 305
+
+ Gabriel, Jacques Ange 324, 367
+ Gabriele d’Agnolo, 287
+ Gaddi, Taddeo 263
+ Gadyer, Pierre 315
+ Galilei, Alessandro 305
+ Garnier, Charles 372
+ Gerhardt von Riel, 243
+ Giacomo di Pietrasanta, 286
+ Gibbs, James 332, 333, 356, 385
+ Giocondo, Fra 286
+ Giotto di Bondone, 258, 263, 272
+ Giuliano da Majano, 286, 287
+ Giulio Romano, 289, 292
+ Goujon, Jean 316, 321
+ Gumiel, Pedro 349
+
+ Hallet, Stephen (Étienne) 389
+ Hansen, Theophil 360
+ Have, Theodore 327
+ Hawksmoor, 332
+ Hendrik de Keyser, 336
+ Henri de Narbonne, 249
+ Henry of Gmünd, 255
+ Herrera, Francisco 352
+ Herrera, Juan d’ 348, 350, 351
+ Hitorff, J. J. 364, 372
+ Hoban, Thomas 390
+ Holbein, Hans 327
+ Hübsch, Heinrich 375, 376
+ Hunt, Richard M. 393
+
+ Ictinus, 62, 63, 65
+ Isodorus of Miletus, 127
+ Ivara, Ferdinando 352, 365
+
+ Jacobus of Meruan, 255
+ Jansen, Bernard 327
+ Jefferson, Thomas 390
+ John, Master 243
+ John of Padua, 328
+ Jones, Inigo 328, 332, 333
+ Juan Battista, 351
+ Junckher of Cologne, 241
+
+ Kearsley, Dr. 386
+ Kent, 333
+ Klenze, Leo von 359, 360, 367
+
+ Labrouste, Henri 364
+ Lassus, J. B. A. 371
+ Latrobe, Benjamin H. 389
+ Laurana, Francesco 310
+ Laurana, Luciano 287
+ Le Breton, Gilles 313
+ Lefuel, Hector 372
+ Lemercier, Jacques 312, 319, 322
+ Le Nepveu, Pierre 314
+ Lescot, Pierre 316, 321
+ Le Vau (or Levau) 320
+ Lieven de Key, 336
+ Ligorio, Pirro 293
+ Lippi, Annibale 293
+ Lira, Valentino di 343
+ Lombardi, Antonio 284
+ Lombardi, Martino 284
+ Lombardi, Moro 284
+ Lombardi, Pietro 284
+ Lombardi, Tullio 284, 293
+ Longhena, Baldassare 304
+ Lorenzo, Bernardo di 282
+ Louis, Victor 362
+ Luca della Robbia, 281
+ Lunghi, Martino (the elder) 304, 305
+
+ Machuca, 351
+ Maderna, Carlo 295, 303
+ Majano, Benedetto da 280, 281
+ Majano, Giuliano da 286, 287
+ Mansart, François 322
+ Mansart, Jules Hardouin 320, 321, 322
+ Marchionne, 305
+ Marini, Giovanni 339
+ Martino, Pietro di 287
+ Matthew of Arras, 243
+ Meo del Caprino, 286
+ Meruan, Jacobus of 255
+ Métézeau, 318
+ Michelozzi, Michelozzo 279, 283
+ Mino da Fiesole, 281
+ Mnesicles, 65
+ Mullet, A. B. 392
+
+ Narbonne, Henri de 249
+ Nénot, Henri P. 374
+
+ Ohlmüller, 375
+
+ Palladio, Andrea 299, 301, 319, 328, 350
+ Percier, Charles 362
+ Perrault, Claude 320
+ Peruzzi, Baldassare 289, 291, 292, 294
+ Phidias, 62
+ Philibert de l’Orme, 316, 317
+ Pietrasanta, Giacomo di 286
+ Pintelli, Baccio 286
+ Pisano, Giovanni 260
+ Pisano, Niccolo 272
+ Polaert, 382
+ Poyet, 363
+ Pugin, A. Welby 378
+ Pythius, 71
+
+ Raphael Sanzio, 289, 290, 291, 292, 293
+ Renwick, James 391, 392
+ Revett, Nicholas 355, 358
+ Richardson, Henry H. 393, 394
+ Rickman, Thomas 378
+ Riel, Gerhardt von 243
+ Ristoro, Fra 256
+ Rizzio, Antonio 284
+ Romano, Giulio 289, 292
+ Rossellini, Bernardo 286
+ Ruiz, Fernando 352
+
+ Salvi, Niccola 305
+ Sammichele, Michele 293, 299, 300, 329
+ San Gallo, Antonio da (the Elder) 294
+ San Gallo, Antonio da (the Younger) 289, 291, 294
+ San Gallo, Giuliano da 278, 291, 292, 294
+ Sansovino, Giacopo Tatti 289, 293, 299, 300, 304
+ Satyrus, 71
+ Scamozzi, Vincenzo 299, 339
+ Schinkel, Friedrich 358, 360, 376
+ Schmidt, F. 378
+ Scott (General) 382
+ Scott, Sir Gilbert 380
+ Semper, Ottfried 376
+ Sens, William of 219
+ Servandoni, 323
+ Settignano, Desiderio da 281
+ Shaw, Norman 382
+ Siccardsburg, 376
+ Smirke, Robert 356
+ Smithson, Robert 328
+ Soane, Sir John 356
+ Soufflot, J. J. 362
+ Steinbach, Erwin von 241
+ Stella, Paolo della 339
+ Stern, Raphael 305, 365
+ Street, George Edmund 380
+ Stuart, James 355, 358
+ Stuhler, 359
+
+ Talenti, Francesco Di 259, 263
+ Talenti, Simone di 266
+ Taylor, Robert 334
+ Tessin, Nicodemus de 337
+ Thomson, Alexander 357
+ Thornton, 389
+ Thorpe, John 328
+ Titz, 376
+ Torregiano, 327
+ Trevigi, 327
+
+ Upjohn, Richard 392
+
+ Val Del Vira, 348
+ Valentino di Lira, 343
+ Van Aken, 343
+ Van Brugh, Sir John 332
+ Van Noort, William 336
+ Van Noye, Sebastian 336
+ Van Vitelli, 304
+ Vasari, Giorgio 162
+ Viart, Charles 311
+ Viel, 372
+ Vignola, Giacomo Barozzi da 289, 292, 296, 299, 300, 301
+ Vignon, Pierre 362
+ Viollet-le-Duc, Eugene Emmanuel 370, 371
+ Vischer, Kaspar 343
+ Vischer, Peter 347
+ Visconti, Louis T. J. 371, 372
+ Vitoni, Ventura 293
+ Vitruvius, 56, 71, 77
+ Von der Null, 376
+
+ Wallot, Paul 377
+ Wallot, Jean 333
+ Walter, Thomas Ustick 391
+ Waterhouse, Alfred 381
+ Webb, Aston 382
+ Wilkins, 357
+ William of Sens, 219
+ William of Wykeham, 222, 226
+ Wood, 333
+ Wren, Sir Christopher 329, 331, 332, 356, 385
+
+ Ziebland, 375
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+The buildings are arranged according to location. Those which appear
+only in the lists of monuments at the ends of chapters are omitted.
+_Numerals in parentheses refer to illustrations._
+
+ ABAYAGIRI.
+ Tope, 403
+ ABBEVILLE. St.
+ Wulfrand, 209, 213
+ ABU-SEIR.
+ Stepped pyramid, 9
+ ABYDOS.
+ Columns, 12.
+ Temple, 19, 21.
+ Tombs, 11 (+5+)
+ ADDEH.
+ Grotto-temple, 22
+ ÆMILIA.
+ Churches in, 157, 262
+ AGRA, 149.
+ Pearl Mosque, 148.
+ Taj Mahal, 148 (+86+)
+ AGRIGENTUM.
+ Temple of Zeus, 56, 61 (+33+)
+ AHMEDABAD, 148
+ AIX-LA-CHAPELLE.
+ Minster (palatine Chapel), 172.
+ Palace of Charlemagne, 176
+ AIZANOI.
+ Temple of Zeus, 67.
+ Theatre, 70
+ AJMIR, 148
+ AJUNTA.
+ Brahman Chaityas, 404;
+ viharas, 405
+ ALBANO.
+ Tomb, 89
+ ALBANY.
+ All Saints’ Cathedral, 394.
+ Capitol, 391
+ ALBY Cathedral, 185, 205, 206, 212, 249 (+123+)
+ ALCALA DE HEÑARES, 352.
+ Archepiscopal Palace, 350.
+ College, 349
+ ALCANTARA.
+ Bridge, 108
+ ALENÇON Cathedral, 209, 213
+ ALEXANDRIA TROAS.
+ Palæstra, 71.
+ ALLAHABAD.
+ Akbar’s Palace, 148
+ ALTENBURG Cathedral, 242.
+ Town hall, 344
+ AMADA.
+ Columns, 12
+ AMBOISE Castle, 310
+ AMIENS Cathedral, 189, 197, 201, 203, 205, 206, 219, 232 (+122+);
+ west front of, 207, 208, 212, 227
+ AMRAVATI.
+ Topes, 403
+ AMSTERDAM.
+ Bourse (Exchange) Hanse House, Town hall, 336
+ ANCY LE FRANC.
+ Château, 317
+ ANET.
+ Château, 317
+ ANGERS.
+ Cathedral S. Maurice, 200.
+ Hospital, 214
+ ANGORA (Ancyra), 118
+ ANGOULÊME Cathedral, 164
+ ANI, 134
+ ANNAPOLIS.
+ Harwood and Hammond Houses, 386
+ ANTIOCH, 115
+ ANTIPHELLUS.
+ Theatre, 70.
+ Tombs, 72
+ ANTWERP
+ Cathedral, 190, 246, 247.
+ Town Hall, 334, 336
+ AQUITANIA.
+ Churches of, 164, 167, 168, 179, 373
+ ARANJUEZ.
+ Palace, 352
+ AREZZO Cathedral, 257.
+ Sta. Maria della Pieve, 159
+ ARGOS.
+ Gates, 45
+ ARIZONA.
+ Spanish churches in, 388
+ ARLES.
+ St. Trophime, 165
+ ASCHAFFENBURG.
+ Church, 243
+ ASHEVILLE.
+ Biltmore House, 399
+ ASIA MINOR, 53, 55, 58, 62, 66, 122
+ ASPENDUS.
+ Theatre, 70
+ ASSISI.
+ Church of St. Francis (S. Francesco), 255, 256, 258
+ ASSOS, 55.
+ Public cquare, 69.
+ Temple, 61
+ ASTI.
+ Church, 256
+ ASTORGA.
+ Rood-screen, 352
+ ATHENS.
+ Academy, 365.
+ Acropolis, 65, 69.
+ Agora Gate, 68.
+ Cathedral, 134.
+ Choragic Monument of Lysicrates, 66 (+30+, +38+).
+ Erechtheum, 64 (+35+, +36+).
+ Museum, 365.
+ Odeion of Regilla (of Herodes Atticus), 68, 69, 70.
+ Parthenon, 56, 58, 63, 64, 131, 359 (Frontispiece, +31+ d, +34+).
+ Propylæa, 58, 65, 69, 358 (+37+).
+ Stoa of Attalus, 67.
+ Temple of Nike Apteros, 64, 65.
+ Temple of Olympian Zeus, 68 (+39+).
+ Theatre of Dionysus, 69, 70.
+ Theseum (Temple of Theseus or Heracles), 62.
+ Tower of Winds (Clepsydra of Cyrrhestes), 53, 67.
+ University, 365
+ ATTICA, 50, 55
+ AUGSBURG.
+ Town hall, 344
+ AUSTRIA, 330
+ AUTUN Cathedral, 166, 167
+ AUVERGNE.
+ Churches, 204
+ AUXERRE Cathedral, 197, 201
+ AVIGNON.
+ Notre Dame Des Doms, 165
+ AVILA.
+ S. Vincente, 180, 247;
+ Tombs in, 352
+ AZAY-LE-RIDEAU.
+ Château, 316
+
+ BAALBEC (Heliopolis), 83.
+ Circular Temple, 94.
+ Temple of Sun, 92
+ BAB-EL-MOLOUK, 14
+ BAGDAD.
+ Tombs, etc., 145, 146
+ BAGH.
+ Viharas, Great Vihara, 405
+ BAILLUR.
+ Temples, 409, 410
+ BAMBERG.
+ Church, 243
+ BARCELONA.
+ Cathedral, 189, 249.
+ Sta. Maria del Pi, 249
+ BAROLLI.
+ Hindu Temple, 409
+ BASLE.
+ Spahlenthor, 246
+ BASSÆ (Phigalæa).
+ Temple of Apollo Epicurius, 65
+ BATALHA.
+ Church, mausoleum, 251
+ BAVARIA, 342
+ BAYEUX Cathedral, 197, 205
+ BAYONNE Cathedral, 197
+ BEAUGENCY.
+ Town hall, 316
+ BEAUMESNIL.
+ Château, 319
+ BEAUNE.
+ Hospital, 214
+ BEAUVAIS Cathedral, 189, 197, 211, 219;
+ chapels, 205;
+ size, 206, 211, 212, 243
+ BEIT-EL-WALI.
+ Rock-cut Temple, 22
+ BELEM.
+ Church, 251, 352.
+ Cloister, tower, 352
+ BELGIUM, 334.
+ BENARES.
+ Hindu Temples, 408, 409
+ BENI HASSAN.
+ Columns, 11, 24, 50.
+ Speos Artemidos, 22.
+ Tombs, 11 (+6+, +7+)
+ BERGAMO.
+ Town Hall, 266
+ BERLIN.
+ Bauschule, 376.
+ Brandenburg Gate, 358.
+ Old Museum, 359 (+200+).
+ New Museum, 359.
+ Parliament House, 377.
+ Theatres, 360, 376
+ BETHLEHEM.
+ Church of the Nativity, 115
+ BHAJA.
+ Chaityas, 404
+ BHILSA.
+ Topes, 403
+ BHUWANESWAR.
+ Hindu temples, 408
+ BIDAR, 146
+ BIJAPUR.
+ Tomb of Mahmud, 148, 153 (+85+).
+ Jumma Musjid, 148.
+ Mogul architecture, 149
+ BILTMORE House, 399
+ BINDRABUN.
+ Ruined temple, 408
+ BIRS NIMROUD.
+ Stepped pyramid, 31
+ BLENHEIM House, 332 (+188+)
+ BLOIS.
+ Château of, 216, 310, 313 (+175+, +176+)
+ BOHEMIA, 338
+ BOLOGNA, 157.
+ Brick houses, 266.
+ Campo Santo, 382.
+ Frati di S. Spirito, 279.
+ Local style, 283.
+ Pal. Bevilacqua, Pal. Fava, 283.
+ Palazzo Communale (town Hall), 266.
+ Renaissance churches in, 277, 293.
+ S. Francesco, 256, 263.
+ S. Petronio, 257, 258, 259, 263.
+ Sta. Maria dei Servi, 263
+ BONN.
+ Minster, 174.
+ Baptistery, 175
+ BORDEAUX.
+ Cathedral, spires, 209.
+ Grand Théatre, 362
+ BOSTON.
+ Ames Building, 397.
+ Custom House, 390.
+ Faneuil Hall, 388.
+ Fine Arts Museum, 394.
+ Hancock House, 387.
+ Old State House, 388.
+ Old South Church, 386.
+ Public Library, 399.
+ State House, 390.
+ Trinity Church, 394 (+222+)
+ BOURGES Cathedral, 189, 197, 199, 202, 249;
+ chapels, 205;
+ size, 206;
+ portals, 208.
+ House of Jacques Cœur, 215 (+127+)
+ BOURNAZEL.
+ Château, 315
+ BOWDEN PARK, 357
+ BOZRAH Cathedral, 117 (+70+)
+ BRANDENBURG.
+ St. Catherine, St. Godehard, 244
+ BREMEN.
+ Town hall, 246, 344
+ BRESCIA.
+ Sta. Maria dei Miracoli, 287
+ BRIEG.
+ Piastenschloss, 343
+ BRISTOL Cathedral, piers, 178
+ BRUGES.
+ Ancien Greffe, 334.
+ Cloth hall, 247.
+ Ste. Anne, 334.
+ Town hall, 247
+ BRUNSWICK.
+ Burg Dankwargerode, 176.
+ Town hall, 246
+ BRUSA, 150
+ BRUSSELS.
+ Bourse, 382.
+ Cathedral (ste. Gudule), 246.
+ Pal. de Justice, 382.
+ Renaissance Houses, 335 (+190+).
+ Town Hall, 247
+ BUBASTIS.
+ Temple, 13
+ BUDA-PESTH.
+ Synagogue, 378
+ BUDDH GAYA.
+ Tope or stupa, 404
+ BUFFALO.
+ Guaranty Building, 397
+ BULACH.
+ Basilica, 375
+ BURGUNDY.
+ Cathedrals in, 197
+ BURGHLEY House, 328 (+184+)
+ BURY.
+ Château, 315
+ BURGOS Cathedral, 248, 249, 251 (+145+)
+ BYZANTIUM, 92; See Constantinople
+
+ CAEN.
+ Churches, 167, 178;
+ St. Étienne (Abbaye aux Hommes) and Ste. Trinité
+ (Abbaye aux Dames), 168;
+ St. Pierre, 312.
+ Hôtel D’Écoville, 316
+ CAHORS Cathedral, 164
+ CAIRO.
+ Karafah (Tombs of Khalîfs), 137, 138, 139.
+ Mohammedan monuments (list), 136, 153.
+ Mosque of Amrou, 136;
+ of Ibn Touloun, 136;
+ of Barkouk, 137;
+ of Kalaoun, 137;
+ of Sultan Hassan, 137, 138 (+80+);
+ of El Muayyad, 137;
+ of Kaîd Bey, 137 (+81+)
+ CALIFORNIA.
+ Spanish missions and churches, 388
+ CAMBODIA.
+ Temple of Nakhon Wat, 413
+ CAMBRAY Cathedral, 197
+ CAMBRIDGE.
+ Caius College, Gate of Honor, 328.
+ Fitzwilliam Museum, 356.
+ King’s College Chapel, 223, 227, 234.
+ Trinity College Library, 332
+ CAMBRIDGE (Mass.).
+ Craigie (Longfellow) House, 387 (+219+)
+ CANTERBURY Cathedral, 219;
+ central tower of, 228;
+ chapels, 231;
+ transepts, 232;
+ minor works in, 234
+ CAPRAROLA.
+ Palace of, 300
+ CAPUA.
+ Amphitheatre, 103
+ CARIA, 71; see Halicamassus
+ CARINTHIA, 338, 339
+ CARLTON House, 357
+ CARTER’S GROVE, 386
+ CASERTA.
+ Royal Palace, 304
+ CASTLE HOWARD, 332
+ CÉRISY-LA-FORÊT.
+ Church, 178
+ CEYLON.
+ Topes, 403
+ CHAISE-DIEU.
+ Cloister, 213
+ CHÂLONS (Châlons-sur-Marne) Cathedral, 205
+ CHALVAU.
+ Château, 314
+ CHAMBORD.
+ Château, 314 (+177+, +178+)
+ CHANTILLY. “Petit Château,” 317
+ CHARLESTON.
+ St. Michael’s, 385
+ CHARLOTTEVILLE.
+ University of Virginia, 390
+ CHARLTON Hall, 328
+ CHARLTON-ON-OXMORE. Plate tracery (+110+)
+ CHARTRES
+ Cathedral, 197, 201, 203;
+ chapels of, 205;
+ size of, 206;
+ W. front, 207;
+ transept porches, 208;
+ spires, 209;
+ capital from (+126+ C).
+ hospital, 214
+ CHEMNITZ Cathedral, 245
+ CHENONCEAUX.
+ Château, 316, 317
+ CHIARAVALLE.
+ Certosa, 255
+ CHICAGO.
+ Auditorium Theatre, 399.
+ Columbian Exposition, 393, 399.
+ Masonic Building, 396.
+ Fisher Building, Schiller Building, 397
+ CHICHESTER Cathedral, spire, 229
+ CHIHUAHUA.
+ Church, 352
+ CHILLAMBARAM.
+ Dravidian Temple, Mantapa of Parvati, 411
+ CHISWICK.
+ Villa, 328, 329
+ CHITTORE.
+ Hindu temples, 409.
+ Palace, 409.
+ Towers, 407, 408 (+227+)
+ CLERMONT (Clermont-Ferrand)
+ Cathedral, 197;
+ chapels of, 205, 212.
+ Notre-Dame-du-Port, 165, 204 (+96+, +97+)
+ CLUNY.
+ Abbey Church, 166.
+ Houses at, 214.
+ Hôtel de (at Paris), 216
+ COBLENTZ.
+ Church of St. Castor, 237
+ COIMBRA.
+ Sta. Cruz, 352
+ COLESHILL.
+ House, 329
+ COLOGNE.
+ Apostles’ Church, 174, 243 (+101+).
+ Cathedral, 189, 192, 205, 243, 249;
+ vaulting of, 239;
+ spires, 240, 241;
+ plan, 189, 205, 242 (+141+).
+ Church of St. Mary-in-the-Capitol, 174.
+ Great St. Martin’s, 174, 243.
+ Romanesque Houses, Etc., 176
+ COMO.
+ Town hall (broletto), 266
+ COMPOSTELLA.
+ St. Iago, 180
+ CONJEVERAM.
+ Dravidian temple, 411
+ CONSTANTINE.
+ Amphitheatre, 92
+ CONSTANTINOPLE, 120.
+ Byzantine monuments (list), 134.
+ Church of Hagia Sophia (Santa Sophia, Divine Wisdom),
+ 111, 123, 124, 127-131, 132, 133, 150, 151
+ (+72+, +75+, +76+, +77+).
+ Church of the Apostles, 132.
+ Early Christian monuments (list), 119.
+ Fountains, Fountain of Ahmet III., 152, 153.
+ Mosque of Ahmet II. (Ahmediyeh), 151 (+88+);
+ of Mehmet II., 150, 151 (+87+);
+ of Osman III. (Nouri Osman), 151;
+ of Soliman (Suleimaniyeh), 151 (+89+);
+ of Yeni Djami, 151.
+ Palaces, 153.
+ St. Bacchus, 127.
+ St. John Studius (Emir Akhor mosque), 118.
+ St. Sergius, 117, 127 (+74+).
+ Tchinli Kiosque (Imperial Museum), 153;
+ sarcophagi in, 66.
+ Tombs, 152.
+ Turkish mosques, 150
+ COPENHAGEN.
+ Exchange, Fredericksborg, 336
+ CORDOVA, 141;
+ Great Mosque, 142, 143 (+83+)
+ CORINTH.
+ Temple of Zeus, 60
+ COUTANCES Cathedral, 197;
+ chapels of, 205;
+ spires, 209
+ CRACOW Castle, 338.
+ Chapel of Jagellons, 338
+ CREMONA.
+ Town hall, 266
+ CTESIPHON.
+ Tâk-kesra, 145
+
+ DAMASCUS, Mosque of El-walîd, 136
+ DANTZIC.
+ Town hall, 344
+ DASHOUR.
+ Pyramid, 9
+ DEIR-EL-BAHARI.
+ Tomb-temple of Hatasu, 15, 21
+ DEIR-EL-MEDINEH.
+ Temple of Hathor, 19
+ DELHI.
+ Jaina Temples, 407.
+ Jumma Musjid, 148.
+ Mogul Architecture of, 149.
+ Palace of Shah Jehan, 148.
+ Pathan arches, Etc., 148
+ DELOS.
+ Gates, 45;
+ Portico of Philip, 67
+ DENDERAH.
+ Temple of Hathor, 17.
+ Group of Temples, 22, 24.
+ Hathoric columns, 24
+ DETROIT.
+ Majestic Building, 397
+ DIEPPE.
+ Church of St. Jacques, 213
+ DIJON.
+ St. Michel, 312
+ DOL Cathedral, east end, 205
+ DRESDEN.
+ Castle, Georgenflügel, 342.
+ Church of St. Mary (Marienkirche) 346 (+194+).
+ Theatre, 376 (+213+).
+ Zwinger Palace, 346 (+193+)
+ DRÜGELTE.
+ Circular church, 175
+ DURHAM Cathedral, 177, 178, 220, 221 (+102+);
+ central tower of, 228;
+ Chapel of Nine Altars, 232
+
+ EARL’S BARTON.
+ Tower, 176
+ ECOUEN.
+ Château, 316
+ EDFOU.
+ Great Temple, 16, 17, 22 (+9+, +10+, +14+).
+ Peripteral Temple, 22
+ EDINBURGH.
+ High School, Royal Institution, 357
+ EGYPT.
+ Early Christian buildings in, 118
+ ELEPHANTINE.
+ Temple of Amenophis III., 22
+ EL KAB. Temple of Amenophis III.; 18
+ ELEUSIS.
+ Propylæa, 69
+ ELLORA.
+ Chaityas, 404.
+ Dravidian Kylas, 413
+ ELNE.
+ Cloister, 170, 213
+ ELY Cathedral, 220;
+ choir vault, 222;
+ octagon, 224, 330;
+ clearstory, 225;
+ towers, 228;
+ interior, 229;
+ size, 232;
+ Lady Chapel, 234
+ EPHESUS. Temple of Artemis (Artemisium), 66;
+ Ionic Order, 53.
+ Palæstra, 71
+ ERECH, 31
+ ESCURIAL.
+ Monastery, 351
+ ESNEH.
+ Hathoric columns, 25.
+ Temple, 23.
+ ESSEN.
+ Nun’s choir, 172
+ ESSLINGEN.
+ Church spire, 240
+ ETCHMIADZIN.
+ Byzantine monuments, 134
+ EVREUX Cathedral, 197
+ EXETER Cathedral, 221 (+129+)
+ EZRA.
+ Church of St. George, 117
+
+ FERAIG.
+ Rock-cut Temple, 22
+ FERRARA Cathedral, 261, 304.
+ Churches, 277, 293.
+ Palaces Scrofa, Roverella, 283
+ FIROUZABAD.
+ Sassanian Buildings, 144
+ FLORENCE.
+ Baptistery, 162.
+ Bartolini, Guadagni, Larderel, Pandolfini, Serristori palaces, 291.
+ Campanile, 263, 264 (+147+ a).
+ Cathedral (Duomo, Santa Maria del Fiore), 257, 258, 263;
+ façade, 261;
+ marble incrustation, 263;
+ dome, 273-275 (+147+, +148+, +159+, +160+).
+ Church
+ of San Miniato, 115, 161, 162;
+ of Or San Michele, 264.
+ Gondi Palace, 291.
+ Loggia dei Lanzi, 266.
+ Loggia di San Paolo, 281.
+ Minor works, 287.
+ Ospedale degli Innocenti, 281.
+ Palazzo Vecchio, 265.
+ Pitti Palace, 280, 300, 319.
+ Riccardi Palace, 279, 280, 281, 290 (+162+).
+ Rucellai Palace, 280, 282.
+ Santa Croce, 258;
+ Pazzi Chapel of, 276;
+ pulpit in, 281;
+ Marsupini tomb, 281.
+ San Lorenzo, 276.
+ San Spirito, 276 (+161+),
+ Santa Maria Novella, 256, 258;
+ façade, 277;
+ fountain in sacristy of, 281.
+ Strozzi Palace, 280, 290 (+163+)
+ FLUSHING.
+ Town hall (Hôtel de Ville), 335
+ FONTAINEBLEAU.
+ Palace, 313, 318
+ FONTEVRAULT.
+ Abbey, 164
+ FONTFROIDE.
+ Cloister, 213
+ FRANCE.
+ Romanesque monuments (list), 170, 171;
+ Gothic monuments (list), 216, 217;
+ Renaissance monuments (list), 324, 325
+ FRANKFORT.
+ Salt House, 346
+ FREIBURG Cathedral, 239, 242, 243;
+ Spire, 240
+ FREIBERG IM ERZGEBIRGE.
+ Golden portal, 242
+ FRITZLAR.
+ Church, 243
+ FULDA.
+ Monastery, 172, 173, 175
+ FURNESS.
+ Abbey, pointed arches, 219
+ FUTTEHPORE SIKHRI.
+ Mosque of Akbar, 148
+
+ GANDHARA.
+ Monasteries, 404
+ GAILLON.
+ Château, 310
+ GELNHAUSEN.
+ Abbey Church, 243. Castle ruins, 176
+ GENOA.
+ Campo Santo, 382.
+ Cathedral, west front, 261.
+ PALACES:--Balbi, Brignole, Cambiasi, Doria-tursi (municipio),
+ Durazzo (reale), Pallavicini, University, 302.
+ Sta. Maria Di Carignano, 299
+ GERMANY.
+ Mediæval, 172.
+ Romanesque monuments (list), 180.
+ Gothic monuments (list), 252.
+ Renaissance monuments (list), 353
+ GERNRODE.
+ Romanesque church, 173
+ GERONA Cathedral, 185, 249, 250
+ GHENT (Gand).
+ Cloth hall, 247
+ GHERF HOSSEIN.
+ Rock-cut temple, 22
+ GHERTASHI (Kardassy).
+ Temple, 23
+ GHIZEH.
+ Pyramids, 4;
+ Pyramid of Cheops, 7 (+1+, +2+);
+ of Chephren, 8;
+ of Mycerinus, 8.
+ Sphinx, Sphinx temple, 10 (+3+, +4+)
+ GIRNAR.
+ Jaina temples, 407.
+ Temple of Neminatha, 407
+ GLASGOW.
+ Churches in Greek style, 357
+ GLOUCESTER Cathedral, 178, 220, 222;
+ cloisters, 222;
+ east window, 227;
+ central tower, 228;
+ Lady Chapel, 234
+ GOSLAR.
+ Palace of Henry III., 176
+ GOURNAH.
+ Columns, 24.
+ Temple, 21
+ GRAN.
+ Cruciform Chapel, 338
+ GRANADA, 141.
+ Alhambra, 142, 143, 144, 351 (+84+).
+ Cathedral, 348, 350;
+ minor works in, 352.
+ Palace of Charles V., 352 (+197+)
+ GRANGE House, 357
+ GREAT BRITAIN.
+ Gothic monuments (list), 235, 236.
+ Norman monuments (list), 181.
+ Renaissance monuments (list), 337
+ GUADALAJARA.
+ Infantado, 350
+ GUJERAT, 146
+ GWALIOR.
+ Jaina Temples, 407.
+ Palace, 409.
+ Teli-ka-mandir, 409
+
+ HADDON Hall, 326
+ HAGUE, THE.
+ Town hall, 336
+ HÄMELSCHENBURG Castle, 343 (+191+)
+ HALBERSTADT Cathedral, 244.
+ Town hall, 245
+ HALICARNASSUS.
+ Mausoleum, 4, 53, 71, 72 (+41+)
+ HAMONCONDAH.
+ Temple, 410
+ HAMPTON Court, 326, 332
+ HARTFORD.
+ State Capitol, 393
+ HAURAN.
+ Roman works in, 92;
+ domestic buildings, 118
+ HARDWICKE Hall, 328
+ HATFIELD House, 328
+ HECKLINGEN.
+ Romanesque church, 173
+ HEIDELBERG Castle, 343 (+192+).
+ Ritter House, 346
+ HEILSBERG Castle, 245
+ HELDBURG Castle, 342
+ HENGREAVE Hall, 326
+ HERCULANUM, 86.
+ Amphitheatre, 92.
+ Houses, 107.
+ Theatre, (+61+)
+ HEREFORD Cathedral, 220
+ HIERAPOLIS.
+ Early Christian buildings in, 118
+ HILDESHEIM.
+ Kaiserhaus, 346.
+ Renaissance houses, 345.
+ St. Godehard, 173.
+ Town hall, 245.
+ Wedekindsches Haus, 346
+ HOLLAND House, 328
+ HOWARD Castle, 332
+ HULLABÎD.
+ Temples, 409;
+ double temple, 410 (+228+);
+ Kaît Iswara, 410
+
+ IFFLEY.
+ Church, 179 (+104+)
+ INDIA, 146-149.
+ Moslem monuments (list), 154.
+ Non-moslem monuments (list), 415
+ INNSBRÜCK, Schloss Ambras, 339
+ IPSAMBOUL.
+ (Abou Simbel). Grotto temples, 21, 22 (+13+)
+ IRELAND.
+ Celtic Towers, 176
+ ISPAHAN.
+ Meidan (Meidan-Shah), Mesjid-Shah, Bazaar, Medress, 146
+ ISSOIRE.
+ Church of St. Paul, 165, 204
+ ITALY.
+ Early Christian monuments (list), 119;
+ Romanesque monuments (list), 170;
+ Gothic monuments (list), 268-269;
+ Renaissance monuments (list), 306-307
+
+ JAEN Cathedral, 348, 350
+ JAMALGIRI.
+ Monastery, 405
+ JERUSALEM.
+ Church of the Ascension, 115.
+ Early Christian churches, 111.
+ Herod’s temple, 41, 83.
+ Mosque of Omar (Dome of the Rock, Kubbet-es-sakhrah), 116, 136.
+ Octagonal church on temple site, 115, 116.
+ Tombs of the Kings, Etc., 39.
+ Tomb of Absalom, of Hezekiah, Golden Gate, Solomon’s temple, 40.
+ Wall of Lamentations, 41.
+ Zerubbabel’s temple, 41
+ JAUNPORE, 146
+
+ KALABSHÉ.
+ Columns, 12.
+ Temple, 23
+ KALB LOUZEH.
+ Church, 117 (+69+)
+ KALBURGAH, 146
+ KANARUK.
+ Hindu temples, 408
+ KANTONNUGGUR.
+ Hindu temple, 408
+ KARDASSY (Ghertashi).
+ Temple, 23
+ KARLI.
+ Chaityas, 404
+ KARLSTEIN Castle, 245
+ KARNAK, 50.
+ Great Temple (of Amen Ra) and Hypostyle Hall,
+ xxiii., 17, 18, 19, 24, 36 (+11+, +12+).
+ Ancient temple, 13.
+ Temple of Khonsu, 16, 20
+ KASCHAU Cathedral, 245
+ KASR.
+ Mound, 31
+ KEDDLESTONE Hall, 334
+ KELAT SEMAN. Church of St. Simeon
+ Stylites, 117
+ KHAJURAHO.
+ Jaina temples, 407.
+ Kandarya Mahadeo, 408
+ KHORSABAD.
+ Palace of Sargon, 31, 32 (+18+).
+ City Gate, 32, 33, (+19+)
+ KIRKSTALL Abbey, pointed arches, 219
+ KÖNIGSBERG.
+ Church At, 244
+ KOYUNJIK.
+ Palaces of Sennacherib and Assur-bani-pal, 31
+ KUTTENBERG.
+ Church of St. Barbara, 239, 240
+
+ LAACH.
+ Abbey of, 174
+ LABYRINTH (of Moeris or Fayoum in Egypt), 26
+ LA MUETTE.
+ Château, 314
+ LANDSHUT.
+ Residenz, 342.
+ St. Martin’s, 240, 244
+ LANGRES Cathedral, 167
+ LAON Cathedral, 197, 205, 206, 210;
+ porches, 208
+ LA ROCHEFOUCAULD.
+ Château, 315
+ LAVAL Cathedral (La Trinité), 201
+ LE MANS Cathedral, 197, 200, 205, 206 (+118+);
+ tomb in, 310
+ LEON.
+ Cathedral, 189, 249.
+ Panteon of S. Isidore, 179, 180
+ LE PUY (Puy-en-Vélay).
+ Church, 204;
+ cloister of same, 213
+ LEIPZIG.
+ Fürstenhaus, 346
+ LEMGO.
+ Town hall, 344
+ LEYDEN.
+ Town hall, 336
+ LICHFIELD Cathedral, 225, 229 (+135+);
+ west front, 228 (+134+);
+ spire, 229
+ LIÈGE.
+ Archbishop’s Palace, 334.
+ Church of St. Jacques, 247
+ LIMBURG-ON-THE-HARDT.
+ Church, 193
+ LIMBURG-ON-LAHN.
+ Abbey Church, 174.
+ Cathedral of St. George, 239 (+139+)
+ LIMOGES Cathedral, 197, 205, 212
+ LINCOLN Cathedral, 219, 225, 229, 232;
+ west front, 227;
+ central tower, 228;
+ chapter-house, 223
+ LISBON, 352
+ LISIEUX Cathedral, 197
+ LIVERPOOL.
+ St. George’s Hall, 358 (+199+)
+ LOIRE VALLEY.
+ Churches of, 165
+ LOMBARDY.
+ Romanesque Monuments In, 157
+ LONDON.
+ Albert Memorial, 380.
+ Albert Memorial Hall, 382.
+ Bank of England, 334, 356.
+ British Museum, 356 (+198+);
+ Elgin marbles in, 57;
+ mausoleum fragments in, 71.
+ Cathedral (St. Paul’s), 329-331 (+186+, +187+).
+ Chapel Royal (Banqueting Hall, Whitehall), 329 (+185+).
+ CHURCHES:--
+ Bow Church, 332;
+ St. George’s, Bloomsbury, 333;
+ St. Martin’s-in-the-Fields, 333 (+189+);
+ St. Mary’s, Woolnoth, 332;
+ St. Pancras’s, 357;
+ St. Paul’s Cathedral, 329-331 (+186+, +187+);
+ St. Paul’s, Covent Garden, 329;
+ St. Stephen’s, Walbrook, 331;
+ St. Stephen’s Chapel, Westminster, 234;
+ Temple Church, pointed arches in, 219;
+ Westminster Abbey, 220 (+137+);
+ Henry VII.’s chapel in same, 192, 223, 227, 229, 234 (+136+).
+ Greenwich Hospital, 332.
+ Mansion House, 334.
+ Natural History Museum, South Kensington, 381 (+216+).
+ New Law Courts, 380.
+ Newgate Prison, 334.
+ Parliament Houses, 234, 380 (+215+).
+ Somerset House, 329, 333.
+ South Kensington Museum, new building, 382.
+ University, 357.
+ Westminster Abbey, see above.
+ Westminster Hall, 233.
+ Whitehall Palace, 329;
+ Banqueting Hall (Chapel Royal) in same, 329 (+185+)
+ LONGLEAT House, 328
+ LOUVAIN
+ Cathedral, 246, 247.
+ Cloth hall, 247.
+ Town hall, 248 (+144+)
+ LÜBECK.
+ City Gates, 246.
+ St. Mary’s, 242, 244.
+ St. Catharine’s, 244.
+ Town hall, 246
+ LUCCA.
+ Campanile, 264.
+ Cathedral (S. Martino), 161, 257, 258, 260 (+149+);
+ tempietto in same, 281;
+ tomb of P. di Noceto in same, 281 (+164+).
+ S. Frediano, S. Michele, 161.
+ Minor works, 282, 283.
+ Palazzo Pretorio, Pal. Bernardini, 283
+ LUPIANA Monastery, 350
+ LUXOR, 50.
+ Temple, 19, 20.
+ Osirid Piers, 24
+ LUZ.
+ Church at, 352
+ LYCIA.
+ Tombs, 37, 39, 52
+
+ MADRID.
+ First Palace, 350.
+ New Palace, 352
+ MADRID, Château de (at Boulogne), 314
+ MADURA.
+ Choultrie of Tirumalla Nayak, 411.
+ Great Temple, corridors, 411.
+ Palace, 413
+ MAFRA.
+ Palace, 353
+ MAGDEBURG Cathedral, 189, 242, 243
+ MAHRISCH TRÜBAU.
+ Castle portal, 338
+ MAISONS.
+ Château, 322
+ MALAGA.
+ Alcazar, 142, 143.
+ Cathedral, 348
+ MALINES (Mechlin).
+ Cathedral of St. Rombaut, 246, 247.
+ Cloth hall, 247.
+ Hôtel du Saumon, 324
+ MANCHESTER.
+ Assize Courts, 380 (+216+)
+ MANIKYALA.
+ Tope, 403
+ MANRESA.
+ Collegiate Church, 249
+ MANTINÆA.
+ Theatre, 69
+ MANTUA.
+ Campanile, 264.
+ Church of S. Andrea, 279.
+ Early Renaissance palaces, 283.
+ Palazzo del Té, 289
+ MARBURG.
+ St. Elizabeth, 240, 242 (+140+)
+ MARIENBURG Castle, Great Hall, 245
+ MARIENWERDER.
+ Castle, 245
+ MARSEILLES.
+ Chapel of St. Lazare, 310.
+ Fountain of Longchamps, 372 (+211+)
+ MASHITA.
+ Palace of Chosroes, 145
+ MASSACHUSETTS. Country house in (+225+)
+ MAULBRONN.
+ Monastery, 176
+ MAYENCE Cathedral, 174
+ MEAUX Cathedral, 212
+ MECCA.
+ Kaabah, 136
+ MEDINA DE RIO SECO.
+ Rood-screen, 352
+ MEDINET ABOU.
+ Osirid piers, 24 (+15+).
+ Pavilion of Rameses III., 26.
+ Peripteral temple, 22.
+ Tomb-temple of Rameses III., 15, 21
+ MEISSEN.
+ Albrechtsburg, 245
+ MEROË.
+ Pyramids, 9
+ METZ Cathedral, 244
+ MEYDOUM.
+ Stepped Pyramid, 9
+ MILAN, 157.
+ Arcade, 382.
+ Cathedral, 243, 255, 257, 260, 261, 262, 263, 264.
+ Domical churches, 278.
+ Ospedale Maggiore, 283.
+ S. Ambrogio, 158, 159 (+90+).
+ S. Eustorgio, Portinari Chapel in, 283.
+ S. Satiro, sacristy of, 289.
+ Sta. Maria delle Grazie, 278, 289
+ MILETUS.
+ Temple of Apollo Didymæus, 53, 66 (+28+, +29+)
+ MINDEN Cathedral, 244
+ MŒRIS.
+ Labyrinth of, 26
+ MOISSAC.
+ Cloister, 170, 213
+ MONREALE.
+ Churches, cathedral, 162
+ MONS.
+ Cathedral, St. Wandru, 246, 247
+ MONTEPULCIANO.
+ Church of S. Biagio, 294
+ MONTMAJOUR.
+ Cloister, 170, 213
+ MONT ST. MICHEL.
+ Abbey, 167, 168, 213, 214;
+ cloister of same, 213
+ MORET.
+ House of Francis I., 316
+ MOSCOW.
+ The Kremlin, 366
+ MOSUL, 33
+ MOUNT ABU.
+ Jaina temples, Temple of Vimalah Sah, 405, 406 (+226+)
+ MOUNT ATHOS.
+ Monastery, 134
+ MUGHEIR.
+ Temple of Sin Or Hurki, 30
+ MUJELIBEH.
+ Mound, 31
+ MUKTESWARA.
+ Hindu temples, 409
+ MÜLHAUSEN.
+ Town Hall, 344
+ MUNICH, 366.
+ Auekirche, 375.
+ Basilica, 375.
+ Cathedral, 240, 242.
+ Glyptothek, 359.
+ Ludwigskirche, 375.
+ Propylæa, 360 (+201+).
+ Ruhmeshalle, 359.
+ St. Michael’s, 344.
+ MÜNSTER.
+ Church at, 243.
+ Town hall, 245
+ MÜNZENBERG.
+ Castle ruins, 176
+ MYCENÆ.
+ Fortifications, 44 (+23+).
+ Lion Gate, 44 (+22+).
+ Tholos of Atreus, 45, 46, 148 (+24+, +25+).
+ Tombs, 4
+ MYLASSA.
+ Tomb, 72
+ MYRA.
+ Theatre, 69.
+ Tombs, 72
+
+ NAKHON WAT, Temple of, 413
+ NAKSH-I-ROUSTAM (persepolis), 36.
+ Tomb of Darius, 37
+ NANCY.
+ Ducal Palace, 216, 311
+ NANKIN.
+ Porcelain Tower, 414
+ NAPLES.
+ Arcade, 382.
+ Arch of Alphonso, 287.
+ Church
+ of Gesù Nuovo, 304;
+ of S. Francesco di Paola, 305, 365;
+ of S. Lorenzo, 263;
+ of S. Severo (+173+).
+ Minor works, 281, 282.
+ Pal. Gravina, Porta Capuana, 287.
+ Royal Museum, 304.
+ Royal Palace, 304, 305.
+ Theatre of S. Carlo, 305, 365
+ NARBONNE Cathedral, 197, 205, 211
+ NASSICK.
+ Chaityas, 404
+ NAUKRATIS, 44
+ NAUMBURG.
+ Church At, 243
+ NETHERLANDS, 146.
+ Gothic monuments (list), 252-253
+ NEUWEILER.
+ Church of St. Peter And St. Paul, 243
+ NEVERS.
+ St. Étienne, 165
+ NEW MEXICO.
+ Spanish churches, 388
+ NEWPORT.
+ Town hall, 388.
+ Trinity Church, 386
+ NEW YORK.
+ American Surety Building, Broadway Chambers, 397.
+ Casino, 399.
+ Cathedral
+ of St. John the Divine, 399;
+ of St. Patrick, 375, 391.
+ Century Club, 399.
+ City Hall, 389.
+ Custom House, 390 (+221+).
+ Grace Church, 392.
+ Huntington house, 399.
+ Madison Square Garden, Metropolitan Club, 399.
+ St. Paul’s, 386.
+ Sub-Treasury, 390.
+ Times Building, (+224+).
+ Trinity Church, 392.
+ Vanderbilt and Villard houses, 399
+ NÎMES.
+ Amphitheatre, 92.
+ Maison Carrée, 93, 94
+ NIMROUD.
+ Palaces of Assur-nazir-pal and Shalmaneser, 31, 32
+ NINEVEH, 31
+ NIPPUR (Niffer).
+ Ruins of, 29, 31
+ NORMANDY.
+ Romanesque churches in, 167, 177;
+ cathedrals in, 197, 213
+ NORTH GERMANY.
+ Brick churches in, 244
+ NORTH WOBURN.
+ Rumford House, 387
+ NORWICH Cathedral, 177, 178, 220
+ NOYON Cathedral, 197, 200, 203, 205, 246
+ NUBIA.
+ Early Christian buildings, 118
+ NUREMBERG, 238.
+ Churches of St. Sebald, St. Lorenz, 245.
+ Funk, Hirschvogel, and Keller houses, 346.
+ Renaissance houses, 345.
+ Town hall, 344.
+ Shrine of St. Sebald, 347
+
+ OLYMPIA.
+ Altis, Echo Hall, 69.
+ Heraion, 50, 62.
+ Temples, 55;
+ sculptures from, 57.
+ Temple of Zeus, 62
+ OPPENHEIM.
+ St. Catharine’s, 239, 242, 244
+ OUDEYPORE.
+ Hindu temples, palace, 409
+ ORANGE.
+ Theatre, 101
+ ORCHOMENOS.
+ Ceiling, 47
+ ORLÉANS.
+ Houses, 316.
+ Town hall (hôtel de ville), 311
+ ORVIETO Cathedral, 257, 259, 261;
+ façade of same, 260
+ OSNABRÜCK.
+ Church at, 243
+ OTTMARSHEIM.
+ Church at, 172
+ OUDENÄRDE.
+ Town hall, 247
+ OURSCAMP.
+ Hospital, 214
+ OXFORD.
+ All Souls’ College, 333.
+ Cathedral (Christ Church), 220, 222.
+ Christ Church Hall, 233, 234.
+ Merton College Chapel, 234.
+ Radcliffe Library, 333.
+ Sheldonian Theatre, 332
+
+ PADERBORN.
+ Town hall, 344
+ PADUA.
+ Arena chapel, 258.
+ Palazzo del Consiglio, 287
+ PÆSTUM.
+ Basilica, 69.
+ Temples, 61
+ PAILLY.
+ Château, 317
+ PALERMO.
+ Churches of Eremitani, La Martorana, 162
+ PALMYRA, 83.
+ Temple of the Sun, 92.
+ Ceiling panels (+50+ a)
+ PARASNATHA.
+ Jaina temples, 407
+ PARIS.
+ Arch of Triumph of the Carrousel, 362, 363;
+ of l’Étoile, 362, 363 (+204+).
+ Bourse (Exchange), 363.
+ Cathedral (Notre Dame), 189, 197-202, 249 (+116+, +117+, +124+);
+ rose windows, 203, 212;
+ chapels, 205;
+ size, 206, 232;
+ west front, 207, 227 (+124+);
+ capital from (+126+ b);
+ early carving (+114+).
+ CHURCHES:--
+ Chapel and Dome of the Invalides, 321 (+182+);
+ Madeleine, 362, 363 (+205+);
+ Panthéon, 361, 362 (+202+, +203+);
+ Sacré-Cœur at Montmartre, 373;
+ Sainte Chapelle, 185, 203, 224 (+106+, +121+);
+ capital from same (+126+ a);
+ Sorbonne, 319;
+ St. Augustin, 371;
+ Ste. Clothilde, 371, 375;
+ St. Étienne-du-Mont, St. Eustache, 312;
+ St. Jean de Belleville, 371;
+ St. Merri, St. Sévérin, 213;
+ St. Paul-St. Louis, 319;
+ St. Sulpice, 323, 361 (+183+);
+ St. Vincent-de-Paul, 364;
+ Val-de-Grâce, 322.
+ Collège Chaptal, 371.
+ Colonnades of the Garde-Meuble, 361, 367.
+ Column of July (Colonne Juillet), 365.
+ Corps Législatif (Palais Bourbon), 363.
+ École des Beaux-Arts, 355, 370, 392, 393;
+ library of same, 364;
+ door (+206+).
+ École de Médecine, new buildings, 374.
+ Exhibition buildings, 374.
+ FOUNTAINS:--of Cuvier, Molière, St. Michel, 372.
+ Halles Centrales, 371.
+ Hôtel-de-Ville (town hall), 316;
+ new building, 373.
+ HÔTELS:--
+ Carnavalet (de Ligeris), 316;
+ de Cluny, 216;
+ des Invalides, 321.
+ House of Francis I. (Maison François I.), 316.
+ Library of the Beaux-Arts, 364;
+ of Ste. Genéviève, 365.
+ Louvre (see palaces). Museum (Musée) Galliéra (+212+).
+ Opera House (Nouvel Opéra), 372 (+210+).
+ PALACES:--
+ Palais Bourbon (Corps Législatif), 363;
+ Palais de l’Industrie, 364;
+ Pal. de Justice, 364;
+ Louvre and Tuileries, 215, 315-319, 321, 362, 371, 372
+ (+179+, +208+, +209+);
+ Luxemburg Palace, 318 (+180+).
+ PLACES (Squares):--
+ de la Concorde, 324;
+ Royale, 319;
+ Vendôme, 322.
+ Railway stations (du Nord, de l’Est, d’Orléans), 372.
+ Sorbonne, new academic buildings, 374.
+ PAULINZELLE.
+ Romanesque church, 173
+ PAVIA, 157.
+ Certosa, 255, 262, 263, 278, 283, 284 (+152+, +153+).
+ Church of S. Michele, 159.
+ Domical churches, 278
+ PEKIN.
+ Summer pavilion, Temple of Great Dragon, 414
+ PERGAMON (Pergamus). Altar of Eumenes II., 67.
+ Christian buildings, 118
+ PERIGUEUX.
+ St. Front, 164 (+94+, +95+)
+ PEROOR.
+ Temple, 411
+ PERSEPOLIS, 145.
+ Columns, 37, 38 (+21+).
+ Hall of Xerxes, 36, 37.
+ Palaces, 35, 69
+ PERSIA.
+ Moslem architecture, 145, 146 (list 154).
+ Sassanian buildings, 144, 145
+ PERUGIA.
+ Oratory of San Bernardino, 279.
+ Town hall (Pal. Communale), 266.
+ Roman Gates, 88
+ PETERBOROUGH Cathedral, 178, 220;
+ retro-choir, 222;
+ west front, 227
+ PHIGALÆA (Bassæ).
+ Gate, 45.
+ Sculptures from, 57.
+ Temple of Apollo Epicurius, 65
+ PHILADELPHIA.
+ Christ Church, 386 (+218+).
+ Girard College, 390, 391.
+ Independence Hall, 388.
+ Marine Exchange, Mint, 390.
+ Municipal Building, 391
+ PHILÆ.
+ Great Temple, 22.
+ Peripteral temple, 22
+ PIACENZA, 157.
+ Campanile, 159 (+91+).
+ Cathedral (+91+).
+ Town hall, 266
+ PIASTENSCHLOSS at Brieg, 343
+ PIENZA.
+ Palazzo Piccolomini, etc., 282
+ PIERREFONDS.
+ Château, 371
+ PISA.
+ Churches in, 115, 261;
+ minor works in, 282;
+ early Renaissance in, 282-283.
+ Baptistery, 160 (+92+).
+ Cathedral (Duomo), 159, 160, 276 (+92+, +93+).
+ Leaning Tower, 160 (+92+).
+ Sta. Maria della Spina, 264
+ PISTOIA.
+ Campanile, 264.
+ Churches, 161, 261.
+ Podestà, Palazzo Communale, 266.
+ Sta. Maria dell’ Umiltà, 293
+ PITTSBURGH.
+ Carnegie Building, 397.
+ Carnegie Library, 399.
+ County Buildings, 394
+ PLAGNITZ.
+ Castle, 343
+ PLASSENBURG.
+ Castle, 343
+ POITIERS Cathedral, 197, 201, 205
+ POLA.
+ Amphitheatre, 92, 102
+ POMPEII.
+ Amphitheatre, 92.
+ Baths, 86.
+ Houses, 72, 107, 108;
+ House of Pansa (+65+).
+ Theatre, 101.
+ Tombs, 105
+ PONT DU GARD.
+ Bridge, 108
+ PORTSMOUTH. Sherburne House, 387
+ PORTUGAL, 352.
+ Gothic monuments (list), 253
+ POTSDAM.
+ St. Nicholas Church, 359
+ PRAGUE.
+ Belvedere, 339.
+ Cathedral, 239, 242, 244.
+ Palace on Hradschin, Schloss Stern, Waldstein palace, 339
+ PRATO.
+ Churches in, 161, 293.
+ Madonna delle Carceri, 278
+ PRENTZLAU.
+ Church, 244
+ PRIENE.
+ Ionic order, 53;
+ Propylæa, 69
+ PROVENCE, 164.
+ PROVINS.
+ Houses at, 214
+ PURI.
+ Temples, 408.
+ Temple of Jugganât, 409
+ PURUDKUL.
+ Rock-cut raths, 413
+
+ RAMESSEUM (Thebes).
+ Tomb-temple of Rameses II., 15, 21, 24 (+8+)
+ RAMISSERAM.
+ Temple, corridors, 411
+ RATISBON (Regensburg) Cathedral, 239, 241, 244.
+ Town hall, 245.
+ Walhalla, 359
+ RAVENNA, 114.
+ Baptistery of St. John, 119.
+ Byzantine monuments (list), 134.
+ Cathedral, 304.
+ Early Christian monuments (list), 119.
+ S. Apollinare Nuovo, S. Apollinare in Classe, 114.
+ S. Vitale, 117, 122, 127, 172 (+73+)
+ REGGIO.
+ Amphitheatre, 92
+ REIMS Cathedral, 189, 197, 201, 202, 203, 205;
+ size, 206;
+ west front, 207, 213, 227;
+ towers, 209;
+ portals, 208, 210
+ RIMINI.
+ S. Francesco, 277
+ ROCHESTER Cathedral, 220
+ RODEZ Cathedral, 197, 212
+ ROME.
+ Ancient monuments, (list) 108, 109.
+ Amphitheatre of Statilius Taurus, 102.
+ ARCHES:--
+ in general, 77, 103;
+ of Constantine, 80, 103 (+63+);
+ of Septimius Severus, 103;
+ of Titus, 92, 103;
+ of Trajan, 97, 103.
+ BASILICAS:--
+ in general, 97, 98;
+ Basilica Æmilia, 98;
+ of Constantine, xxiii, 80, 82, 98, 99 (+50+ b, +58+, +59+);
+ Julian Basilica, 98;
+ Sempronian, 98;
+ Ulpian, 97, 98 (+57+).
+ (For Early Christian Basilicas, see Churches.)
+ BATHS (Thermæ):--
+ in general, 71, 92, 99;
+ of Agrippa, 91, 100;
+ of Caracalla, 87, 92 (+60+);
+ of Diocletian, 92, 100, 101;
+ of Titus, 86, 91, 100, 105.
+ Campanile of Campidoglio (Capitol), 305.
+ Capitol, 91;
+ palaces on, 299.
+ CHURCHES:--
+ in general, 293;
+ Church of Gesù, 299;
+ Sistine Chapel of Vatican, 286, 289;
+ Sta. Agnese
+ (basilica), 112
+ (modern church), 303;
+ S. Agostino, 286;
+ S. Clemente, 114;
+ Sta. Costanza, 111 (+66+);
+ St. John Lateran, 113, 251, 304, 305;
+ cloister of same, 281;
+ S. Lorenzo, 112;
+ S. Lorenzo in Miranda, 93;
+ Sta. Maria degli Angeli, 101;
+ Sta. Maria Maggiore, 113, 305;
+ Chapel of Sixtus V. in same, 299;
+ Sta. Maria del Popolo, 286, 287;
+ Chigi Chapel in same, 293;
+ Sta. Maria della Vittoria, 303;
+ Sta. Maria sopra Minerva, 256;
+ St. Paul-beyond-the-Walls, 113, 281 (+67+, +68+);
+ St. Peter’s, original basilica, 113;
+ existing church of, 274, 286, 289, 290, 294-296, 299, 321
+ (+169+, +170+, +171+);
+ colonnade of same, 295, 303, 367;
+ sacristy of same, 305;
+ S. Pietro in Montorio, Tempietto in court of, 209.
+ CIRCUSES:--
+ Maximus, 103;
+ of Caligula and Nero, 103, 113.
+ Cloaca Maxima, 81, 90.
+ Colosseum (Flavian amphitheatre) 91, 92, 102 (+45+, +62+).
+ COLUMNS:--103;
+ of Marcus Aurelius, 104;
+ of Trajan, 97, 104.
+ Early Christian monuments, 111; (list), 118, 119.
+ FORA:--
+ in general, 97;
+ of Augustus, 91, 97;
+ of Julius, Nerva, Vespasian, 97;
+ Forum Romanum (Magnum), 97, 98;
+ Forum of Trajan, 97, 98 (+57+).
+ Fountain of Trevi, 305.
+ HOUSES:--
+ in general, 105, 106, 108;
+ of Vestals (Atrium Vestæ), 94, 106;
+ of Livia, 107.
+ Lateran, carved ornament from Museum of (+49+);
+ palace of, 300.
+ Mausoleum of Augustus, of Hadrian, 104.
+ Minor Works in Rome, 287.
+ Monument to Victor Emmanuel, 382.
+ National Museum, 382.
+ PALACES (Ancient):--
+ of Cæsars on Palatine Hill, 86, 91, 105;
+ of Nero (Golden House), 91, 92, 100, 105;
+ Septizonium, 105.
+ PALACES (Renaissance):--
+ Altemps, 292;
+ Barberini, 304, 305;
+ Borghese, 304;
+ Braschi, 305;
+ of Capitol, 299;
+ Cancelleria, 290, 291;
+ Corsini, 305;
+ Farnese, 292 (+167+, +168+);
+ Farnesina, 291;
+ Giraud, 290, 291 (+166+);
+ Lante, 292;
+ Massimi, Palma, 291;
+ Quirinal, 300;
+ Sacchetti, 291;
+ Vatican, Belvedere, greater and lesser court,
+ Court of S. Damaso, Loggie, 209, 291;
+ Braccio Nuovo, 305, 365;
+ Casino del Papa in gardens, 293;
+ papal residence, 300;
+ Scala Reggia, 305;
+ palazzo di Venezia, 286.
+ Pantheon of Agrippa, 82, 91, 94-96, 100, 118, 122, 127, 365
+ (+54+, +55+, +56+).
+ Pons Ælius (Ponte S. Angelo), 108.
+ Porta Maggiore, 108.
+ Portico of Octavia, 91.
+ TEMPLES:--
+ Of Castor and Pollux (Dioscuri), 84, 91, 94 (+44+);
+ of Concord, 94;
+ of Faustina, 93;
+ of Fortuna Virilis, 89, 90, 93;
+ of Hercules or Vesta, 90;
+ of Julius, 94;
+ of Jupiter Capitolinus, 68, 89, 91;
+ of Jupiter Stator, so called (see Temple of Castor and Pollux);
+ of Jupiter Tonans, 91;
+ of Mars Ultor, 91;
+ of Minerva Medica, 127;
+ of Peace, 98;
+ of Trajan, 97;
+ of Venus and Rome, 94 (+53+);
+ of Vesta, in Forum, 94;
+ of Vesta, so called, or Hercules, 90.
+ THEATRES:--
+ Of Marcellus, 91, 101 (+42+);
+ of Mummius, of Pompey, 101.
+ TOMBS:--86, 104;
+ of Caius Cestius, of Cecilia Metella, 104;
+ of Helena, 118
+ ROSENBORG Castle, 336
+ ROSHEIM.
+ Church façade, 175
+ ROTHENBURG.
+ Town hall, 344
+ ROUEN, 310.
+ Cathedral, 192, 197, 201, 202, 205;
+ size of, 206;
+ west front, 207;
+ rose windows, 212.
+ Hôtel Bourgtheroude, 316.
+ Palais de Justice, 214.
+ St. Maclou, 209.
+ St. Ouen, 212, 213, 375;
+ rose window from (+112+)
+ ROUHEIHA.
+ Early Christian church, 117
+ ROYAL DOMAIN, 166, 167, 197
+ RUANWALLI.
+ Topes, 403
+ RUSSIA, 367.
+ Byzantine monuments (list), 134
+
+ SADRI.
+ Temple, 406
+ SAKKARAH.
+ Pyramid, 9
+ SALAMANCA.
+ Casa de las Conchas, 349.
+ Cathedral (old), 180, 248;
+ (new), 250, 348.
+ Monastery of S. Girolamo, 348.
+ S. Domingo, 348.
+ University, 349;
+ portal of (+195+)
+ SALISBURY
+ Cathedral, 219, 223, 225, 229, 232 (+128+);
+ west front, 228;
+ spire, 228, 229.
+ Market cross, 234
+ SALONICA. Church of St. George, 118.
+ Other monuments (list), 134
+ SALSETTE.
+ Viharas, 405
+ SALZBURG.
+ Church of St. Francis, 242
+ SAMOS.
+ Gate, 45
+ SANCHI.
+ Brahman temple, 404.
+ Tope, 403
+ SAN ILDEFONSO.
+ Royal Palace, 352
+ SABAGOSSA.
+ Casa de Zaporta, 350 (+196+)
+ SAXONY, 173
+ SCHALABURG.
+ Castle, 339
+ SCHLETTSTADT Cathedral, 239
+ SCHLOSS HÄMELSCHENBURG, 343 (+191+)
+ SCHLOSS PORZIA at Spital, 338
+ SCHLOSS STERN at Prague, 339
+ SCHWARZ-RHEINDORF.
+ Church, 174
+ SCHWEINFÜRTH.
+ Town hall, 344
+ SCINDE, 146
+ SECUNDRA.
+ Tomb of Akbar, 148
+ SEDINGA.
+ Hathoric columns, 24
+ SÉEZ Cathedral, 197
+ SEGOVIA Cathedral, 190, 249, 348.
+ Church of S. Millan, of Templars, 180
+ SELINUS.
+ Temples, 49;
+ northern temple, 60;
+ Temple of Zeus, 61
+ SEMNEH.
+ Pavilion, 26
+ SENLIS Cathedral, 197, 200, 209
+ SENS.
+ Archbishop’s palace, 317.
+ Cathedral, 203, 219
+ SERBISTAN.
+ Sassanian buildings, 144
+ SEVILLE.
+ Alcazar, 142, 143.
+ Casa de Pilato (House of Pilate), 142, 350.
+ Cathedral, 244, 250, 257, 351.
+ Giralda, 142, 143, 352
+ SHEEPREE.
+ Pathan arches, 148
+ SIENNA.
+ Brick houses, 266.
+ Campanile, 264.
+ Cathedral (Duomo), 257, 259, 263 (+150+);
+ west front, 260 (+151+).
+ Loggia del Papa, 282.
+ Minor works, 282.
+ PALACES:--
+ Del Governo, Piccolomini, Spannocchi, 282;
+ Palazzo Pubblico, 266.
+ Renaissance churches, 293.
+ S. Giovanni in Fonte, 260
+ SILSILEH.
+ Grotto temple, 22
+ SOISSONS Cathedral, 197, 200, 203, 205, 243
+ SOMNATH.
+ Jaina temple, 407
+ SOMNATHPUR.
+ Chalukyan temples, 409, 410
+ SOUTHWELL Minster, carving from, (+115+)
+ SPAIN, 347.
+ Gothic monuments (list), 253.
+ Romanesque churches, 179-180
+ SPALATO.
+ Palace of Diocletian, 92, 106, 113 (+64+)
+ SPITAL.
+ Schloss Porzia, 338
+ SPIRES (Speyer) Cathedral, 174 (+100+)
+ ST. ALBAN’S Abbey, tombs, etc., in, 234
+ ST. AUGUSTINE.
+ Fort Marion (S. Marco), 388.
+ Ponce de Leon Hotel, 399.
+ Roman Catholic cathedral, 388.
+ ST. BENOÎT-SUR-LOIRE.
+ Antechurch, 177
+ ST. DENIS.
+ Abbey, 197, 198, 200, 202, 203 (+120+);
+ tomb of Louis XII. in, 316;
+ of Francis I., 317
+ ST. GERMAIN-EN-LAYE.
+ Château, 313;
+ Royal chapel in, 204
+ ST. GILLES.
+ Church, 165
+ ST. LOUIS.
+ Union Trust Bdg., 397
+ ST. PAUL.
+ State Capitol, 400
+ ST. PETERSBURG, 366, 367.
+ Admiralty, 367.
+ Cathedral of St. Isaac, 367 (+207+).
+ CHURCHES:--
+ of the Citadel, of the Greek Rite, 366;
+ of Our Lady of Kazan, 367.
+ New Museum, Palace of Grand Duke Michael, 367.
+ Smolnoy Monastery, 366.
+ ST. RÉMY.
+ Tombs, 105
+ STABIÆ, 92
+ STOCKHOLM.
+ Palace, 337
+ STRASBURG
+ Cathedral, 243;
+ spire of, 238, 240, 241, 243.
+ University Buildings, 376
+ STUTTGART.
+ Old Castle, 343.
+ Technical School, 376
+ STYRIA, 339
+ SULLY.
+ Château, 317
+ SULTANIYEH.
+ Tomb, 145
+ SUNIUM.
+ Propylæa, 69
+ SUSA, 145.
+ Palaces, 35
+ SYRACUSE.
+ Theatre, 70
+ SYRIA, 122;
+ early Christian churches in, 115, 116, 117; (list), 119
+
+ TABRIZ.
+ Ruined Mosque, 145
+ TAFKHAH.
+ Early Christian Church, 117
+ TAKHT-I-BAHI.
+ Monastery, 405
+ TÄNGERMÜNDE.
+ Church, 244
+ TANJORE.
+ Great temple, 412.
+ Palace, 413.
+ Shrine of Soubramanya, 412 (+229+)
+ TARPUTRY.
+ Gopura, 411
+ TEHERAN, 146
+ TEL-EL-AMARNA, 27
+ TEWKESBURY Abbey, 222 (+130+)
+ THEBES.
+ Amenopheum, 15.
+ Ramesseum, 15 (+8+)
+ THORICUS.
+ Gate, 45;
+ Stoa Diple, 69
+ TINNEVELLY.
+ Dravidian temples, 411
+ TIRUVALUR.
+ Dravidian temples, 411
+ TIRYNS, 44
+ TIVOLI.
+ Circular temple, 90, 356 (+52+).
+ VILLAS:--
+ D’Este, 293;
+ of Hadrian, 87, 106
+ TOKIO.
+ Great Palace, 415
+ TOLEDO.
+ Archbishop’s Palace, 360.
+ Cathedral, 189, 248, 348.
+ Gate of S. Martino, 350.
+ Hospital of Sta. Cruz, 349.
+ S. Juan de los Reyes, 251
+ TONNERRE.
+ Hospital, 214
+ TORGAU.
+ Hartenfels Castle, 342
+ TORO.
+ Collegiate church, 180
+ TOULOUSE Cathedral, 212.
+ Church of St. Sernin, 204.
+ Houses, 317
+ TOURNAY Cathedral, 190, 197, 205, 209;
+ rood-screen in, 335
+ TOURS, 310.
+ Cathedral, 197, 205, 209;
+ towers of, 312;
+ tomb of children of Charles VIII. in, 310, 342
+ TRAUSNITZ Castle, 342
+ TREVES (Trier).
+ Cathedral, 174.
+ Frauenkirche (Liebfrauenkirche, Church of Our Lady),
+ 189, 242, 243 (+142+)
+ TROYES
+ Cathedral, 197, 201, 205;
+ size, 206;
+ west portals, 209.
+ St. Urbain, 212
+ TUCSON.
+ Church, 352
+ TUPARAMAYA.
+ Topes, 403
+ TURIN.
+ Church of La Superga, 365
+ TURKEY, 149.
+ Monuments (list), 154
+ TUSCULUM.
+ Amphitheatre, 92
+ TYROL, 338, 339
+
+ UDAIPUR (near Bhilsa).
+ Hindu temples, 409
+ ULM Cathedral, 238, 239, 241, 243;
+ spire, 241
+ UR, 30
+ URBINO.
+ Ducal palace, 287
+ UTRECHT Cathedral, 244
+
+ VALENCIA Cathedral, 249
+ VALLADOLID.
+ Cathedral, 350.
+ S. Gregorio, portal (+146+)
+ VELLORE.
+ Gopura, 411
+ VENDÔME Cathedral, portal, 209
+ VENETIA, 157, 262, 305
+ VENICE, 300.
+ Campaniles of St. Mark, of S. Giorgio Maggiore, 305.
+ CHURCHES:--
+ Frari (S. M. Gloriosa dei Frari), 256;
+ Redentore, 299;
+ S. Giobbe, 284;
+ S. Giorgio dei Grechi, 293;
+ S. Giorgio Maggiore, 299, 305;
+ SS. Giovanni e Paolo, 256;
+ Sta. Maria Formosa, 293;
+ S. M. dei Miracoli, 283;
+ S. M. della Salute, 304, (+174+);
+ St. Mark’s, 132, 164 (+78+, +79+);
+ Library of same (Royal Palace), 301 (+172+);
+ S. Salvatore, 293;
+ S. Zaccaria, 284.
+ Doge’s Palace, 267, 284 (+157+).
+ Minor works, 287.
+ PALACES:--267, 283, 284;
+ Cà d’Oro, Cavalli, Contarini-Fasan, 268;
+ Cornaro (Corner de Cà Grande) 301;
+ Dario, 285;
+ Ducale (Doge’s Palace), 267, 284 (+157+);
+ Foscari, 268;
+ Grimani, 300;
+ Pesaro, 304;
+ Pisani, 268;
+ Rezzonico, 304;
+ Vendramini (Vendramin-Calergi), 284, 285 (+165+);
+ Zorzi, capital, 275 (+158+)
+ VERCELLI.
+ S. Andrea, 256, 263
+ VERNEUIL.
+ Château, 317
+ VERONA, 157.
+ Amphitheatre, 92, 102.
+ Campanile, 264.
+ Church
+ of Sta. Anastasia, 256, 258;
+ of S. Zeno, 159, 175.
+ PALACES:--283;
+ Bevilacqua, Canossa, 300;
+ del Consiglio, 286;
+ Pompeii, Verzi, 300.
+ Tombs of Scaligers, 264
+ VERSAILLES Palace, 320
+ VÉZÉLAY.
+ Abbey, 166, 198, 203
+ VICENZA, 300, 301.
+ Basilica, 301.
+ PALACES:--283;
+ Barbarano, Chieregati, Tiene, Valmarano, 301;
+ Villa Capra, 301, 328
+ VIENNA, 347.
+ Arsenal at Wiener Neustadt, 338.
+ Burgtheater, 376.
+ Cathedral (St. Stephen), 239, 240, 241;
+ spire of, 240, 241.
+ Church of St. Charles Borromeo, 358.
+ Imperial Palace, portal, 339.
+ Museums, 378.
+ Opera House, 376.
+ Parliament House, or Reichsrathsgebäude, 360, 378.
+ Residence-block (Maria-Theresienhof), 378 (+214+).
+ Sta. Maria in Gestade, 245.
+ Town hall, University, 378.
+ Votiv Kirche, 375
+ VIJAYANAGAR.
+ Palace, 413
+ VINCENNES.
+ Royal chapel, 204
+ VITERBO.
+ Houses, 267.
+ Town hall (Palazzo Communale), 266.
+ Villa Lante, 293
+ VOLTERRA (Volaterræ).
+ Gate, 88
+
+ WALTHAM.
+ Abbey, 178.
+ Eleanor’s Cross, 234
+ WARFIELD.
+ St. Michael’s, window (+111+)
+ WARKAH (Erech).
+ Palace terraces, 31
+ WARTBURG Castle, 176
+ WASHINGTON.
+ Capitol, 389, 391 (+220+).
+ Congressional Library, 399.
+ Patent Office, 390.
+ State, Army, and Navy Building, 392.
+ White House, 390
+ WELLS Cathedral, 222, 225, 232;
+ west front, 228;
+ chapter house of, 223 (+131+)
+ WESTMINSTER. See LONDON
+ WESTONZOYLAND. Ceiling of St. Mary’s (+138+)
+ WESTOVER House, 386
+ WIENER-NEUSTADT. See VIENNA
+ WILLIAMSBURG.
+ Town hall, 385
+ WILTON House, 329
+ WINCHESTER Cathedral, 178, 220, 222, 226, 229 (+103+);
+ tombs, etc., in, 234
+ WINDSOR.
+ St. George’s Chapel, 223, 227, 234
+ WISMAR.
+ Castle (Fürstenhof), 343.
+ City Gates, 246
+ WOBURN. Public Library (+223+)
+ WOLLATON Hall, 328
+ WOLFENBÜTTEL.
+ Marienkirche, 345
+ WOLTERTON Castle, 326
+ WORANGUL.
+ Kurti Stambha, 410
+ WORCESTER Cathedral, 232
+ WORMS.
+ Minster (cathedral), 174 (+99+)
+ WÜRZBURG.
+ University Church, 345
+
+ XANTEN.
+ Church, 242
+ XANTHUS.
+ Nereid monument, 71
+
+ YORK Cathedral, 192, 225, 226;
+ west front, 227;
+ tower, 228;
+ minor works in, 234
+ YPRES.
+ Cloth hall, 247
+
+ ZURICH.
+ Polytechnic School, 376
+ ZWETTL Cathedral, 242
+
+
+ * * * * *
+ * * * *
+
+
+College Histories of Art.
+
+A HISTORY OF PAINTING.
+
+BY
+
+JOHN C. VAN DYKE, L.H.D.
+
+Professor of the History of Art in Rutgers College, and Author of
+“Principles of Art,” “Art for Art’s Sake,” etc.
+
+With Frontispiece and 110 Illustrations in the text, reproduced in
+half-tone from the most celebrated paintings. Crown 8vo, 307 pages,
+$1.50.
+
+
+“... The initial volume of a promising series ... seems a model of pith,
+lucidity, and practical convenience; and that it is sound and accurate
+the author’s name is a sufficient guarantee. Essential historical and
+biographical facts, together with brief critical estimates and
+characterizations of leading schools and painters, are given in a few
+well-chosen words; and for students who wish to pursue the subject in
+detail, a list of selected authorities at the head of each chapter
+points the way. Serviceable lists are also provided of principal extant
+works, together with the places where they are to be found. The text is
+liberally sprinkled with illustrations in half-tone.”--DIAL, CHICAGO.
+
+“Prof. Van Dyke has performed his task with great thoroughness and good
+success.... He seems to us singularly happy in his characterization of
+various artists, and amazingly just in proportion. We have hardly found
+an instance in which the relative importance accorded a given artist
+seemed to us manifestly wrong, and hardly one in which the special
+characteristics of a style were not adequately presented.”--NATION, N.Y.
+
+“... Gives a good general view of the subject, avoiding as a rule all
+elaborate theories and disputed points, and aiming to distinguish the
+various historical schools from one another by their differences of
+subject and technique ... we do not know of anybody who has, on the
+whole, accomplished the task with as much success as has Mr. Van Dyke.
+The book is modern in spirit and thoroughly up-to-date in point of
+information.”--ART AMATEUR.
+
+“Professor Van Dyke has made a radical departure in one respect, in
+purposely omitting the biographical details with which text-books on art
+are usually encumbered, and substituting short critical estimates of
+artists and of their rank among the painters of their time. This feature
+of the work is highly to be commended, as it affords means for
+comparative study that cannot fail to be beneficial.... Altogether
+Professor Van Dyke’s text-book is worthy of general adoption, and as a
+volume of ready reference for the family library it will have a distinct
+usefulness. It is compact, comprehensive, and admirably
+arranged.”--BEACON, BOSTON.
+
+
+LONGMANS, GREEN, & CO.,
+
+91 & 93 Fifth Avenue, NEW YORK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+ * * * *
+
+
+A History of Sculpture.
+
+BY
+
+ALLAN MARQUAND, Ph.D., L.H.D.
+
+AND
+
+ARTHUR L. FROTHINGHAM, Jr., Ph.D.
+
+Professors of Archæology and the History of Art in Princeton University.
+
++With Frontispiece and 113 Illustrations in half-tone in the text,
+Bibliographies, Addresses for Photographs and Casts, etc. Crown 8vo, 313
+pages, $1.50.+
+
+
+HENRY W. KENT, _Curator of the Seater Museum, Watkins, N.Y._
+
+“Like the other works in this series of yours, it is simply invaluable,
+filling a long-felt want. The bibliographies and lists will be keenly
+appreciated by all who work with a class of students.”
+
+CHARLES H. MOORE, _Harvard University_.
+
+“The illustrations are especially good, avoiding the excessively black
+background which produce harsh contrasts and injure the outlines of so
+many half-tone prints.”
+
+J. M. HOPPIN, _Yale University_.
+
+“These names are sufficient guarantee for the excellence of the book and
+its fitness for the object it was designed for. I was especially
+interested in the chapter on _Renaissance Sculpture in Italy_.”
+
+CRITIC, _New York_.
+
+“This history is a model of condensation.... Each period is treated in
+full, with descriptions of its general characteristics and its
+individual developments under various conditions, physical, political,
+religious and the like.... A general history of sculpture has never
+before been written in English--never in any language in convenient
+textbook form. This publication, then, should meet with an enthusiastic
+reception among students and amateurs of art, not so much, however,
+because it is the only book of its kind, as for its intrinsic merit and
+attractive form.”
+
+OUTLOOK, _New York_.
+
+“A concise survey of the history of sculpture is something needed
+everywhere.... A good feature of this book--and one which should be
+imitated--is the list indicating where casts and photographs may best be
+obtained. Of course such a volume is amply indexed.”
+
+NOTRE DAME SCHOLASTIC, _Notre Dame, Ind._
+
+“The work is orderly, the style lucid and easy. The illustrations,
+numbering over a hundred, are sharply cut and well selected. Besides a
+general bibliography, there is placed at the end of each period of style
+a special list to which the student may refer, should he wish to pursue
+more fully any particular school.”
+
+
+LONGMANS, GREEN & CO., Publishers,
+
+91 & 93 Fifth Avenue, NEW YORK.
+
+
+ * * * * *
+ * * * *
+
+
+ERRORS AND INCONSISTENCIES:
+
+Missing or invisible punctuation has been silently supplied, as have
+missing umlauts and line-end hyphens; errors of this type were assumed
+to be mechanical, introduced either in printing or scanning. Conversely,
+“Bauschule” (Berlin) was consistently misprinted as “Bauschüle”.
+
+Hyphenization of some words was inconsistent: zigzag and zig-zag,
+semicircular and semi-circular, staircase and stair-case. The plural of
+“portico” is regularly “porticos”, rarely “porticoes”. Both occurrences
+of “mantelpiece” are at line-break; the hyphen was omitted based on
+usage in the 8th edition.
+
+Alphabetization in the Index is as printed.
+
+Names:
+
+ The architect Robert Adam is consistently called “Adams”; the error
+ was corrected in the 8th edition. The name form “Michael Angelo”
+ is standard for the time.
+ Columbia College changed its name to Columbia University in 1896,
+ presumably after the book’s original preface (dated January 20,
+ 1896) was written.
+ The French palace is variously Luxembourg and Luxemburg.
+
+Spelling of place names was unchanged except when there was an
+unambiguous error. For details, see below.
+
+ Chapter VII:
+ the choragus Lysicrates [choraegus]
+ Chapter VIII:
+ (long miscalled the temple of Jupiter Stator) [Jupitor]
+ Chapter IX:
+ Adams, _Ruins of the Palace of Spalato_. [Spalatro]
+ --, Monuments:
+ [FORA] Trajan (by Apollodorus of Damascus, 117 A.D.)
+ [_closing ) missing_]
+ Chapter XII:
+ the time of Haroun Ar Rashid (786) [_spelling unchanged_]
+ Chapter XIII, Monuments:
+ [FRANCE, 11th century] Mont St. Michel, 1020 (the latter altered
+ in 12th and 16th centuries) [_closing ) missing_]
+ Chapter XIV:
+ Northern Italy, with which the Hohenstauffen emperors
+ [_spelling unchanged_]
+ Chapter XVII:
+ Such vaults are called _lierne_ or _star_ vaults.
+ [_Figure caption has “net or lierne”_]
+ [Monuments] All Soul’s College [_apostrophe in original_]
+ Chapter XX:
+ _Cinquecento_ to the sixteenth century [cenury]
+ Chapter XXI:
+ but following its pernicious example [pernicous]
+ --, Monuments:
+ Chapel of S. Lorenzo, new sacristy of same [sacristry]
+ P. Giugni, 1560-8.
+ [_text has “P. Giugni, -1560.” Correction was taken from
+ 8th edition_]
+ Chapter XXIII:
+ St. Paul’s ranks among the five or six greatest [five of six]
+ Chapter XXVI:
+ Sammelmappe hervorragenden Concurrenz-Entwurfen.
+ [Sammel mappe]
+
+ Appendix B:
+ the brick tower on the Piazza dell’ Erbe [dell ’Erbe]
+ Appendix D:
+ the chief marks of the Art Nouveau [Noveau]
+
+ Glossary:
+ QUATREFOIL, with four leaves or _foils_ [QUARTREFOIL]
+
+ Index:
+ BERLIN
+ Old Museum, 359 (+200+).
+ New Museum, 359.
+ [_alphabetized as shown; body text has “Museum” and “New Museum”_]
+ DURHAM Cathedral, 177, 178, 220, 221 (+102+) [+116+]
+ PARIS. ... Cathedral ... early carving (+114+) [+122+]
+ TAFKHAH. Early Christian Church [Christain]
+ WORMS. Minster (cathedral), 174 (+99+) [+112+]
+
+
+A few words in Chapters VI and VII were printed with “ae” instead of the
+expected “æ”. They have been regularized for this e-text.
+
+ From Olympia, Ægina, and Phigaleia [Aegina]
+ Selinus, Agrigentum, Pæstum [Paestum]
+ Castor and Pollux, Demeter, Æsculapius [Aesculapius]
+
+
+PLACE NAMES:
+
+The form “Herculanum” (for Herculanum) was used consistently. The
+English city is Peterboro’ (with apostrophe) in its first few
+appearances, and then changes to Peterborough for the remainder of
+the book. The Italian city was conventionally spelled “Sienna” (with
+two n’s) in English.
+
+Many names, especially non-European ones, differ significantly from
+their modern form. Some of the following are conjectural.
+
+Near East:
+
+ Ipsamboul: Abu Simbel
+ Bozrah: probably modern Bouseira, Jordan (not “Bosrah”, modern Basra)
+
+Greater India (including modern Pakistan and Bangladesh)
+
+ Tope: the form “stupa” is more common
+ Indian desert: Thar desert
+
+ Baillur: Belur
+ Chillambaram: probably Chidambaram; the author’s sources seem to
+ have had trouble with “l” in South Indian names
+ Conjeveram: Kanchipuram
+ Futtehpore Sikhri: Fatehpur Sikri
+ Hullabid: Halebid
+ Jaunpore: Janpur
+ Jugganat: the name of the deity is Jagannath; the English name-form
+ led to the word “juggernaut”
+ Kantonnuggur: Kantanagar
+ Oudeypore: the author seems not to have realized that this is the same
+ place as Udaipur, cited with that spelling in the same paragraph
+ Scinde: Sind
+ Shepree: could not be identified.
+ The author’s source is probably James Ferguson, who describes it
+ as “near Gualior” (Gwalior)
+ Tanjore: Thanjavur
+ Worangul: Varangal
+
+Cambodia:
+
+ Nakhon Wat: better known as Angkor Wat
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE ***
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