An Encyclopædia of Architecture: Historical, Theoretical, and PracticalLongman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1842 - 1089 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 6-10 von 94
Seite 65
... architrave , are still in existence , is a very early specimen of Grecian architecture . The assertion that it was dedicated to Venus is unsupported by testimony . 147. The Grecian temples in Sicily were erected at periods which it is ...
... architrave , are still in existence , is a very early specimen of Grecian architecture . The assertion that it was dedicated to Venus is unsupported by testimony . 147. The Grecian temples in Sicily were erected at periods which it is ...
Seite 69
... architrave in terms of the lower diameter Height of the frieze in terms of the lower diameter Height of cornice in terms of the lower diameter 0.850 0.483 0.833 Total height of entablature in terms of the lower diameter 2.166 From which ...
... architrave in terms of the lower diameter Height of the frieze in terms of the lower diameter Height of cornice in terms of the lower diameter 0.850 0.483 0.833 Total height of entablature in terms of the lower diameter 2.166 From which ...
Seite 71
... architrave of the portico was a bright red ; the figures in the frieze were painted in their proper natural colours : traces of the colour show that the walls were green . It was not discovered that in the columns more than the arrises ...
... architrave of the portico was a bright red ; the figures in the frieze were painted in their proper natural colours : traces of the colour show that the walls were green . It was not discovered that in the columns more than the arrises ...
Seite 75
... architraves and lintels , as is sufficiently proved in the Piscina of Volterra . 180. The Romans , until the conquest of Greece , borrowed the taste of their architecture from Etruria . Even to the time of Augustus , the species called ...
... architraves and lintels , as is sufficiently proved in the Piscina of Volterra . 180. The Romans , until the conquest of Greece , borrowed the taste of their architecture from Etruria . Even to the time of Augustus , the species called ...
Seite 85
... architrave have been chiselled away to form a plane surface for containing the inscription . Modillions and dentils are met with in the cornice , and the frieze in the interior was sculptured . The height of the columns is 42.86 ft ...
... architrave have been chiselled away to form a plane surface for containing the inscription . Modillions and dentils are met with in the cornice , and the frieze in the interior was sculptured . The height of the columns is 42.86 ft ...
Inhalt
1 | |
15 | |
16 | |
20 | |
43 | |
50 | |
131 | |
184 | |
509 | |
586 | |
662 | |
671 | |
687 | |
695 | |
708 | |
726 | |
202 | |
209 | |
295 | |
300 | |
378 | |
399 | |
407 | |
433 | |
445 | |
457 | |
502 | |
732 | |
779 | |
819 | |
856 | |
891 | |
920 | |
951 | |
1022 | |
1029 | |
1063 | |
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
1-inch deal 15th century arch architect architecture architrave axis balusters base bead butt bead flush breadth bricks building called cathedral centre of gravity century church circle circular circumference colour columns construction Corinthian order cube Cubic Foot curve described diameter divided divisor Doric order draw edge edifices ellipsis entablature equal equation erected example extrados feet foot fraction half height Hence horizontal inches intercolumniations iron joints length lime limestone moulded multiplied nave oolite ornaments ovolo palace panels parallel parallelogram perpendicular piece piers placed plane portico Prop proportion pyramid quantity radius rectangle right angles right line Roman Roman architecture roof sandstone scantlings side sofite solid square root stone style subtract supposed surface tangent temple thickness timber tower transepts triangle vault vertical Vitruvius voussoirs wainscot walls whence whereof width
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 6 - In taking two stations having the same value, the one to the north and the other to the south of...
Seite 316 - The angle at the centre of a circle is double of the angle at the circumference upon the same base, that is, upon the same part of the circumference.
Seite 16 - The western face, which is the least elevated, is the most interesting on account of the appearance of building it presents. Near the summit of it appears a low wall, with interruptions, built of unburnt bricks, mixed up with chopped straw or reeds, and cemented with clay-mortar of great thickness, having between every layer a layer of reeds ; and on the north side are also some vestiges of a similar construction.
Seite 375 - As 360 is to the degrees in the arc of the sector, so is the area of the whole circle to the area of the sector.
Seite 17 - ... in breadth, diminishing in thickness to the top, which is broken and irregular, and rent by a large fissure extending through a third of its height.
Seite ix - Vive, vale ; si quid novisti rectius istis, Candidus impertí ; si non, his utere mecum.
Seite 51 - Twenty-five years, and above three millions sterling, were employed by the founder: his liberal taste invited the artists of Constantinople, the most skilful sculptors and architects of the age; and the buildings were sustained or adorned by twelve hundred columns of Spanish and African, of Greek and Italian marble. The hall of audience was...
Seite 372 - PROBLEM I. To find the area of a parallelogram, whether it be a square, a rectangle, a rhombus, or a rhomboides.
Seite 199 - The taste of all these stately mansions was that bastard style which intervened between Gothic and Grecian architecture; or which perhaps was the style that had been invented for the houses of the nobility, when they first ventured on the settlement of the kingdom after the termination of the quarrel between the Roses, to abandon their fortified dungeons, and consult convenience and magnificence...
Seite 216 - What the back-ground is in painting, in architecture is the real ground on which the building is erected ; and no architect took greater care that his work should not appear crude and hard, that is, that it did not abruptly start out of the ground without expectation or preparation.