INDEX TO VOLS. I. AND II.
[The volumes are indicated by Roman, the pages by Arabic, numerals.]
- Aarhuus, church at, ii, 320.
- The Frue Kirke, 321.
- Abbeville, ii, 160.
- Abbeys, Cistercian, i, 14.
- Abd-el-Melik, mosques erected or restored by, ii, 517-522.
- Abd-el-Rahman, mosque founded by, ii, 543-547.
- Abencerrages, hall of the, ii, 554.
- Aberbrothock, ii, 438.
- Aberdeen Cathedral, nave and spires, ii, 437.
- Material employed, ibid.
- Abernethy, Scotland, architectural element at, ii, 419.
- Abo, Finland, church at, ii, 315.
- Abou Abdallah, court in the Alhambra built by, ii, 552.
- Abouseer, Pyramid temple of, i, 107.
- Abraham’s burial-place, i, 294. 363.
- Absalom, so-called tomb of, i, 369.
- Abû Gosh (Kirjath-Jearim), noteworthy church at, ii, 36.
- Abydus, remains of temples at, i, 128.
- Plans, ibid.
- Historical value of the tablet found there, 129.
- Fortress of, 137.
- Arch in the temple, 128. 214.
- Acropolis, restored view of the, i, 240.
- Plan, 251.
- Early temple, 252.
- Adrian I., Pope, first church-tower builder, i, 578.
- Ægina, age of temple at, i, 252.
- Dimensions, ibid. note.
- Restored, 252.
- Aerschot, Belgium, church at, ii, 194.
- Æsthetic element in art, i, 4-10.
- Africa, basilican churches in, i, 508-511.
- Aghadoe, near Killarney, doorway at, ii, 448.
- S. Agnese, basilican church, Rome, its date, i, 515.
- Aisles, 515. 522.
- Section and plan, 522.
- S. Agostino, basilican church, Rome, i, 515.
- Its style, 517.
- Agrigentum, Doric temples at, i, 254.
- Telamones in the great temple, 269.
- Plan, 271.
- Peculiarities of form and construction, ibid.
- Elevation and section, 273.
- How lighted, 274.
- Agrippa, baths said to have been built by, i, 343.
- Ahmed, Sultan, mosque founded by, ii, 562.
- Aigues Mortes, fortified town of, ii, 186.
- Aillas, façade of church at, ii, 78.
- Ainay, St. Martin d’, Lyons, west front of church, ii, 95.
- Aisles in basilican churches, Rome, i, 515.
- Aitchison, Prof., Iron girders in Baths of Caracalla, i, 346 note.
- Aix, France, baptistery at, ii, 59.
- Cloister, 61.
- Aix-la-Chapelle, circular church at, its founder, &c., ii, 247.
- Aizaini, temple at, i, 228.
- Albano, tomb of Aruns at, i, 299.
- S. Alban’s, ii, 411.
- Alby Cathedral, peculiarities of its construction, ii, 69. 181.
- Alcala, Paranimfo at, ii, 497 note.
- Alcantara, Trajan’s bridge at, i, 352. 387.
- Alcazar, Seville, ii, 551.
- Alcobaça, church at, ii, 509.
- Alet, apse at, ii, 54.
- Interior, ibid.
- See 467.
- Alexander Severus, Column of Victory erected by, i, 353.
- Alexandria, Diocletian’s column at, i, 353.
- Algeria, architecture of, ii, 541.
- Al-Hadhr, palace and edifices at, i, 390, 392-395.
- Alhambra, the, ii, 545. 551-554.
- Alma-Tadema, velarium of amphitheatre, i, 340 note.
- Alost, belfry of, ii, 200.
- Alsace, ii, 44.
- Altenberg, near Cologne, merits of church of, ii, 268.
- Cloisters, 261.
- Altenfurt, circular chapel at, ii, 254.
- Alyattes, tomb or tumulus of, i, 230, 231. 294. 296.
- Amalfi, cloisters at, i, 605.
- Amati, façade of Milan Cathedral finished by, i, 629.
- Amenemhat III., pyramid of, i, 141.
- Inscriptions in labyrinth, i, 112.
- Amenhotep III., tomb of, i, 133.
- America, ancient, architecture of, ii, 563.
- Amiens Cathedral, ii, 53, 131.
- Amphitheatre: Etruscan, at Sutrium, i, 293. 337 and note.
- Flavian, or Colosseum, Rome, 337-340.
- Capua, Nîmes, 340.
- Verona, Pola, 341.
- Otricoli, the ‘Castrense,’ Arles, 342.
- Amrith, peculiar monument and tomb at, i, 239.
- Amru, mosque of, ii, 30.
- Amsterdam, churches at, ii, 207.
- Ancona, Trajan’s arch at, i, 347.
- Ancyra, church of St. Clement at, i, 455.
- Andernach, church at, ii, 238.
- The Weigh-tower, 296.
- S. Andrew’s, Scotland, cathedral of, ii, 437.
- S. Angeli, Perugia, circular church of, i, 545, 546.
- S. Angelo, castle of, Rome, i, 356.
- St. Angelo, Mont, baptistery of, i, 601.
- Angers, cathedral of, ii, 81.
- Angilbertus, silver altar of, i, 567.
- Angoulême, domical cathedral of, ii, 68.
- Ani, capital of Armenia, cathedral of, i, 473.
- Side elevation, 474.
- Tombs, 475.
- Capital, 477.
- Anjou, architectural province of, its boundaries, &c., ii, 41, 43.
- Announa, Algeria, basilican church at, i, 509.
- Antelami’s baptistery, Parma, ii, 12.
- Anthemius of Thralles, great architectural work of, i, 440.
- Antinoë, Hadrian’s arch at, i, 348.
- Antioch, Constantine’s church at, i, 432.
- Antoninus and Faustina, temple of, i, 311, 317.
- Antrim, tower-doorway in, ii, 451 note, 452.
- Antwerp Cathedral, ii, 138. 188.
- Apocalyptic churches, the seven, ii, 446.
- SS. Apollinare Nuovo and Apollinare-in-Classe, Ravenna, basilicas of, i, 528-530.
- Apollo, temples of: Branchidæ, i, 258.
- Bassæ, 254, 265, 270.
- Apollo Didymæus, Ionic temple to, i, 256.
- Dimensions, 258.
- Apollo Epicurius, Doric temple of, i, 254.
- Apostles, churches dedicated to the: Constantinople, i, 451, 531; ii, 557.
- Cologne, 191.
- Appian Way, i, 385.
- Apse, early example of, i, 316.
- Its use in Roman basilicas, 329. 332. 507.
- In early Christian churches, 509, 510. 512. 523.
- Ravenna, 528-531. 536.
- Polygonal apses, i, 528. 532. 537 and note.
- Treble apse, 538.
- Torcello, 539.
- Byzantine examples: Qalb Louzeh, 425.
- Thessalonica, 458.
- Athens, 460.
- Mistra, 463.
- Italian examples: Pavia, 565.
- St. Ambrogio, 566.
- Verona, 570.
- San Pellino, 592, 593 and note.
- Lydda, ii, 37.
- Singular example at St. Quinide, 53.
- Alet, 54.
- Triapsal church, Planes, 59.
- Cruas, 60.
- Romanesque form, 73.
- The apse proper as distinguished from the chevet, ibid.
- Querqueville, 110.
- St. Stephen’s, Caen, 111.
- Bayeux, 118.
- Gernrode, 220.
- Trèves, 224.
- Mayence, 230.
- Cologne, 233-234.
- Bonn, 235.
- Scandinavian example, 315.
- St. Bartolomeo, Toledo, 497.
- Use made of the apse, 388.
- See Chevet.
- Apulia, churches in, i, 582. 592.
- Aqueduct: Etruscan, at Tusculum, i, 301.
- Rome, at Nîmes, Segovia, and Tarragona, 385, 386.
- Aquileja, basilican church at, ii, 220 note.
- Aquitania, architectural boundaries of, ii, 41, 42.
- Arabs, architectural habits of the, ii, 514.
- Considerations in regard to their immigration into other lands, 513-515.
- Arbroath, ii, 438.
- Arc de l’Etoile, Paris, i, 30.
- Arcades of the Romans, i, 313.
- Arch, objection of the Hindus to the, i, 22. 217.
- To what extent known to the Egyptians, 214-218.
- Examples at Nimroud and Khorsabad, 215.
- Oldest in Europe, 216.
- Delos, 245.
- Etruscan examples, 300, 301.
- Advances of the Romans, 306.
- Ctesiphon, 399.
- Thessalonica, 421.
- Screen at Angers, ii, 88.
- Horseshoe arch at Göllingen, 238.
- Oxford, 366.
- Jedburgh, 421.
- Kelso, 422.
- Holyrood, 436.
- Clonmacnoise, 452.
- Mosque of Amru, 525.
- See Pointed Arches. Triumphal Arches.
- Archæology an essential adjunct in Ethnological studies, i, 53. 84, 85.
- Instance of its value, 241.
- Architecture: points of view from which it may be studied; value of the historic method, i, 3.
- Principles distinguishing it from painting and sculpture, 4.
- Their office in connection with it, 5.
- Earlier and later systems: result of the latter, 11, 12.
- Definition of the art and elucidations of same, 12, 13.
- Respective provinces of engineer and architect, 15, 16.
- Technical principles: Mass, 16.
- Stability, 17.
- Durability, 18.
- Materials, 19.
- Construction, 22.
- Forms, 25.
- Proportion, 26.
- Carved ornament, 31.
- Decorative colour, 35.
- Sculpture and painting, 37.
- Uniformity, 39.
- Imitation of Nature, 40.
- Association, 43.
- New style, 44.
- Prospects, 47.
- Essential fact in connection with architectural history, 55.
- Chief divisions therein, 87, 88, 89.
- Various styles: Egyptian, i, 91.
- Assyrian, 151.
- Greece, 240.
- Etruscan and Roman, 289.
- Parthian and Sassanian, 389.
- Byzantine, 419.
- Russian, 484.
- Italy, 500.
- France, ii, 39.
- Belgium and Holland, 187.
- Germany, 209.
- Scandinavia, 313.
- England, 335.
- Spain and Portugal, 460.
- Saracenic, 512.
- Ancient American, 583.
- Ardmore, bas-relief at, ii, 448.
- Round tower, 454.
- Arezzo, church of Sta. Maria at, i, 588.
- d’Argent, Mark, church erected by, ii, 122. 157. 273.
- Aristotile Fioravanti of Bologna, Russian church ascribed to, i, 492.
- Arles, amphitheatre at, i, 342.
- Armenia, i, 466.
- Examples of its architecture, 466-478.
- See Ani.
- Arnolfo di Lapo, cathedral built by, 617-622.
- Arpino, Etruscan gateway at, i, 301.
- Arranmore, Galway, ii, 446 note.
- Arsinoë, Column of Victory at, i, 353.
- Artemisia, tomb erected by, i, 282.
- Aruns, tomb at Albano of, i, 299, 300.
- Aryans, first users of iron, i, 56.
- Their origin, migrations, &c., 75, 76.
- Purity and exaltedness of their religion, 76, 77.
- Form of government, prevalence of caste, &c., 78, 79.
- Morals and Literature: result of the perfect structure of their language, 79, 80.
- Why the Fine Arts do not flourish among them, 81.
- Their proficiency in the useful arts, 82.
- Their true mission, 83.
- In Russia, 484.
- In Spain, ii, 462.
- See i, 65. 71. 73, 74. 251. ii, 337.
- Asia Minor, advantageous position of, epoch of its history, &c., i, 229.
- Oldest remains, 230.
- Tumuli and rock-cut monuments, 230-232.
- Lycia and its tombs, 233-239.
- Existence of an Ionic order, 256.
- Corinthian example, 257.
- Theatres, 280.
- Turkish conquest, ii, 515.
- Asoka, Buddhist king, result of his alliance with Megas, i, 285 note.
- See ii, 586.
- Assisi, church at, i, 611, 612.
- Assos, gateway at, i, 246.
- Assyria, result of recent discoveries in, i, 255.
- Assyrians, borrowings of the Greeks from the, i, 33. 35. 154.
- Examples of their architecture how preserved, 68.
- Occasion of their rise, 152.
- M. Botta’s exploration, 154.
- Chronological epochs, 155.
- Chaldean period, 157-167.
- Palatial architecture: sources of information, 168.
- Babylonian and Ninevite palaces. 169.
- Buildings at Khorsabad, 171-181.
- Peculiarity of construction common to their palaces, 172.
- Interior of a Yezidi house, 182.
- Houses of the humbler classes, 183.
- Sculptured representations of buildings, 187-189.
- Temples and tombs, 191.
- Value of their wall-sculptures, 193.
- Rank to be assigned to their architecture, ibid.
- Purposes for which only they used stone, 194.
- Users of the pointed arch, ii, 45.
- See Chaldean. Khorsabad. Koyunjik.
- Asti, baptistery at: Plan i, 561.
- Description, 562.
- Church and Porch, 610.
- View of the Porch, 611.
- Tower, ii, 6.
- Asturias, churches in the, ii, 464.
- Athens, influence on art of the admixture of races at, i, 242.
- Temples, 252, 253. 324.
- The Propylæa, 254.
- Corinthian examples, 257.
- Hadrian’s arch, 348.
- Byzantine churches: Panagia Lycodemo, i, 460, 461. 463.
- Cathedral, 461.
- Athos, Mount, convents at, i, 459, 460.
- Atreus, treasury or tomb of, i, 243.
- Fragment of column, 244.
- Atrium, the, in basilican churches, i, 513.
- Novara, 562.
- San Ambrogio, Milan, 566.
- Augsburg Cathedral, ii, 286.
- Augustan age, sole remains of the i, 315.
- S. Augustine, Canterbury, original church of, ii, 344.
- Augustus, arches erected by, i, 347.
- His tomb, 355.
- Autun, double-arched Roman gates at, i, 349.
- Auvergne, architectural province of, ii, 41. 43.
- Auxerre Cathedral, chevet and lady chapel of, ii, 147.
- Avallon, ii, 95.
- Avignon, cathedral at, ii, 50.
- Avila, church of San Vicente, ii, 473.
- Western porch, 474.
- Axum, obelisks at, i, 150.
- Azhar, mosque of, ii, 30.
- Date and character, 530.
- Aztecs and Toltecs, early inhabitants of Mexico, ii, 583-585.
- Inference from their architectural remains, 589.
- See Mexico.
- Baalbec, magnitude of the stones used at, i, 19. 326.
- Frieze there, 311.
- Remains of the great temple, 325.
- Plan, elevation, &c., of the smaller temple, 325.
- Babouda, Syria, chapel at, i, 426.
- Babylon, palaces of, materials of their construction, &c., i, 169, 194.
- Bacharach, St. Werner’s chapel at, ii, 288.
- Bagdad, ii, 548.
- Bahram Gaur, fourteenth Sassanian King, i, 393.
- S. Balbina, basilican church, Rome, its date, i, 515.
- Baldwin of Constantinople, building founded by, ii, 200.
- Ballyromney Court, Cork, Irish mansion, ii, 458.
- Bamberg, Church of St. Jacob at, ii, 240.
- Cathedral, 286.
- Baptisteries, i, 512.
- Baquoza, Syria, Byzantine church at, 422, 423.
- Barbarossa’s palace, Gelnhausen, ii, 256.
- Barbary, ii, 515.
- Examples of its architecture, 538-541.
- Barcelona, church of San Pablo, ii, 464.
- Bari Cathedral, i, 592.
- Plan, 591.
- East end, 592.
- Defects in the towers, 605.
- Dome, 600.
- Church of San Nicolo, 594.
- view of, 594.
- Barletta, i, 595.
- S. Bartolomeo in Isola, basilican church, Rome, its date, i, 515.
- Basilicas, importance attached by the Romans to, i, 327.
- Trajan’s, its plan, dimensions, arrangement, &c., 328, 329.
- Difference between it and that of Maxentius, ibid.
- Plan, particulars, &c., of the latter, 330, 331.
- Construction of the roofs, 332.
- Provincial Basilicas: Trèves, Pompeii, Otricoli, 332, 333.
- Origin and peculiar applicability for Christian uses of these buildings, 334.
- Examples in Bethlehem, Jerusalem, Thessalonica, Syria, and Asia Minor, i, 419-431.
- Christian basilicas; Preliminary observations, 504-508.
- African examples, 508-511.
- Modifications introduced by Christian usages, 512.
- Choirs and crypts: the atrium and the narthex, 513, 514.
- Chronological list of basilicas in Rome, 515.
- Peculiarities of the more important ones, 517-530.
- Mosaic pavements, 527.
- Ravenna, 527.
- St. Mark’s, Venice, 530.
- Dalmatia and Istria, 536.
- Torcello, 538.
- Causes of Byzantine, Lombardic, and Gothic varieties, 540.
- Distinction between the basilica and the church, 542-543.
- German examples, ii, 214 et seq.
- Use made of the apse, 388.
- Absence of basilicas in Ireland, 446.
- Basle Cathedral, doorway of, ii, 244.
- Its one defect, 245.
- Bassæ, Ionic column at, i, 265.
- Basse Œuvre, Beauvais, plan and section, ii, 105.
- Batalha, church of, ii, 507, 508.
- Its circular tomb-house, 508.
- Baths of the Romans, i, 342-346.
- Of the Moors in Spain, ii, 555.
- Battlements, Jerpoint abbey, ii, 457.
- Bavarian church architecture, ii, 287, 288.
- Bayazid, mosque of, ii, 558.
- Bayeux Cathedral, ii, 118.
- Bays in cathedrals—Italy: Verona, i, 612.
- Bazas Cathedral: plan, ii, 150.
- Description, 151.
- Beaune, Roman column at Cussi, near, i, 353.
- Beauty in art, i, 5.
- Beauvais Cathedral, choir of, i, 18.
- Becket, Thomas à, his asylum, ii, 155.
- Bedochwinta, Armenia, church at, i, 471.
- proof of its comparative modernness, 471.
- Beejapore, i, 444.
- Beisan, khans at, ii, 525.
- Belem, date of chapel at, ii, 433.
- Belfries and campaniles. Bell-towers of Moscow, i, 497.
- Belgium, immigration of Germans into, and its results, ii, 187.
- Bellefontaine, church of, ii, 122 note.
- Bells, when first used, i, 577.
- Russian bells, 497.
- Belus, base of the temple of, i, 163 note.
- Benedictine monastic system, plan illustrative of the, ii, 215.
- Beneventum, Trajan’s arch at, i, 347.
- Beni-Hasan, tombs of, i, 115, 294, 363.
- Pillars, 154.
- Arches, 214.
- Bergamo, church of San-Tomaso near, i, 576.
- Berkook, Sultan, mosque and tomb of, ii, 533.
- Berne Cathedral, ii, 276.
- Berosus, state of the text of, i, 151.
- Besançon, Porta Nigra at, i, 349.
- Bethlehem, churches at, i, 419.
- Church of the Nativity, 419.
- Bicchieri, Cardinal, church erected by, i, 610.
- Billings, Mr. R. W., character of his Architectural Work on Scotland, ii, 420 note.
- Birs Nimroud, the, i, 159.
- Buildings of which it was the type, 157, 159.
- Diagrams and description, 160.
- Dedication, 161.
- Bittonto, west front of cathedral at, i, 593.
- Blackfriars Bridge, i, 48.
- Black Prince, tomb of the, ii, 408.
- Blouet, M., restored plan of Roman baths by, i, 344.
- Blundell, Mr. Weld, Researches at Persepolis, i, 205 note.
- Bocherville, Norman church at, ii, 111.
- Bodleian Library, ii, 339.
- Boffiy, Guillermo, cathedral designed by, ii, 488.
- Bohemia, ii, 211.
- Bohemund’s tomb at Canosa, i, 601.
- Bois le Duc, church at, ii, 207, 208 note.
- Boisserée’s ‘Nieder Rhein,’ ii, 212 note, 260.
- On Cologne cathedral, 273.
- Bologna, ii, 151.
- Circular church of San Stefano, i, 545.
- Asinelli and Garisenda towers, 579, ii, 2.
- Cathedral or church of San Petronio, i, 614, 622, 623.
- Plan, 623.
- Enormous size originally determined on, 622.
- Boni, Signor, Cà d’Oro Palace, Venice, ii, 18.
- Bonn, church at, ii, 234.
- Bonnueill, Étienne, Swedish cathedral by, ii, 314.
- Bordeaux cathedral, ii, 71.
- Its chevet and spires, 149.
- Boris, Czar of Russia, tower erected by, i, 497.
- His tower in the Kremlin, 497.
- Bornholm, circular churches in, ii, 327 note, 329.
- Oester Larsker, 329.
- Borsippa, temple of the Seven Spheres at, i, 161.
- Inscriptions, 163.
- Bosra, plan of cathedral, i, 432, 433.
- Boston, Lincolnshire, church of, ii, 401.
- Bothwell Church, near Glasgow, ii, 435.
- Botta, M., his explorations at Khorsabad, i, 154.
- Bourges, church of Neuvy St. Sepulchre at, ii, 76.
- Braga, Portugal, church at, ii, 511.
- Brandenburg, Marien Kirche at, ii, 308.
- Brechin, Scotland, architectural peculiarity at, ii, 419, 452.
- Brescia, Duomo Vecchio at: Plan, i, 575.
- Brick architecture: Italian examples, ii, 10-15.
- Bridges over the Thames, progress in, i, 48.
- Roman bridges, 385.
- Brigwithe, English architect, church at Vercelli by, i, 610.
- Brindisi, churches of, i, 595, 599.
- Bristol chapter-house, ii, 389, 392.
- Brittany, architectural boundary of, ii, 41, 43.
- Brolettos, or Italian town-halls, ii, 11.
- Bronze doors: Novogorod, i, 488.
- Milan, 567.
- Trani, 599.
- Troja, 599.
- Canosa, 601.
- Brou en Bresse, sepulchral church of, ii, 159, 494.
- Brück-am-Mur, Gothic house at, ii, 299.
- Bruges, ii, 188.
- Brunelleschi, designs by, i, 618, 622.
- Brunswick town-hall and fountain, ii, 300, 301.
- View, 300.
- Brussels, Notre Dame de la Chapelle at, ii, 194.
- Buddha, Buddhism. Source of the effect produced by the Topes, i, 16.
- Buddhist architecture whence derived, 157.
- Buddhism the religion of a Turanian people, 165.
- Scandinavian Buddhism, i, 481.
- Building, primary application and gradual development of the art of, i, 4.
- Bürgelin, abbey of, ii, 238.
- Burgos, ii, 433. 463, 469, 508.
- Burgund, Norway, wooden church at, ii, 332.
- Burgundy, architectural province of, ii, 41-43.
- Bussorah, ii, 567.
- Butler, A. J., on Coptic churches, i, 507, 511; ii, 527.
- Buttresses, earliest proper use of, i, 360.
- Byzantine style, region dominated by the, i, 411, 412.
- True application of the term, 415.
- Definitions and divisions, 416, 417.
- Basilicas, 419-423.
- Stone-roofed churches, 428-431.
- Circular or Domical buildings, 432-447.
- Domestic examples, 447-452, 464, 465.
- Neo-Byzantine, 453-464.
- Armenian, 466-480.
- Rock-cut churches, 481-483.
- Mediæval Russian, 484-499.
- See 501, 502, 521, 523, 528-541, 548-551, 554.
- St. Mark’s, Venice, 530-535.
- Byzantine-Romanesque style, 582.
- Examples: Rectangular, 583, 600.
- Southern Italy, 600-602.
- Circular, ibid.
- Towers, 603.
- Civil architecture, 605.
- See also ii, 15.
- Cæcilia Metella, tomb of, i, 355. 542.
- Caen, churches of:
- Cæsars, Palace of the, i, 375.
- Its probable character as an architectural work, 376.
- Cairo, Mosques of: Amru, ii, 30. 525, 526.
- Calatayud, Dominican church at, ii, 498.
- Cambridge, King’s College chapel, i, 472; ii, 70, 338, 367, 397.
- Campaniles, see Belfries.
- Campione, Marco da, Italian architect, i, 626.
- Campus Martius, tomb of Augustus in the, i, 355.
- Canina, restoration of Trajan’s basilica, i, 327 note.
- Canosa, tomb of Bohemund at, i, 601.
- Canterbury, French asylum for the archbishops of, ii, 155.
- Becket’s Crown, 317 note, 344.
- Churches of St. Augustine and Cuthbert, ibid.
- St. Anselm’s chapel, 375. 377.
- Cathedral, 131.
- Plan, 347.
- Most foreign of our English examples, 353.
- Angel Tower, 384.
- Chapter-house, 384. 389.
- Anomalies in style, 387.
- Site, 388.
- Infirmary chapel, 393.
- Decorative arch on staircase, 402, 403.
- Prior de Estria’s screen, 406.
- Tomb of the Black Prince, 408.
- Area, measurements, &c., 417.
- Capitals and columns: Isis-headed or Typhonian, i, 35. 127. 143.
- Examples: Beni-Hasan, 114, 115.
- Thebes, 121.
- Medeenet-Habû, 125.
- Denderah, 143.
- Persepolis, 207.
- Susa, 209.
- Mycenæ, 244.
- Ancient Corinthian, 258.
- Doric, 260.
- Ionic and Corinthian examples, 264-268.
- Roman examples, 308-310. 312. 525.
- Ani and Gelathi, 476.
- Provençal, ii, 54. 62, 63.
- Gothic: theory and diagram, 162.
- Capitals from Rheims, 178.
- Gelnhausen, 251.
- Canterbury, 402.
- Lincoln, 404.
- Dome of the Rock, 521-522.
- See Obelisks, Columns.
- Columns of Victory.
- Capua, amphitheatre at, i, 340.
- Caracalla, restored plan of the baths of, i, 344.
- Arrangement, dimensions, &c., 345, 346.
- Caravanserais: Persia, ii, 579.
- Peru, 606.
- Carcassonne, church of St. Nazaire at, compared with Diana’s temple at Nîmes, ii, 49, 50.
- Town walls, 186.
- Carlisle, eastern window at, ii, 355. 378.
- Carlovingian period, paucity of examples of the, i, 559.
- Carpenter, R. H., churches with bisected naves, ii, 324 note.
- Mosque of Cordoba, 546.
- Carpentras, arched gate at, i, 349.
- Carthage and the Carthaginians, ii, 22, 462.
- Carved ornament, principle and object of, i, 31.
- Caryatides at Medeenet-Habû, i, 125.
- As made use of in Greek architecture, 268.
- Caserta Vecchia, cathedral church of, view, i, 598.
- Tower, 592.
- Dome, 594.
- Cashel, Cormac’s chapel at, ii, 447.
- Cassiodorus, elucidation of a passage in, i, 570.
- Caste, nature and influence of, i, 78.
- Its value, 79.
- Castel d’Asso, Etruscan tombs at, i, 294.
- Peculiarities of shape, &c., 295.
- Castel del Monte, plan, and sectional elevation, i, 606.
- Particulars, ibid.
- Castille, castles in, ii, 505.
- Castles: St. Angelo, Rome, i, 356.
- S. Castor, Coblentz, ii, 238.
- “Castrense,” the, i, 342.
- Catalonia, architecture of, ii, 466.
- Cathedrals, English and foreign compared, ii, 385.
- See England. France.
- Catherwood, F., ancient tomb figured by, i, 372.
- Value of his Central-American drawings, ii, 584.
- Cattaneo (Prof. Raphael),
- dates of St. Stefano Rotondo, i, 545 note;
- of St. Mark’s, Venice, i, 531, 534;
- of cathedral, Torcello, 536 note, 538;
- of Palazzo delle Torre, Turin, 556;
- of Duomo, Brescia, 575, and note;
- of Tower of St. Satiro, Milan, 578 note.
- St. Lorenzo, Rome, 523.
- St. Praxede, 525 note.
- dates of St. Stefano Rotondo, i, 545 note;
- Caumont, M. de, map published by, ii, 41 note.
- Cavallon, arched gate at, i, 349.
- Caves: Crimean, i, 482.
- Caythorpe church, Lincolnshire, reference, ii, 324 note.
- Cecilia Metella, tomb of, i, 355, 542.
- Cefalu, cathedral at, ii, 24, 29.
- Dimensions, cloisters, &c., 29.
- Celtic races, their presumed origin, and migratory character, i, 70, 71.
- Their religion: dominance of their priests, 71.
- Form of government best suited to them, ibid.
- Their ruling passion, 72.
- Literature, 72.
- Pre-eminent in art, 73, 74.
- Direction of their scientific pursuits, 74.
- Megalithic or Celtic period in England, ii, 338.
- Celto-Saxon period, ibid.
- Irish style, 445.
- Celto-Irish system, Celtic likes and dislikes in a church direction, 444, 445.
- Form and examples of their churches, 447-450.
- Close of the Celtic epoch in Ireland, 459.
- Certosa, near Pavia, i, 610. 629-631.
- Its date, 629.
- Feature in Monreale cathedral surpassing it, ii, 26.
- Cervetri, Etruscan tomb at, i, 297, 298.
- Chaitya caves, i, 426.
- Chaldean dynasties, period of the, i, 151, 152.
- State of the remains of their buildings, 153.
- Written characters; arrow-headed inscriptions, 155.
- Temples at Wurka and Mugheyr, 158.
- Birs Nimroud, 160, 161.
- Mujelibé, 163.
- Tomb of Cyrus, 163, 196-198.
- S. Chamas, arches and bridge at, i, 351. ii, 51.
- Chambon, sepulchral chapel at, ii, 93.
- Champollion, i, 92.
- Chapels. Babouda, i, 426.
- Chapter-houses, rarity of, in France and Germany, ii, 292.
- Chaqqa, Byzantine building at, i, 437.
- Singular window, 448.
- Charing Cross, Mr. Barry’s restoration of, ii, 413 note.
- Charité sur Loire, collegiate church of, ii, 153.
- Choir, 153.
- Charlemagne, model of the tomb of, i, 550.
- Charles II. of Anjou, cathedral erected by, i, 583.
- Charles V., architectural encroachment on the Alhambra by, ii, 552.
- Charroux, church of, ii, 74, 75.
- Chartres Cathedral, i, 24. ii, 132.
- Chedanne, M., Discoveries in Pantheon, i, 320 note.
- Chemillé, spire at, ii, 87.
- Chemnitz, doorway of church at, ii, 294.
- Its extravagant ornamentation, 295.
- Cheops, see Khufu.
- Chepstow Castle, ii, 413.
- Cherson, i, 485.
- Wooden cathedral, 426.
- Chevet churches in Aquitania, ii, 72.
- Chiaravalle, dome at, i, 620, 622, 631.
- Chichen Itza, Yucatan, temple at, ii, 598.
- Interior, 599.
- Chichester Cathedral, ii, 380.
- Chillambaram, India, porch of hall at, i, 430.
- China, stationary perfection of works in, i, 62.
- Ancient counterpart of its people, 96.
- Choirs, introduction of, i, 512.
- Chosroes, arch of, at Takt-i-Bostan, i, 408.
- St. Crisogonus, basilican church, Rome, date of, i, 515.
- Christian architecture, discrimination of, its eras, styles, &c. i, 410-414.
- Oriental tradition relative to Christian architects, ii, 527.
- Christianity, adaptability of the Roman Basilicas to the usages of, i, 504-506.
- Christodulos, Christian architect employed by Mahomet, ii, 557.
- Chunjuju, Yucatan, building at, ii, 596.
- Church, double, see Double churches.
- Churches, circular, see Circular churches.
- Cimborio, or dome, in Spanish churches, ii, 474.
- Circular and polygonal churches, first germ of, i, 542.
- Circular windows, France, their number and dissimilarity in tracery, &c., ii, 165-167.
- Cistercian abbeys, i, 14. ii, 154.
- Citeaux, ii, 95.
- Civic and Municipal buildings: Italy, ii, 10.
- Clairvaux, ii, 95.
- Clarke (Mr. J. T.): Temple of Assos, i, 254 note.
- Proto-Ionic capital, 255 note.
- Classic architecture, cause of the revival of, i, 43, 47.
- S. Clemente, as a type of the Roman basilican church, i, 513-514.
- Its date, 515.
- Colonnade, 525.
- Cleopatra in Egyptian paintings, i, 139.
- Clerestories, in Greek and Egyptian temples, i, 272.
- First publication of the Author’s views on the subject, ibid. note.
- Munich and Metz, ii, 287.
- Clermont, church of Notre Dame du Port at, ii, 89.
- Climate: regions in which it has and has not changed, i, 56.
- Cloaca Maxima, Rome, arch of the, i, 216, 300.
- Cloisters, English and southern, St. John Lateran, i, 599.
- Clonmacnoise, tower and arch at, ii, 451, 452.
- Clovis, division of France on the death of, ii, 120.
- Cluny, Abbey of, ii, 95.
- Cluny, Hôtel de, ii, 184.
- Cnidus, lion tomb at, i, 284.
- Coata, Titicaca, Peru, terraced building at, ii, 605.
- Cobern, hexagonal chapel at, ii, 253.
- Coblentz, church of St. Castor at, ii, 238.
- Coburg, chapel at, ii, 241 note, 243.
- Cockerell, C. R., work on Grecian temples by, i, 262 note.
- Cocos, Castille, castle of, ii, 505.
- Cocumella, the, at Vulci, i, 298, 300.
- Cœur, Jacques, house of, ii, 184.
- Coimbra, churches at, ii, 509.
- Cologne Cathedral: dimensions, comparative observations, &c., i, 24. ii, 131, 157, 159, 195, 196, 275, 278.
- View, 272.
- Buttresses, 173.
- Features in which it is pre-eminent, 268.
- Date, plan, &c., 269.
- Disproportion of length to height, 270.
- External proportions, 271.
- Mechanical merits, 273.
- Window tracery, 271.
- Most pleasing characteristics of the cathedral, 275.
- Original cathedral, 232, 269.
- See 478, 479. i, 618, 622, 626, 629.
- Cologne, triapsal and other churches at, The Apostles’, ii, 199, 233-235.
- Colosseum, or Flavian amphitheatre, Rome, i, 306.
- Interest attaching to it, 337.
- Effect of reduplication of parts, plan, sections, &c., 338.
- Area, amount of sitting space, 339.
- Colour as an architectural element, i, 35.
- See Painting.
- Columbaria, Rome, arrangement and object of the, i, 356.
- Columna Rostrata, ugliness of, i, 352.
- Columns of Victory, remarks on, and examples of, i, 352, 353.
- Buddhist sthambas, i, 578.
- Columns: Sedinga, i, 127.
- Thessalonica and Constantinople, 421, 422.
- Como, cathedral at, i, 632.
- Broletto, ii, 12.
- Composite arcades, i, 313.
- Composite order, i, 312.
- Its merits and defects, 313.
- Compostella, cathedral of, ii, 468.
- Comte, Auguste, truth overlooked by, i, 83.
- Concord, Temple of, at Rome, i, 309. 314. 317.
- Condor, Major C. R., ii, 520.
- Conques, chevet church at, ii, 73. 76.
- Conquests, how effected, and general result of, ii, 513.
- Conrad, emperor, churches erected by, ii, 226. 229.
- Constantine: His mother’s tomb, i, 357.
- His daughter’s, 358. 544.
- Basilican churches erected by him, 517. 521. 523.
- His tomb, or baptistery, 544.
- His church at Antioch, i, 432. See i, 504. 506. 508. 515.
- His baths at Rome, i, 344.
- Constantinople, cisterns, i, 44.
- Palace of the Hebdomon, i, 464.
- Churches: The Apostles’: occasion of its destruction, 531 note.
- Sta. Irene, 453. 455. 470. ii. 558.
- St. John, 421, 422. 438.
- Double church of “Kutchuk Agia,” or lesser Sta. Sophia, including the Basilica of SS. Peter and Paul and the domical church of SS. Sergius and Bacchus, i, 438, 439.
- Church of Moné tés Choras, 456.
- The Pantokrator, the Fethîyeh Djamisi, and the Theotokos, 457.
- Sta. Sophia, 440,
- Its grandeur; boast of its founder, &c., 440.
- Fate of the original church, ibid.
- Dimensions, plan, sections, &c., 441-446.
- Compared with the Renaissance cathedrals, 446.
- Considered as an outgrowth of Roman classical edifices, 452.
- Last creation of Byzantine art, 453.
- Mode of lighting its dome, 454.
- Dimensions of the dome, ii, 561.
- Number of minarets, 563. [See i, 455. ii, 557-558.]
- Results of the occupation of the city by the Turks, ii, 556-558.
- Mosques: appropriation of Christian churches, ii, 557.
- Civil and domestic architecture: “palaces” and fires, ibid.
- Construction in architecture, rationale of, i, 22. Gothic cathedrals, ii, 179.
- Contarini (Sr. Marino), Palace of, ii, 14.
- Conventual buildings, Germany, ii, 259-261.
- Corbel, beautiful example of, ii, 178.
- Cordova, or Cordoba, mosque at, ii, 543-548.
- Corinth, i, 251. Age of Doric temple at, 252.
- Corinthian order, its origin; period of introduction into Greece, i, 257. 268.
- Noteworthy examples, 257, 258. 266, 267.
- Keynote of Roman architecture, 308.
- Roman elaborations of it, 309-311.
- Base from the church of St. Praxede, 312.
- Corvey, abbey of, ii, 221.
- S. Costanza, Rome, tomb or baptistery of, i, 358.
- Plan, 544.
- Coucy, castle-keep of, ii, 185.
- Viollet le Duc’s section, ibid. note.
- Coutances Cathedral, ii, 147.
- Coventry, ii, 401.
- Crassus, tomb of C. Metella, wife of, i, 355.
- Crecy, battle of, its influence on French art, ii, 122.
- Cremona, the Torracio at, i, 605. ii, 3. 4.
- S. Croix, Mont Majour, triapsal church of, ii, 59.
- Crosses: Waltham, ii, 412.
- Kells, 459.
- Cruas, circular church at, ii, 60. 76.
- Cruciform tomb of Galla Placidia, i, 435. 553.
- Crusaders, introduction of the Gothic style into Palestine by, ii, 32.
- Crypts, purposes to which dedicated, i, 512.
- Crystal Palace, Sydenham, a step in the right direction, i, 48.
- Ctesiphon, i, 389.
- The Tâk Kesra, 398.
- Its great arch, 399.
- Cubbet-es-Sakhra (Dome of Rock), ii, 520. 523.
- Cubbet es-Silsileh (Dome of Chain), ii, 521.
- Cufic inscriptions at Diarbekr, i, 393 and note.
- Cunault, spire and tower at, ii, 87.
- S. Cunibert, Cologne, ii, 237, 264.
- Cussi, near Beaune, Roman pillar of Victory at, i, 353.
- Cuthbert, Archbishop, baptistery erected by, ii, 344.
- Cuzco, Peru, Manco Capac’s house at, ii, 604.
- Walls, 605-608.
- Cybele, temple at Sardis of, i, 258.
- Cyclopean works, chief element of, i, 19.
- Cypselidæ, race of, i, 251.
- Cyrene, rock-cut tombs at, i, 285-287. 294.
- Remains of colour, 285.
- Probable date, 287. 370 note.
- Recent explorations, 370.
- Cyrus, so-called tomb of, i, 158. 160.
- View, Plan and Section, 196-198.
- Dahshur, Pyramid of, i, 102.
- Dalmeny, ii, 420.
- Damascus, antecedents and present state of the great mosque at, ii, 522-524.
- Plan, 523.
- Dana, on the Euphrates, i, 469.
- Daniel, so-called tomb of, ii, 569.
- Dankwarderode (Brunswick), Palace of, ii, 256.
- Dantzic, cathedral and churches of, ii, 306.
- Darius, palace of, i, 202, 203.
- Tomb, 204.
- Dartein, F. de, vault of St. Michele, Pavia, i, 564.
- David, alleged sarcophagus of, i, 368 note.
- David I. of Scotland, and the round-arched style, ii, 419.
- Decorated style, see Edwardian period.
- Delft, churches at, ii, 207.
- Delhi, i, 494.
- Delos, Pelasgic masonry at, i, 245.
- Column of temple, 260.
- Denderah, i, 127.
- Façade and Isis-headed columns of the temple, 142, 143.
- S. Denis, abbey of, ii, 122. 154. 237. 266. 338. 371.
- Denmark, church architecture in, ii, 318-321.
- Round churches, 327-332.
- Dêr-el-Bahree, Temple of, i, 131.
- Arch at, 216.
- Devenish, Ireland, round tower at, ii, 453. 454.
- De Vogüé, Comte. See Vogüé.
- Diana, temple at Ephesus of, i, 256.
- Dimensions, 258.
- Remains of, 277.
- Plan, arrangements, &c., ibid.
- Temple at Nîmes, 317, 318.
- Diarbekr, i, 392.
- The great mosque, 392-394.
- Dieppe, church of St. Jacques at, ii, 160.
- Diest, Belgium, boucherie at, ii, 204.
- Dieulafoy (M.), Pasargadæ, i, 196;
- Susa, 210-211;
- Frieze of Archers, 210.
- Dighour, Armenia, Byzantine church at; View, i, 467.
- Plan, &c., 468.
- Dijon, church of St. Benigne at, ii, 75. 95, 96. 508.
- Dinant, Notre Dame de, ii, 194.
- Diocletian’s Palace at Spalato: Arcades, i, 314.
- Idea suggested by its splendour and magnitude, 376.
- Plan and dimensions, 377.
- The Golden Gateway, 379.
- General arrangement, 378.
- Temples in the palace, 322, 323, 360. 378.
- His baths at Rome, 344.
- Diogenes, Tomb of, at Hass, i, 451.
- Djemla, basilican church at, i, 509.
- Dochiariu, Catholicon at, i, 459.
- Plan, 459.
- Dodona, or Dramyssus, theatre at, i, 280.
- Doganlu, rock-cut monuments at, i, 232, 233.
- Doge’s palace, Venice, ii, 16, 17.
- Domes and domical buildings: Pelasgian, i, 244.
- The Pantheon, 321.
- Minerva Medica, 359-361.
- Diagram of pendentives, 434.
- Byzantine, 433-447.
- Neo-Byzantine, 454-463.
- Greek Byzantine, 459.
- Mode of lighting domes, 454.
- Armenian, 468.
- Florence, 618.
- Chiaravalle, 621.
- Aquitaine, ii, 64-80.
- Anjou, 83, 84.
- St. Gereon, Cologne, 264.
- Only true Gothic dome, 351.
- Best modern specimen, 393 note.
- Batalha, 507.
- See Circular churches.
- Domestic Architecture; Egypt, i, 136.
- Domitian, baths of, i, 343.
- S. Donato. On the Murano, apse of, i, 571.
- Zara, 603.
- Donoughmore, Ireland, doorway in tower of, ii, 453.
- Doors and doorways; Egyptian, i, 106.
- Pelasgic, 245.
- Firouzabad, 397.
- Moscow, 493.
- Naples, 598.
- Palermo, ii. 25.
- France: Maguelonne, 57.
- Beauvais, 143.
- Basle, 244.
- Chemnitz, 294.
- Gothland, 325, 326.
- Lichfield, 405.
- Rochester, 407.
- Elgin, 430.
- Linlithgow, 439.
- Edinburgh, 440.
- Pluscardine, 441.
- Kildare, 455.
- Early Irish, 458.
- Lérida, 473.
- Valencia, 501.
- See Bronze doors. Gates. Porches.
- Dorians, character of the, i, 242.
- Their “treasuries,” 243.
- Doric temple, earliest known example of, i, 252.
- Examples in Greece, ibid.
- In Sicily, 254.
- Rationale of the application of the order, 259.
- Columns, 260.
- Material used, 262.
- Sculpture and colours, 263.
- Compared with the Ionic order, 264-266.
- Roman examples, 308.
- Columns of Victory, 353.
- Dorpfield (Dr). Plan of Palace of Tiryns, i, 248.
- Age of Temple of Theseus, 253.
- On hypæthral temples, 272 note.
- Greek Theatres, 281 note.
- Dort, church at, ii, 207.
- Dosseret (Impost block): Its Byzantine origin, i, 421. 523 note.
- Examples, 439. 449. 523. 530. 532, 538. 549. 550.
- Double churches, ii, 241-243. 256. 328.
- Dramyssus, or Dodona, Greek theatre at, i, 280.
- Plan, 280.
- Drüggelte, circular church at, ii, 251.
- Plan and model, 251.
- Druidical trilithon, i, 26.
- Dublin, English churches in, ii, 443.
- Cathedral, 444.
- Dugga, near Tunis, ancient tomb at, i, 371.
- View, 372.
- Dunblane, ii, 438.
- Dunfermline, porch at, ii, 437. 439.
- Dunkeld, window at, ii, 438.
- Durability, i, 18.
- Durham Cathedral: Plan, ii, 348.
- Dutch architecture, ii, 206-208.
- Dyer Abou Taneh, church, i, 510.
- Earl’s Barton, Saxon church at, ii, 341.
- Window, 342.
- Early styles in England, epoch of, ii, 337.
- East, advantage to inquirers of the immutability of manners and customs in the, i, 182.
- Echternach, abbey church of, ii, 238.
- Edfû, temple at, i, 140.
- Its arrangements, dimensions, &c., 140.
- Edinburgh, church doorway at, ii, 440.
- Edmund, Archbishop of Canterbury, ii, 155.
- Edward I., monumental crosses erected by, ii, 412.
- Edward II., shrine or tomb of, ii, 410.
- Edward III., ii, 122. 128.
- Edward the Black Prince, tomb of, ii, 408.
- Edwardian period of English architecture, ii, 338.
- Eger, double church at, ii, 241 note, 242.
- Eginwald, Biographer of Charlemagne, ii, 213. 220.
- Eglinton tournament, system carried out in the, i, 12.
- Egypt, architecture of, i, 22. 29. 35. 62.
- Chronology of its dynasties, 90.
- Historical facts bearing on the subject, 92, 93.
- Paintings and sculpture, 94. 108.
- Its architecture our sole source of knowledge of its people, 95.
- Their proficiency as mathematicians and builders, 98.
- Architecturally historic value of the sculptured lists of kings, 129.
- Side of the Nile preferred for sepulture, 136.
- Domestic architecture of the great Theban period: existing examples, 136, 137.
- Periods of decline and revival of the arts; limited influence thereon of foreign domination, 139, 140.
- Gradual degradation of the people: their essential characteristic, 144.
- Alleged parent state, 147.
- First users of stone, 194.
- Architectural feature neglected by them, 201.
- Object of contention with Phrygia, 229.
- Principle despised by them, ii, 180.
- See Obelisks. Pyramids. Rock-cut temples. Thebes.
- Egyptian mosques, see Cairo.
- Eitelberger (Prof.) Parenzo, i, 537 note.
- Eleanor, Queen of Edward I., monumental crosses to, ii, 412.
- Elegance and sublimity, distinctive features of, i, 26.
- Elephantine, Mammeisi at, i, 132.
- Elgin Cathedral, windows of, ii, 419.
- El-Hakeem, ii, 33.
- Sanctuary rebuilt by him, 545.
- Elis, temple of Jupiter at, i, 16.
- Elizabeth of Germany, residence of, ii, 258.
- Church dedicated to her, 267.
- Elizabethan period, architecture of the, ii, 339.
- State of the country, ibid.
- Elne, Provence, cloisters at, ii, 63.
- Capitals, 62.
- S. Eloi, church of, at Espalion, ii, 79.
- Eltham palace; roof, ii, 415.
- Hall, 416.
- Ely Cathedral, ii, 349.
- Emanuel the Fortunate, tomb-house of, ii, 508.
- Convent founded by him, 509.
- England, an architectural difficulty surmounted only in, ii, 68.
- Introduction of the Pointed style, 131. 371.
- Bold transepts why required, 270.
- Abiding love of the people for Gothic art, 335.
- Multiplicity of works on the national architecture; space allotted to it in this work, 336.
- Epochs of its history, 337.
- Saxon architecture, 341.
- Dominating feature in the plans of our cathedrals, 345.
- Chapter-houses, 388.
- Chapels, 393.
- Parish churches, 397.
- Details, doorways, &c., 401.
- Tombs, 408.
- Crosses, 412.
- Civil and domestic architecture, 413.
- Comparative table of cathedrals, 417.
- English influence in Ireland, 443. 458.
- Cathedrals: See Bristol. Canterbury. Carlisle. Chichester. Coventry. Durham. Ely. Exeter. Gloucester. Hereford. Lichfield. Lincoln. Norwich. Oxford. St. Paul’s. Peterborough. Salisbury. Wells. Westminster. Winchester. York.
- Ephesus, i, 229.
- Temple, see Diana.
- Erechtheium, the, i, 39.
- Its perfectness as a sample of Greek art, 255.
- Column and cornice, 264.
- Caryatides, 268.
- Mode of lighting, 276.
- Its threefold aspect, 276.
- Plan, section, and view, 274-276.
- Erfurt Cathedral, and church of St. Severus, ii, 290.
- View and peculiar features of the latter, ibid.
- Ermeland, or Eastern Prussia, brick buildings of, ii, 307.
- Ermet, the ancient Hermonthis, i, 510.
- Erzeroum, Hospital of Oulou Diami at, ii, 570.
- Interior, ibid.
- Esarhaddon, palace of, i, 184.
- Esslingen, church at, ii, 276.
- Estremadura, chapel at Humanejos in, ii, 498.
- Etchmiasdin, legendary occasion of the four churches at, i, 472.
- Ethiopians, probable parent-stock of the, i, 147.
- Most remarkable of their monuments, 148.
- Their mode of preserving their dead, 149.
- Arches, 217.
- Ethnology and Ethnography, as applied to architecture, i, 52.
- Importance of Archæology as an adjunct, 53.
- Characteristics of various races and ages, 55-83. [See Aryans. Celtic races. Semitic races. Turanian races.]
- Conclusion, 83-85.
- Ethnological considerations bearing on the architecture of France, ii, 39-44.
- Eton, ii, 414.
- Etruscans, mounds of the, i, 16.
- Parallels in Asia Minor, 230.
- Certainty of their existence, 289.
- Their probable origin; permanence of their influence on Roman art, 290, 291.
- Only example of their temples, 292.
- Their civil buildings, skill in engineering, &c., 293.
- Shapes and classification of their rock-cut tombs, 294, 295.
- Numerousness of their tumuli, 296.
- Prominent examples, 297, 300.
- Tomb of Aruns, 300.
- Their use of the arch, 300, 301. 306.
- Euphrasius, Bishop, basilica built by, i, 536.
- Evreux Cathedral, ii, 149.
- Circular window, 166.
- Exeter Cathedral: Vault, ii, 358.
- Eyub, mosque of, ii, 558.
- Ezekiel, tomb of, ii, 569.
- View, ibid.
- Ezra, in the Hauran, Byzantine church at, i, 438.
- Façades: Paris, i, 30.
- Falaise, castle of, ii, 185.
- Falkland Castle, ii, 440.
- Fanal de Cimetière, and the Irish round tower, ii, 450.
- Fano, basilica built by Vitruvius at, i, 334.
- Fellows, Sir Charles, his Lycian investigations, i, 233, 237.
- Ferdinand and Isabella, sepulchral chapel of, ii, 494.
- Ferrara, the Duomo at, i, 632.
- Façade, 632.
- Palazzo Pubblico, ii, 10.
- Fez, towers of, ii, 550.
- Fire temples of the Persians, i, 212.
- Firouzabad, palace at, i, 397.
- Plan, doorway, ibid.
- External walls, 398.
- Internal arrangement, ibid.
- Date, 401 note.
- Flamboyant style, its faults and beauties, ii, 165. 376. 379.
- Introduced into Scotland, 419.
- Flaminian Way, i, 347.
- Flanders, see Belgium.
- Flanders, French, ii, 44.
- Flavian amphitheatre, Rome, see Colosseum.
- Florence, baptistery at, i, 552.
- San Miniato, 584-586. 596.
- Cathedral (St. Mary, or Sta. Maria dei Fiori), proportion of solids to area, ii, 179.
- Left unfinished, i, 619.
- Plan, 617.
- Dome and nave, 618.
- Flank, 619.
- SS. Croce and Maria Novella, 631.
- San Michele, 633.
- Giotto’s campanile, ii, 7.
- Palazzo Vecchio, 10.
- See i, 500. 553. 579. 624. 629. 631. ii, 8.
- Folö, Gothland, church at, ii, 326.
- Interior, 324.
- Fontevrault, plan of church at, ii, 84.
- Chevet and bay, 84.
- Fontifroide, church at, ii, 56.
- Form in Architecture, principles of, i, 25.
- Fortified churches in France.
- See Maguelonne. Royat.
- Fortuna Virilis, temple of, i, 317.
- Foscari palace, Venice, ii, 19.
- Fougères, town walls of, ii, 186.
- Fowler (Charles) on Maulbronn, ii, 236 note.
- France, Roman arches in, i, 348-350.
- Roman column at Cussi, 353.
- Diversity and ultimate fusion of races, architectural provinces, &c., ii, 39-44.
- Architecture of the northern division, 104.
- Progress in Central France, 108.
- Great architectural epoch of the nation, 120-122.
- Gothic cathedrals, 130.
- Painted glass; External sculptures, 141-142.
- Collegiate churches, 153-159.
- Church furniture, 180.
- Domestic architecture; town-halls, 182.
- Houses, 183.
- Castellated buildings, &c., 184.
- Fortified town walls, 186.
- French forms in English edifices, 353. 371.
- Styles of the two countries compared, 355. 367. 379. 386. 401.
- French styles in Scotland, 419.
- Examples of the styles of the various provinces, see Anjou. Aquitania. Auvergne. Burgundy. Frankish Province. Normandy.
- Cathedrals: See Alby. Amiens. Angers. Angoulême. Autun. Auxerre. Avignon. Bayeux. Bazas. Beauvais. Besançon. Bordeaux. Bourges. Chartres. Coutances. Dijon. Evreux. Laon. Limoges. Lisieux. Lyons. Nevers. Notre Dame, Paris. Noyon. Orleans. Poitiers. Rheims. Rouen. Sens. Soissons. Toul. Toulouse. Tours.
- Troyes. Vienne.
- See also ii, 264. 266. 377. 386.
- Frankish Province, France, birthplace of the true Gothic Pointed style, ii, 104.
- Frankish Architecture, 120.
- Franks, Mr., suggestion by, i, 69 note.
- Frauenburg, brick church at, ii, 307.
- Frederick II., castle built by, i, 606.
- Freemasonry, its origin, rationale, &c., ii, 125-129.
- Freiburg in the Breisgau, cathedral of, ii, 138. 195. 273.
- Freiburg on the Unstrutt, double chapel at, ii, 241 note, 243.
- Freshfield, Dr., triple apses, i, 447 note.
- Freshford, Kilkenny, doorway at, ii, 448.
- Friuli, vaulted chapel at, i, 559.
- Fulda, original cathedral of, ii, 220.
- Circular church, 251.
- Furnes, Belgium, belfry of, ii, 200.
- Gaeta, tower at i, 601. 604.
- Gaillard, castle of, ii, 185.
- Gainsborough Abbey, ii, 374.
- Galatina, i, 595.
- S. Gall, ancient plan of monastery found at, and details of same, ii, 213-216. 235, 236.
- Galla Placidia, alleged sarcophagus of, i, 552 note.
- Her tomb, its peculiar form, polychromatic decorations, &c., 434. 553.
- View of interior, 435.
- Her tomb, its peculiar form, polychromatic decorations, &c., 434. 553.
- Gallerus, oratory of, ii, 457.
- Galway, ancient house in, ii, 458.
- Gardiner, Bishop of Winchester, tomb of, ii, 408.
- Gates and Gateways: Assyrian, i, 181.
- Pelasgic, 245-247.
- Arpino, 301.
- Ctesiphon, 399.
- Jerusalem, 449, 450.
- Moscow, 498.
- Bristol, ii, see Doors. Golden Gateways.
- “Gates” of the Bible, i, 202.
- Gates of Justice, i, 350.
- Gebweiler, cathedral of, ii, 240.
- Geddington, cross at, ii, 412.
- Gelathi, Armenia, capital at, i, 477.
- Gelnhausen, palace at, ii, 256.
- S. Geneviève, Paris, i, 24.
- Geology, importance of Palæontology in the study of, i, 53, 54.
- S. George, Cologne, ii, 238.
- S. George’s Hall, Liverpool, i, 346 note.
- S. Gereon, Cologne, ii, 264-266;
- an English parallel to, 398.
- See Cologne.
- Gerizim, Mount, Justinian’s Church on, i, 432.
- S. Germain des Prés, Paris, in its original state, ii, 121.
- Germany, round-arched Gothic style of, i, 23.
- Character of its races, ii, 40. 209.
- Effect of Freemasonry, 128. 210.
- Claim as to the Pointed style, 211.
- Leading characteristics of the Round style, 211, 212.
- Basilicas, 213-240.
- Double churches, 241-243.
- Noteworthy peculiarities in German Gothic, 244.
- Circular and polygonal churches, 247-254.
- Domestic architecture, Romanesque style, 255-263.
- Ecclesiastic examples, Pointed style, 264-291.
- Foible of German masons, 275.
- Circular churches (Pointed style) church furniture, civil architecture, 292-306.
- Races and building materials of Baltic Provinces, 302.
- Examples of brick architecture, 302-309.
- A trick of its architects, 422.
- German artists brought to Moscow, i, 493.
- See ii, 357. 380. 413. 461.
- Gernrode, basilican church at, ii, 220-222.
- Gerona, Spain, vault in the cathedral at, ii, 367.
- Ghazan Khan, mosque founded by, ii, 571, 572.
- Ghazni, ii, 454 note.
- Ghengis Khan, ii, 571.
- Ghent, ii, 188.
- Ghibellines and Guelfs; influence of their quarrels on Italian architecture, i, 608.
- Gibel Barkal, temples and pyramids at, i, 147-149.
- S. Gilles, church of, ii, 52. 58.
- Prototype of St Mark’s, Venice, façade, i, 534.
- S. Giorgio in Velabro, Roman basilican church, its date, i, 515.
- Giotto, campanile designed by, ii, 7.
- S. Giovanni a Porta Latina, Roman basilican church, its date, i, 515.
- Giralda, Seville, dimensions of the, ii, 550.
- View, ibid.
- Gizeh, Pyramids at, see Pyramids.
- Gladiatorial exhibitions at Rome, i, 337.
- Glasgow Cathedral, ii, 424-428.
- Glass, painted, see Painted glass.
- Glendalough, seven churches at, ii, 446.
- Gloucester Cathedral, ii, 355.
- Golden Gateways: Spalato, i, 379.
- Jerusalem, 449, 450.
- Göllingen, horseshoe-arch, crypt at, ii, 238, 239.
- Gonse (M. Louis) on L’art Gothique, ii, 122 note.
- Gorlitz, Petri Kirche at, ii, 291.
- Goslar, Imperial Palace, ii, 256.
- Gothic architecture; source of its beauty, i, 14.
- Massiveness, 17.
- French and English peculiarities contrasted, 22, 23.
- Proportion: naves, aisles, towers, spires, 29-31.
- Carved ornaments, 34, 35.
- Painted glass and sculpture, 37.
- Symmetry, how far regarded, 39.
- Imitation of Nature, 42.
- Effect of fifteenth-century enthusiasm, 43.
- Conclusion arrived at by the clergy, 47.
- Compared with Egyptian architecture, 145.
- Element of superiority in Roman roofs, 331.
- Roman peculiarities employed and improved upon, ibid.
- Cause of its decadence, 388.
- An oasis of Gothic art, 410.
- Regions peopled by the Gothic tribes: True application of the term, 412.
- Stone vaults and wooden roofs, their accessories and their dangers, 540. 547. ii, 47.
- Gothic invasion of Italy, 558.
- Lombard and Round-arched style, 558-581.
- Pointed Italian, 607-634. ii, 1-22. [See Italy.]
- Sicilian Pointed style, 22-31.
- The style in Palestine, 32-38.
- Inventors of the true pointed style, 104.
- Progress under the French kings, 120-122. [See France.]
- Introduction of painted glass, 124.
- Abiding love for the style in England, 335.
- Edwardian period, 338.
- Culmination under the Tudors, 339.
- English examples, 345-417. [See England.]
- Scottish examples, 418-442. [See Scotland.]
- Ireland, 443-459.
- Period of its prevalence in Spain, 462.
- Spanish examples, 464-506. [See Spain.]
- Portugal, 507-511.
- See i, 501.
- Gothem (Gothland) Church, ii, 326.
- Interior, 323.
- Gothland, interest attaching to the architecture of, ii, 321.
- Gouda, painted glass at, ii, 207.
- Grado, Duomo at, i, 537.
- St. Marie delle Grazie, 537, 538.
- Granada, expulsion of the Moors from, ii, 497. 556.
- See 547.
- Granson, church at, ii, 219.
- Great Leighs Church, Essex, spire of, ii, 398.
- Greece, Byzantine churches in, i, 459-463.
- Greeks, architecture of the, i, 11.
- Their non-employment of the arch, 22.
- Use of proportion, 29.
- Of ornament, 32.
- Borrowings from the Assyrians, 33. 35. 154.
- Uniformity and symmetry, 39.
- Immigration of the Aryans and Pelasgi, 75.
- Results of Pelasgic influences, 81 note.
- Their indebtedness to the Egyptians, 132. 257.
- Points in which they surpassed them, 145.
- Their theory as to Egyptian civilization, 147.
- Essential differences between them and the Romans, 241. 289, 290.
- Chronological memoranda, 240.
- Sources of their language, arts, religion, &c., 241.
- Short period comprehended in their great history, 242.
- Dimensions of their temples, 258.
- System of proportion employed, 261.
- Forms of their temples, i, 269-272.
- Suggested mode of lighting them, 272-276.
- Their municipal architecture, 279.
- Theatres, 280.
- Tombs, 281-284.
- Domestic architecture, 287.
- Period of art development in their nation, 289.
- Result of their repulse of their invaders, 290.
- Their style of decoration adopted at Pompeii, 382-385.
- Work of Greek architects in Russia, i, 481, 488, 491. See Pelasgi.
- Greek Orders of Architecture, see Corinthian. Doric. Ionic.
- Greensted, Essex, wooden church at, ii, 342.
- S. Gregory, legend of the appearance of the Saviour to, i, 472.
- Guildhall, London, ii, 413.
- Guimaraens, Portugal, ii, 511.
- Gutschmid’s Chaldean researches, i, 151.
- Hadrian, remains of temple built by, i, 318. 323.
- Triumphal arches, 348.
- His famous tomb, or ‘Mole,’ 356. 362.
- Columns thereof, 320.
- Hagby, Sweden, round church at, ii, 331.
- Hakeem, Caliph, Sanctuary built by, ii, 545.
- Hal, Notre Dame de, ii, 194.
- Halberstadt Cathedral, ii, 287.
- Liebfrauen Kirche, 236.
- Halicarnassus, i, 229.
- Mausoleum at, 282-284.
- Hall, Sir James, theory of, ii, 294.
- Hamburg, ii, 309.
- Hameln, church at, ii, 230.
- Hammer-beam roofs, ii, 415.
- Hampton Court, ii, 416.
- Hannington Church, Northamptonshire, ii, 324 note.
- Hanover, church tower at, ii, 307.
- Haroun al-Rashid, absence of proofs of the magnificence of, ii, 567.
- Splendour of his court, ibid.
- Hasbeiya, remains at, ii, 525.
- Hass, Central Syria, tomb at, i, 451.
- Hassan, Sultan, mosque of, ii, 531-533.
- Hastings, battle of, its architectural result, ii, 413.
- Hatshepsu, obelisks erected by, i, 135.
- Hauran, effect of the Mahomedan conquest on the buildings in the, i, 447.
- Hawara Pyramid, i, 112.
- Hebdomon (Constantinople), palace of, i, 464, 465.
- Elevation, 464.
- Hebron, mosque at, ii, 37.
- Plan, 38.
- Hechlingen, church at, ii, 239.
- Heckington Church, canopy over sedilia, ii, 406.
- Heeren’s notion of the ruins at Wady el-Ooatib, i, 149.
- Height, disproportionate, its effect, ii, 59, 60.
- Heiligenstadt, Anna chapel at, ii, 292.
- Heisterbach, abbey church of, ii, 238.
- Cloisters, ii, 261.
- Hejira, events of the first century of the, ii, 512.
- S. Helena, Constantine’s mother, tomb of, i, 357. 542. 544.
- Heliopolis, beautiful obelisk at, i, 111. 135.
- Henry III., choir rebuilt by, ii, 374.
- Henry VII.’s chapel, French and German parallels to, ii, 160. 283. 353. 494.
- Aisle, 364.
- Herculaneum, theatre at, i, 335.
- Hereford Cathedral, lancet window in, ii, 372. 374.
- Herod’s Temple at Jerusalem, i, 227, 228.
- Plan and view restored, 225, 226.
- Type of the Expiatory Stele erected by him, i, 239.
- His tomb, 368.
- See 498.
- Herodotus on the tumulus of Alyattes, i, 230.
- Hersfeld Church, ii, 230.
- Hierapolis, Byzantine churches at, i, 430, 431.
- Hildesheim, St. Michael’s church at, plan and interior, ii, 225.
- Description, 226.
- Hindus, proverbial objection to the arch by the, i, 22. 217.
- Hitterdal, Norway, wooden church at; Plan, ii, 332.
- View, 333.
- Hoäte Church, Gothland, doorway of, ii, 326.
- Hogarth’s pictures, i, 4.
- Hohenstaufens, architectural period of the, ii, 237.
- Holland, race indigenous to, and architecture of, ii, 206-208.
- Holyrood Chapel, its date, ii, 437. See 440.
- Holy Sepulchre, Jerusalem, Church of the, ii, 33-36.
- Homer’s architectural descriptions, i, 247.
- Religion of his poem, 249.
- Honeyman, Mr. John, drawings by, ii, 435 note.
- Honeysuckle ornament, i, 258. 264.
- Hope, Mr. Beresford, point asserted by, ii, 156 note.
- Horseshoe arches. Takt-i-gero, i, 406.
- Horse tent, Nimroud, i, 190.
- Hoskins, Mr., pyramids figured by, i, 148.
- His Ethiopian researches, 215.
- Huelgas, ii, 498.
- Cloister of the, 502.
- S. Hugh, of Lincoln, architectural debt due to, ii, 358.
- Hugo, Victor, an axiom of, ii, 141.
- Humanejos, chapel at, ii, 498.
- Husein Shah, Madrissa of, ii, 577, 578.
- Huy, Notre Dame de, ii, 194.
- Ibn Tooloon, mosque of, ii, 527.
- Ibrim in Nubia, basilican church at, i, 510.
- Igel, near Trèves, Roman monument at, i, 362.
- Ilescas, tower at, ii, 499.
- Ilissus, Ionic temple on the, i, 255. 274.
- Illahun Pyramid, i, 113.
- Imumzade, palace of, i, 407.
- Ingelheim, Charlemagne’s palace at, ii, 256.
- Inkerman, cave at, i, 482.
- Inner Temple Hall, ii, 415.
- Innisfallen, Celtic church or oratory at, ii, 447.
- View, ibid.
- Iona, ii, 419. 439.
- Window, 441.
- Ionian colonies, i, 229.
- Ionic order, origin of the, i, 154. 237, 238.
- Result of recent discoveries: oldest and finest examples, 255.
- Temples of Juno, Diana, Apollo, and at Pergamon, 256, 257.
- Compared with the Doric order, 264.
- Columns and cornices, 264, 265.
- Carving, colour, masonry, &c., 265.
- Use of the order by the Romans, 309.
- Ipsamboul, rock-cut temple at, i, 130.
- Ireland, scroll work at New Grange in, i, 245 note.
- Iron as a building material, i, 21.
- Irrigation, proficiency of the Turanian races in, i, 63.
- St. Isaac’s at St. Petersburg, redeeming feature in the design of, i, 20.
- Isis-headed or Typhonian capitals, i, 35, 127. 143.
- Ispahan, works of Shah Abbas at, ii, 575.
- Issoire, chevet church at: Plan, ii, 89.
- Elevation and section, 90.
- Italy, ethnographic history of art in, i, 289.
- Adaptation of circular buildings left by the Romans, 543.
- Introductory notice; Division and classification of styles, i, 500.
- Lombard and round-arched Gothic, 558.
- Examples, 559-581.
- Byzantine Romanesque and other phases of the Byzantine style, 582-605.
- Pointed Gothic: effect of the disputes of factions, 607.
- Sources of difference between Italian Gothic and that of other peoples, 608.
- Examples, 610-634.
- Circular buildings, ii, 1.
- Towers, 2.
- Porches, 8.
- Civic buildings, 10.
- Moulded bricks, 13.
- Windows, 14. 19.
- Palestine, why treated as (architecturally) a part of Italy, ii, 32.
- See Amalfi. Asti. Bari. Bittonto. Bologna. Brindisi. Byzantine. Ferrara. Florence. Friuli. Lucca. Mantua. Milan. Naples. Novara. Orvieto. Padua. Palestine. Pavia. Piacenza. Pisa. Prato. Rome. Sicily. Siena. Toscanella. Venice. Vercelli. Verona. Vicenza.
- Ivan III, and Ivan the Terrible, churches built by, i, 492.
- Jackson (Mr. T. G.), Dalmatia and Istria, i, 536-538.
- Trau, Jak, 590.
- Ragusa, ii, 21.
- Jaina, i, 371.
- Parallel to its style in Ireland, ii, 456.
- Jak, Hungary, church at, i, 590.
- S. James, sepulchre of, i, 368. 370.
- Jedburgh Abbey, mixed style at, ii, 419.
- Jerpoint Abbey, tower and battlements of, ii, 457.
- Jerusalem, chief feature of admiration in the Temple of, i, 19.
- Earliest Temple, or Tabernacle, 222, 223.
- Solomon’s Temple, 65. 68. 201.
- Source of its splendour, 223.
- Its dimensions and plan, 222, 223.
- Ornaments and accessories of metal, 224.
- Subsequent rebuildings: Herod’s Temple, 225.
- Author’s drawing of the same, 226.
- Its magnitude and magnificence, 227.
- Cognate temples, 228.
- Constantine’s Basilicas, 420.
- The Golden Gateway, 449.
- The Gate Huldah, 450.
- Bassi-relievi on the Arch of Titus, 348.
- Rock-built tombs: Herod’s, Zechariah’s, 368.
- Absalom’s, the Judges’, 369.
- Result of the Crusades, ii, 32.
- Churches of SS. Anne, Marie la Grande, Marie Latine, and the Madeleine, 36.
- Church of the Holy Sepulchre, ii, 33-36.
- “Dome of Rock,” or Mosque of Omar, 520-522.
- Mosque el-Aksah (Abd el-Melik’s), 517-519.
- Fountains, 525.
- Jews, period of the Exode of the, i, 93.
- See Jerusalem. Semitic races.
- John, King of Portugal, church founded by, ii, 507.
- S. John Lateran, Roman basilican church built, i, 515.
- Present state, 521.
- Original founder, ibid.
- Cloister, 599.
- S. John, Ravenna, baptistery of, i, 547.
- Knights of St. John at Brindisi, 599.
- Jones, Owen, reproduction of the Alhambra Court of Lions by, ii, 553 note.
- Josephus, fragment of Manetho preserved by, i, 92, 93. [See Manetho.]
- His idea of Solomon’s palace, 221.
- Judah, alleged tombs of the kings of, i, 368 note.
- Judea, architecture of, see Jerusalem.
- Judges, tomb of the, i, 369.
- Façade, 370.
- Jumièges, Norman church at, ii, 111. 114.
- Juno, temple at Samos of, i, 256.
- Dimensions, 258.
- Jupiter, temples of, at Elis, i, 16.
- Olympia, 253.
- Agrigentum, 258. 271. 273.
- Jupiter Ammon, alleged ruins of a temple of, i, 149.
- Jupiter Capitolinus, Etruscan temple to, i, 292. 315.
- Jupiter Olympius, Athens, temple of, i, 257.
- Dimensions, 257. 323.
- School to which it belongs, 267.
- Plan and view of its ruins, 324.
- Jupiter Stator, temple of, i, 34. 310. 311.
- Its form and dimensions, 315, 316.
- Jupiter Tonans, temple of, i, 316.
- Justinian’s Church at Bethlehem, i, 419.
- His boast on the completion of the mosque of Sta. Sophia, 440.
- Church in Armenia ascribed to him, 469.
- Kaabah at Mecca, i, 65; ii. 514. 516. 536, 537.
- Persian Kaabahs, i, 212.
- Kahun, Town of, i, 113, 114.
- Plan of houses, 113.
- Kaitbey, mosque and tomb of, ii, 534.
- View, 535.
- Kalabscheh, rock-cut temple at, i, 131.
- Roman temple: Plan, 143.
- Section, 144.
- Roman temple: Plan, 143.
- Kalaoon, mosque of, ii, 531.
- Kalat Sema’n, Syria, church and monastery at, i, 422, 423.
- Double church, section and plan, 433.
- Kallundborg, Denmark, peculiarly formed church at, ii, 321.
- View, 320.
- Kampen, church at, ii, 207.
- Kangovar, temple at, i, 228. 324.
- Karlsburg Cathedral, ii, 210.
- Karnac, chief feature of the Hypostyle Hall at, i, 17.
- Its dimensions, 24. 122.
- Original founder of the Temple, 111.
- Its successive accretions, great magnitude, &c., 122-124.
- The South Temple, 127.
- Parallel to the Hypostyle Hall, 123. See ii, 553.
- Kells, Ireland, ii, 449.
- Ancient Cross, 459.
- Kelso Abbey Church, ii, 422.
- Norman arches, 422.
- Kenilworth Hall, ii, 416.
- Kerouan, Great mosque of, ii, 538-540.
- Kertch, tumuli near, i, 481.
- Khafra, Pyramid of, i, 97-99.
- Temple of, 107, 108.
- Khasné, or treasury of Pharaoh: View i, 364.
- Section and description, 365.
- Khiva, ii, 581.
- View of palace, 581.
- Khorsabad, explorations at, i, 154.
- Temple exhumed by M. Place, 161.
- Elevation of Observatory, 162.
- Plan of, ibid.
- Situation of the city, 172.
- Plans of the Palace, 171. 176.
- Restorations by the Author, 176. 178.
- Peculiar ornamentation, 180.
- Discovery of the city gates, 181.
- Plan of gateway, 180.
- Elevation of, 181.
- Remains of propylæa, 173.
- Sculptured view of a pavilion, 187.
- Example of the arch, 215.
- Khosru (Nushirven), daring building feat of, i, 398.
- Khufu (or Cheops), the proved founder of the Great Pyramid, i, 102.
- Alleged repairer of the Sphinx, 108 note.
- Kief, architects of churches at, i, 484.
- Churches: Dessiatinnaya, and SS. Basil and Irene, 486.
- Cathedral (Sta. Sophia), 486, 487. 493.
- Other churches, 488.
- Immense number thereof, 489.
- Churches: Dessiatinnaya, and SS. Basil and Irene, 486.
- Kieghart, Armenia, rock-cut church at, i, 483.
- Kilconnel, Monastery, ii, 444.
- View of cloister, 445.
- Kilcullen, early doorway at, ii, 455.
- Kildare Cathedral, ii. 444.
- Doorway in tower, 452.
- Killaloe, section of chapel at, ii, 448.
- Kilree, Kilkenny, round tower at, ii, 453, 454.
- King’s College Chapel, Cambridge. See Cambridge.
- Kinneh, County Cork, round tower at, ii, 454, 455.
- Kirk, proper application of the term, i, 543.
- Whence derived, ibid. note.
- Kirkwall Cathedral, ii, 423.
- Kloster Neuberg, “Todtenleuchter” at, ii, 297.
- Königsberg, ii, 309.
- Kootub Mosque and Minar, ii, 551.
- Kostroma, Eastern Russia, churches in, i, 490.
- Views of interiors, 491, 492.
- Kour, rock excavations on the banks of the, i, 483.
- Kouthais, Armenia, peculiarities of church at, i, 472, 473.
- Koyunjik, palace of Sennacherib at, 183.
- Palace of Esarhaddon, or South-west palace, 184.
- Central palace; its plan, 185.
- Its sculptures and pavement, 186.
- Palace of Tiglath Pileser, 185.
- Original magnificence of these groups of palaces, 186.
- Cause of the preservation of their ruins, 187.
- Illustrative bas-reliefs from palace walls, 187-190.
- Kremlin, the. See Moscow.
- Kubr Roumeïa, i, 372.
- Plan, 373.
- Kurtea el Argyisch, i, 479.
- View of, 495.
- Its plan, ibid.
- Date, 496.
- Kuttenberg, church of St. Barbara at, its peculiar features, ii, 284.
- Section, 285.
- Laach, abbey church at, ii, 235.
- Plan and view, 236.
- Labyrinth of Lampares, i, 111.
- Its probable dimensions and arrangements, 112.
- Läderbro, Gothland, church and wapenhus at, ii, 331. 398.
- Lambeth Palace, ii, 416.
- Landsberg, double chapel at, plan and section, ii, 243.
- Landshut, St. Martin’s church at, ii, 286.
- Langres, double-arched Roman gate at, i, 349. ii, 100.
- Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury, ii, 155.
- Langue d’Oc and Langue d’Œil, ii, 42.
- Lantern pillars of Germany and France, ii, 297.
- Lanterns: St. Ouen, Rouen, ii, 177.
- Salamanca, 475.
- Laon Cathedral, its spires and towers, ii, 145.
- Lapo, Arnolpho da, church remodelled by, i, 616.
- Lateran church, Rome. See St. John Lateran.
- Latin style, French example of the, ii, 105.
- Layard, Sir Henry Austen, his Assyrian explorations, i, 163. 169, 170 note, 215. 297.
- Le Duc, Viollet, his Dictionnaire d’Architecture, ii, 179 note.
- Leighs. See Great Leighs.
- Leo the Isaurian, church built by, i, 453.
- Leon, Spain, ii, 467.
- Lérida. Door of porch, ii, 473.
- Léry, Norman Church at, ii. 111.
- Lethaby (W. R.): Restoration of Mujelibé, i, 163 note.
- Leuchars, Norman window at, ii, 420.
- Lewis (Prof. T. H.), ii, 518, 519. 521.
- Lichfield Cathedral: Spires, ii, 196.
- Liège Cathedral, its date, &c., ii, 194.
- Lierre, church of St. Gommaire at, ii, 197.
- Belfry, 200.
- Lighting of temples, i, 124. 272.
- Of domes, 454.
- Limburg, near Dürkheim, church at, ii, 226. 229.
- Limburg on the Lahn, cathedral of, ii, 288.
- Lincoln Cathedral, ii, 348, 349 note.
- Linköping, Sweden, church at, ii, 314.
- Linlithgow, doorway at, ii, 439.
- Palace, 440.
- Lino, Spain, churches of SS.
- Lion tomb at Cnidus, i, 284.
- Lisieux Cathedral, ii, 149.
- Lismore Cathedral ii, 444.
- Little Maplestead, Essex, round church at, ii, 35. 398.
- Little Saxham, Sussex, round-towered church at, ii, 398.
- Liverpool, St. George’s Hall at, i, 346 note.
- Livia, house of, i, 375.
- Lloyd, Mr. Watkiss, subject of a paper by, i, 262 note.
- Loches, round arches upon pointed ones at, ii, 83.
- Loftus, Mr., explorations of. Susa, i, 209.
- Wurka, 392.
- Lohra, chapel at, ii, 241 note. 243.
- Lombardy, ii, 3, 4 note; i, 558.
- Disappearance of original Lombard buildings, 560.
- Examples of Lombard and round-arched Gothic, 559-581.
- See Italy.
- London Bridge, i, 48.
- St. Lorenzo, Milan, see Milan.
- Lorenzo, basilican church, Rome, dates of, i, 515.
- Aisles, ibid.
- Gallery, 523.
- Interior view, 524.
- Lorraine, architectural affinities of, ii, 44.
- Lorsch, porch of convent at, elevation of, ii, 255.
- Louis le Gros, Louis le Jeune, Saint Louis, and the architecture of France, ii, 121, 122.
- Louis the Pious, i, 566.
- Loupiac, façade of church at, ii, 78.
- Louvain, town-hall at, i, 14.
- Lubeck, brick-built Cathedral and churches of SS. Mary and Catherine at. Plans, view, &c., ii, 303-305.
- Town-hall, 311.
- Lucca, i, 558. 580. 607.
- Bays of San Martino, 613.
- San Michele, 588. ii, 6.
- Lund, Sweden, cathedral at, ii, 315.
- Lüneburg, brick architecture of, ii, 311.
- Luther’s shelter, ii, 258.
- Luxeuil, ii, 95.
- Luxor, temple of, i, 125.
- Obelisk, 135.
- Lycia and its tombs, i, 234. 237.
- See i, 430.
- Lycurgus, i, 242.
- Effect of his laws, 251.
- Lydda, Gothic church at, ii, 37.
- Lydia, i, 229.
- Lyons, church of St. Martin d’Ainay at, ii, 95.
- Lysicrates, choragic monument of, its character as a work of art, i, 26. 257. 266.
- Dimensions and elevation, 279.
- Mabillon, plan found and published by, ii, 213.
- MacGibbon (David): Architecture of Provence, ii, 55 note.
- Machpelah, cave of, i, 294. 363.
- Madeleine, Paris, i, 20.
- Madeleine, Jerusalem, ii, 36.
- Madracen, tomb, view of, i, 373.
- Madrissa, the, see Ispahan.
- Maestricht: St. Servin’s, ii, 192.
- Notre Dame, 192.
- Magdeburg, model of church built by Otho the Great at, ii, 250.
- Maguelonne, fortified church at, ii, 57. 93.
- Mahomed Khodabendah, city founded by, ii, 573.
- Splendid tomb erected by him, 574.
- Mahomet, first mosque of, ii, 514. 516.
- His intention relative to the temple of Jerusalem, 518.
- Mahomet II, number and splendour of the mosques of, ii, 557.
- Mahomedanism, result of the outburst and cause of the success of, ii, 512-515.
- Maison Carrée, Nîmes, i, 311.
- Description, plan, &c., 317. 509.
- Malines, church of St. Rombaut at, ii, 194.
- Chief points of interest, 196.
- Mallay, M., on the churches in Puy de Dome, ii, 89. 92.
- Mammeisi, purpose of Egyptian temples so called, i, 132.
- Manco Capac’s house, Cuzco, ii, 604.
- Manetho, dynastic chronology of Egypt, by, i, 90.
- Fragment preserved by Josephus, 93.
- On the Labyrinth, 111.
- On the Shepherd kings, 116.
- Confirmation of his list of kings, 129.
- Manresa, collegiate church at, ii, 486.
- Interior view, 487.
- Mantua, i, 293.
- Maplestead, Essex, Round church at, ii, 35. 398.
- Marburg, church of S. Elizabeth at; Plan, section, &c., ii, 267.
- Marcus Aurelius, Column of Victory of, i, 353.
- Margaret of Austria, sepulchral church erected by, ii, 159.
- S. Maria degli Angeli, Rome, i, 344.
- S. Maria di Ara Cœli, basilican church, date of, i, 515.
- S. Maria in Capitolio, triapsal church, Cologne, ii, 232.
- S. Maria in Cosmedin, basilican church, Rome, i, 515.
- Tower: Dimensions, 578.
- Elevation, ibid.
- S. Maria in Domenica, basilican church, Rome, date of, i, 515.
- S. Maria, Florence, dimensions of, i, 24.
- See Florence.
- S. Maria Maggiore, basilican church, Rome, date of, i, 515.
- Plan, 521.
- Interior view, proportions, &c., 522.
- Modern alterations, 521.
- S. Maria sopra Minerva, basilican church, Rome, date of, i, 515.
- Its style, 517.
- S. Maria in Trastevere, basilican church, date of, i, 515.
- S. Maria Rotunda, see Theodoric.
- S. Marie de l’Épine, west front of, ii, 156.
- Its English prototype, ibid.
- Spire, 157.
- Marienburg, brick Castle at, ii, 310.
- Mariette, M., Egyptian Explorations of, i, 105. 116 note.
- Markham, Mr., on Peruvian architecture, ii, 603.
- S. Mark’s, Venice. See Venice.
- Marmoutier, church of, ii, 240.
- Marryat’s Works on Sweden, Jutland, &c., Illustrations from, ii, 316 et seq.
- Mars Ultor, temple of, i, 316. 509.
- Marseilles, early colonists of, i, 363; ii, 30.
- Marshall, Bishop, tomb of, at Exeter, ii, 405. 407.
- S. Martin, triapsal church, Cologne, ii, 232-234.
- S. Martino in Cielo d’Oro, Ravenna, i, 528 note.
- S. Martino di Monti, basilican church, Rome, date of, i, 515.
- S. Mary Redcliffe, a French prototype of, ii, 156.
- Mashita, palace at, plan, i, 400.
- Triapsal hall, 402.
- Western octagon tower, 403.
- Façade, 404.
- Elevation restored by the author, 405.
- Maspero, (M.), Egypt, domestic and military architecture, i, 136, 137.
- Mass, as an element in Architecture, i, 16.
- Mastaba, its meaning, i, 102.
- Examples, 102. 105, 106.
- Matera, cathedral at, i, 597.
- Window, 597.
- Materials in architecture: Stone and brick, i, 19, 20.
- Plaster, wood, cast iron, 21.
- S. Mathias, near Trèves, ii, 238.
- Maulbronn, Wurtemburg, Abbey of, ii, 236 and note.
- Mausolus, tomb of, at Halicarnassus, i, 282.
- View and plan as restored by the Author, 282, 283.
- Dimensions and description, 283, 284.
- Maxentius, basilica of, or Temple of Peace, its dimensions, i, 24.
- Considered as an example of Roman art, 306.
- Description, plan, sections, &c., 329-331.
- Its stucco ornaments, 345.
- Proportion of solids to area, 24; ii, 179.
- Mayence Cathedral, ii, 226.
- Mecca, the Kaabah at, i, 65. 212; ii, 514. 516.
- Mechlin, ii, 188.
- Intended Town-hall, 204.
- Medina, Mahomet’s Mosque at, ii, 514. 516.
- Medeenet Habû, temple of i, 125.
- Pavilion of Rameses, 137.
- Medum, Pyramid of, i. 102. 104.
- Megalithic period in England, ii, 337.
- Meillan, château of, ii, 184.
- Meissen Cathedral, ii, 276.
- Melrose Abbey, ii, 420. 431.
- Memnonium, the, i, 126.
- Memphis, i, 91.
- Mariette’s explorations, 92.
- Dynasties of Pyramid-building Kings, ibid.
- Magnificence of the city, destruction of its monuments, &c., 118, 119.
- S. Menoux, church at; exterior, ii, 102.
- Chevet and narthex, 103.
- Meroë, the alleged parent state of Egypt, i, 147.
- Remains of Ethiopian temples and pyramids, 148.
- Arches, 217.
- Merovingian Kings, no architectural remains of the, ii, 120.
- Merzig, Church of, ii, 238.
- Messina, architecture of, ii, 24. 29.
- Metal used in Roman architecture, i, 346 note, 384.
- Mettlach, Octagonal Church, ii, 249.
- Capital, 250.
- Metz Cathedral, pleasing features of, ii, 287.
- Mexico, primitive perfection of the arts in, i, 62.
- Early inhabitants, ii, 583.
- Recent artistic explorers, 584.
- Toltecs and Aztecs; result of the Spanish conquest, 584-586.
- Alleged Buddhist Sculptures: Eastern prototypes of Mexican forms, 587, 588. 591.
- Teocallis or pyramid-temples, 589, 590.
- Temple or palace at Mitla, 591, 592.
- Buildings of Yucatan, 593-595.
- Principles of construction, 597. 599.
- Michel Angelo, ii, 566.
- Michel, Mont St., medieval features, retained at, ii, 186.
- Middleton (Prof.): Pantheon, i, 321 note.
- Trajan’s Basilica, 329 note.
- Roman Theatres, 335 note.
- Sutrium, 337 note.
- Velaria, 340 note.
- Frigidarium, Caracalla’s Baths, 346 note.
- Age of Temple of Minerva Medica, 359 note.
- Earthen pots in Roman Vaults, 549 note.
- House of Vestal Virgins, i, 375 note.
- Milan Cathedral, i, 24. Its architecture, 608. 610. 625.
- Plan, section, interior, original model, &c., 625-629.
- Church of San Lorenzo: Plan, its mutilations, &c., i, 550, 551.
- Church of San Ambrogio, its atrium, silver altar, bronze doors, &c., i, 565-567.
- Its additional tower, 580.
- Tower of St. Satiro, 578 note.
- Milan city, half German, i, 500. 558.
- The Great Hospital, ii, 13.
- Miletus, Ionic temple at, i, 256.
- Minars and Minarets, their beauty, ii, 534.
- Minden, Church at, ii, 231.
- Minerva, temple of, at Sunium, i, 254.
- Minerva Medica, temple or tomb of, i, 359.
- Peculiar features of its construction, 359-361. 434.
- Its real destination, 359 note.
- S. Miniato, Florence, i, 525.
- Dimensions, 584. Plan, ibid.
- Elevation, 585.
- Sections, 584. 586.
- Missionary zeal of the Buddhists, ii, 586.
- Missolonghi, doorway at, i, 246, 247.
- Mistra, Sparta, church of the Virgin at, i, 462. 471.
- Apse, 463.
- Mitla, Mexico, temple at, ii, 591.
- Palace, 592.
- Modena, cathedral at, i, 570.
- Octagon, 580.
- Ghirlandina tower, ii, 5.
- Mohammed, see Mahomet.
- Mohammed ben Alhamar, founder of the Alhambra, ii, 551.
- Moissac, church at, ii, 69.
- Plan, 69.
- Mokwi, Armenia, Byzantine church at, i, 471.
- Molfetta, Apulia, church at, i, 582.
- Plan and section: its domes, 600.
- Monasterboice, Ireland, early doorway at, ii, 455.
- Monasteries: Kalat Sema’n, i, 422, 423.
- Monkwearmouth, ii, 343.
- Saxon doorway, 343.
- Monreale: Plan of church at, ii, 26.
- Mons, Belgium, ii, 188.
- Mont Majour, triapsal church at, ii, 59.
- Mont St. Angelo, baptistery of, i, 601.
- Mont St. Michel, Normandy, mediæval features preserved in, ii, 186.
- Montier-en-Der, part Romanesque, part Gothic church at, ii, 107.
- Montierneuf, church of, ii, 86.
- Monza, example of brick architecture from, ii, 14.
- Moors, the, in Spain, ii, 461, 462. 468. 472. 495.
- Moravia, ii, 210.
- Moresco Style, see Moors.
- Morienval, church of, ii, 122 note.
- Mosaic pavements in Roman basilicas, i, 526.
- Mosaic pictures at Monreale, ii, 26, 31.
- Moscow, architects of the churches in, i, 485, 486.
- When made the capital of Russia, 489.
- Numerousness of its churches, 489-492.
- The Annunciation and St. Michael’s churches, 492.
- The Assumption, ibid.
- Plan, 493.
- St. Basil (Vassili Blanskenoy), ibid.
- Plan, ibid.
- View, 494.
- Tower of Ivan Veliki, 496.
- The Kremlin. Towers on its walls, 497.
- Sacred Gate, 498.
- Moses, the brazen serpent of, i, 567.
- Mosques: Diarbekr, i, 392-394.
- Moudjeleia, Syria, plan of house, i, 448.
- Muayyad, El, mosque of, ii, 534.
- Muckross, Ireland, monastery cloister at, ii, 444.
- Münzenberg, castle of, ii, 259.
- Picturesque features, ibid.
- Mugheyr, details and diagrams of temple at, i, 158, 159.
- Mühlhausen, Maria Kirche at, plan, ii, 289.
- Arrangement, view, &c., ibid.
- Mujelibé, probable origin of the, i, 163.
- Munich Cathedral, ii, 286.
- Brick churches, 287.
- Municipal, see Civic.
- Münster Cathedral, ii, 230.
- Murano, arches in apse of, i, 406.
- Murcia, chapel at, ii, 508.
- Murphy, Mr., illustrator of the Alhambra, ii, 507 note. 543.
- Music among the ancient races, i, 68, 82.
- Mycenæ, tombs of the kings at, i, 243.
- Gate of the Lions, 247.
- Mylassa, Column of Victory at, i, 353.
- Tomb, 371.
- View of same, ibid.
- Myra, church of St. Nicholas at, i, 455.
- Myron’s treasury, and materials of its decorations, i, 250.
- Naksh-i-Rustam, tomb of Darius at, i, 204.
- Nancy, Ducal palace at, ii, 183, 184.
- Portal, &c., 185.
- Naples, paucity of examples in, i, 583.
- Cathedral, 584.
- Napoleon I., façade completed by, i, 629.
- Naranco, church of Sta. Maria, &c., its character and ornamentation, ii, 464.
- View, chief point of interest, 465.
- Narthex, the, in basilican churches, i, 514. 530.
- Nature, imitation of, i, 41.
- Naumburg, church of, ii, 286.
- Choir-screens, 293.
- Naval architecture, continuous advance of, i, 45; ii, 128.
- Naval triumphal columns in Rome, i, 352.
- SS. Nazario and Celso, church of, its original appellation, peculiarities of construction, &c., i, 554.
- SS. Nereo ed Achilleo, basilican church, Rome, its date, i, 515.
- System of which it affords an example, 526.
- Nero, baths of, i, 343.
- Neufchatel, Notre Dame de, ii, 219.
- Neuss, church of St. Quirinus in, ii, 238. 262.
- Nevers Cathedral, ii, 149.
- New style, possibility of a, i, 44, 45.
- Newton, Sir Charles, explorations of, i, 282.
- Mausoleum, Halicarnassus, ibid. note.
- New Walsingham church, roof of aisle, ii, 400.
- Nicholai Kirche, Zerbst, ii, 291.
- S. Nicolo in Carcere, basilican church, Rome, its date, i, 515.
- Nieuport, Belgium, belfry of, ii, 200.
- Niké Apteros, or Wingless Victory, temple of, i, 255.
- Its frieze, 264.
- Nile, Egyptian rule with regard to erections on the two sides of, i, 110. 135.
- Course of civilization, up stream or down stream? 147.
- Nîmes, Maison Carrée or Temple of Diana at, i, 311. 317. 509; ii, 49.
- Amphitheatre, i. 340.
- The Tour Magne, 362. 555.
- The Pont du Gard, 385. See 428.
- Nimroud, North-west Palace at, i, 170.
- Plan, ibid.
- Result of exploration of the pyramid, 191.
- Vaulted drain, 215.
- Nineveh, i, 153. 169.
- Explorations, 169.
- Parts of Ninevite structures remaining, 198.
- Stairs, 201.
- Nisibin, triple church at, i, 428. 466.
- Nismes, see Nîmes.
- Nivelles, church of St. Gertrude at, ii, 189.
- Its circular tower, &c., 190.
- Nocera dei Pagani, baptistery of, i, 546, 547. 435.
- Nomenclature in Christian architecture, remarks on, i, 411.
- Norman architecture, chief feature of, i, 17.
- Architectural province of Normandy, ii, 41.
- Inconsistency characteristic of the race, 105.
- Culminating epoch of the style, 105.
- Destroyers and rebuilders, 107.
- Examples of the style: towers and vaulting, 110-119.
- Pillars, 161.
- Result of the Norman conquest of England, 337.
- Effect of the wars of the Roses, 339.
- Norman chapels, 389.
- Norman gateway, 403.
- Normans and Norman buildings in Sicily, ii, 22, 23.
- Northampton, round church at, ii, 398.
- Eleanor cross in the county, 412.
- Norway, church architecture of, ii, 316.
- Wooden churches, 332-334.
- Norwich Castle, ii, 413.
- Norwich Cathedral: Plan, ii, 346.
- Notre Dame, Paris. See Paris.
- Notre Dame de Dijon, ii, 147.
- Nourri, pyramids at, i, 148.
- Novara Cathedral: Atrium, plan, i, 562.
- Elevation and Section, 563.
- Baptistery, 552.
- Novogorod, Sta. Sophia, i, 471. 486. 488.
- East end, 487, 488.
- Interior, bronze doors, &c., 488.
- Convents, ibid.
- Village church, 489.
- Noyon Cathedral, ii, 145. 168 note.
- Nubia, rock-cut Egyptian temples in, i, 130.
- Church at Ibrim, 510.
- See Rock-cut temples.
- Nunziatella, Messina, ii, 24.
- Nuremberg, double chapel at, ii, 242.
- Nylarska, Bornholm, round church, ii, 327.
- Nymwegen, circular church at, ii, 249, 250.
- Nyska, Bornholm, round church, ii, 327.
- Oajaca, Tehuantepec, pyramid of, ii, 590.
- Obelisks of Egypt, side of the Nile always chosen for the, i, 111.
- Earliest and finest examples, 111. 135.
- Their purpose, &c., 135.
- Assyrian obelisk at Divanubara, 192.
- Octagon: Ely Cathedral, ii. 352.
- Of Parliament Houses, 392.
- Odo, Archbishop, cathedral erected by, ii, 344.
- Oester Larsker, Denmark, round church at, ii, 327.
- View, 329.
- Ogival, French use of the term, ii, 169 note.
- S. Olaf, churches built by, and in memory of, ii, 316.
- Olite, Spain, castle of, ii, 506.
- Olska, Bornholm, round church, ii, 327.
- Omar, incentive to the building of a mosque by, ii, 516.
- His mosque, 517.
- Omm-es-Zeitoun, Syria, Kalybe at, plan and view, i, 437.
- Oppenheim, objectionable features in the church at, ii, 288.
- Orange, Roman theatre at: Description, i, 335.
- Plan and view, 335, 336.
- Triumphal arch, 348.
- Church ii, 53.
- Oratories: Normandy, ii, 110.
- Orchomenos, tomb (or treasury) at, i, 244.
- Orkneys, architectural elements traceable in the, ii, 423.
- Orleans Cathedral, its merits, date, &c., ii, 152.
- Orleansville, double-apsed basilica at, i, 510.
- Ornament, carved, principle, object, and application of, i, 31-35.
- Osirtasen II., pyramid of, i, 113.
- Orvieto, i, 558. 614. 617. 619.
- Osman III., mosque of, ii, 564.
- Osnabrück, church at, ii, 230.
- Othos, German architecture under the, ii, 211.
- Otranto Cathedral, i, 596. Crypt, ibid.
- Otricoli, basilica at, i, 334.
- Amphitheatre, 342.
- Ottmarsheim, Alsace, circular church at, ii, 250.
- Oudenarde, masonic trick in the town-hall of, ii, 204.
- S. Ouen, Rouen. See Rouen.
- Oviedo, ii, 464, 509.
- Oxford Cathedral, Wolsey’s roof at, ii, 366.
- Choir arches, 366.
- Oxford Martyrs’ Memorial, ii, 413 note.
- Oxford University: Merton College chapel, ii, 375. 393.
- Paderborn Cathedral, transitional feature shown in, ii, 231. 307.
- Padua, civic hall at, ii, 10.
- Its dimensions, arcades, &c., ibid.
- Church of San Antonio, i, 535. 536.
- Pæstum, Doric temple at, i, 255.
- Peculiarities of the double Temple, 271. 273.
- Painted glass, circumstances attending the introduction of, ii, 57. 70. 92.
- Painting and Sculpture, their province as distinguished from architecture, i, 4, 5.
- Pre-Raphaelitism, 12.
- Egyptian examples, 94. 109.
- Ptolemaic period, 143.
- Painting and Sculpture in Assyrian buildings, 188-190.
- How used in the palaces of Persepolis and Susa, 208. 210-211.
- Sculpture and colours in the Grecian orders, 263. 266.
- External sculpture of the French cathedrals, ii, 141.
- English cathedrals, 338.
- Mural Painting in Saxon edifices, 344.
- Polychromy in Sicily, 26, 27.
- Palaces: Egyptian, i, 122. 125.
- Assyrian, 168-190.
- Ancient Persian, 201-211.
- Roman, 314. 375-380.
- Parthian, 390-395.
- Sassanian, 395.
- Romanesque, 556.
- German, ii, 256.
- Saracenic (Alcazar and Alhambra), 551-555.
- Persian-Saracenic, 578.
- Mexican, 592. 596.
- Palæontology, its importance to the Geologist, i, 53, 54.
- Palenque, probable Christian bas-relief at, ii, 593 note.
- Palermo, church of San Giovanni in, ii, 24, 25.
- Palestine, Italian Gothic, how introduced into, ii, 32.
- Examples, 33-38.
- Palmyra, Temple of the Sun at, i, 228. 324.
- See ii, 523.
- Pansa’s House, Pompeii, i, 381.
- See Pompeii.
- S. Pantaleone, Cologne, ii, 260.
- Pantheon, Paris, proportion of solids to area in the, ii, 179.
- Pantheon, Rome, compared with the Parthenon, i, 17.
- Its rotunda, 319.
- Portico, 320. 544.
- Description, Plan, Elevation, Section, &c., 320-322.
- Discoveries by Mr. Chedanne in 1892, 320 note.
- Repetitions of its form in miniature, 357. 543.
- Period of its erection, 320 and note. 321.
- Plan of lighting in, 322.
- Pantokrator Church, Constantinople, i, 457.
- Pappacoda, Naples, church at, i, 598.
- Its doorway, 598.
- Parenzo, Basilica at, i, 536.
- Plan 537.
- Paris: influence of the materials of its construction on the effect produced by the Madeleine, i, 20.
- Parish churches, England, examples of, ii, 397-401.
- Parliament Houses, London, central octagon, ii, 393 note.
- Parma Cathedral, i, 570.
- Principles of design illustrated by the Baptistery, ii, 1.
- Paros, island of, apses of churches in, i, 539 note.
- Parthenon, principle illustrated by the, i, 14.
- Compared with other edifices, 17.
- Dimensions, 24. 258.
- Its fitness for ornamental adjuncts, 38.
- Its character as a work of art, 253.
- Elevation of a column, 260.
- The façade, 262.
- Plan, 270.
- Form, ibid.
- Section, 273.
- Parthians, i, 389-392.
- Palace of Al Hadhr.
- Plan, 390.
- Elevation, 391.
- Mosque of Diarbekr, 392-394.
- Palace of Al Hadhr.
- Pasargadæ, tomb of Cyrus at, i, 164. 196-198.
- State of remains there, 198.
- Fire temple or tomb, 212.
- S. Paul’s Cathedral, London, i, 24. 446. ii, 179.
- S. Paul’s basilican church, Rome, its date, i, 515.
- Aisles, ibid.
- Plan, description, interior view, &c., 516-519.
- S. Paul Trois-Chateaux, Provence, ii, 55. 255.
- Paulinzelle, ruined abbey of, ii, 238.
- Pavia, church of St. Michele at, i, 563. ii, 219. 244.
- Considered as an example of its style, i, 563.
- Section, 564.
- Apse, 565.
- S. Pietro and S. Teodoro, ibid.
- Paxton, Sir Joseph, i, 48.
- Payerne, basilican church at, ii, 219.
- Peace, temple of, at Rome. See Maxentius.
- Peacock, Dr., Dean of Ely, memorial to, ii, 382 note.
- Pelasgi, parent race of the, i, 75. 241.
- Most remarkable of their remains, 243.
- Domes, ibid.
- Doorways, arches, wall masonry, &c., 245-247.
- Culminating period of their civilization, 251.
- See i, 81 note.
- Pellegrini’s designs for Milan Cathedral, i, 629.
- S. Pellino, apse of, i, 593.
- Elevation, 592.
- Pendentives, diagrams of, i, 434. 532.
- At Salamanca, 476.
- At Tarragona, 477.
- Penrose, Mr., work on Athenian architecture by, i, 261 note.
- Discoveries in 1884 in Temple of Jupiter Olympius, Athens, 323 and note.
- Drawing by him, ii, 152.
- Pepin, union of French dominions under, ii, 120.
- Pergamon, German Exploration at, i, 256.
- Pergamus, wooden roofed basilica at, i, 427, 428.
- Périgueux, church of St. Front at, ii, 64, 65.
- Peristyle in Greek temples, object of the, i, 271, 272.
- Perpendicular, late pointed, or Lancastrian style, epoch of the, ii, 339.
- Motto of the period, ibid.
- See 376.
- Persepolis, i, 153.
- Author’s work on the subject, 168 note.
- Parts of buildings still preserved, 198.
- Prominence of staircases, 200.
- Palaces of Xerxes and Darius, 201-209.
- See 390. 397.
- Persia, Assyrian buildings reproduced in, i, 158, 188.
- Peru, ii, 600.
- Perugia, church of Sti. Angeli at, i, 545.
- Town-hall, ii, 10.
- Pesth, i, 410 note.
- Peterborough Cathedral: Proportions, ii, 347. 417.
- S. Peter’s basilican church, Rome, its date, i, 515.
- Aisles, 515.
- Plan, 516.
- Site, dimensions, &c., 517.
- Internal view, 518.
- Two interesting adjuncts, 519.
- S. Peter’s, Rome (present building), i, 12. 24.
- Petersburg, near Halle, ruined circular church at, ii, 250.
- S. Petersburg, architects of the churches of, i, 485.
- Petra, i, 363.
- Peculiar aspect of the locality, ibid.
- The Khasné or Treasury of Pharaoh:
- View, 364.
- Section and description, 365.
- Question as to object of some of the so-called tombs, ibid.
- Corinthian tomb, 366.
- Rock-cut interior, 367.
- Petrie, George, fact relative to Irish round towers proved by, ii, 450.
- Petrie, W. M. Flinders, researches in Egypt. Pyramids and Temples in Gizeh, i, 98-100. 102.
- Medum, 104.
- Abouseer, Dahshur, 107.
- Temple of Sphinx, 107, 108.
- The Labyrinth, 111, 112.
- Hawara, Illahun Pyramids, 112, 113.
- Houses at Kahun, 113. 115.
- Wooden column found by, 115 note.
- Phigaleia, temple of Apollo at Bassæ in, i, 273.
- Philæ, noteworthy features of the temple at, 142-143.
- Plan, 145.
- Philip Augustus, progress of France under, ii, 122.
- Philip of Valois, ii, 122.
- Phœnicians, the, i, 238 note; ii, 461, 462.
- Phonetic element in art, i, 4-10.
- Phrygia, object of contention between Egypt and, i, 229.
- Piacenza, church of San Antonio at:
-
- Plan, i, 560.
- Section, 561.
- Façade of cathedral, 568.
- Campanile, 581.
- Palazzo Pubblico, ii, 10.
-
- Pier arches in English cathedrals, ii, 367.
- Pierrefonds, castle of, ii, 185.
- S. Pietro ad Vincula, basilican church, Rome, i, 515. 525.
- Pillars (compound). Diagrams of plans, ii, 162.
- Pinnacles, over-employment by French architects of, ii, 174.
- Pisa Cathedral, i, 540. 566.
-
- Merit of its exterior, 588.
- View, 587.
- Blind arcades, 588.
- Leaning tower, 578. 603.
- Chapel of Sta. Maria della Spina, 633.
- Baptistery, 602.
-
- Pisani Palace, Venice, ii, 19.
- Pistoja, Cathedral, i, 588.
- Tower, ii, 6.
- Pitzounda, Byzantine church at: Plan, i, 469.
- Section and view, 470.
- Probable date, 471.
- Place, M., excavations and discoveries at Khorsabad by, i, 161. 172-181. 176 note.
- Planes, triapsal church at, ii, 59.
- Pliny on the temple of Diana, i, 278.
- On the tomb of Mausolus, 283.
- On the tomb of Porsenna, 299.
- Pluscardine Abbey, ii, 439.
- Doorway, 441.
- Poetry, its province as an art, i, 5.
- Pointed arches and style: Earliest Italian examples, i, 572. 610.
- Pre-Christian and early post-Christian use of the arch, ii, 45.
- Theory, diagram, and examples, 46-49.
- Norman arches over pointed ones, 83.
- Invention of the true pointed style, 104.
- Critical observations greatest recommendation of the style, 123, 124.
- French examples, 130-186.
- Claim of the Germans, ii, 211.
- German examples, 264-291.
- Early Scandinavian examples, ii, 313-334.
- When introduced into England, 371.
- See Arches.
- Poitiers, façade of church of Notre Dame at, ii, 85.
- Pola, amphitheatre at, i, 341, 342.
- Arch of the Sergii, 348.
- St. Maria de Canneto, 538.
- Polychromy. See Colour. Painting.
- Polycrates, temple ascribed to, i, 256.
- Pompeii, i, 269.
- Basilica, 333.
- Plan of same, ibid.
- Theatres, 335.
- Baths, 343.
- Shape and arrangement of private dwellings, 380, 381.
- Pansa’s house, 381.
- Use of colours and metals, 382-385.
- See 570.
- Basilica, 333.
- Pontigny, abbey of, ii, 154.
- Porches, Portals, and Porticos: Persepolis (pillars), i, 207.
- Porsenna, Pliny on the tomb of, i, 299.
- Porta Nigra at Besançon, i, 349.
- At Trèves, 350.
- Portugal, church of Batalha in, ii, 507-509.
- Prague, church of St. Veit at, ii, 285.
- Prato, Duomo at, ii, 3.
- Its tower, 7.
- S. Praxede, Rome, Corinthian base from, i, 312.
- Date of the church, 515.
- Arches, 525.
- Pre-Raphaelitism, cause of the failure of, i, 12.
- Priene, Ionic hexastyle temple at, i, 256.
- Proportion in Architecture, i, 26, 27.
- Diagrams, 28, 29.
- Observed in the Pyramids, 262 note.
- Proportions of area to solids, &c., in important buildings, i, 24.
- Protestant worship, early French church suitable for, ii, 71.
- Provence, Roman bridge and arches at St. Chamas in, i, 351.
- Prussia, East, brick architecture of, ii, 302.
- Ptolemies, the, i, 91. 126.
- Revival of Egyptian arts under them, 139.
- Temples of the period, 140-143.
- S. Pudenziana, basilican church, Rome, date of, i, 515.
- Scriptural interest attaching to it, its plan, &c., 524, 525.
- Puissalicon, tower at, ii, 59, 60.
- Pullan, R. P., and Sir C. Newton, Restoration of mausoleum of Halicarnassus, i, 282 note.
- Pulpits in German churches, ii, 293.
- Puy de Dome, churches in, ii, 89-93.
- Puy-en-Velay, cathedral at, ii, 96.
- Its cloister, ibid.
- Pyramids, Tombs and Temples of Egypt, and their builders, i, 16, 17, 18. 55. 61, 62.
- Date of the pyramids of Gizeh, 92, 93.
- Constructive skill exhibited in the Great Pyramid, 93-95.
- Truthfulness of its pictures, and portrait-statues, 95.
- Questions suggested by these structures, ibid.
- Their site and number, 97.
- Dimensions, angular inclinations, &c., of the three great ones, 98-100.
- Details of their construction, 101.
- Peculiarities of that of Sakkara, plan, section, &c., 103, 104.
- Medum, 104.
- Hawara, 112.
- Illahun, 113.
- Tombs, paintings thereon, &c., 105-107.
- Temples, and recent discoveries regarding them: their architectural effectiveness, &c., 107-109.
- Structures of the first Theban kingdom, 110.
- The Labyrinth, its arrangement, purpose, &c., 111, 112.
- Tombs of Beni Hasan, 114, 115.
- Remains of the Shepherd Kings, 116.
- Mode of lighting the temples, 124. 272.
- Rock-cut tombs and temples, 130-135.
- Mammeisi, 132.
- Arches in the Pyramids, 217.
- Use of definite proportions, 262 note.
- Mexican, as compared with those of Egypt and Assyria, ii, 591.
- Examples at Palenque, 594.
- See Obelisks, Thebes.
- Qalb-Louzeh, church at, i, 425.
- Quattro Coronati, basilican church, Rome, date of, i, 515.
- Quedlinburg, Schloss Kirche, ii, 230.
- St. Quentin, church at, ii, 147.
- Town-hall, 183.
- Querqueville, triapsal church at, ii, 110.
- Quetzalcoatl, the Mexican Lycurgus, ii, 584. 586.
- St. Quinide, Vaison, France, peculiar apse of, ii, 53.
- St. Quirinus, Neuss, church of, ii, 238.
- Windows, 262.
- Rabbath Ammon, palace of, i, 407.
- Plan, section, 407.
- Raglan Castle, ii, 413.
- Ragusa (Dalmatia), palace of, ii, 21.
- Rahotep, tomb of, arches found in, i, 105.
- Rameseum at Thebes, its founder, dimensions, &c., i, 121, 122.
- Rameses the Great, i, 121.
- Rameses II., temple erected by, i, 214.
- Rameses Maiamoun, tomb of, i, 133.
- Ramleh, Syria, church at, ii, 37.
- Ratisbon, the old Dom at, ii, 219.
- Ravello, Casa Ruffolo at, its exceptional style, i, 605.
- Ravenna. Tomb of Theodoric at, i, 296 note. 554, 555.
- Tomb of Galla Placidia, 435.
- Chapel in Archiepiscopal Palace, ibid.
- Church of San Vitale, 359. 548-550. ii, 248.
- Ancient splendour of its basilican churches, i, 527.
- Examples: SS. Apollinare Nuovo and in Classe, 528-530.
- Its circular buildings, 547.
- Palace of Theodoric, 556.
- Tower of S. Apollinare in Classe, 577, 578.
- Rawlinson, Sir Henry, explorations of, i, 155 note. 157 note.
- On the Birs Nimroud, 157. 159 note.
- Assyrian canon discovered by him, 168.
- Reculver, Saxon fragments at, ii, 341.
- Redman, Bishop of Ely, tomb of, ii, 411.
- Refadi, Byzantine house at, i, 448.
- Reformation, effect on church building of the, ii, 339.
- Regulini Galeassi tomb at Cervetri, i, 297-299.
- Reichenau, basilican church of Mittelzell in island of, ii, 217.
- Plan, elevation, &c., ibid.
- Roof, 222.
- St. Remi, arched gateway at, i, 349.
- Renaissance style, cause of the, i, 43, 47.
- Renan (E.), Phœnicia, i, 238 note.
- S. Reparatus, basilican church of, i, 509.
- Rhamnus, form of temple at, i, 269.
- Rheims, Roman arch at, i, 349.
- Rhenish architecture, ii, 209-254.
- See Aix-la-Chapelle, Bonn, Cologne, Germany.
- Rhine, inferiority of its Castles to those of England, ii, 413.
- Settlement of the Goths in its valley, i, 558.
- Riaz, Ferdinand, addition to the Giralda by, ii, 550.
- Ribe, Schleswig, cathedral of, ii, 321.
- Richard II., Westminster Hall rebuilt by, ii, 414.
- Rickman on remains of Saxon buildings, ii, 341.
- Rieux, church at, ii, 59.
- Riez, baptistery at, ii, 59.
- Rimini, arch erected by Augustus at, i, 347.
- Ripon, Saxon remains at, ii, 341.
- Rising Castle, ii, 413.
- Rochester: Chapter-house doorway in Cathedral, ii, 407.
- Castle, 413.
- Rock-cut tombs and temples of the Egyptians, i, 130.
- Temple at Ipsamboul, ibid.
- Other examples, 131.
- Dynasties by whom constructed, 132, 133.
- Fact deducible from the mode of their construction, 133.
- As to the assumed intention to conceal their entrances, 134.
- Monuments at Doganlu, 233.
- Tombs in Lycia, 234-237.
- Cyrene, 285-287, 367.
- In Etruria, 294.
- Petra, 363-368.
- Jerusalem, 368-370.
- Rock-cut churches in the Crimea, ii, 482.
- Roda, Catalonia, church at, ii, 466, 467.
- Roeskilde, Denmark, Domkirche at, ii, 318.
- Plan and elevation, 319.
- Roger, king of Sicily, mosque-like church built by, ii, 24. 29.
- Romain-Motier, basilican church at, ii, 218.
- Plan, view, ibid.
- Roman architecture: Pagan, see Romans.
- Christian, see Rome.
- Romance language, definition of, ii, 42 note.
- Romanesque style, origin of the, i, 411.
- Its various phases, 411.
- Distinctive features of this style and the Gothic, i, 502.
- Early examples in remote parts: African types, 508-510.
- Basilicas, 513-530.
- Modification of plan in St. Mark’s, Venice, 531.
- Basilicas at Parenzo, Grado, and Torcello, 537-541.
- Restrictive effect of its antecedents, Circular churches, 542-556.
- Lombard types. Basilicas, 558-574.
- Circular churches, 574-577.
- Towers, 577-581.
- Byzantine Romanesque, 582-606. [See Byzantine.]
- Secular buildings: Example at Montier-en-Der, ii, 107.
- See i, 563, 607; ii, 51, 73, 107, 108, 121, 221, 222, 247, 250, 257.
- See also Basilicas. Circular churches.
- Romans, architectural elements understood by the, i, 16.
- Their constructive merits and defects, 22.
- Neglect of proportion, 29.
- Modes of decoration introduced by them, 32, 33.
- First true constructors of the arch, 216.
- Essential differences between them and the Greeks, 238, 289, 290.
- Result of their early connection with the Etruscans, 290.
- Chief value of their style, 303.
- Architectural results of their marvellous career, &c., 304.
- First inhabitants of their city, 305.
- Their borrowings from the Greeks and Etruscans, 305, 306.
- Their extended use of the arch: Buildings evidencing their inventiveness, 306, 307.
- Variety and splendour of their works, 307.
- Their modifications and elaborations of the various orders, 307-313.
- Arcades, 313.
- Temples, 315-326.
- Importance attached to their basilicas, 327.
- Examples of same, 327-334.
- Theatres, 334, 335.
- Chief feature of admiration in their buildings, 336.
- Amphitheatres: Love for and result of gladiatorial exhibitions, 337.
- Flavian and other amphitheatres, 337-342.
- Grandeur of their baths, 342.
- Present remains of same, 343-346.
- Triumphal and commemorative arches, 347-352.
- Objectionable features in them and in their columns of Victory, 352-354.
- Number and importance of their tombs, 354.
- Tombs, columbaria, temple-tombs, &c., 355-363.
- Tombs in the East, their character, sites, &c., 363-375.
- Domestic architecture: Palace of the Cæsars, 375, 376.
- Diocletian’s palace, Spalato, 376-380. [See Diocletian.]
- Private dwellings, 380-385. [See Pompeii.]
- Use of the metals in buildings, 384.
- Constructive skill exhibited in their aqueducts and bridges, 385-388.
- Tomb of Marcellus, 454.
- Feature in their buildings improved on by Gothic architects, ii, 161.
- England after their departure, 337.
- Use made of their buildings in Egypt and Spain, 515.
- Principle of their arches and domes, i, 485.
- Do., vaults, 365.
- See ii, 23.
- Rome, Christian architecture of: Basilicas, i, 504-527.
- Extent of variations in style, 500. 502.
- First church towers, 577, 578.
- Cloister of St. John Lateran, 599.
- Modifications in Sicily, ii, 23.
- See Basilicas.
- Rood-lofts or screens, Troyes, ii, 181. 292.
- Roofs: English examples, ii, 356. 399, 400.
- Rosheim, façade of church at, ii, 239.
- Roslyn Chapel, Spanish traces in, ii, 419. 432.
- Exterior and under-chapel, 434.
- Rotterdam Church, ii, 207.
- Rouen. Cathedral: Plan, luxuriance of detail, &c., ii, 150.
- Roueiha, Byzantine church at, i, 424.
- Round churches. See Circular churches.
- Round towers of Ireland, ii, 450.
- Purposes for which built, ibid.
- Examples, 452-454.
- Royat, fortified church at, ii, 93.
- Runic carving on Norwegian churches, ii, 333.
- Ruremonde, Belgium, church at, ii, 192.
- Russian mediæval architecture, causes of the low character of, i, 484, 485.
- Churches of Kief, 486.
- Novogorod, 487.
- Tchernigow, 488.
- Village churches, 489, 490.
- Kostroma, 490, 491.
- Troitzka monastery, 493.
- Moscow churches and bell-towers, 493, 494.
- Church at Kurtea d’Argyisch, 495.
- The Kremlin, its towers and gates, 497-499.
- Ruvo, i, 595.
- S. Sabina, basilican church, Rome, its date, i, 515.
- Sacraments Häuschen in German churches, ii, 293.
- Saint Clair, William, chapel erected by, ii, 432.
- Sainte Chapelle, Paris, ii, 122.
- Saintes, double-arched Roman bridge at, i, 352.
- Saints, disposal of the bodies of, i, 512.
- Sakkara, pyramid at, i, 103, 104.
- Salamanca Cathedral, ii, 470, 475.
- Salisbury Cathedral, i, 24; ii, 140.
- Salzburg, Franciscan church at, ii, 283.
- Arrangement, plan, &c., ibid.
- Samarkand, ii, 581.
- Samos, Ionic temple at, i, 256.
- Samthawis, Armenia, Byzantine chapel at, i, 474.
- Niche, 475.
- Sandeo, Gothland, pointed doorway at, ii, 325.
- Sandjerli, Armenia, church at, i, 475.
- Santiago di Compostella, cathedral of: Plan, ii, 468.
- South transept, 469.
- Santoppen, brick church at, ii, 308.
- View, ibid.
- Saracens, adoption of the pointed arch by the, ii. 45. 47.
- Saragoza, church of St. Paul at, ii, 499.
- Sardanapalus, i, 169.
- Tomb assumed to be his, 191.
- Sardis, i, 229.
- Tumulus near, 230.
- Ionic octastyle temple, 256.
- Sassanian architecture, i, 389.
- Architectural practices of the Sassanians, 395.
- Palaces of Serbistan and Firouzabad, 395-398.
- Tâk Kesra, 398-401.
- Palace of Mashita, 401-406;
- Of Rabbath-Ammon, 407-408.
- Saulcy, M. de, on the Jerusalem tombs, i, 368 note.
- Savonières, Anjou, church at, ii, 107.
- Saxham, Little, Suffolk, church tower of, ii, 398.
- Saxon architecture in England, foreign form analogous to, ii, 256.
- Saxony, church architecture of, ii, 238. 288.
- Scaligers, tombs at Verona of the, their form, &c., ii, 2.
- Scandinavia, form of Buddhism carried by Woden to, i, 481.
- Scandinavian architecture, ii, 313-332.
- Schiavi, Torre dei, i, 357. 544.
- Schulpforta, Saxony, church of, ii, 288.
- Schwartz Rheindorf, double church at, ii, 241-242.
- Scipio, sarcophagus of, i, 354.
- Scotch church, Ratisbon, ii, 240.
- Scotland, architecture of, historical observations, ii. 418-420.
- Scott, Sir George Gilbert, Eleanor-cross reproduced by, ii, 413 note.
- Scott (Mr. G. G.), Roman basilicas, i, 506, 507 note.
- Sculpture, see Painting.
- Sebaste, church at, ii, 37.
- St. Sebastian, gate of, Columbarium near, i, 356.
- Sebastopol, church-cave near, i, 482, 483.
- Sedinga, temples of Amenophis at, i, 127.
- Segovia, Roman aqueduct at, i, 386.
- Seleucidæ, the, i, 390.
- Selim I., mosque of, ii, 558.
- Selinus, Doric temples at, i, 254. 269.
- The great temple, 270.
- Plan, 270.
- The great temple, 270.
- Seljukians, buildings of the, ii, 570.
- Semitic races, i, 57.
- Their unchangeableness, 64.
- Their religion and its influence on their buildings for worship, 65, 66.
- Their chiefs, kings, and prophets, 66.
- Their worst faults: Effects of their isolation, ibid.
- High character of their literature, 67.
- Their palaces and tombs, 68.
- Their one æsthetic art, ibid.
- Their pre-eminence as traders, 69.
- Extent of their scientific studies, ibid.
- Sennacherib, i. 169.
- His palace, 183.
- Sens Cathedral, ii, 147.
- William of Sens, 371.
- Septimius Severus, triumphal arch of, i, 348.
- Sepulchre, see Holy Sepulchre.
- Serbistan, Sassanian palace at, i, 395, 396.
- Its probable date, 401 note.
- Sergii, arch of the, i, 348.
- SS. Sergius and Bacchus, domical church of, Constantinople, i, 438.
- Plan and section, 439.
- Capital, ibid.
- Seven churches, a favourite number, ii, 446.
- Seven Spheres, temple dedicated to the, i, 161.
- Seville, ii, 479.
- Shah Abbas, Maidan or mosque and bazaar of, ii, 575.
- Shepherd Kings’ invasion of Egypt, i, 90.
- Period of their rule, 93.
- Particulars regarding them, 116.
- Shi-ites, sect of, ii, 573.
- Sicily, Doric temples in, i, 254.
- Elements influencing its medieval architecture, i, 503.
- Points of interest in its architectural history, ii, 22.
- Its Saracenic and Norman epochs, 23.
- Style peculiar to each of its divisions, 24.
- Churches and Palaces, 24-31.
- The pointed arch, for what purpose used, 30, 31.
- See 555 note.
- See also Monreale, Palermo.
- Siebenbürgen, Gothic architecture in, i, 410. ii, 210.
- Siena, i, 579. 619.
- Cathedral, 614.
- Plan, i, 614.
- Façade, 615.
- Town-Hall, ii, 10.
- Cathedral, 614.
- Silsilis, caves at, i, 131.
- Sillustani, Peru, tombs at, ii, 603.
- Sinan, Sultan Suleiman’s architect, ii, 564. 566.
- Sinzig, church at, ii, 237, 238. 266.
- Sion, cathedral tower of, ii, 219.
- Sion Church, Cologne, ii, 238. 262.
- Sites of English cathedrals, ii, 387, 388.
- Skelligs, beehive huts, ii, 446 note.
- Smyrna, gulf of, tumuli of Tantalais, i, 230.
- Soest Church, transitional feature shown in, ii, 231.
- Soignies, church of St. Vincent at, ii, 189.
- Soissons Cathedral, ii, 148.
- Ruined church of St. John, 176.
- Solomon’s Palace, time occupied in building, i, 219.
-
- Diagram plan, 220.
- House of the cedars of Lebanon, 221.
- Materials, ornamentation, &c., ibid.
-
- Somnites, sect of, ii, 573, 574.
- Sta. Sophia, see Constantinople.
- Sorrento, cloisters at, i, 605.
- Soueideh, five-aisled Byzantine church at, i, 422.
- Souillac, cupola church at, ii, 67.
- Souvigny, ribbed vaulting at, ii, 170.
- Spain, ii, 419.
- Early ages of its architecture, 460.
- Styles successively introduced; ethnological considerations; Gothic epoch, 462, 463.
- French and German influences, 463.
- Examples: Round-arched Gothic, 464.
- Early Spanish Gothic, 468.
- Middle pointed style, 478.
- Late Spanish Gothic, 492-497.
- Moresco style, 497.
- Civil architecture: Monastic and municipal buildings, 502.
- Castles, 505.
- Saracenic architecture, 542.
- Spalato, palace at, i, 314. See Diocletian.
- Sparta, i, 242. 251.
- Speos Artemidos, Beni Hasan, grotto of, i, 131.
- Sphinx, the, i, 107. Temple near, 107, 108.
- Spiegelthal, Herr, tumuli explored by, i, 230.
- His notion regarding them, 231.
- Spires, early examples of, ii, 87.
- Spires, Cathedral, i. 24, ii, 112, 226.
- Stability in architecture, principle and illustrative instances of, i, 17.
- Staircases at Persepolis, i, 200, 201.
- Steinbach, Erwin von, designs erroneously ascribed to, ii, 278.
- Steinfurt, Westphalia, chapel at, ii, 241 note.
- S. Stefano Rotondo, Rome, circular church, i, 545.
- S. Stephen’s Chapel, Westminster, see Westminster, St. Stephen’s.
- S. Stephen’s, Caen, ii, 111, see Caen.
- S. Stephen’s, Vienna, see Vienna.
- Sthambas of the Buddhists, i, 578.
- Stirling Castle, ii, 440.
- Stokes (Prof.), Celtic churches of Ireland, ii, 446 note.
- Stonehenge, i, 14; ii, 337.
- Stone-roofed churches, i, 428-431.
- Strasburg Cathedral spire, ii, 138, 195, 196.
- Strawberry Hill, result on English architecture of the erection of, ii, 335.
- Stregnäs, Sweden, church at, ii, 315.
- Street’s ‘Gothic Architecture in Spain,’ obligations of the Author to, ii, 463 note.
- Sublimity and elegance discriminated, i, 26.
- Sufis, dynasty of the, their buildings, ii, 575.
- Suger, Abbé, opportune advent of, ii, 121.
- Suleiman the Magnificent, mosques of:
- Sultanieh, tomb of Mahomet Khodabendah at, ii, 573.
- Sun-worshippers, bas-relief from a temple of the, i, 141.
- Fate of their monuments, 147.
- Susa, i, 209.
- Frieze of Arches at, 210.
- Tomb of Daniel, ii, 549.
- Susa (Piedmont), triumphal arch at, i, 347.
- Sutrium, Etruscan amphitheatre at, i, 293. 337 and note.
- Sweden, church architecture of, ii, 313-331.
- Round churches, 316.
- Switzerland, ancient monastery at St. Gall in, ii, 213-216
- Syracuse, Doric temple at, i, 255. See ii, 24.
- Syria, Byzantine examples in, and Asia Minor, i, 422-428.
- Tabreez, mosque at, ii, 571.
- Tafkha, stone-roofed church at, i, 429.
- Plan, sections, mode of construction, &c., 429, 430.
- Tag Eiran, Palace of, i, 407.
- Tâk Kesra, Ctesiphon, builder and plan of, i, 398.
- Its great arch, 399.
- Takt-i-Bostan, view of, i, 408.
- Takt-i-Gero, Sassanian arch, i, 406, 468.
- Talars, or ancient Persian prayer platforms, i, 203.
- Talavera, old temple at, i, 314.
- Tambos, or Peruvian caravanserai, ii, 606.
- Tancarville, fortifications at, ii, 185.
- Tantalais, tumuli at, i, 230.
- Tarazona, Aragon, pierced stone window-tracery at, ii, 503.
- Tarragona, Roman aqueduct at, i, 386.
- Tarsus, i, 229.
- Tartars, Moscow destroyed by the, i, 492.
- Their architectural forms, 493.
- Tartar mosque and tomb at Tabreez, ii, 571-573.
- Taylor, consul, Cufic inscriptions copied by, i, 393 note.
- Tchekerman, Crimea, excavated church at, i, 482.
- Tchernigow Cathedral, its domes and apses, i, 488.
- Technic arts, scope and object of, i, 4-10.
- Tegea, Arcadia, Ionic temple at, i, 256.
- Teheran, throne room in palace at, ii. 579.
- Tehuantepec, pyramid of Oajaca at, ii, 590.
- Telamones, example of, i, 269.
- Tel-el-Amarna, bas-relief at, i, 142.
- Grottoes, 147.
- Templars’ church at Brindisi, i, 599.
- Temples. See Assyrians. Buddha. Chaldean. Etruscan. Greeks. Jerusalem. Rock-cut temples. Roman. Thebes.
- Teocallis, or temples, of Mexico, ii. 589.
- Teos, Ionic hexastyle temple at, i, 256.
- Teotihuacan, Mexico, pyramid-temples at, ii, 590.
- Tewkesbury, ii, 349. 411.
- Texier, M., researches of, i, 417.
- Obligations of the Author to him, 436 note.
- Tezcuco, Mexico, pyramid at, ii, 590.
- Thann, Alsace, spire at, ii, 276.
- Theatres of the Greeks, i, 280.
- Of the Romans, 334-337.
- See Amphitheatre.
- Theban dynasties in Egypt; Temples and tombs of the first kingdom, i, 110-116.
- Kings of the great Theban period, 118.
- Thebes, the “hundred-pyloned city” of, i, 119.
- Differences between its architecture and that of Memphis, ibid.
- Comparative completeness of its remains, ibid.
- Number and grandeur of its temples, 120.
- Plan and details of the Rameseum, 120, 121.
- The Palace-temple of Karnac, its unparalleled magnitude, &c., 122-126.
- Temple of Luxor, its irregularity of plan, &c., 125.
- The Memnonium, 126.
- Temple of Medinet-Habu, 125.
- South Temple of Karnac, its beauty, &c., 127.
- Temples at Tanis, Sedînga, ibid.
- Abydus, &c., 128, 129.
- Rock-cut tombs and temples, 131.
- Theodoric (“Dietrich of Berne”) tomb of (church of Sta. Maria Rotunda), i, 296 note, 554.
- Plan, ibid.
- Its peculiar roof, ibid.
- Church built by him, 528.
- His palace, 556.
- His love for, and adornment of Verona, 569.
- Theodosius, temple converted into a Christian church by, ii, 523.
- Theotokos, Byzantine church, Constantinople, its value as an example of the style, i, 457, 458.
- Theron, temple founded by, i, 255.
- Theseus, Temple of, i, 16.
- Its date and real title, 253.
- Thessalians, irruption into Greece of the, i, 251.
- Thessalonica, Byzantine churches, i, 420-421.
- Round churches, 435, 436.
- Neo-Byzantine, 458-459.
- Church of St. George at, plan, 435.
- Section, 436.
- View, ibid.
- Éski Djuma, 420.
- St. Demetrius, 421-422.
- Thierry of Alsace, memorial chapel built by, ii, 192.
- Thoricus, Pelasgic gateway at, i, 245.
- Thorsager, round church at, ii, 329.
- Thothmes I., hall built by, i, 122.
- Thothmes III., palace built by, i, 123.
- Section, 123.
- Tia Huanacu, Peru, “Seats of the Judges” (Cyclopean ruins) at, ii, 601.
- Tiglath-Pileser, i, 169.
- Palace built by him, 185.
- Timahoe, round tower at, ii, 452.
- Timour the Lame, ii, 581.
- Tintern Abbey, a German counterpart of, ii, 268.
- See 374.
- Tirhakah, temples of, i, 147.
- Titus, baths of, i, 343, 382, 384.
- Triumphal arch, 348.
- Tivoli, Roman temple at, i, 322.
- Toledo, ii, 463, 482, 490.
- Toltecs of Mexico, ii, 583.
- S. Tomaso in Limine, i, 576, 577.
- Plan section, and particulars, 576.
- Tombs: Beni-Hasan, i, 114.
- Of Cyrus, 196-198.
- Darius, 204.
- Alyattes, 230.
- Lycian examples, 233-237.
- Amrith, 239.
- Pelasgic, 243.
- Mausoleum, Halicarnassus, 282.
- Cnidus, 284.
- Cyrene, 285-287.
- Etruscan tombs and tumuli, 294-300.
- Roman, 354-359.
- Petra, 363-368.
- Jerusalem, 368-370.
- Mylassa, 371.
- Dugga, 372.
- Armenian, 475, 476.
- Ravenna, 553, 554.
- Sta. Costanza, Rome, 544.
- Italian, 601.
- Toulouse, ii, 180.
- English examples, 405, 408-411.
- Persian, 568, 569, 573-575.
- Peruvian, 603, 606.
- See Pyramids.
- Tongres, Notre Dame de, ii, 194.
- Tooloon, mosque of.
- See Ibn Tooloon.
- Torcello, Romanesque basilica at, i, 538.
- Its apse: Church of Sta. Fosca, 539.
- Toro, collegiate church at, ii, 473.
- Torre dei Schiavi, i, 357, 544.
- Tortoom, Ish Khan church at, i, 478, 479.
- Toscanella, exceptional style of the churches at, i, 572.
- Examples, 573-574.
- Tossia family, sepulchre of the, i, 357.
- Toul Cathedral, ii, 148.
- Toulouse, church of the Cordeliers at, ii, 70.
- Tour Magne, Nîmes, i, 362, 555.
- Tourmanin, Byzantine church at, i, 427.
- Tournay Cathedral, ii, 190.
- Tournus, ii, 95.
- Tours, church of St. Martin at: Plan, ii, 74.
- Towers: Of the Winds, i, 257, 267, 279.
- Town-halls, see Civic and Municipal buildings.
- Towton, battlefield, epoch in art marked by, ii, 339.
- Trabala, Lycia, Byzantine church at, i, 455. 471.
- Tracery, see Windows.
- Trajan, basilica of, i, 327-329.
- His baths, 343.
- Triumphal arches: Beneventum, 347.
- Alcantara, 352.
- His column, 353.
- His bridges, 387.
- see i, 577.
- Trani Cathedral, bronze doors of, 599.
- Trau (Dalmatia) Cathedral, i, 589.
- Treasuries: ancient tombs so called: Of Atreus, i, 243.
- Of Pharaoh, 364, 365.
- Trebizond, i, 229.
- Tree-worshippers, i, 481 note.
- Trèves, basilica at, i, 332.
- Triforium in French cathedrals, ii, 168.
- Tristram, Dr., discovery of the Um Rasas Tower, ii, 451 note.
- Triumphal arches, Roman, i, 347-352.
- Objectional features in them, 352.
- Troitzka, near Moscow, monastery at, 491.
- Its doorway, 493.
- Troja Cathedral, i, 589.
- Façade, 591.
- Its bronze doors, 599.
- Trondhjem, Norway, cathedral and church of St. Clement at, ii, 316.
- Troy, i, 229.
- Tumuli or mounds on the Plain, 231. 249.
- Consequence of the great war, 251. 291.
- Troyes Cathedral, arrangement and plan, ii, 147, 148.
- Trunch Church, Norfolk, roof of, ii, 400.
- Tudor style, epoch of the, ii, 339.
- Tumuli in Asia Minor, i, 232.
- Attempts to discriminate their epochs, 233.
- Etruscan examples, 294-301.
- Tunis, Mosque of Kerouan, ii, 538.
- Turanian races, age typified by the, i, 55.
- Chief feature in their history, 57.
- Ancient and modern types, 57, 58.
- Character of their deities and religious worship, 58, 59.
- Government, 59.
- Morals, 60.
- Limited nature of their literature, 66.
- Excellence attained by them in the Arts, 61-63.
- Only science cultivated by them, 63.
- Their proficiency as builders and irrigators, 63.
- Points of comparison or contrast between them and other races, 63-70. 75. 81. 289. 291.
- Their reverence for the dead, 191, 296.
- Turin, Palazzo delle Torre at, i, 556.
- Turkestan, ii, 581.
- Turkey, its architecture and its people. See Constantinople. Mahomedanism.
- Tuscany, architecture of, i, 586.
- Tusculum, Etruscan arch at, i, 301.
- Tyre and Sidon, non-existence of remains of, i, 219; ii, 462.
- Tzarkoe-Selo, wooden church near, i, 490.
- Ulm Cathedral, its merits and defects, ii, 280.
- The “Sacraments Häuschen,” 293.
- Ulpian, or Trajan’s basilica, i, 327.
- Um Rasas Tower, ii, 451 note.
- Uniformity in architecture, i, 39.
- Principle followed by the Greeks, 40.
- Upsala, cathedral at, ii, 313.
- Its French designer, 314 and note.
- Urnes, Norway, wooden church at, ii, 332.
- View, 333.
- Usunlar, Armenia, Byzantine church at, i, 469.
- Utrecht, church of, ii, 207.
- Uxmal, Central America, Casa de las Monjas at, ii, 596.
- Vaison, pointed arches at, ii, 30. 46.
- Churches, 53.
- Valence, Aymer de, tomb of, ii, 409.
- Valence, church at, ii, 58.
- Valencia Cathedral, ii, 488.
- Valentia, Lord, measurement of obelisk of Axum by, i, 150.
- Vardzie, excavations at, i, 483.
- Varro’s description of Porsenna’s tomb, i, 298.
- Varzahan, Byzantine tomb at, i, 476.
- Vaults in Egyptian work, i, 113.
- In Assyrian palaces, 176, note, 215, 216, 217.
- In Pelasgic work, 243, 244.
- In Roman work, 306, 307. 317, 318. 321. 331, 332. 345, 346. 357-360.
- At Al Hadhr, 391. 395.
- Serbistan, 396.
- Firouzabad, 397.
- Tâk Kesra, 398, 399.
- Mashita, 401.
- Rabbath-Ammon, Imumzade, Tag Eiran, 407.
- Byzantine, 430, 431. 434-444. 449, 450. 454-456. 461. 465. 468. 470. 473. 491.
- Romanesque, 532. 540. 547. 550. 554.
- Lombard, 559-566. 575-577.
- Byzantine-Romanesque, 596, 600.
- Pointed Italian, 610. 619. 621.
- Sebenico, 634.
- Palestine, ii, 36, 37.
- France, 45-50. 64-73. 83.
- Issoire, 90.
- Tournus, 97.
- Cluny, 99.
- Vezelay, 101.
- Stone vault in France first attempted, 107.
- Montier-en-Der, 107, 108.
- Intersecting vaulting, 111, 113-116.
- St. Denis, 122 note.
- Ribbed vaulting, 123.
- French system, 169-170.
- Germany: Spires, 229.
- St. Gereon, 264.
- Cologne Cathedral, 271.
- Kuttenberg, 285.
- Gothland, 323-325.
- English system and examples, 355-367.
- Chapter-houses, 389-392.
- Chapels, 394-397.
- Scotland, 426, 427. 432-435. 437.
- Ireland, 448.
- Spain, 469. 476, 477. 484. 487. 489.
- Poverty of same, 492.
- Cairo, 532.
- Constantinople, 560.
- Persia, 568.
- Origin of stalactite vault, 570 note. 574.
- Venice: St. Mark’s, i, 530-536.
-
- Plan, 531.
- Capital, 532.
- Dimensions and particulars, ibid.
- View, 533.
- Its tower or campanile, 579, 581.
- Churches: San Giovanni e Paolo, and the Frari, 632.
- San Giorgio, 574 note.
- Civil and domestic examples, ii, 15.
- The Doge’s palace, cause and extent of its claims to admiration, its actual demerits, &c., 16-18.
- The Ca d’Oro, and the Foscari and Pisani palaces, 18, 19.
- Picturesque parts of the buildings: angle window; Ponte del Paradiso, 20, 21.
- Piazza, 575 note.
- See, i, 456. 500, 501; ii, 32.
-
- Venus and Rome, temple dedicated by Hadrian to, i, 318. 323.
- Vercelli, church of St. Andrea at, first example of the pointed style in Italy, i, 572. 610-629.
- Verona, Roman amphitheatre at, i, 341.
- Vespasian, temple built by, i, 317.
- His baths, 383.
- Vezelay, ii, 95.
- Vianden, Luxemburg, chapel of, ii, 241 note.
- Viborg (Denmark), cathedral, ii, 321.
- Vicenza, town-hall of, ii, 10.
- Victory, columns of, i, 352, 353.
- Victory, Wingless, see Niké Apteros.
- Vienna, St. Stephen’s Cathedral at, ii, 280.
- Vienne, cathedral of, ii, 58. 102.
- Villena, Spain, twisted columns in the church at, ii, 493. 505.
- Villers, abbey church of, curious window, ii, 193, 194.
- Vincennes, keep of, ii, 185.
- S. Vincenzo alle Tre Fontane, basilican church, Rome, date of, i, 515.
- Viollet le Duc, see Le Duc.
- Virgins of the Sun, Peru, house of the, ii, 604.
- View, 605.
- S. Vitale, octagonal church, Ravenna, i, 505, 548; ii, 38.
- Plan and section, i, 548.
- Capitals, 549, 550.
- Copied by Charlemagne, ii, 248.
- S. Vito, Roman sepulchre at, i, 357.
- Section, 357.
- Vitruvius, temples mentioned or described by, i, 274. 291, 292.
- Basilica built by him, 334.
- Mode of decoration reprobated by him, 384.
- Vladimir, cathedral and churches built by, i, 486, 488.
- The city so named, 489.
- Vogüé, Comte Melchior de, on churches in Syria and Palestine, i, 416, 422-427. 429. 433. 437. 450; ii, 36. note. 37.
- Domestic architecture, i, 447-448.
- Vulci, Cocumella tumulus at, i, 298, 299.
- Vyse, Colonel Howard, Egyptian researches of, i, 97. 102.
- Wady el-Ooatib, true character of the ruins at, i, 149.
- Wales, castles of, ii, 413.
- Walid, Caliph, mosques built by, ii, 523.
- Walls: Assyrian, i, 169. 173.
- Walpole, Horace, impulse given to the revival of the Gothic style by, ii, 335.
- Walpole St. Peter’s, Norfolk, as a type of an English parish church, ii, 401.
- Walsingham, Alan of, examples of the architectural genius of, ii, 350. 396.
- Walsingham, New, Norfolk, roof of aisle at, ii, 400.
- Waltham Cross, ii, 412
- S. Wandrille, Normandy, triapsal oratory at, ii, 110.
- Wartburg, palace or castle on the, ii, 257, 258.
- Warwick Castle, ii, 413.
- Waterloo Bridge, i, 48.
- Wechselburg, rood-screen at, ii, 238, 239.
- Wells Cathedral, ii, 273.
- West, bishop of Ely, tomb of, ii, 408.
- Westeräs, Sweden, church at, ii, 315.
- Westminster Abbey: French and English elements in its design, ii, 338. 353.
- Westminster Bridge, i, 48.
- Westminster Hall, roof of, ii, 356. 395. 399.
- Dimensions, plan, and section, 414-416.
- Westminster, St. Stephen’s chapel, ii, 338.
- Westphalian churches, architecture, ii, 230.
- Westropp, Mr. Hodder, suggestions by, ii, 298 note. 450.
- White Convent near Siout, i, 510.
- Plan, 511.
- Wilkinson’s ‘Ancient Architecture and Geology of Ireland,’ ii, 444 note.
- William the Conqueror, memorial church built by, ii, 111.
- His tomb, 118.
- William I. of Sicily, building erected by, ii, 24.
- Willis, Professor, Holy Sepulchre, ii, 33 notes, 344 note.
- Winchester Cathedral, i, 18; ii, 349.
- Winchester School, ii, 414.
- Windows and window tracery, ii, 123.
- Winds, Tower of the, i, 257. 267.
- Dimensions and description, 279.
- Windsor Castle, ii, 413.
- Wisby, Gothland, early prosperity of, ii, 321.
- Helge-Anders and other churches, 322-324.
- Wolsey’s choir at Oxford, ii, 366.
- Hampton Court, 415.
- Woman’s position among the various races: Turanians, i, 60.
- Semites, ibid.
- Celts, 72.
- Aryans, 79.
- Wood, Mr., explorations of, i, 277, 278.
- Wooden Churches of Norway, ii, 332-334.
- Of Russia, i, 490.
- Wooden types copied in stone, i, 106. 234-237.
- Worcester Cathedral, chapter house of, ii, 390.
- Measurements, 417.
- Worms Cathedral, ii, 226.
- Wurka, the Bowariyeh (early Chaldean temple) at, i, 158. 165.
- The Wuswus ruin, 165-167. 398.
- Wykeham, William of, architectural works of, ii, 349. 369. 378. 414.
- Xanten, great church at, ii, 287.
- Plan, 287.
- Xeres, church of San Miguel at, ii, 494.
- Xerxes, palace of, i, 205-208.
- Xochicalco, Mexico, pyramid at, ii, 590.
- Yaroslaf of Russia, architectural works of, i, 486.
- Yezidi house, interior of a, i, 182.
- York Cathedral, i, 24; ii, 352.
- Yorkshire, remains of abbeys in, ii, 348.
- Yousouf, memorial tower built by, ii, 551.
- Ypres, church of St. Martin at, ii, 194.
- Yrieix, Gothic house at, ii, 183.
- Yucatan, race inhabiting, ii, 586.
- Zagros, Mount, Takt-i-Gero shrine on, i, 468.
- Zahra, palace of, ii, 547, 548.
- Zamora, Spain, cathedral of, ii, 471-473.
- Zara, Dalmatia, cathedral of: Plan, i. 588.
-
- View, 590.
- Church of San Donato, 602, 603; ii. 35.
-
- Zawyet-el-Mayyitûr, lotus pier, i, 115.
- Zayi, Yucatan, palace at, ii, 596.
- Zechariah, so-called tomb of, i, 368.
- Zerbst, Nicholai Kirche at, ii, 291.
- Zobeidé, tomb of, its peculiar plan and form, ii, 568.
- Zurich Minster, ii, 189.