INDEX
- Aachen, dome,
11 (cut).
- Abutments, lack of, in the dome of Florence cathedral,
22,
23;
- of dome of St. Peter’s,
50 (cut),
53.
- Agnolo, Baccio d’, his work on the Palazzo Bartolini, Florence,
109;
- his innovation in framing window openings,
109,
116.
- Aisles, treatment of façade over the, in ch. of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
37;
- in ch. of Sant’Agostino, Rome,
74.
- Alberti, Leon Batista, said by Milizia to be regarded as one of the principal restorers of the architecture of antiquity,
35;
- his use of the Roman triumphal-arch design as a model for his façades,
38,
39–43 (cuts);
- applied himself to writing on, rather than practising architecture,
107,
108;
- his influence seen in Bramante’s works,
112;
- ch. of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
35,
41,
42;
- ch. of Sant’Andrea of Mantua,
38–42 (cut and plate),
53;
- Palazzo Rucellai, Florence,
107,
108 (cut).
- Angelo, Michael,
90;
- design for the tomb of Pope Julius II.,
46;
- his work on St. Peter’s,
53–65 (cuts),
237;
- date of his appointment as architect of St. Peter’s,
53;
- his alterations of Bramante’s plan,
53,
70;
- his admiration for the dome of Florence cathedral,
55;
- quoted on the Pantheon dome,
55;
- defects in his scheme,
63,
64;
- his makeshifts,
66;
- windows of Palazzo Farnese, Rome,
116,
117 (cut).
- Angle, Roman treatment of the,
79 (cut);
- pilasters on the,
78–81 (cut).
- Arabesque, Renaissance in imitation of Roman,
167 (cuts).
- Arcades, of the court of Palazzo Farnese, use of Roman combination of arch and entablature,
118;
- cloister of Santa Maria della Pace, Rome,
119;
- château of La Rochefoucauld, France, Flamboyant arches framed with pilasters,
188.
- Arch, the radical nature of the change wrought in architecture
by the introduction of, was never grasped by the imperial Roman designers,
37;
- the Roman triumphal, used as a model of Renaissance façades,
38,
39–43 (cuts);
- the Roman arch and entablature scheme applied to a continuous arcade,
118,
119;
- of Flamboyant depressed or three-centred form,
184,
188.
- Architectural carving of the Renaissance,
167–178 (cuts).
- See Carving, Architectural.
- Architectural shams, use of, in the Renaissance,
32,
121,
132.
- Architecture, the communal and individual spirit in,
4,
5;
- its division into three distinctive styles and two classes,
6,
7;
- proper meaning of the term,
152;
- structural integrity a fundamental prerequisite of good,
24;
- use of structural members without structural meaning
violates the true principles of architectural design,
68;
- mechanical rules cannot reach the law of the proportions
of a genuine work of art,
133,
207,
249;
- conscious effort to be original in, is inevitably disastrous,
206;
- the noblest, has always been mainly a social, communal, and
national, not a personal product,
206.
- Arezzo, church of Santissima Annunziatta,
83;
- nave,
83 (cut).
- Arnolfo, his design for the dome of Florence cathedral,
13 (cut),
16.
- Artificial elements in architectural ornamentation, use of,
172.
- Assisi, church of Santa Maria degli Angeli,
89;
- date,
89;
- general plan,
89;
- chapels,
90;
- orders,
90 (cut);
- piers,
90 (cut);
- ressauts,
90;
- influence of St. Peter’s in,
90;
- façade,
90.
- Athens, the Propylæa, spacing of the columns of the order,
113;
- National Museum, leafage of capital from Epidaurus,
174 (cut).
- Attic wall, use in an interior as a support for vaulting,
151,
243;
- of the façade of the chapel of the Pazzi, Florence,
31;
- of Michael Angelo’s dome of St. Peter’s, Rome,
54.
- Baalbek, Pantheon of,
292;
- entablature,
292;
- breaking of the pediment,
94,
95 (cut),
117;
- ressauts,
95.
- Baccio d’Agnolo, architect of tower of Santo Spirito, Florence,
82.
- Balconies, with balustrades,
160.
- Baldinucci, _Lettera di Filippo Baldinucci Intorno
al modo di dar Proporzione alle Figure_, etc.,
2492;
- quoted on rules of proportion in art,
250.
- Barley, ear of, in Renaissance and in Greek carving compared,
169 (plate and cut).
- Barrozzi, Giacomo. See Vignola.
- Beltrami, Luca, _Il Pantheon_,
891.
- Benedict XIV, Pope, his inquiries as to the safety of the
dome of St. Peter’s,
60.
- Bernini, Wren’s meeting with him at Paris,
233.
- Berty, Adolphe, _Les Grands Architectes Français de la Renaissance_,
1941,
2001;
- quoted on Lescot,
194,
1961;
- quoted on De l’Orme,
2001.
- Bettini, Giovanni, his work on the church of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
35.
- Blind arcade, forms proper decoration for mediæval interiors,
29.
- Bloomfield, Reginald, A History of Renaissance
Architecture in England,
218,
2322;
- quoted on Inigo Jones,
232.
- Bologna, Palazzo Bevilacqua,
165;
- window openings of mediæval form without central shaft,
165.
- Bourges, house of Jacques Cœur, a forerunner of the Renaissance châteaux,
180.
- Bramante, his birth and early work,
44;
- the Tempietto of San Pietro in Montorio,
44–46 (cut),
239;
- his work on St. Peter’s, Rome,
47–53 (cuts),
63,
64,
70,
236;
- his use of the Pantheon and Basilica of Maxentius as models,
49–52 (cuts);
- alteration of his scheme by others,
493,
53–55,
64,
70;
- weakness of his scheme,
52;
- accused of poor workmanship,
64;
- ch. of Santa Maria della Consolazione at Todi,
74–77 (cuts);
- his work on the cathedral of Como,
144;
- ch. of Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan,
140,
142;
- ch. of San Satiro, Milan,
138 (cut);
- cloister of Santa Maria della Pace, Rome,
119;
- Palazzo Cancelleria, Rome,
112–114 (cut).
- Brescia, Palazzo Comunale,
163,
- of the broletto type,
163,
- window openings,
164;
- Palazzo Martinengo, peculiar and meaningless style of window opening,
166 (cut);
- Palazzo Municipale, leafage of capitals,
176 (cut).
- Brunelleschi, the dome of Florence cathedral,
10–25,
22,
48,
50,
54,
55;
- his own account of the dome quoted,
181,
221;
- his great ability,
21;
- his scaffolding,
213;
- why he led the way in a wrong direction,
22,
25,
63;
- character of his work in general,
26;
- his use of the orders,
26;
- the chapel of the Pazzi, Florence,
26–32 (cuts),
175;
- ch. of San Lorenzo, Florence,
33;
- ch. of Santo Spirito, Florence,
33;
- the Pitti palace, Florence,
106;
- Palazzo Pazzi or the Quaratesi, Florence,
106;
- leafage of capital,
175 (cut).
- Bullant, _Reigle Géneralle de Architecture_,
1921;
- his reproduction of the order of a Roman temple in the
portico of the château of Écouen,
192.
- Buttresses, in support of domes,
10,
53;
- of St. Peter’s, Rome,
53 (cut),
55,
56,
59;
- of a circular Gothic vault,
571;
- concealing of, in St. Paul’s, London,
244,
245 (cut).
- Byzantine architecture,
6,
7;
- term loosely applied,
291;
- the dome on pendentives is the distinguishing structural feature of,
291;
- their domes were properly constructed,
63;
- scheme prevails in Renaissance architecture,
74.
- Caen, church of St. Pierre, exterior of apse with Lombard
Renaissance details applied to a Flamboyant structural scheme,
214.
- Cambridge, England, Caius College, gate of honor, neo-classic features,
223.
- Carving, architectural, of the Renaissance,
167–178 (cuts):
- Sculpture of the human figure on Renaissance buildings has little proper
architectural character,
167;
- Relief carving,
167–178 (cuts);
- pictorial treatment of,
158;
- a great deal is in close imitation of Roman models,
167 (cut),
171,
172;
- the best is superior to that of ancient Rome,
168,
170,
176;
- conventionalization of forms,
169 (plate and cut);
- formal convolutions of,
170,
171;
- the finish, in many cases, mere surface smoothing,
170,
171;
- two schemes which are used with wearisome repetition,
171;
- arrangement of composition and treatment of details
often artificial and inorganic,
172 (cut),
173 (cuts);
- the finest forms those of foliation,
170,
174;
- leafage of capitals,
175–178 (cuts);
- artificial convention of the ridges which mark the
subdivisions of the leaf surface,
176 (cuts);
- the grotesque is uniformly weak and characterless,
176–178 (cuts);
- _Putti_ are without particular merit as design,
178.
- Casati, _I Capi d’Arte di Bramante da Urbino nel Milanese_,
1381,
1421.
- Cecchini, _Opinione Intorno lo Stato della gran Cupola del Duomo di Firenze_,
241;
- cited on the stability of the dome of Florence cathedral,
233,
241.
- Celled vault, a Gothic circular,
20,
21;
- nature of its construction,
56–59 (cuts).
- Chains, binding,
12,
22,
74;
- of the dome of Florence cathedral,
19,
241;
- of St. Peter’s, Rome,
59,
60.
- Chambers, Sir William, _Treatise on the Decorative Part of Civil Architecture_,
1341.
- Chimney-stacks in shape of Doric columns in Elizabethan houses,
217 (cut),
223.
- Church, the, in Middle Ages and Renaissance period,
1–3.
- Church architecture, of the Florentine Renaissance,
26–43 (cuts);
- of the Roman Renaissance,
66–101 (cuts);
- of the Renaissance in North Italy,
135–153.
- Clamps, metal, used in masonry,
222;
- of St. Peter’s dome,
60.
- Classic inspiration in the Renaissance,
4,
97,
119.
- Classic models, the classic style which was followed in
the Renaissance was that of the decadent Greek schools as represented in Roman copies,
4,
247;
- misuse of,
33,
84.
- Claudian aqueduct,
106.
- Coffering, Roman, in interior of church of Sant’Andrea of Mantua,
39.
- Colonnade of Bramante’s scheme for St. Peter’s dome,
51,
56.
- Columns, small, free-standing, placed by Sansovino
on each side of the pier to bear the archivolt,
123,
130;
- often spoken of as an innovation of Sansovino and
Palladio, but instances of it occur in Græco-Roman architecture of Syria,
131 (cut);
- peculiar form of, claimed by De l’Orme as his own invention,
201–206 (cut);
- practically the same column occurs in Serlio’s book,
203 (cut);
- an ancient adumbration of this form occurs in the Porta Maggiore, Rome,
205;
- other Italian examples of the same column,
205,
206;
- mention of its use in England,
221,
222,
229;
- notion that the Ionic order was designed after female proportions,
207.
- Communal spirit of the Middle Ages,
4,
5.
- Como, cathedral,
144–149 (cuts);
- description of exterior,
144;
- details are mediæval Lombard modified by neo-classic elements,
144;
- portals, illogical use of arch and entablature in,
144,
145 (cuts),
149;
- window openings, variety of illogical forms in,
148 (cut);
- tapering jamb shafts,
149.
- Consoles, reversed over the aisle compartments of an exterior,
37,
74,
95.
- Constantinople, Hagia Theotokos, dome,
10 (cut);
- church of St. Sophia, dome mentioned,
10.
- Conventionalization of forms in relief carving of the Renaissance,
168 (cut).
- Corinthian capitals,
84.
- Corner pilasters,
78–81 (cut).
- Cornice, of St. Peter’s, Rome, dwarfs the effect of altitude,
68,
92;
- breaking of,
93–95 (cut).
- Cosimo de’ Medici,
103,
110.
- Court, circular, of Vignola, influences De l’Orme and Jones
in building the courts of the Tuileries and Whitehall,
130,
131.
- Cunningham, _The Lives of the Most Eminent British Painters, Sculptors, and Architects_,
2172,
226 ff.;
- quoted on the unsubstantial structures of the Renaissance in England,
217.
- De l’Orme, Philibert, _Le Premier Tome de l’Architecture_,
2002 ff.,
209;
- a man with little artistic genius,
200,
209;
- overestimated by Viollet le Duc,
2001,
2073;
- Adolphe Berty on,
2001;
- studied the antique in Rome,
200;
- his work on the Tuileries,
200–207 (cut);
- peculiar form of column claimed by him as his own invention,
201–206 (cut);
- his doorway, with use of the peculiar column,
203 (cut);
- description of doorway quoted from his book,
209 (cut).
- Delaborde, Viscount, quoted,
73.
- Della Porta,
73;
- façade of ch. of the Gesù, Rome,
95 (cut).
- Dolcebono, architect, Church of Monastero Maggiore, Milan,
142,
143.
- Domes, construction of early,
10–15;
- hidden externally by drum and timber roof,
10,
11 (cut);
- Byzantine, on pendentives,
10 (cut),
291;
- polygonal,
12,
243;
- pointed in outline,
12,
14,
16,
52;
- octagonal,
13,
14,
16;
- hemispherical,
243,
52;
- Arabian,
121;
- binding chains,
12,
241;
- the thrust,
151,
24,
52;
- why a dome cannot have the character of a Gothic vault,
20,
21,
56–59 (cuts);
- proper mode of constructing, settled by the ancient Romans and Byzantines,
63;
- attempt of the architects of the Renaissance to solve the great dome problem,
241,
242;
- most modern domes modelled after St. Peter’s and St. Paul’s are wooden constructions,
242;
- of Hagia Theotokos, Constantinople,
10 (cut);
- of Florence cathedral,
10–25,
65,
- design of Arnolfo,
13,
- modelled on dome of Baptistery,
16,
- details of construction,
16–20,
- magnitude of the work,
21,
- stability of,
23;
- of Florence Baptistery, details of construction,
14 (cut),
- dome of Florence cathedral derived from,
16,
20;
- vault of the chapel of the Pazzi, Florence, not a dome,
27 (cut),
28,
56;
- ch. of San Lorenzo, Florence,
34;
- vault of ch. of Santo Spirito, Florence,
34;
- St. Paul’s, London, rejected scheme,
235 (cut),
- likeness to Bramante’s scheme for St. Peter’s, Rome,
236 (cut),
- likeness to Michael Angelo’s scheme,
237,
- present structure,
239 (plate),
- recalls Bramante’s San Pietro in Montorio, Rome,
239,
- structural system of,
239–242 (cut);
- ch. of Santa Maria delle Grazie, Milan,
140 (cut);
- vault of the chapel of St. Peter Martyr, ch.
of Sant’Eustorgio, Milan, like vault of chapel of the Pazzi, Florence,
142;
- ch. of San Biagio at Montepulciano,
81 (cut);
- Pisa cathedral,
12 (cut);
- ch. of Sant’Andrea di Ponte Molle, Rome,
86;
- Antonio San Gallo’s design for St. Peter’s, Rome,
71;
- Tempietto, Rome,
44 (cut);
- cath. of Salamanca approaches the nature of a Gothic vault,
57–59 (cut);
- Todi,
74 (cut),
77.
- Domestic architecture. See Palace architecture.
- Doorway, of De l’Orme,
203 (cut);
- of Serlio,
203 (cut).
- Drum, of a dome, raised above the springing of the dome,
10–14,
23;
- dome set on the top of,
12;
- of the dome of Florence cathedral,
16;
- the central vault of the chapel of the Pazzi, Florence,
27 (cut);
- the Tempietto of San Pietro in Montorio, Rome,
44;
- St. Peter’s, Rome,
50 (cut),
53.
- Du Cerceau, engraving of the Fountain of the Innocents, Paris,
195 (cut);
- work of Lescot on the Louvre,
197 (cut);
- work of De l’Orme on the Tuileries,
201 (cut),
2212;
- project for the château of Charleval,
209.
- Durm, _Die Dom Kuppel in Florenz_,
191;
- _Die Baukunst der Renaissance in Italien_,
201;
- cited on domes,
201.
- East end of the Redentore, Venice,
100,
101.
- Elizabethan Art,
216–225 (cuts).
- See Renaissance in England.
- England, Renaissance in, Architecture of the,
216–246 (cuts).
- See Renaissance in England.
- Burghley House, chimneys in the form of a Doric order,
217 (cut);
- Cranborne Manor-House, porch and façade illustrate Elizabethan neo-classic ornamentation,
221,
222 (cut);
- Hardwick Castle, mention of,
217;
- Kirby Hall, façades of the court,
218–220 (cut),
- pilasters supporting nothing but miniature pedestals,
219,
- window openings said to have been inserted by Inigo Jones,
218,
- porch, description of,
220,
- its scheme a variation of Lescot’s Louvre pavilions,
220,
- gables of Flemish or Dutch origin,
220 (cut);
- Longford Castle,
221;
- French influence in,
221;
- resemblance to château of Chambord, France,
221;
- Lower Walterstone Hall, window illustrating Elizabethan neo-classic ornamentation,
221 (cut);
- Stanway House, gatehouse portal, neo-classic features,
223;
- Tixall Castle, gatehouse, neo-classic ornamentation,
222;
- Westwood Park, porch in the form of a Roman triumphal arch,
223;
- Wollaton Hall, neo-classic ornamentation,
223,
- chimney-stacks in the semblance of Doric columns,
223,
- portal,
224.
- Entablature, passing through the arch impost,
29,
30 (cut);
- in Roman art,
29,
30,
37;
- springing of a vault from,
29,
68;
- Vignola’s,
85 (cut);
- removing of, between the ressauts,
117 (cut);
- Roman arch and entablature scheme applied to a continuous arcade,
118,
119;
- breaking of,
134 (cut),
199 (cut);
- used with the arch illogically in the portals of north Italy,
144,
145 (cuts);
- ch. of Santissima Annunziatta, Arezzo,
83 (cut);
- the chapel of the Pazzi, Florence, running through the impost,
29 (cut);
- façade of ch. of Sant’Andrea of Mantua,
40 (cut);
- ch. of Sant’Andrea di Ponte Molle, Rome, the two parts
which have no _raison d’être_ under a vault have been omitted,
89 (cut);
- ch. of San Biagio, Montepulciano, Rome,
78 (cut);
- the Gesù, Rome, has no ressauts except at the crossing,
92;
- ch. of St. Paul outside the wall, Rome,
301;
- St. Peter’s, Rome, interior, dwarfs the effect of its altitude,
68;
- façade of ch. of San Francesco della Vigna, Venice,
100;
- of ch. of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, placed above small pilasters of the archivolts,
98;
- The Redentore, Venice,
101;
- Todi,
75,
76 (cut).
- Entablature block, in Roman art,
30,
37;
- in ch. of San Lorenzo, Florence,
33 (cut);
- in façade of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
36 (cut);
- in nave of ch. of Sant’Agostino, Rome,
72 (cut).
- Entasis of columns in church of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice,
98.
- Façades, of the Badia of Fiesole,
32 (cut);
- chapel of the Pazzi, Florence,
30 (cut);
- ch. of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
35 (cut);
- old St. Paul’s cathedral, London, incongruous mixture of,
230–232 (cut);
- Whitehall, London, banqueting hall,
227 (plate);
- Westminster front,
229 (cut),
- circular court,
230;
- ch. of Sant’Andrea of Mantua,
39–42 (cut);
- ch. of the Gesù, Rome, Vignola’s,
92–95 (cuts);
- Della Porta’s,
95 (cut);
- ch. of Sant’Andrea di Ponte Molle, Rome,
86–88 (cut),
92;
- ch. of Sant’Agostino, Rome,
74 (cut);
- Palazzo Cancelleria, Rome, description of,
112–114 (cut),
- projecting bays at each end,
113,
- portal of almost Greek purity of design,
114;
- Palazzo Massimi, Rome,
114–116 (cut);
- ch. of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice,
99 (cut);
- Scuola di San Marco (Venice),
156–158 (cut);
- ch. of Santa Maria dei Miracole, Venice, a marvel of excellence in mechanical execution,
151,
152 (cut).
- Fiesole, church of the Badia, façade,
32 (cut);
- likeness to chapel of the Pazzi,
32.
- Filarete, Antonio, Ospedale Maggiore, Milan,
164 (cut);
- window openings,
165 (cut);
- arabesque on door-valves of St. Peter’s, Rome,
170 (cut).
- Fine Arts, of an epoch, the expression of its conditions,
1,
3;
- of the Renaissance, spirit of,
3,
4,
6;
- of the Middle Ages, spirit of,
2,
5.
- Flamboyant Gothic style of Castle Châteaudun,
184 (cut).
- Florence, condition in Middle Ages and in Renaissance,
2,
3;
- Board of Works of Florence cathedral,
21,
221.
- Badia, façade,
32 (cut).
- Baptistery, dome, details of construction,
14 (cut);
- forms inspiration for dome of the Florence cathedral,
16,
20;
- entablature,
301;
- attic wall,
31;
- Ghiberti gates, inorganic composition with over-naturalism in details,
173 (cut).
- Cathedral of, dome,
10–25;
- design of Arnolfo,
13 (cut);
- modelled on the dome of the Baptistery,
16,
20,
50;
- details of construction,
16–20;
- its rib system gives it nothing of Gothic character,
20;
- shell,
16,
54;
- rib system,
16 (cuts),
55;
- binding chains,
19,
22;
- magnitude of the work,
21,
22;
- deliberations of the Board of Works,
211,
221;
- scaffolding,
213;
- is fundamentally false in principle,
22,
23,
24;
- stability of,
23;
- lantern,
25;
- has nothing of classic Roman character,
25;
- its octagonal form,
551;
- its fine features,
65.
- Chapel of the Pazzi,
26–32 (cuts);
- its central vault,
27 (cut),
56;
- interior,
28–30 (cut);
- Byzantine in form,
29;
- orders of,
29,
31,
32;
- entablature,
29,
30 (cut);
- portico,
30 (cut),
134;
- panelled attic wall,
31,
81;
- false use of the orders,
109;
- leafage of capitals,
175.
- Church of Santa Croce, pulpit, carving of,
171,
172 (cut);
- leafage of capitals,
176;
- See Chapel of the Pazzi.
- Church of Sant’ Jacopo Soprarno,
32.
- Church of San Lorenzo,
33;
- celled vault,
33;
- mediæval features,
34;
- piers,
34 (cut).
- Church of Santa Maria del Fiore, false front of wood mentioned,
120.
- Church of Santa Maria Novella,
35;
- façade,
35–38 (cut),
42;
- orders,
35 (cut),
112;
- mediæval features,
35,
38;
- portal,
36 (cut),
41;
- tower,
82.
- Church of Santo Spirito,
33;
- spire-like tower of,
81 (cut);
- pseudo-classic details,
82;
- lantern,
83.
- Museum, Roman arabesque used as model for Renaissance,
167 (cut);
- pilaster with carving of a meaningless and artificial composition,
173 (cut).
- Palazzo Bartolini,
109;
- window openings,
109 (cut),
116;
- Palazzo Gondi,
107;
- arcades of the court,
107;
- leafage of capitals,
176 (cut).
- Palazzo Guardagni,
107;
- Palazzo Mozzi,
102;
- the Pitti palace, its façade as monotonous as the Claudian aqueduct, which it resembles,
106;
- the Quaratesi,
106;
- Palazzo Riccardi,
103 (cut and plate),
- moderation shown in,
103,
110,
- façade,
103,
- window openings,
103,
- arcades of interior court,
104;
- Palazzo Rucellai,
107,
108 (cut);
- application of classic orders,
108,
112,
- window openings,
109,
- rustication of the masonry,
109,
- resemblance between Palazzo Cancelleria and,
112,
114;
- Palazzo Strozzi,
106,
- cornice,
106,
- fortress-like character,
106;
- the Strozzino,
106;
- Palazzo Vecchio,
102.
- Florentine Renaissance, church architecture of the,
26–43 (cuts and plate);
- palace architecture,
102–111 (cuts and plate).
- See Renaissance architecture.
- Foliation, the finest feature of Renaissance architectural carving,
174.
- Fontana, Carlo, cited on dome of Pisa,
131;
- cited on stability of Florence dome,
233;
- quoted on Michael Angelo,
551,
241;
- cited on safety of St. Peter’s dome,
59;
- _Il Tempio Vaticano e sua Origine_, etc., Discritto dal Cav. Carlo Fontana, etc.,
712;
- cited on short-sighted admiration of St. Peter’s,
71;
- cited on binding chains,
74.
- France, Châteaux of, see Renaissance in France.
- Castle Châteaudun, portal and bay in the Flamboyant Gothic style,
184 (cut).
- Château of Azay le Rideau,
182–187 (cuts);
- general description,
182–184;
- portal and bay of characteristic French Renaissance design in which
neo-classic details are worked into a pseudo-Gothic scheme,
184–187 (cut);
- window openings,
186;
- one of the finest monuments of the early Renaissance in the country,
187;
- portal,
214.
- Château of Blois, cornice with neo-classic and mediæval elements combined,
182, (cut);
- court façade,
188–190 (cut);
- superimposed orders of pilasters of the court façade ornamented with bead mouldings,
188 (cut);
- polygonal staircase tower,
190 (cut);
- garden façade,
190;
- open gallery of,
191.
- Château of Chambord, its multiplicity of soaring
features resembles a late Gothic building,
191;
- resemblance of Longford Castle, England, to,
221.
- Château of Charleval,
209–213 (cuts);
- exterior façade, pilasters which have no entablature to support,
210;
- unmeaning variation of the detail of the several bays,
210;
- interior façade, the division of the building into two stories
not expressed on the outside,
211;
- court of Kirby Hall, England, resembles,
218.
- Château of Chenonceaux, portal where Flamboyant idea is
treated in neo-classic details,
188 (cut).
- Château of Écouen, architectural scheme is comparatively simple,
191;
- in the portico of the court is reproduced the order of a Roman temple
without admixture of mediæval details or Italian corruptions,
192.
- Château of Fontainebleau follows the general character of early French Renaissance,
191.
- Château of La Rochefoucauld, arcades of the court where Flamboyant
arches are framed with pilasters,
188;
- open gallery,
191.
- Château of St. Germain en Laye,
192,
193;
- buttresses,
192;
- window openings,
192.
- Villers Cotterets, column claimed by De l’Orme as his own invention,
202 (cut).
- French architecture, Renaissance influence upon,
179.
- French Renaissance. See Renaissance in France.
- Frieze, problem of the arrangement of metope and triglyph at the end of,
121,
122 (cuts);
- of library of St. Mark, Venice,
123 (cut).
- Galleries, open, covered by extension of the main roof in French châteaux,
191.
- Genoa, portal containing columns claimed by De l’Orme as his own invention,
206.
- Geymüller, Baron H. von, _Die ursprünglichen Entwürf für Sanct Peter in Rom_,
472,
492.
- Gisors, Church of SS. Gervais and Protais, the west front Flamboyant Gothic with
incongruous Renaissance details,
214.
- Gotch, Architecture of the Renaissance in England,
2171;
- cited on Kirby Hall, England,
2183;
- on Longford Castle, England,
221;
- on Tixall Castle,
222;
- on Stanway, Westwood Park, Wollaton Hall,
223.
- Gothic, King James’s,
227.
- Gothic architectural carving, has at once an appropriate
architectural character and a high degree of excellence in the development of form,
167,
172;
- foliation,
176;
- the grotesque,
177.
- _Gothic architecture, development and character of_ cited,
71;
- cited on dome of Salamanca,
572,
592;
- cited on early stage of apsidal vault development,
591.
- Gothic architecture, one of the three distinctive styles of architecture,
6;
- beauty and structural logic of,
7;
- use of wooden ties,
222;
- why a dome cannot have the character of a Gothic vault,
20,
21,
56–59 (cuts);
- variety which arises through some new constructive idea,
2111;
- French Renaissance châteaux in which distorted neo-classic
details are worked into a pseudo-Gothic scheme,
184;
- Wren’s scheme to reconcile the Gothic to a better manner,
238,
243,
245.
- Gothic art forms a new French order, a true evolution out
of the ancient orders superbly adapted to new conditions,
206.
- Goujon, sculptures of the fountain of the Innocents, Paris,
196.
- Greek architectural carving, vitality of,
169 (cut),
171,
174 (cut);
- beauty of leafage,
174,
176 (cuts).
- Greek architecture, the classic style which was followed
in Renaissance architecture was that of the decadent Greek schools as represented
in Roman copies,
4,
247;
- the only proper use of the classic order made in,
43.
- Greek coin (of Metapontum), conventionalized ear of
barley on, compared with Renaissance carving,
169,
170 (cut).
- Greek sculpture on buildings is in a measure
independent of the building on which it is placed,
167.
- Grotesque, the, in architectural carving, the
northern races only capable of conceiving it in an imaginative way,
177;
- in Renaissance architecture uniformly weak and characterless,
176,
177 (cuts).
- Guasti, _Santa Maria del Fiore_,
132;
- quoted on Brunelleschi’s account of the dome of Florence,
181.
- Gubbio, his work on the ducal palace, Venice, arabesque after Roman model,
167 (cut).
- Hermæ, of façade of the Gesù, Rome,
93;
- of the Tuileries, Paris,
207.
- Human figure, in sculpture, on buildings,
167;
- has little proper architectural character in the Renaissance,
167.
- Impost, continuous,
1881.
- Individuality, element of, in Renaissance architecture,
4;
- as developed by Middle Ages and by Renaissance,
5.
- Innocent XI, Pope, his inquiries as to the safety of the dome of St. Peter’s,
59.
- Intellectual movement in the Renaissance,
2,
8.
- Ionic volutes,
84.
- Italian domestic architecture,
102;
- unwise admixture of classic elements in,
107,
109;
- spirit of display in,
105,
110.
- Italian genius for painting,
6,
7.
- Jamb shafts, tapering,
137 (cut),
142,
149,
150.
- Jones, Inigo, his work on Kirby Hall, England,
2183;
- influence of Vitruvius and Palladio on,
226,
227;
- travel and study in Italy,
227;
- _Stonehenge Restored_,
227;
- Whitehall,
227–230 (plate and cut);
- Banqueting Hall, London,
227 (plate);
- had no true conception of the principles of classic art,
230;
- old St. Paul’s west front,
230–232 (cut);
- the spirit of his architecture theatrical,
232.
- Julius II, Pope, the building of St. Peter’s,
44,
46.
- Kent, William, _The Designs of Inigo Jones, consisting
of Plans and Elevations for Publick and Private Buildings_,
2292;
- scheme for the palace of Whitehall, London,
229;
- old St. Paul’s cathedral, west front,
231 (cut).
- Lantern of Florence dome,
25;
- St. Peter’s, Rome, Bramante’s plan,
52 (cut);
- ch. of Santo Spirito, Florence,
83.
- Leafage, Greek and Roman compared,
174–176 (cuts);
- Renaissance,
175.
- Lescot, Pierre,
194;
- Fountain of the Innocents, Paris,
194–196 (cut);
- influence of Serlio,
196;
- west wing of the Louvre,
196–200 (cut).
- Letarouilly, _Edifices de Rome Moderne_,
721;
- cited on ch. of Sant’Agostino, Rome,
72.
- Loftie, W. J., _Inigo Jones and Sir Christopher Wren_,
2421.
- Lombard blind arcade recalled in the ch. of Santa Maria dei Miracole, Venice,
151 (cut).
- Lombard Romanesque architecture, towers,
82.
- Lombard Romanesque, style modified by neo-classic
elements mark the Renaissance architecture of northern Italy,
144;
- a porch which forms a model from which an illogical
Renaissance portal is derived,
145 (cuts).
- Lombardi, the,
149;
- architectural carving of,
169 (plate).
- Lombardo, Martino, Scuola di San Marco, Venice, façade,
156.
- Lombardo, Pietro,
149;
- ch. of Santa Maria dei Miracole, Venice,
151 (cut);
- Palazzo Corner-Spinelli, Venice,
160 (plate).
- Lombardo, Tullio,
149;
- ch of San Salvatore, Venice,
150.
- London, St. Paul’s cathedral, west front of old structure by Inigo Jones,
230,
232 (cut);
- Wren ordered to submit designs for the restoration of,
234;
- his drawings for the new structure,
235–238 (cuts);
- rejected scheme with details of its dome,
235,
236 (cut);
- likeness of dome to Bramante’s scheme for St. Peter’s,
236;
- likeness to Michael Angelo’s scheme,
237;
- façade of the second design a close copy of Inigo Jones’s,
238;
- present structure never embodied in any set of drawings,
239;
- plan has no beauty comparable to that of St. Peter’s,
239 (cut);
- comparison of, with St. Peter’s,
236,
239,
241,
243,
245;
- plan and elevation,
239;
- dome,
239–242 (plate);
- recalls Bramante’s San Pietro in Montorio,
239;
- structural system of,
240 (cut);
- vaulting of the nave has somewhat the effect of Gothic vaulting,
243;
- use of attic wall in support of vaulting,
243;
- neo-classic orders of the interior,
244,
245 (cut);
- intersecting of archivolt and entablature,
244;
- concealing of the buttresses,
244,
245 (cut);
- vaulting of the apse,
245.
- Whitehall, Banqueting Hall,
227 (plate);
- of Palladian design,
228;
- orders of the façade,
228;
- scheme for the palace illustrated by Kent,
229;
- plan is French in character rather than Italian,
229;
- order of the basement has a structural character,
229 (cut);
- façade of circular court, orders of,
230.
- Church of St. Stephen’s,
246;
- ch. of St. Bride’s,
246;
- ch. of St. Mary-le-Bow,
246;
- ch. of St. Peter’s, Cornhill,
246.
- Longhena, architect, Palazzo Pesaro, Venice,
163.
- Maderna, the western bays of St. Peter’s, Rome,
68.
- Majano, Benedetto da, the Palazzo Strozzi, Florence,
106.
- Mantua, church of Sant’ Andrea,
38–42 (cut and plate);
- erected and ornamented on Roman models,
38;
- nave,
38 (plate);
- piers,
38,
39,
53;
- its interior one of the finest of the Renaissance,
39;
- its scheme foreshadows that of St. Peter’s,
39,
53;
- façade,
39–42 (cut);
- early use of so-called colossal order,
40 (cut),
53,
66;
- resemblance of central arch to that of ch. of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
41;
- panelled pilasters,
41,
160;
- reflection of, seen in Bramante’s church of San Satiro of Milan,
138.
- Martin, _Hist. de France_,
1801.
- _Mathematici, Parere di tre, sopra i danni che si sono trovato nella cupola di S.
Pietro, etc._,
601.
- Mathematicians’ report on the condition of St. Peter’s dome in 1742,
60.
- Mediæval art, structural forms of, formed, for the most part, the basis
of Renaissance design,
43,
247;
- considered false and barbaric by the neo-classicists,
97,
248;
- its architects transformed the classic orders in a creative way,
248.
- Melani, _Architettura Italiana_,
1501,
1541,
2502;
- quoted on architecture of the Renaissance,
250.
- Metope, problem of making half a metope fall at the
end of the frieze,
121,
122 (cuts).
- Michelozzi, The Riccardi, Florence,
103;
- praised by Vasari,
105;
- the Strozzino, Florence,
106;
- chapel of St. Peter Martyr, ch. of Sant’Eustorgio, Milan,
142;
- his work in Venice,
149.
- Middle Ages, conditions of the,
1;
- spirit of, and that of the Renaissance,
2,
5–6;
- individuality of,
5.
- Middleton, _Ancient Rome_,
521;
- cited on the dome of the Pantheon,
521.
- Milan, church of Sant’Eustorgio, chapel of St. Peter Martyr,
142;
- circular celled vault,
142.
- Church of San Lorenzo mentioned,
140.
- Church of Santa Maria delle Grazie,
140 (cut);
- description of exterior,
140;
- dome,
140;
- its encircling arcade suggests the encircling
colonnade of the dome of St. Peter’s,
142.
- Church of Monasterio Maggiore,
142;
- compound window openings,
143.
- Church and sacristy of San Satiro,
138–140 (cut);
- reflects ch. of St. Andrea of Mantua,
138;
- orders of the interior of the sacristy,
139 (cut).
- Ospedale Maggiore,
164;
- larger features are of mixed and debased
mediæval character with no application of classic orders,
164;
- window openings,
165 (cut).
- Palazzo Brera, arches sprung from pairs of
columns connected by short entablatures,
166.
- Milanesi, cited,
341,
35.
- Milizia, _Memorie degli Architetti_, etc., quoted,
232,
841;
- cited on Alberti,
35,
44;
- cited on use of entablature block,
36;
- cited on safety of the dome of St. Peter’s,
584;
- cited on the strengthening of the dome of St. Peter’s,
62;
- on ch. of Consolazione at Todi,
74;
- on spire-like tower of ch. of Santo Spirito, Florence,
81;
- cited on Vignola,
84;
- on dome of Sant’Andrea di Ponte Molle, Rome,
86;
- on window openings framed with orders, crowned with pediments,
109;
- quoted on Sansovino,
119,
121;
- quoted on Vignola,
128;
- quoted on De l’Orme,
194.
- Montalembert, cited,
51.
- Montepulciano, church of San Biagio,
77–83 (cuts);
- interior,
78–80 (cut);
- ressauts,
78,
90;
- Doric order,
78;
- use of pilasters on the angles,
78,
81;
- exterior,
81–83 (cut);
- dome,
81;
- façade,
81;
- panels of upper story,
81;
- orders,
81,
83;
- towers,
81.
- Naples museum, composite capital showing Roman leafage,
175.
- Nave of ch. of Santissima Annunziatta, Arezzo,
83 (cut);
- Sant’Andrea of Mantua,
38 (plate);
- ch. of Sant’Agostino, Rome,
72;
- ch. of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice,
97,
98.
- Nelli, _Discorsi di Architettura_,
213;
- quoted on Brunelleschi’s scaffolding,
213;
- cited on stability of Florence dome,
233,
241.
- Neo-classicists, their confidence in the art of Roman
antiquity as the embodiment of all true principles of architectural design,
97.
- Neo-pagan spirit of the Renaissance,
2,
4,
8.
- Nicholas V, Pope, rebuilding of basilica of St. Peter,
47.
- Norton, C. E., Church Building in the Middle Ages,
211;
- cited on building of the dome of the Florence cathedral,
211.
- Openings, mediæval Florentine form,
102 (cut);
- of domestic architecture in Perugia,
102;
- reveals are shallow in earlier buildings,
104;
- cathedral of Como, variety of illogical forms in,
148 (cut);
- See Window openings.
- Order and symmetry of a mechanical kind seen in Renaissance architecture,
133.
- Order, colossal, so-called, early use of,
40.
- Order, classic, use of without structural meaning in
Renaissance architecture,
6,
29,
43,
244;
- Brunelleschi’s use of,
26;
- unsuitable for a building of mediæval character,
29,
43;
- disposition of, in various Renaissance façades,
42;
- misapplication and distortion of by Italians of the Renaissance,
43;
- used with propriety by the Greeks alone,
43;
- the usual size of, compared with that of St. Peter’s, Rome,
67;
- Vignola’s treatise on the Five Orders,
84;
- the proportions of the, altered by Vignola,
85;
- Vitruvius quoted on maintaining the purity of,
86;
- inappropriate in a church interior,
98;
- application of, in palace architecture,
107,
109;
- Renaissance innovation in spacing the columns of,
112,
114;
- podium introduced beneath,
112;
- where the columns of, act somewhat as buttresses,
131;
- aberrations and makeshifts made necessary by efforts to
apply the classic orders to uses for which they were not adapted,
244;
- transformed by the mediæval architects in a creative way,
248;
- De l’Orme’s claim of having invented a new order, which he
called the French order,
202 (cut),
206.
- Of the Parthenon, Athens,
67;
- the Temple of the Sun at Baalbek,
671;
- chapel of the Pazzi, Florence,
29,
30 (cut);
- ch. of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
35,
42 (cut);
- Palazzo Rucellai, Florence,
108,
109 (cut);
- St. Paul’s, London, interior, difficulties of combining
neo-classic style of, with the high vaulting,
243,
244;
- Whitehall, banqueting hall, London,
228 (plate),
229 (cut),
230;
- ch. of Sant’Andrea of Mantua,
40 (cut),
42;
- ch. of San Biagio at Montepulciano,
78,
81 (cuts);
- Duomo of Pienza,
42;
- St. Peter’s, Rome, interior,
53,
66,
- dwarfs the effect of magnitude in the interior,
67,
- size compared with that of the Parthenon and Pantheon,
67,
- diminishes the effect of altitude of the vaulting,
68;
- Palazzo Cancelleria, Rome, podium introduced beneath,
112,
- innovation in spacing the columns of,
113;
- court of Palazzo Farnese, Rome, treatment of the capital,
118;
- ch. of San Francesco della Vigna, Venice,
100;
- ch. of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, raised on pedestals,
98,
101,
- placed under the archivolts,
98;
- library of St. Mark, Venice,
122,
123 (cuts);
- Palazzo Contarini, Venice,
161;
- Palazzo Vendramini, Venice, full orders in all three
stories of façade,
161,
162,
- arrangement in lateral bay of façade,
162;
- town hall portico of Vicenza, the columns of, act
somewhat as buttresses,
130,
131.
- See Columns.
- Ornamentation, architectural, use of artificial elements in,
172–174 (cuts);
- use of forms drawn from organic nature,
174.
- See Carving, architectural.
- Oxford, St. Mary’s Church, porch, mentioned,
227;
- Sheldonian theatre, Wren quoted on,
234.
- Padua, town hall, Palladio’s scheme for town hall
of Vicenza derived from,
130,
131.
- Painting, Italian genius for,
6,
7;
- most Renaissance architects were painters and sculptors,
6,
7,
84,
96.
- Palace architecture of the Renaissance, Florentine,
102–111 (cuts and plate);
- Roman,
112–134 (cuts);
- of North Italy,
154–166 (cuts);
- Venetian,
154–163 (cuts).
- See Renaissance architecture.
- Palladian architecture,
95;
- introduced into England by Jones,
227;
- far from true to classic design,
228,
230;
- rules are arbitrary and not in accord with the
true principles of ancient art,
248.
- Palladio, Quattro libri dell’Architettura di Andrea Palladio,
964;
- his influence greater than that of any other architect of the Renaissance,
95,
248;
- quoted on his study of architecture,
96,
97;
- quoted on his admiration of his own work,
1311;
- his compositions based on order and symmetry of a mechanical kind,
133;
- concerned with the superficial appearance in architecture,
133;
- ch. of San Francesco della Vigna, Venice,
100;
- ch. of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice,
97–100 (cuts);
- ch. of the Redentore, Venice,
100 (cut);
- Palazzo Valmarana, Venice,
133;
- Loggia Bernarda, Vicenza,
133 (cut);
- Palazzo Colleone-Porta, Vicenza,
133;
- Palazzo Porta-Barbarano, Vicenza,
133;
- the portico of the town hall, Vicenza,
130–132 (cut).
- Pallaiuolo, Simone, Palazzo Guardagni, Florence,
107.
- Palustre, Leon, L’Architecture de la Renaissance,
892;
- quoted on the entablature of St. Andrea di Ponte Molle, Rome,
89.
- Paris, Church of St. Etienne du Mont, of Flamboyant
Gothic form, with neo-classic west front and central portal,
213,
214;
- portal with columns modelled after those claimed by
De l’Orme as his own invention,
214.
- Church of St. Eustache, a Gothic structure overlaid
with Renaissance details,
213.
- Fountain of the Innocents,
194–196 (cut);
- a reproduction of the scheme of a Roman triumphal arch,
196.
- Hotel Cluny, a forerunner of the Renaissance châteaux,
180.
- Louvre, Lescot’s work on the west wing,
196–200 (cut);
- orders,
198,
199;
- the salient pavilions, have no function,
198;
- breaking of the entablature in,
199;
- sculptured festoons heavy and formal,
199.
- Palace of the Tuileries, work of De l’Orme,
200–207 (cuts);
- peculiar form of column claimed by De l’Orme as his invention,
201–206 (cut);
- basement arcade,
207;
- attic story,
207.
- Parthenon, metal clamps in masonry,
222;
- effect of a dome erected on,
89.
- Pavia, Church of the Certosa, general description of façade,
136–137;
- Lombard Romanesque forms with pseudo-classic elements engrafted on them,
137;
- window openings,
137 (cut).
- Church of San Pietro in Cielo d’Oro, portal framed
by structural members without structural meaning,
148 (cut).
- Pazzi, Chapel of the. See Florence.
- Pediment, breaking of the,
93–95 (cut),
117 (cut);
- one placed within another,
95 (cut);
- of Baalbek,
95 (cut).
- Pellegrini, Palazzo Brera, Milan,
166.
- Perugia, domestic architecture,
102.
- Church of S. Bernardino, general description of façade,
135 (plate);
- affords a rare instance of the use of colour in Renaissance architecture,
135.
- Peruzzi, Baldassare, his plan for St. Peter’s, Rome,
472;
- Palazzo Massimi, Rome,
114–116 (cut).
- Piers, pierced transversely and longitudinally,
38,
39,
150 (cuts);
- ch. of Santissima Annunziatta, Arezzo,
83 (cut);
- ch. of San Lorenzo, Florence,
34 (cut);
- château of Blois, France, polygonal staircase tower,
190 (cut);
- ch. of Sant’Andrea of Mantua,
38,
39 (plate);
- ch. of Sant’Agostino, Rome, alternate system,
72;
- St. Peter’s, Rome,
53,
66,
68;
- Todi,
75,
76 (cut);
- ch. of San Giorgio Maggiore, Venice,
97,
98 (cut);
- ch. of St. Mark, Venice,
150 (cut);
- ch. of San Salvatore, Venice,
151 (cut).
- Pietra Santa, Giacomo da, said to have built the ch. of Sant’Agostino, Rome,
72.
- Pilaster strips, form proper decoration for mediæval structures,
29,
82.
- Pilasters, coupling of,
31;
- use of, in the treatment of the angles of buildings,
78–81 (cut);
- the panelling of,
160;
- of Kirby Hall, England, support nothing but miniature pedestals,
219;
- portico of the chapel of the Pazzi,
31 (cut);
- façade of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
37,
38;
- National Museum, Florence, meaningless and artificial design in carving,
173 (cut);
- château of Azay le Rideau, France, combination of pseudo-Gothic and neo-classic forms,
186 (cut);
- façade of ch. of Sant’Andrea of Mantua,
41 (cut);
- San Biagio, Montepulciano, use of, on the angles in interior,
78 (cut);
- Palazzo Contarini, Venice, grouping of those of three different proportions and magnitudes,
161 (cut).
- Pisa cathedral, dome,
12.
- Pisan Romanesque architecture, of façade of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
37.
- Poleni, Memorie Istoriche delle Gran Cupola del Tempio Vaticano,
593;
- his strengthening of the dome of St. Peter’s,
62,
63;
- quoted on poor work of Bramante,
64.
- Pollaiuolo, Simione, called Il Cronaca, court and cornice of Palazzo Strozzi, Florence,
106.
- Pontoise, church of St. Maclou, remarkable Renaissance north portal,
214.
- Porches, church of San Zeno of Verona, a model from which
an illogical form of Renaissance portal is derived,
146 (cut);
- Cranborn Manor-House, England, illustrates Elizabethan
neo-classic ornamentation,
221,
222 (cut);
- Kirby Hall, England,
220;
- resemble Louvre pavilions,
220.
- Portals, from Serlio, in which the entablature is removed between the ressauts,
117,
118 (cut);
- illogical use of arch and entablature in the portals of north Italy,
144,
145 (cuts);
- illogical Renaissance portal derived from the porch of San Zeno of Verona,
146 (cut);
- unreason of Renaissance portals compared with those of Greek or Gothic art,
156;
- of cath. of Como, illogical use of arch and entablature,
144,
145 (cut),
149;
- Stanway House (England) gatehouse, neo-classic features,
223;
- Wollaton Hall, England, illustrates Elizabethan neo-classic ornamentation,
224 (cut);
- ch. of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
36 (cut),
41;
- château of Azay le Rideau, France, neo-classic details worked into a pseudo-Gothic scheme,
184;
- château of Chenonceaux, France, Flamboyant and neo-classic forms combined,
188 (cut);
- ch. of San Pietro in Cielo d’Oro, Pavia,
148 (cut);
- Palazzo Cancelleria, Rome, of almost Greek purity of design,
114;
- Scuola di San Marco, Venice,
156 (cut);
- Porta del Palio, Verona,
125 (cut).
- Portico, château of Écouen, the order of a Roman temple is produced without admixture of mediæval details or Italian corruptions,
192.
- Raphael, plans for St. Peter’s, Rome,
472.
- Ravenna, ch. of San Vitale mentioned,
140.
- Relief carving of the Renaissance, see Carving,
Architectural, of the Renaissance.
- Renaissance, conditions of,
1;
- intellectual movement in,
2,
8;
- neo-pagan revival in,
2,
8;
- its spirit as manifested in its fine arts,
3,
4,
6,
8;
- its architects were sculptors and painters,
6;
- art of painting in,
7.
- Renaissance architecture, element of individuality in,
4,
6;
- the classic style which was followed was that of the
decadent Greek schools as represented in Roman copies,
4,
247;
- architects were generally also painters and sculptors,
6,
96;
- a surface architecture,
6;
- little heed given to structural propriety,
23,
64,
66,
116;
- use of the classic order,
29;
- passing of the entablature through the arch imposts,
29;
- use of stucco,
32;
- alternation of wide and narrow intervals,
38;
- misapplication of the classic orders,
43,
247;
- the designers worked on a foundation of mediæval
ideas from which they could not free themselves,
43,
247;
- use of Roman models,
43,
117,
119,
247;
- breaking of the pediment,
93 (cut),
117;
- use of structural members without structural meaning,
116,
133,
135,
156,
165;
- entablature removed between the ressauts,
117;
- later architecture the work of men of little genuine artistic inspiration,
119,
133;
- architectural shams extensively produced by later architects,
121,
132;
- attempt to make half a metope fall at the end of the frieze,
121–122 (cut);
- barbaric compositions of frequent occurrence in later,
124;
- based on order and symmetry of a mechanical kind,
133;
- independent personal effort to be original at the bottom of most of the mistakes of,
206;
- no architects of, had a true conception of the principles of classic art,
230;
- theatrical in its spirit,
232;
- no true adaptation of classic elements in Renaissance design,
247;
- great influence of short-sighted and mechanical Italian rules in modern times,
248,
250;
- claims advanced for it as the only architecture of correct
principles since that of classic antiquity are without justification,
250;
- sculpture of, see Carving, architectural, of the Renaissance.
- Renaissance architecture, in England,
216–246 (cuts);
- Elizabethan art,
216–225 (cuts);
- its best features were of native growth out of the
mediæval feudal castle and the latest phase of perpendicular Gothic,
216,
225;
- use of classic details,
217,
218–225 (cuts);
- flimsiness of material in interiors and ornamental details,
217,
218;
- buildings have little foreign character in plan and
outline, but neo-classic forms are confined to ornamentation,
218,
221;
- strange aberrations of design wrought by foreigners and native craftsmen,
218–225 (cuts);
- fantastic gables features of the more showy architecture,
220;
- Flemish and Dutch ornamental workers,
220,
224;
- the design and execution of the buildings were performed by building craftsmen,
224,
225.
- Work of Jones and Wren,
226–246 (plate and cuts);
- use of classic details becoming established,
226,
228;
- acceptance of neo-classic style by the people,
228,
232,
233.
- Renaissance architecture, Florentine; church architecture,
26–43 (cuts);
- palace architecture,
102–111 (cuts and plate).
- See also Renaissance architecture and Florence.
- Renaissance architecture, in France, early,
179–193 (cuts);
- the French Renaissance château, conditions which gave rise to,
180;
- evolved from the feudal castle of the Middle Ages,
180,
201;
- factitious in composition,
179,
181,
2113;
- distorted neo-classic details worked into a pseudo-Gothic scheme,
184,
190;
- a survival of later Gothic habit of design is shown where
the continuity of upright lines is obtained in the use of superimposed pilasters with
ressauts in the entablatures,
188,
190;
- has a distinctly French expression,
179,
193,
194;
- later French Renaissance given a more marked neo-classic
dress by Lescot and De l’Orme,
194–215;
- misuse of structural forms in ornamentation,
199;
- excessive profusion of ornament,
200;
- church architecture, Gothic structural forms largely
entwined with a misapplication of classic details,
213–215.
- Renaissance architecture, Lombard,
135,
136–149;
- neo-classic influences confined largely to ornamental details,
136;
- illogical scheme of openings which became characteristic of,
144–149 (cuts).
- Renaissance architecture, North Italian, profusion of ornament
a marked characteristic of,
136;
- Lombard Romanesque forms modified by neo-classic features
mark the character of,
144;
- church architecture of the,
135–153 (cuts);
- mixture of mediæval and pseudo-classic forms,
149;
- palace architecture of the,
154–166 (cuts);
- later architecture of the, based on the art of Palladio and Vignola,
165.
- See Renaissance architecture.
- Renaissance architecture, Venetian,
135;
- church architecture,
149–153;
- palace architecture,
154–163 (cuts);
- its most characteristic architecture is that of the
palaces of the grand canal,
159;
- the usual scheme of the front that of a wide central
bay wholly occupied by openings flanked by lateral bays with a solid wall on
either side of an opening,
162,
163;
- neo-classic influences confined largely to ornamental details,
136;
- illogical scheme of openings which became characteristic of,
144–149 (cuts);
- drew some of its material from Florentine and Lombard sources,
149;
- later architecture follows the measurably uniform style
of Vignola and Palladio,
153,
162;
- overlaying with heavy orders the typical unequal main
divisions of the palace fronts,
162,
163.
- Ressauts, irrational use of,
38;
- of façade of Santa Maria Novella, Florence,
37;
- of San Francesco of Rimini,
38;
- of ch. of Santa Maria degli Angeli, Assisi,
89.
- Rhenish Romanesque style of ch. of Sant’Agostino, Rome,
72.
- Ribs, system of, in Florence dome,
16–19,
55 (cuts);
- in Gothic vaulting have nothing of the character of dome ribs,
20,
21,
56;
- of St. Peter’s dome, Rome,
55,
56,
59;
- of cath. of Salamanca,
57,
58.
- Riccio, Antonio, his work on east side of the court of the Ducal Palace, Venice,
154 (plate).
- Rimini, San Francesco of, church of,
35;
- façade,
38,
42;
- modelled on the arch of Septimius Severus,
38,
42;
- ressauts,
38.
- Roman arch and entablature scheme applied to a continuous arcade,
118,
119.
- Roman architecture, furnished models for Renaissance architecture,
38,
40,
43,
97;
- use of entablature block in,
37;
- use of the arch in,
37;
- the ressaut,
38;
- triumphal arch design a model for Renaissance façades,
38,
39–43 (cut);
- treatment of the angle,
79 (cut).
- Roman architectural carving, furnished models for Renaissance work,
167;
- tasteless and meaningless designs,
1701;
- leafage of, compared with Greek leafage,
174 (cuts).
- Roman Renaissance, church architecture of the,
66–101 (cuts);
- palatial architecture,
112–134.
- See Renaissance architecture and Rome.
- Romanesque architecture,
7;
- Rhenish Romanesque style of ch. of Sant’Agostino, Rome,
72.
- Rome, its monuments the inspiration of Renaissance architecture,
3,
43,
247;
- St. Peter’s, rebuilding and demolishing of the old basilica,
47;
- work of Rossellino,
47;
- work of Bramante,
47–53 (cuts),
63,
64,
70;
- date of the beginning of building,
47;
- general plan,
47,
53,
66 (cut);
- the plans of Raphael and Peruzzi,
472;
- work of Michael Angelo,
54–65 (cuts),
66;
- work of Maderna,
66,
245;
- short-sighted admiration of,
71;
- design of Antonio San Gallo,
71;
- influence of, seen in other churches,
90,
92;
- arabesque on door-valves,
170 (cut);
- Wren’s scheme for St. Paul’s based on the model of,
236,
237;
- comparison of, with St. Paul’s,
236,
239,
241,
243,
245.
- Dome,
44–65 (cuts);
- use of the Pantheon and the Basilica of Maxentius as models,
49–52 (cuts);
- drum,
50 (cut),
53;
- abutments,
50 (cut),
53;
- colonnade,
51,
56,
142;
- lantern,
52;
- piers,
53,
66,
68;
- buttresses,
53 (cut),
55,
56,
59;
- design of Michael Angelo,
53–65 (cuts);
- his alterations of Bramante’s scheme,
53–55,
64;
- attic,
54 (cut);
- vault shells,
54 (cut),
55;
- ribs,
55,
56,
59;
- binding chains,
59,
60,
62;
- ruptures in,
59,
60–63 (cut),
64;
- mathematicians’ report of the condition of the structure in 1742,
60 (cut);
- violation of laws of stability in,
64,
65;
- strengthening of Bramante’s work,
641;
- its beauty exaggerated,
65;
- likeness of Wren’s scheme of St. Paul’s to,
236.
- Exterior,
68–70 (cut);
- makeshifts necessitated by the use of the colossal order,
68–70 (cut);
- aisle walls carried to the height of the clerestory,
68,
245;
- domes over the aisles,
68–70 (cut),
245.
- Interior, Bramante’s scheme,
53,
66;
- Michael Angelo’s work,
53,
66–70;
- piers,
53,
66,
68;
- effect of magnitude dwarfed by the colossal order,
53,
67,
68;
- great size of the structural parts,
68;
- part of the vault hidden by the cornice,
68,
92;
- its ornamentation a cheap deception,
71;
- ressauts,
90,
92.
- Church of the Gesù,
91–95 (cuts);
- Vignola’s plan given in his book on the Five Orders,
92;
- interior, general scheme,
92;
- orders,
92;
- entablature,
92;
- façade,
92–95 (cuts);
- broken pediments of,
93,
95;
- scroll work and hermæ,
93;
- reversed consoles,
95;
- tablets,
95 (cut).
- Church of Sant’Agostino,
72–74 (cuts);
- its architects,
72;
- date,
72;
- the general style is Rhenish Romanesque,
72;
- nave,
72;
- Renaissance ornamental details,
72 (cut);
- façade,
73,
74 (cut);
- truncated pediment,
74;
- tablets in wall surface,
74;
- dome,
74.
- Church of Sant’Andrea di Ponte Molle,
86–89 (cuts);
- dome,
86;
- façade,
86–88 (cut),
92,
101;
- likeness to the Pantheon,
87;
- entablature,
89 (cut).
- Church of San Biagio, entablature,
78 (cut).
- Church of Santa Maria della Pace, cloister arcade,
119.
- Church of St. Paul outside the wall, entablature,
301.
- The Tempietto,
44–46 (cut);
- the dome and its drum,
44,
74;
- resemblance to the temple of Vesta,
44,
45;
- orders,
45,
83;
- dome of St. Paul’s, London, recalls,
239.
- Arch of Septimius Severus used as model of façades by Alberti,
38,
39–43 (cut);
- treatment of angle in,
79.
- Arch of the Silversmiths,
39.
- Arch of Titus, scheme of, used by Sansovino in the
Loggetta of the Campanile, Venice,
123.
- Basilica of , columns and arches,
37;
- as model for St. Peter’s,
49.
- Baths of Caracalla, entablature,
29.
- Pantheon,
10,
151,
87;
- said to be taken as model for dome of Florence cathedral,
16;
- grandeur of,
23;
- as model for Bramante’s dome of St. Peter’s,
49,
52 (cuts);
- its internal character,
521;
- abutments,
49 (cut),
52;
- not a homogeneous structure,
89.
- Porta Maggiore, form of column similar to that
claimed by De l’Orme as his own invention,
205.
- Temple of Peace. See Basilica of Maxentius.
- Theatre of Marcellus, its façade followed by
Sansovino for the library of St. Mark’s,
122.
- Palazzo Cancelleria, façade,
112–114 (cut);
- window openings, north Italian,
112,
149;
- podium introduced beneath each order,
112;
- spacing of the columns of the order,
112,
114;
- projecting bays at each end,
113;
- portal of almost Greek purity of design,
114;
- court,
114.
- Palazzo Farnese,
116–118;
- window openings framed by structural members without
structural meaning,
116,
117 (cut);
- removal of entablature between ressauts over window openings,
117 (cut);
- court, treatment of columns,
118.
- Palazzo Girand Torlonia,
112;
- window opening, north Italian,
112,
149.
- Palazzo Massimi, façade described,
114–116 (cut);
- wall above basement unbroken by pilasters or string courses,
114;
- portico,
114,
115;
- spacing of columns and pilasters of basement,
114;
- window openings,
115.
- Ronsard, his poem on Lescot cited,
196.
- Roof, timber, built over early domes,
10,
11.
- Rossellino, his use of the orders in the Duomo of Pienza,
42,
43;
- his work on the basilica of St. Peter, Rome,
47.
- Ruptures, in the dome of Florence cathedral,
23,
24;
- in the dome of St. Peter’s, Rome,
59,
60–63 (cut);
- not necessarily alarming in a properly constructed vault,
622.
- Rustication of masonry,
109;
- Salamanca, cathedral of, dome, how it approaches
and differs in nature from a Gothic vault,
57–59 (cuts).
- San Gallo, Antonio, the elder,
90;
- his work on ch. of San Biagio, Montepulciano, Rome,
78–83;
- ch. of Santissima Annunziatta, Arezzo,
83.
- San Gallo, Antonio, the younger, his design for St. Peter’s, Rome,
71;
- Palazzo Farnese, Rome,
116.
- San Gallo, Giuliano da, designed Palazzo Gondi, Florence,
107,
176;
- leafage of capital,
176 (cut).
- San Giovanni, Florence Baptistery,
14,
16.
- Sanmichele, Porta del Palio, Verona,
125 (cut);
- Palazzo Canalla, Verona,
126;
- Palazzo Pompei alla Vittoria, Verona,
126;
- Palazzo Bevilacqua, Verona,
126,
127 (cut).
- Sansovino (Jacopo Tatti), his predilection for classic forms,
119,
120;
- library of St. Mark, Venice,
121 (cut),
130;
- his attempt to make half the metope fall at the end of the frieze,
121,
122;
- small free-standing column placed on each side of the
pier to bear the archivolt, often spoken of as an invention of,
123,
130,
131 (cut);
- Loggetta of the Campanile, Venice,
123;
- his use of a form of column claimed by De l’Orme as his own invention,
205.
- Scaffolding said to have been employed by Brunelleschi,
213.
- Scamozzi,
133,
134;
- peculiar form of compound window, sometimes called his invention,
134 (cut).
- Scrollwork, of façade of the ch. of the Gesù, Rome,
93.
- Sculpture, on buildings, has in Gothic art only an
appropriate architectural character, and a high degree of excellence in the
development of form,
167;
- Greek, is in a measure independent of the building on which it is placed,
167;
- of the human figure in Renaissance art, has little proper architectural character,
167;
- relief carving of the Renaissance,
167–178 (cuts).
- See Carving, architectural, of the Renaissance.
- Sebastiano, architect of ch. of Sant’Agostino, Rome,
72.
- Serlio, Regole Generali di Architettura di Sebastiano Serlio,
442,
1962;
- cited on the work of Bramante on St. Peter’s, Rome,
472,
49;
- quoted on corner pilasters,
79;
- cited on the removal of the entablature between the ressauts,
117 (cut);
- influence on Lescot,
196;
- his column practically the same as that claimed by De l’Orme as his own invention,
203 (cut).
- Sgrilli, Descrizione e Studj dell’Insigne Fabbrica di S. Maria del Fiore, quoted,
23.
- Siena, Palazzo Pubblico,
102.
- Soane Museum, John Thorpe’s drawings,
2182,
221.
- Spavento, church of San Salvatore, Venice,
150.
- Spire, Gothic, far removed from anything proper to classic composition,
83.
- Steeples, Wren’s,
246;
- are the outcome of the Renaissance spire-like towers,
82.
- Strozzi, Filippo,
110.
- Stucco, use in Renaissance architecture,
32,
132,
133.
- Syria, St. Simeon Stylites, use of the free-standing
column under the archivolts,
131 (cut);
- Basilica of Shakka, form of window opening reproduced
in architecture of the Renaissance,
134.
- Tablets, rectangular in façade surface,
74;
- ugly shapes of, in the façade of The Gesù, Rome,
95 (cut);
- of Vignola,
95 (cut).
- Tatti, Jacopo. See Sansovino.
- Thorpe, John, his plans show a French influence,
218,
220;
- little is known of him,
2182;
- Kirby Hall, England,
218–220 (cuts);
- Longford Castle,
221.
- Thrust, the, of a dome,
151,
24,
52.
- Ties, wooden used in Gothic buildings,
222.
- Tivoli, temple of Vesta, resemblance of the Tempietto, Rome, to,
44,
45 (cut).
- Todi, church of Santa Maria della Consolazione,
74–77 (cuts);
- the scheme is Byzantine,
74,
77;
- dome,
74,
75,
77;
- interior,
75 (cut);
- orders,
75–77 (cut);
- piers,
75,
76;
- exterior,
77 (cut);
- similarity between the sacristy of San Satiro, of Milan, and,
140;
- between cath. of Como and,
144.
- Towers, spire-like, of the Renaissance,
81;
- scheme based on the Lombard Romanesque tower and the
mediæval campanile,
82;
- of ch. of San Biagio at Montepulciano,
78,
81 (cuts);
- of ch. of Santo Spirito, Florence,
81,
82 (cut);
- Giotto’s,
82.
- Triglyph, problem of the arrangement of, at the end of the frieze,
121,
122 (cuts).
- Triumphal arch used as a model of Renaissance façades,
38,
39–43 (cuts).
- Vanvitelli, his placing of binding chains around the
dome of St. Peter’s, Rome,
62.
- Variety, unmeaning, different from that which results
from an active inventive spirit,
2111.
- Vasari, Le Opere di Giorgio Vasari quoted,
16;
- cited on Brunelleschi’s account of the dome of Florence,
181,
221;
- cited,
331,
110;
- cited on Alberti’s work,
35,
44,
107;
- cited on rebuilding St. Peter’s, Rome,
47;
- his short-sighted admiration of St. Peter’s,
71;
- quoted on Michelozzi,
105,
149;
- cited on the Palazzo Strozzi, Florence,
106.
- Vault, Gothic, why a dome cannot have the character of a,
20,
21,
56–59 (cuts).
- Vaults, the nature of the construction of a
circular-celled vault on Gothic principles,
56–59 (cuts);
- of the chapel of the Pazzi, Florence,
27,
28,
56;
- ch. of San Spirito, Florence,
34;
- chapel of St. Peter Martyr, ch. of Sant’Eustorgio, Milan,
142.
- Venetian Renaissance. See Renaissance, Venetian.
- Venice, church of The Redentore, general scheme,
100 (cut);
- east end,
100,
101;
- orders,
101;
- façade,
101.
- Church of S. Fantino,
151.
- Church of San Francesco della Vigna façade,
100.
- Church of San Giorgio Maggiore,
97;
- nave,
97,
98;
- piers,
97,
98 (cut);
- orders raised on pedestals,
98,
99;
- placed under the archivolts,
98;
- entablature,
98,
99,
101;
- façade,
99 (cut),
101.
- Church of Santa Maria Formosa reproduces features of
St. Andrea of Mantua with details of the character of the Lombardi,
153.
- Church of Santa Maria dei Miracoli,
151 (cut),
156;
- refinement in details,
151;
- façade a marvel of excellence in mechanical execution,
151,
152 (cut);
- Lombard blind arcade recalled in decoration of the façade,
151;
- carving of ear of barley and flower stalks,
169 (plate);
- carved mask from a pilaster,
178 (cut).
- Church of St. Mark, piers pierced longitudinally and transversely,
150 (cut).
- Church of San Salvatore,
150,
151;
- peculiar pier supports of the barrel vaulting,
150 (cut);
- use of an attic as support for vaulting,
151;
- its system is that of the ch. of St. Mark,
151.
- Church of San Zaccaria, general description of interior,
149,
150;
- singular column of nondescript character,
150 (cut).
- Palaces of the grand canal, finest are those of the later mediæval period,
159.
- Palazzo Contarini,
161;
- details of façade,
161;
- window openings,
161 (cut);
- grouping of pilasters of three different proportions and magnitudes,
161 (cut).
- Palazzo Corner-Spinelli,
160 (plate);
- window openings, mediæval features, incompleted circle in the tympanum space,
160;
- pilasters, panelling of,
160.
- Palazzo Cornaro, description of the front,
124;
- unequal main divisions of the front overladen with heavy orders,
162.
- Ducal Palace, east side of the court,
154 (plate);
- façade described in detail,
154,
155;
- window openings described,
154,
155;
- north side of court, window openings,
155 (cut);
- giant’s stair, fine execution of,
156;
- arabesque after Roman model,
167 (cut);
- grotesque creatures in the relief of the Scala d’Oro,
177 (cut).
- Palazzo Grimani, façade,
163.
- Palazzo Pesaro,
163.
- Palazzo Valmarano,
133.
- Palazzo Vendramini,
161;
- full orders in all three stories,
161,
162;
- grouping of mediæval window openings,
162;
- balconies,
162;
- disproportion of topmost entablature,
162.
- Library of St. Mark,
121 (cut);
- arrangement of the metope in the frieze,
121,
122 (cuts);
- orders,
122;
- frieze and balustraded balconies,
123;
- free-standing column under the archivolt in the order of the upper story,
123,
130.
- Loggetta of the Campanile,
123.
- Scuola di San Marco, description of façade,
156–158 (cut);
- portal, described, unreason of its composition,
156 (cut);
- carvings,
157.
- Scuola di San Rocco, façade described,
158 (cut);
- portal,
159;
- window openings with mediæval features and others
with pseudo-Corinthian colonnettes,
159 (cut),
160.
- The Zecca, form of column claimed by De l’Orme as his own invention,
205.
- Verona, church of San Zeno, porch and portal,
146 (cut).
- Palazzo Bevilacqua, description of façade,
126,
127 (cut).
- Palazzo Canalla,
126.
- Palazzo del Consiglio,
163 (plate);
- presents a mediæval broletto scheme dressed out in Renaissance details,
163;
- in respect to its finest qualities it belongs to the Middle Ages,
163.
- Palazzo Pompei alla Vittoria,
126.
- Porta del Palio, description of façades,
125 (cut),
126.
- Vicenza, Town hall portico by Palladio,
130–132 (cut);
- use of free-standing columns under the archivolts,
130;
- columns of the great orders act somewhat as buttresses,
131.
- Palazzo Colleone-Porta,
133.
- Palazzo Porta-Barbarano,
133.
- Palazzo Valmarano,
133.
- Loggia Bernarda,
133 (cut).
- Vignola, I Cinque Ordini d’Architettura,
84,
85,
92;
- entablature which he calls his own invention,
85 (cut);
- his unclassic and incongruous combinations,
86,
95;
- eliminates mediæval forms,
92;
- tablet from,
95 (cut);
- great influence of his writings,
248;
- ch. of Sant’Andrea di Ponte Molle, Rome,
86–89 (cuts),
92;
- ch. of Santa Maria degli Angeli, Assisi,
89;
- ch. of the Gesù, Rome,
91–95 (cuts);
- Palazzo Caprarola, near Viterbo,
128.
- Violette-le-Duc, S. V. Château,
1711,
1811;
- Entretiens sur l’Architecture,
2073;
- quoted on French architects of the Renaissance,
1791;
- quoted on château of Chambord,
191;
- quoted on De l’Orme,
2001;
- his genius more scientific than artistic,
2001;
- quoted on the château of Charleval,
211,
212;
- errs in his reasoning in his discourse on Renaissance architecture,
211–213.
- Villani, quoted,
2.
- Villari, cited,
31.
- Viterbo, Palazzo Caprarola, near Viterbo, general description of,
128–130;
- a source of inspiration to later architects of trans-alpine Renaissance,
130.
- Vitruvius,
85;
- quoted on the orders,
86;
- taken by Palladio as his master,
96,
97;
- later Renaissance architects based their practice on the writings of,
119;
- cited on meaningless Roman ornamental designs,
1701;
- notion that the Ionic order was designed after female proportions, derived from,
2071.
- Walpole, Horace, Anecdotes of Painting,
226;
- quoted on Inigo Jones,
226,
229;
- quoted on faults of Jones’s façade of old St. Paul’s, London,
231,
232.
- Ware, Isaac, A Complete Body of Architecture,
2481,
2491;
- quoted on the rules of ancient architects,
248,
249.
- Wenz, Paul, Die Kuppel des Domes Santa Maria del Fiore zu Florenz,
201.
- Willis, his term “continuous impost” used,
1881.
- Window openings, framed by structural members without structural meaning,
116;
- a peculiar form of compound, sometimes called an invention of Scamozzi,
134 (cut),
143;
- the same form occurs in the basilica of Shakka,
134 (cut);
- tapering jamb shafts,
137 (cut),
142,
149;
- illogical scheme of, which became characteristic of
Lombard and Venetian Renaissance architecture,
148 (cut);
- mediæval form of those in Venetian palaces,
159 (cut),
160,
162;
- Lower Walterstone Hall, England, illustrates
Elizabethan neo-classic ornamentation,
221 (cut);
- château of Azay le Rideau, France, Flamboyant Gothic
and neo-classic forms combined,
186 (cut);
- château of Charleval, France, unmeaning variation of details,
210,
211 (cut);
- Palazzo Bartolini, Florence,
109 (cut);
- Palazzo Guardagni, Florence,
107;
- the Quaratesi, Florence,
106;
- the Riccardi, Florence, mediæval in their larger
features, but with tapering jamb shafts,
103;
- Palazzo Rucellai, Florence,
109 (cut);
- Ospedale Maggiore, Milan,
165 (cut);
- of the Certosa of Pavia, tapering jamb shafts,
137 (cut);
- Palazzo Cancelleria,
112 (cut);
- of Palazzo Farnese, Rome, framed by structural
members without structural meaning,
116 (cut);
- Ducal Palace, Venice, east side of court,
154;
- north side, pseudo-Corinthian order of,
155 (cut);
- Palazzo Contarini, Venice, grouping of the pilasters,
161 (cut);
- Palazzo Corner-Spinelli, Venice, mediæval features,
incomplete circle in the tympanum space,
160;
- Palazzo Corneri, Venice,
124 (cut);
- Palazzo Vendramini, Venice, grouping of, in the bays of the façade,
162;
- Scuola di San Rocco, Venice, with mediæval features and
with pseudo-Corinthian colonnettes,
159 (cut);
- Palazzo Bevilacqua, Verona,
126,
127;
- Palazzo Branzo, Vicenza, a peculiar form of compound
window, sometimes called an invention of Scamozzi,
134.
- Wren, Sir Christopher, Parentalia, or Memoir of the
Family of the Wrens,
2323 ff.;
- professor of astronomy at Oxford,
233;
- quotations from a letter written during his visit to Paris,
233;
- quoted on his Sheldonian theatre, Oxford,
234;
- ordered to submit designs for the restoration of old
St. Paul’s cathedral, London,
234;
- his drawings of plans for the new structure,
235–238 (cuts);
- building of the present structure,
239–245 (cuts);
- his scheme to “reconcile the Gothic to a better manner,”
238,
243,
245;
- he learned his art on the scaffold in close contact with the works,
239;
- his churches other than St. Paul’s exhibit a medley of
elements from spurious Gothic to pseudo-classic in irrational combinations,
245,
246;
- his spires are hybrid compositions of barbaric character,
246.