On Architecture, Volume I

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A01=Vitruvius
Ancient engineering
Ancient Rome
Aqueducts
Architect's requirements
Architectural theory
Architectural treatise
Artillery
Augustus
Author_Vitruvius
Building materials
Category=DNL
Classical architecture
De Architectura
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eq_biography-true-stories
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Greek influence
Hydraulic engineering
Loeb Classical Library
Military machines
On Architecture
Public buildings
Renaissance architecture
Road construction
Roman architecture
Roman baths
Roman engineering
Temple design
Urban planning
Vitruvius

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674992771
  • Weight: 295g
  • Dimensions: 108 x 162mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Jan 1931
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Renaissance man avant la lettre.

Vitruvius (Marcus V. Pollio), Roman architect and engineer, studied Greek philosophy and science and gained experience in the course of professional work. He was one of those appointed to be overseers of imperial artillery or military engines, and was architect of at least one unit of buildings for Augustus in the reconstruction of Rome. Late in life and in ill health he completed, sometime before 27 BC, De Architectura which, after its rediscovery in the fifteenth century, was influential enough to be studied by architects from the early Renaissance to recent times.

In On Architecture Vitruvius adds to the tradition of Greek theory and practice the results of his own experience. The contents of this treatise in ten books are as follows. Book 1: Requirements for an architect; town planning; design, cities, aspects; temples. 2: Materials and their treatment. Greek systems. 3: Styles. Forms of Greek temples. Ionic. 4: Styles. Corinthian, Ionic, Doric; Tuscan; altars. 5: Other public buildings (fora, basilicae, theaters, colonnades, baths, harbors). 6: Sites and planning, especially of houses. 7: Construction of pavements, roads, mosaic floors, vaults. Decoration (stucco, wall painting, colors). 8: Hydraulic engineering; water supply; aqueducts. 9: Astronomy. Greek and Roman discoveries; signs of the zodiac, planets, moon phases, constellations, astrology, gnomon, sundials. 10: Machines for war and other purposes.

Frank Stephen Granger (1864–1936) was Professor of Classics and Philosophy at the University of Nottingham.

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