Principles of design in architecture, a series of letters to a friend1809 |
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Výsledky 1 - 5 z 31.
Strana 4
... convenience ; of Sacred , convenience for religious ceremony ; of Civil , public convenience , a fitness for the common pur- poses of many families , associated in one commu- nity , and under one government ; of Military , the end is ...
... convenience ; of Sacred , convenience for religious ceremony ; of Civil , public convenience , a fitness for the common pur- poses of many families , associated in one commu- nity , and under one government ; of Military , the end is ...
Strana 16
... convenience , to follow those who comprehend under that name all . the countries between the Mediterranean and the great desert ) architecture had been making con- siderable advances , while the Israelites were living in Egypt ...
... convenience , to follow those who comprehend under that name all . the countries between the Mediterranean and the great desert ) architecture had been making con- siderable advances , while the Israelites were living in Egypt ...
Strana 18
... convenience , which requires accommodation for assembled multitudes , would urge to the use of these , and promote the cultivation of the joiners art . Solomon appears to have proposed to raise the most magnificent temple , and the most ...
... convenience , which requires accommodation for assembled multitudes , would urge to the use of these , and promote the cultivation of the joiners art . Solomon appears to have proposed to raise the most magnificent temple , and the most ...
Strana 23
... convenience . Certainly it was of extensive preva- lence , and especially in our own country ; where not only all the numerous earthen monuments of the dead , but all the rude temples of stone , attri- buted to the Druids , and the ...
... convenience . Certainly it was of extensive preva- lence , and especially in our own country ; where not only all the numerous earthen monuments of the dead , but all the rude temples of stone , attri- buted to the Druids , and the ...
Strana 25
... convenience , which requires accommodation for assembled multitudes , would urge to the use of these , and promote the cultivation of the joiner s art . Solomon appears to have proposed to raise the most magnificent temple , and the ...
... convenience , which requires accommodation for assembled multitudes , would urge to the use of these , and promote the cultivation of the joiner s art . Solomon appears to have proposed to raise the most magnificent temple , and the ...
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Časté výrazy a frázy
admiration advantageous altogether antiquity appears Arabian archi architect architrave Athens Babylonia beautiful book of Kings brick building called capital castle cathedral character church colonnade columns common considerable convenience Corinthian cornice cottages decoration desired dome domestic Doric Doric order early edifice effect Egypt elegance England equally Europe example exterior extraordinary fancy Fashion Gothic grace grandeur Grecian architecture Grecian taste Grecian temple Greece Greeks ingenious Inigo Jones intablature interior architecture Ionic Italy judgement kind less LETTER lofty Lord Burlington magnificence material merit military monumental Norman object observed ornament palace palæstra perfection perhaps Phenicia picturesk pier pillar Plantagenet pointed arch portico principal proportions public favor purpose reckon reigns Roman architecture Rome roof saint Paul's saint Peter's Salisbury cathedral Saxon seems seen shaft simplicity splendid splendor stone style superior tecture tion triglyphs variety Vitruvius walls wanted whence Winchester cathedral wood
Populárne pasáže
Strana 158 - Ask where's the North? at York, 'tis on the Tweed; In Scotland, at the Orcades; and there, At Greenland, Zembla, or the Lord knows where.
Strana 134 - CAITI.I. called the Queen's Oriel is remarkable for the fancy, luxuriance, and elegance of the workmanship. Nor is the contrivance of the little terraced garden below, considering the history of the times, a matter of small curiosity, where, though all the surrounding country were hostile, fresh air might be safely enjoyed ; and the commanding view of the singularly beautiful landscape around, from both that little herbary or garden, and the bay window or oriel, is so managed as to leave no doubt...
Strana 197 - Jungere si velit, et varias inducere plumas Undique collatis membris, ut turpiter atrum Desinat in piscem mulier formosa superne, Spectatum admissi risum teneatis, amici...
Strana 271 - I venture to deliver it as . my opinion that there are only two characters of buildings: the one may be called perpendicular, and the other horizontal. Under the first, I class all buildings erected in England before and during the early part of Queen Elizabeth's reign, whether deemed Saracenic, Saxon, Norman, or the Gothic of the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries ; and even that peculiar kind called Queen Elizabeth's Gothic, in which turrets prevailed, though battlements were discarded and Grecian...
Strana 133 - Conway," observes an anonymous author, "what is called the Queen's Oriel is remarkable for the fancy, luxuriance, and elegance of the workmanship. Nor is the contrivance of the little terraced garden below, considering the history of the times, a matter of small curiosity, where, though all the surrounding country were hostile, fresh air might be safely enjoyed; and the commanding view of the singularly beautiful landscape around, from both that little herbary or garden, and the bay window or oriel...
Strana 258 - ... above may be increased, or must be diminished, according to circumstances. If a greater width of foundation be thought necessary, it must be gained by increasing the number of the footings, and not their width. The height of abutment, and span, and rise of arch, I suppose prescribed for the engineer.
Strana 86 - Instead of a mere sacristy for the priests, the term at which the pomp of processions ended, and in front of which, under the vault of the sky...
Strana 44 - Tis with our judgements as our watches, none Co just alike, but each believes his own.