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Vitruvius
The Ten Books on Architecture
Book I
Preface
1. While your divine intelligence and will, Imperator Caesar, were engaged
in acquiring the right to command the world, and while your fellow citizens,
when all their enemies had been laid low by your invincible valour, were
glorying in your triumph and victory, while all foreign nations were in
subjection awaiting your beck and call, and the Roman people and senate,
released from their alarm, were beginning to be guided by your most noble
conceptions and policies, I hardly dared, in view of your serious employments,
to publish my writings and long considered ideas on architecture, for fear
of subjecting myself to your displeasure by an unseasonable interruption.
2. But when I saw that you were giving your attention not only to the
welfare of society in general and to the establishment of public order,
but also to the providing of public buildings intended for utilitarian
purposes, so that not only should the State have been enriched with provinces
by your means, but that the greatness of its power might likewise be attended
with distinguished authority in its public buildings, I thought that I
ought to take the first opportunity to lay before you my writings on this
theme. For in the first place it was this subject which made me known to
your father, to whom I was devoted on account of his great qualities. After
the council of heaven gave him a place in the dwellings of immortal life
and transferred your father's power to your hands, my devotion continuing
unchanged as I remembered him inclined me to support you. And so with Marcus
Aurelius, Publius Minidius, and Gnaeus Cornelius, I was ready to supply
and repair ballistae, scorpiones, and other artillery, and I have received
rewards for good service with them. After your first bestowal of these
upon me, you continued to renew them on the recommendation of your sister.
3. Owing to this favour I need have no fear of want to the end of my
life, and being thus laid under obligation I began to write this work for
you, because I saw that you have built and are now building extensively,
and that in future also you will take care that our public and private
buildings shall be worthy to go down to posterity by the side of your other
splendid achievements. I have drawn up definite rules to enable you, by
observing them, to have personal knowledge of the quality both of existing
buildings and of those which are yet to be constructed. For in the following
books I have disclosed all the principles of the art.
Chapter I
The Education of the Architect
1. The architect should be equipped with knowledge of many branches
of study and varied kinds of learning, for it is by his judgment that all
work done by the other arts is put to test. This knowledge is the child
of practice and theory. Practice is the continuous and regular exercise
of employment where manual work is done with any necessary material according
to the design of a drawing. Theory, on the other hand, is the ability to
demonstrate and explain the productions of dexterity on the principles
of proportion.
2. It follows, therefore, that architects who have aimed at acquiring
manual skill without scholarship have never been able to reach a position
of authority to correspond to their pains, while those who relied only
upon theories and scholarship were obviously hunting the shadow, not the
substance. But those who have a thorough knowledge of both, like men armed
at all points, have the sooner attained their object and carried authority
with them.
3. In all matters, but particularly in architecture, there are these
two points: the thing signified, and that which gives it its significance.
That which is signified is the subject of which we may be speaking; and
that which gives significance is a demonstration on scientific principles.
It appears, then, that one who professes himself an architect should be
well versed in both directions. He ought, therefore, to be both naturally
gifted and amenable to instruction. Neither natural ability without instruction
nor instruction without natural ability can make the perfect artist. Let
him be educated, skillful with the pencil, instructed in geometry, know
much history, have followed the philosophers with attention, understand
music, have some knowledge of medicine, know the opinions of the jurists,
and be acquainted with astronomy and the theory of the heavens.
4. The reasons for all this are as follows. An architect ought to be
an educated man so as to leave a more lasting remembrance in his treatises.
Secondly, he must have a knowledge of drawing so that he can readily make
sketches to show the appearance of the work which he proposes. Geometry,
also, is of much assistance in architecture, and in particular it teaches
us the use of the rule and compasses, by which especially we acquire readiness
in making plans for buildings in their grounds, and rightly apply the square,
the level, and the plummet. By means of optics, again, the light in buildings
can be drawn from fixed quarters of the sky. It is true that it is by arithmetic
that the total cost of buildings is calculated and measurements are computed,
but difficult questions involving symmetry are solved by means of geometrical
theories and methods.
5. A wide knowledge of history is requisite because, among the ornamental
parts of an architect's design for a work, there are many the underlying
idea of whose employment he should be able to explain to Greek inquirers.
For instance, suppose him to set up the marble statues of women in long
robes, called Caryatides, to take the place of columns, with the mutules
and coronas placed directly above their heads, he will give the following
explanation to his questioners. Caryae, a state in Peloponnesus, sided
with the Persian enemies against Greece; later the Greeks, having gloriously
won their freedom by victory in the war, made common cause and declared
war against the people of Caryae. They took the town, killed the men, abandoned
the State to desolation, and carried off their wives into slavery, without
permitting them, however, to lay aside the long robes and other marks of
their rank as married women, so that they might be obliged not only to
march in the triumph but to appear forever after as a type of slavery,
burdened with the weight of their shame and so making atonement for their
State. Hence, the architects of the time designed for public buildings
statues of these women, placed so as to carry a load, in order that the
sin and the punishment of the people of Caryae might be known and handed
down even to posterity.
6. Likewise the Lacedaemonians under the leadership of Pausanias, son
of Agesipolis, after conquering the Persian armies, infinite in number,
with a small force at the battle of Plataea, celebrated a glorious triumph
with the spoils and booty, and with the money obtained from the sale thereof
built the Persian Porch, to be a monument to the renown and valour of the
people and a trophy of victory for posterity. And there they set effigies
of the prisoners arrayed in barbarian costume and holding up the roof,
their pride punished by this deserved affront, that enemies might tremble
for fear of the effects of their courage, and that their own people, looking
upon this ensemble of their valour and encouraged by the glory of it, might
be ready to defend their independence. So from that time on, many have
put up statues of Persians supporting entablatures and their ornaments,
and thus from that motive have greatly enriched the diversity of their
works. There are other stories of the same kind which architects ought
to know.
7. As for philosophy, it makes an architect high-minded and not self
assuming, but rather renders him courteous, just, and honest without avariciousness.
This is very important, for no work can be rightly done without honesty
and incorruptibility. Let him not be grasping nor have his mind preoccupied
with the idea of receiving perquisites, but let him with dignity keep up
his position by cherishing a good reputation. These are among the precepts
of philosophy. Furthermore philosophy treats of physics where a more careful
knowledge is required because the problems which come under this head are
numerous and of very different kinds; as, for example, in the case of the
conducting of water. For at points of intake and at curves, and at places
where it is raised to a level, currents of air naturally form in one way
or another; and nobody who has not learned the fundamental principles of
physics from philosophy will be able to provide against the damage which
they do. So the reader of Ctesibius or Archimedes and the other writers
of treatises of the same class will not be able to appreciate them unless
he has been trained in these subjects by the philosophers.
8. Music, also, the architect ought to understand so that he may have
knowledge of the canonical and mathematical theory, and besides be able
to tune ballistae, catapultae, and scorpiones to the proper key. For to
the right and left in the beams are the holes in the frames through which
the strings of twisted sinew are stretched by means of windlasses and bars,
and these strings must not be clamped and made fast until they give the
same correct note to the ear of the skilled workman. For the arms thrust
through those stretched strings must, on being let go, strike their blow
together at the same moment; but if they are not in unison, they will prevent
the course of projectiles from being straight.
9. In theaters, likewise, there are the bronze vessels which are placed
in niches under the seats in accordance with the musical intervals on mathematical
principles. These vessels are arranged with a view to musical concords
or harmony, and apportioned in the compass of the fourth, the fifth, and
the octave, and so on up to the double octave, in such a way that when
the voice of an actor falls in unison with any of them its power is increased,
and it reaches the ears of the audience with greater clearness and sweetness.
Water organs, too, and the other instruments which resemble them cannot
be made by one who is without the principles of music.
10. The architect should also have a knowledge of the study of medicine
on account of the questions of climates air, the healthiness and unhealthiness
of sites, and the use of different waters. For without these considerations,
the healthiness of a dwelling cannot be assured. And as for principles
of law, he should know those which are necessary in the case of buildings
having party walls, with regard to water dripping from the eaves, and also
the laws about drains, windows, and water supply. And other things of this
sort should be known to architects, so that, before they begin upon buildings,
they may be careful not to leave disputed points for the householders to
settle after the works are finished, and so that in drawing up contracts
the interests of both employer and contractor may be wisely safe-guarded.
For if a contract is skillfully drawn, each may obtain a release from the
other without disadvantage. From astronomy we find the east, west, south,
and north, as well as the theory of the heavens, the equinox, solstice,
and courses of the stars. If one has no knowledge of these matters, he
will not be able to have any comprehension of the theory of sundials.
11. Consequently, since this study is so vast in extent, embellished
and enriched as it is with many different kinds of learning, I think that
men have no right to profess themselves architects hastily, without having
climbed from boyhood the steps of these studies and thus, nursed by the
knowledge of many arts and sciences, having reached the heights of the
holy ground of architecture.
12. But perhaps to the inexperienced it will seem a marvel that human
nature can comprehend such a great number of studies and keep them in the
memory. Still, the observation that all studies have a common bond of union
and intercourse with one another, will lead to the belief that this can
easily be realized. For a liberal education forms, as it were, a single
body made up of these members. Those, therefore, who from tender years
receive instruction in the various forms of learning, recognize the same
stamp on all the arts, and an intercourse between all studies, and so they
more readily comprehend them all. This is what led one of the ancient architects,
Pytheos, the celebrated builder of the temple of Minerva at Priene, to
say in his Commentaries that an architect ought to be able to accomplish
much more in all the arts and sciences than the men who, by their own particular
kinds of work and the practice of it, have brought each a single subject
to the highest perfection. But this is in point of fact not realized.
13. For an architect ought not to be and cannot be such a philologian
as was Aristarchus, although not illiterate; nor a musician like Aristoxenus,
though not absolutely ignorant of music; nor a painter like Apelles, though
not unskillful in drawing; nor a sculptor such as was Myron or Polyclitus,
though not unacquainted with the plastic art; nor again a physician like
Hippocrates, though not ignorant of medicine; nor in the other sciences
need he excel in each, though he should not be unskillful in them. For,
in the midst of all this great variety of subjects, an individual cannot
attain to perfection in each, because it is scarcely in his power to take
in and comprehend the general theories of them.
14. Still, it is not architects alone that cannot in all matters reach
perfection, but even men who individually praxes specialties in the arts
do not all attain to the highest point of merit. Therefore, if among artists
working each in a single field not all, but only a few in an entire generation
acquire fame, and that with difficulty, how can an architect, who has to
be skillful in many arts, accomplish not merely the feat in itself a great
marvel of being deficient in none of them, but also that of surpassing
all those artists who have devoted themselves with unremitting industry
to single fields?
15. It appears, then, that Pytheos made a mistake by not observing that
the arts are each composed of two things, the actual work and the theory
of it. One of these, the doing of the work, is proper to men trained in
the individual subject, while the other, the theory, is common to all scholars:
for example, to physicians and musicians the rhythmical beat of the pulse
and its metrical movement. But if there is a wound to be healed or a sick
man to be saved from danger, the musician will not call, for the business
will be appropriate to the physician. So in the case of a musical instrument,
not the physician but the musician will be the man to tune it so that the
ears may find their due pleasure in its strains.
16. Astronomers likewise have a common ground for discussion with musicians
in the harmony of the stars and musical concords in tetrads and triads
of the fourth and the fifth, and with geometricians in the subject of vision
; and in all other sciences many points, perhaps all, are common so far
as the discussion of them is concerned. But the actual undertaking of works
which are brought to perfection by the hand and its manipulation is the
function of those who have been specially trained to deal with a single
art. It appears, therefore, that he has done enough and to spare who in
each subject possesses a fairly good knowledge of those parts, with their
principles, which are indispensable for architecture, so that if he is
required to pass judgment and to express approval in the case of those
things or arts, he may not be found wanting. As for men upon whom nature
has bestowed so much ingenuity, acuteness, and memory that they are able
to have a thorough knowledge of geometry, astronomy, music, and the other
arts, they go beyond the functions of architects and become pure mathematicians.
Hence they can readily take up positions against those arts because many
are the artistic weapons with which they are armed. Such men, however,
are rarely found, but there have been such at times; for example, Aristarchus
of Samos, Philolaus and Archytas of Tarentum, Apollonius of Perga, Eratosthenes
of Cyrene, and among Syracusans Archimedes
and Scopinas, who through mathematics and natural philosophy discovered,
expounded, and left to posterity many things in connexion with mechanics
and with sundials.
17. Since, therefore, the possession of such talents due to natural
capacity is not vouchsafed at random to entire nations, but only to a few
great men; since, moreover, the function of the architect requires a training
in all the departments of learning; and finally, since reason, on account
of the wide extent of the subject, concedes that he may possess not the
highest but not even necessarily a moderate knowledge of the subjects of
study, I request, Caesar, both of you and of those who may read the said
books, that if anything is set forth with too little regard for grammatical
rule, it may be pardoned. For it is not as a very great philosopher, nor
as an eloquent rhetorician, nor as a grammarian trained in the highest
principles of his art, that I have striven to write this work, but as an
architect who has had only a dip into those studies. Still, as regards
the efficacy of the art and the theories of it, I promise and expect that
in these volumes I shall undoubtedly show myself of very considerable importance
not only to builders but also to all scholars.
Chapter II
The Fundemental Principles of Architecture
1. Architecture depends on Order , Arrangement , Eurythmy, Symmetry,
Propriety, and Economy .
2. Order gives due measure to the members of a work considered separately,
and symmetrical agreement to the proportions of the whole. It is an adjustment
according to quantity. By this I mean the selection of modules from the
members of the work itself and, starting from these individual parts of
members, constructing the whole work to correspond. Arrangement includes
the putting of things in their proper places and the elegance of effect
which is due to adjustments appropriate to the character of the work. Its
forms of expression are these: ground plan, elevation, and perspective.
A ground plan is made by the proper successive use of compasses and rule,
through which we get outlines for the plane surfaces of buildings. An elevation
is a picture of the front of a building, set upright and properly drawn
in the proportions of the contemplated work. Perspective is the method
of sketching a front with the sides withdrawing into the background, the
lines all meeting in the center of a circle. All three come of reflection
and invention. Reflection is careful and laborious thought, and watchful
attention directed to the agreeable effect of one's plan. Invention, on
the other hand, is the solving of intricate problems and the discovery
of new principles by means of brilliancy and versatility. These are the
departments belonging under Arrangement.
3. Eurythmy is beauty and fitness in the adjustments of the members.
This is found when the members of a work are of a height suited to their
breadth, of a breadth suited to their length, and, in a word, when they
all correspond symmetrically.
4. Symmetry is a proper agreement between the members of the work itself,
and relation between the different parts and the whole general scheme,
in accordance with a certain part selected as standard. Thus in the human
body there is a kind of symmetrical harmony between forearm, foot, palm,
finger, and other small parts; and so it is with perfect buildings. In
the case of temples, symmetry may be calculated from the thickness of a
column, from a triglyph, or even from a module; in the ballista, from the
hole in a ship, from the space between the tholepins; and in other
things, from various members.
5. Propriety is that perfection of style which comes when a work is
authoritatively constructed on approved principles. It arises from prescription
, from usage, or from nature. From prescription, in the case of hypaethral
edifices, open to the sky, in honor of Jupiter Lightning, the Heaven, the
Sun, or the Moon: for these are gods whose semblances and manifestations
we behold before our very eyes in the sky when it is cloudless and bright.
The temples of Minerva, Mars, and Hercules, will be Doric, since the virile
strength of these gods makes daintiness entirely inappropriate to their
houses. In temples to Venus, Flora, Proserpine, Spring Water, and the Nymphs,
the Corinthian order will be found to have peculiar significance, because
these are delicate divinities and so its rather slender outlines, its flowers,
leaves, and ornamental volutes will lend propriety where it is due. The
construction of temples of the Ionic order to Juno, Diana, Father Bacchus,
and the other gods of that kind, will be in keeping with the middle position
which they hold; for the building of such will be an appropriate combination
of the severity of the Doric and the delicacy of the Corinthian.
6. Propriety arises from usage when buildings having magnificent interiors
are provided with elegant entrance courts to correspond; for there will
be no propriety in the spectacle of an elegant interior approached by a
low, mean entrance. Or, if dentils be carved in the cornice of the Doric
entablature or triglyphs represented in the Ionic entablature over the
cushion shaped capitals of the columns, the effect will be spoilt by the
transfer of the peculiarities of the one order of building to the other,
the usage in each class having been fixed long ago.
7. Finally, propriety will be due to natural causes if, for example,
in the case of all sacred precincts we select very healthy neighborhoods
with suitable springs of water in the places where the fanes are to be
built, particularly in the case of those to Aesculapius and to Health,
gods by whose healing powers great numbers of the sick are apparently cured.
For when their diseased bodies are transferred from an unhealthy to a healthy
spot, and treated with waters from health giving springs, they will the
more speedily grow well. The result will be that the divinity will stand
in higher esteem and find his dignity increased, all owing to the nature
of his site. There will also be natural propriety in using an eastern light
for bedrooms and libraries, a western light in winter for baths and winter
apartments, and a northern light for picture galleries and other places
in which a steady light is needed; for that quarter of the sky grows neither
light nor dark with the course of the sun, but remains steady and unshifting
all day long.
8. Economy denotes the proper management of materials and of site, as
well as a thrifty balancing of cost and common sense in the construction
of works. This will be observed if, in the first place, the architect does
not demand things which cannot be found or made ready without great expense.
For example: it is not everywhere that there is plenty of pit sand, rubble,
fir, clear fir, and marble, since they are produced in different places
and to assemble them is difficult and costly. Where there is no pit sand,
we must use the kinds washed up by rivers or by the sea; the lack of fir
and clear fir may be evaded by using cypress, poplar, elm, or pine; and
other problems we must solve in similar ways.
9. A second stage in Economy is reached when we have to plan the different
kinds of dwellings suitable for ordinary householders, for great wealth,
or for the high position of the statesman. A house in town obviously calls
for one form of construction; that into which stream the products of country
estates requires another; this will not be the same in the case of money-lenders
and still different for the opulent and luxurious; for the powers under
whose deliberations the commonwealth is guided dwellings are to be provided
according to their special needs: and, in a word, the proper form of economy
must be observed in building houses for each and every class.
Chapter III
The Departments of Architecture
1. There are three departments of architecture: the art of building,
the making of timepieces, and the construction of machinery. Building is,
in its turn, divided into two parts, of which the first is the construction
of fortified towns and of works for general use in public places, and the
second is the putting up of structures for private individuals. There are
three classes of public buildings: the first for defensive, the second
for religious, and the third for utilitarian purposes. Under defense comes
the planning of walls, towers, and gates, permanent devices for resistance
against hostile attacks; under religion, the erection of fanes and
temples to the immortal gods; under utility, the provision of meeting places
for public use, such as harbors, markets, colonnades, baths, theaters,
promenades, and all other similar arrangements in public places.
2. All these must be built with due reference to durability, convenience,
and beauty. Durability will be assured when foundations are carried down
to the solid ground and materials wisely and liberally selected; convenience,
when the arrangement of the apartments is faultless and presents no hindrance
to use, and when each class of building is assigned to its suitable and
appropriate exposure; and beauty, when the appearance of the work is pleasing
and in good taste, and when its members are in due proportion according
to correct principles of symmetry.
Chapter IV
The Site of a City
1. For fortified
towns the following general principles are to be observed. First comes
the choice of a very healthy site. Such a site will be high, neither misty
nor frosty, and in a climate neither hot nor cold, but temperate; further,
without marshes in the neighborhood. For when the morning breezes blow
toward the town at sunrise, if they bring with them mists from marshes
and, mingled with the mist, the poisonous breath of the creatures of the
marshes to be wafted into the bodies of the inhabitants, they will make
the site unhealthy. Again, if the town is on the coast with a southern
or western exposure, it will not be healthy, because in summer the southern
sky grows hot at sunrise and is fiery at noon, while a western exposure
grows warm after sunrise, is hot at noon, and at evening all aglow.
2. These variations in heat and the subsequent cooling off are harmful
to the people living on such sites. The same conclusion may be reached
in the case of inanimate things. For instance, nobody draws the light for
covered wine rooms from the south or west, but rather from the north, since
that quarter is never subject to change but is always constant and unshifting.
So it is with granaries: grain exposed to the sun's course soon loses its
good quality, and provisions and fruit, unless stored in a place unexposed
to the sun's course, do not keep long.
3. For heat is a universal solvent, melting out of things their power
of resistance, and sucking away and removing their natural strength with
its fiery exhalations so that they grow soft, and hence weak, under its
glow. We see this in the case of iron which, however hard it may naturally
be, yet when heated thoroughly in a furnace fire can be easily worked into
any kind of shape, and still, if cooled while it is soft and white hot,
it hardens again with a mere dip into cold water and takes on its former
quality.
4. We may also recognize the truth of this from the fact that in summer
the heat makes everybody weak, not only in unhealthy but even in healthy
places, and that in winter even the most unhealthy districts are much healthier
because they are given a solidity by the cooling off. Similarly, persons
removed from cold countries to hot cannot endure it but waste away; whereas
those who pass from hot places to the cold regions of the north, not only
do not suffer in health from the change of residence but even gain by it.
5. It appears, then, that in founding towns we must beware of districts
from which hot winds can spread abroad over the inhabitants. For while
all bodies are composed of the four elements, that is, of heat, moisture,
the earthy, and air, yet there are mixtures according to natural temperament
which make up the natures of all the different animals of the world, each
after its kind.
6. Therefore, if one of these elements, heat, becomes predominant in
any body whatsoever, it destroys and dissolves all the others with its
violence. This defect may be due to violent heat from certain quarters
of the sky, pouring into the open pores in too great proportion to admit
of a mixture suited to the natural temperament of the body in question.
Again, if too much moisture enters the channels of a body, and thus introduces
disproportion, the other elements, adulterated by the liquid, are impaired,
and the virtues of the mixture dissolved. This defect, in turn, may arise
from the cooling properties of moist winds and breezes blowing upon the
body. In the same way, increase or diminution of the proportion of air
or of the earthy which is natural to the body may enfeeble the other elements;
the predominance of the earthy being due to overmuch food, that of air
to a heavy atmosphere.
7. If one wishes a more accurate understanding of all this, he need
only consider and observe the natures of birds, fishes, and land animals,
and he will thus come to reflect upon distinctions of temperament. One
form of mixture is proper to birds, another to fishes, and a far different
form to land animals. Winged creatures have less of the earthy, less moisture,
heat in moderation, air in large amount. Being made up, therefore, of the
lighter elements, they can more readily soar away into the air. Fish, with
their aquatic nature, being moderately supplied with heat and made up in
great part of air and the earthy, with as little of moisture as possible,
can more easily exist in moisture for the very reason that they have less
of it than of the other elements in their bodies; and so, when they are
drawn to land, they leave life and water at the same moment. Similarly,
the land animals, being moderately supplied with the elements of air and
heat, and having less of the earthy and a great deal of moisture, cannot
long continue alive in the water, because their portion of moisture is
already abundant.
8. Therefore, if all this is as we have explained, our reason showing
us that the bodies of animals are made up of the elements, and these bodies,
as we believe, giving way and breaking up as a result of excess or deficiency
in this or that element, we cannot but believe that we must take great
care to select a very temperate climate for the site of our city, since
healthfulness is, as we have said, the first requisite.
9. I cannot too strongly insist upon the need of a return to the method
of old times. Our ancestors, when about to build a town or an army post,
sacrificed some of the cattle that were wont to feed on the site proposed
and examined their livers. If the livers of the first victims were dark
colored or abnormal, they sacrificed others, to see whether the fault was
due to disease or their food. They never began to build defensive works
in a place until after they had made many such trials and satisfied themselves
that good water and food had made the liver sound and firm. If they continued
to find it abnormal, they argued from this that the food and water supply
found in such a place would be just as unhealthy for man, and so they moved
away and changed to another neighborhood, healthfulness being their chief
object.
10. That pasturage and food may indicate the healthful qualities of
a site is a fact which can be observed and investigated in the case of
certain pastures in Crete, on each side of the river Pothereus, which separates
the two Cretan states of Gnosus and Gortyna. There are cattle at pasture
on the right and left banks of that river, but while the cattle that feed
near Gnosus have the usual spleen, those on the other side near Gortyna
have no perceptible spleen. On investigating the subject, physicians discovered
on this side a kind of herb which the cattle chew and thus make their spleen
small. The herb is therefore gathered and used as a medicine for the cure
of splenetic people. From food and water, then, we may learn whether sites
are naturally unhealthy or healthy.
11. If the walled town is built among the marshes themselves, provided
they are by the sea, with a northern or north-eastern exposure, and are
above the level of the seashore, the site will be reasonable enough. For
ditches can be dug to let out the water to the shore, and also in times
of storms the sea swells and comes backing up into the marshes, where its
bitter blend prevents the reproductions of the usual marsh creatures, while
any that swim down from the higher levels to the shore are killed at once
by the saltiness to which they are unused. An instance of this may be found
in the Gallic marshes surrounding Altino, Ravenna, Aquileia, and other
towns in places of the kind, close by marshes. They are marvelously healthy,
for the reasons which I have given.
12. But marshes that are stagnant and have no outlets either by rivers
or ditches, like the Pomptine marshes, merely putrefy as they stand, emitting
heavy, unhealthy vapors. A case of a town built in such a spot was Old
Salpia in Apulia, founded by Diomede on his way back from Troy, or, according
to some writers, by Elpias of Rhodes. Year after year there was sickness,
until finally the suffering inhabitants came with a public petition to
Marcus Hostilius and got him to agree to seek and find them a proper place
to which to remove their city. Without delay he made the most skillful
investigations, and at once purchased an estate near the sea in a healthy
place, and asked the Senate and Roman people for permission to remove the
town. He constructed the walls and laid out the house lots, granting one
to each citizen for a mere trifle. This done, he cut an opening from a
lake into the sea, and thus made of the lake a harbor for the town. The
result is that now the people of Salpia live on a healthy site and at a
distance of only four miles from the old town.
Chapter V
The City Walls
1. After insuring on these principles the healthfulness of the future
city, and selecting a neighborhood that can supply plenty of food stuffs
to maintain the community, with good roads or else convenient rivers or
seaports affording easy means of transport to the city, the next thing
to do is to lay the foundations for the towers and walls. Dig down to solid
bottom, if it can be found, and lay them therein, going as deep as the
magnitude of the proposed work seems to require. They should be much thicker
than the part of the walls that will appear above ground, and their structure
should be as solid as it can possibly be laid.
2. The towers must be projected beyond the line of wall, so that an
enemy wishing to approach the wall to carry it by assault may be exposed
to the fire of missiles on his open flank from the towers on his right
and left. Special pains should be taken that there be no easy avenue by
which to storm the wall. The roads should be encompassed at steep points,
and planned so as to approach the gates, not in a straight line, but from
the right to the left; for as a result of this, the right hand side of
the assailants, unprotected by their shields, will be next the wall. Towns
should be laid out not as an exact square nor with salient angles, but
in circular form, to give a view of the enemy from many points. Defense
is difficult where there are salient angles, because the angle protects
the enemy rather than the inhabitants.
3. The thickness of the wall should, in my opinion, be such that armed
men meeting on top of it may pass one another without interference. In
the thickness there should be set a very close succession of ties made
of charred olive wood, binding the two faces of the wall together like
pins, to give it lasting endurance. For that is a material which neither
decay, nor the weather, nor time can harm, but even though buried in the
earth or set in the water it keeps sound and useful forever. And so not
only city walls but substructures in general and all walls that require
a thickness like that of a city wall, will be long in falling to decay
if tied in this manner.
4. The towers should be set at intervals of not more than a bowshot
apart, so that in case of an assault upon any one of them, the enemy may
be repulsed with scorpiones and other means of hurling missiles from the
towers to the right and left. Opposite the inner side of every tower the
wall should be interrupted for a space the width of the tower, and have
only a wooden flooring across, leading to the interior of the tower but
not firmly nailed. This is to be cut away by the defenders in case the
enemy gets possession of any portion of the wall; and if the work is quickly
done, the enemy will not be able to make his way to the other towers and
the rest of the wall unless he is ready to face a fall.
5. The towers themselves must be either round or polygonal. Square towers
are sooner shattered by military engines, for the battering rams pound
their angles to pieces; but in the case of round towers they can do no
harm, being engaged, as it were, in driving wedges to their center. The
system of fortification by wall and towers may be made safest by the addition
of earthen ramparts, for neither rams, nor mining, nor other engineering
devices can do them any harm.
6. The rampart form of defense, however, is not required in all places,
but only where outside the wall there is high ground from which an assault
on the fortifications may be made over a level space lying between. In
places of this kind we must first make very wide, deep ditches; next sink
foundations for a wall in the bed of the ditch and build them thick enough
to support an earth-work with ease.
7. Then within this substructure lay a second foundation, far enough
inside the first to leave ample room for cohorts in line of battle to take
position on the broad top of the rampart for its defense. Having laid these
two foundations at this distance from one another, build cross walls between
them, uniting the outer and inner foundation, in a comb like arrangement,
set like the teeth of a saw. With this form of construction, the enormous
burden of earth will be distributed into small bodies, and will not lie
with all its weight in one crushing mass so as to thrust out the substructures.
8. With regard to the material of which the actual wall should be constructed
or finished, there can be no definite prescription, because we cannot obtain
in all places the supplies that we desire. Dimension stone, flint, rubble,
burnt or unburned brick, use them as you find them. For it is not every
neighborhood or particular locality that can have a wall built of burnt
brick like that at Babylon, where there was plenty of asphalt to take the
place of lime and sand, and yet possibly each may be provided with materials
of equal usefulness so that out of them a faultless wall may be built to
last forever.
Chapter VI
The Directions of the Streets; with Remarks on the
Winds
1. The town being fortified, the next step is the apportionment of house
lots within the wall and the laying out of streets and alleys with regard
to climatic conditions. They will be properly laid out if foresight is
employed to exclude the winds from the alleys. Cold winds are disagreeable,
hot winds enervating, moist winds unhealthy. We must, therefore, avoid
mistakes in this matter and beware of the common experience of many communities.
For example, Mytilene in the island of Lesbos is a town built with magnificence
and good taste, but its position shows a lack of foresight. In that community
when the wind is south, the people fall ill; when it is northwest, it sets
them coughing; with a north wind they do indeed recover but cannot stand
about in the alleys and streets, owing to the severe cold.
2. Wind is a flowing wave of air, moving hither and thither indefinitely.
It is produced when heat meets moisture, the rush of heat generating a
mighty current of air. That this is the fact we may learn from bronze eolipiles,
and thus by means of a scientific invention discover a divine truth lurking
in the laws of the heavens. Eolipiles are hollow bronze balls, with a very
small opening through which water is poured into them. Set before a fire,
not a breath issues from them before they get warm; but as soon as they
begin to boil, out comes a strong blast due to the fire. Thus from this
slight and very short experiment we may understand and judge of the mighty
and wonderful laws of the heavens and the nature of winds.
3. By shutting out the winds from our dwellings, therefore, we shall
not only make the place healthful for people who are well, but also in
the case of diseases due perhaps to unfavorable situations elsewhere, the
patients, who in other healthy places might be cured by a different form
of treatment, will here be more quickly cured by the mildness that comes
from the shutting out of the winds. The diseases which are hard to cure
in neighborhoods such as those to which I have referred above are catarrh,
hoarseness, coughs, pleurisy, consumption, spitting of blood, and all others
that are cured not by lowering the system but by building it up. They are
hard to cure, first, because they are originally due to chills; secondly,
because the patient's system being already exhausted by disease, the air
there, which is in constant agitation owing to winds and therefore deteriorated,
takes all the sap of life out of their diseased bodies and leaves them
more meager every day. On the other hand, a mild, thick air, without draughts
and not constantly blowing back and forth, builds up their frames by its
unwavering steadiness, and so strengthens and restores people who are afflicted
with these diseases.
4. Some have held that there are only four winds: Solanus from due east;
Auster from the south; Favonius from due west; Septentrio from the north.
But more careful investigators tell us that there are eight. Chief among
such was Andronicus of Cyrrhus who in proof built the marble octagonal
tower in Athens. On the several sides of the octagon he executed reliefs
representing the several winds, each facing the point from which it blows;
and on top of the tower he set a conical shaped piece of marble and on
this a bronze Triton with a rod outstretched in its right hand. It was
so contrived as to go round with the wind, always stopping to face the
breeze and holding its rod as a pointer directly over the representation
of the wind that was blowing.
5. Thus Eurus is placed to the southeast between Solanus and Auster:
Africus to the southwest between Auster and Favonius; Caurus, or, as many
call it, Corus, between Favonius and Septentrio; and Aquilo between Septentrio
and Solanus. Such, then, appears to have been his device, including the
numbers and names of the wind and indicating the directions from which
particular winds blow. These facts being thus determined, to find the directions
and quarters of the winds your method of procedure should be as follows.
6. In the middle of the city place a marble amussium, laying it true
by the level, or else let the spot be made so true by means of rule and
level that no amussium is necessary. In the very center of that spot set
up a bronze gnomon or "shadow tracker". At about the fifth hour in the
morning, take the end of the shadow cast by this gnomon, and mark it with
a point. Then, opening your compasses to this point which marks the length
of the gnomon's shadow, describe a circle from the center. In the afternoon
watch the shadow of your gnomon as it lengthens, and when it once more
touches the circumference of this circle and the shadow in the afternoon
is equal in length to that of the morning, mark it with a point.
7. From these two points describe with your compasses intersecting arcs,
and through their intersection and the center let a line be drawn to the
circumference of the circle to give us the quarters of south and north.
Then, using a sixteenth part of the entire circumference of the circle
as a diameter, describe a circle with its center on the line to the south,
at the point where it crosses the circumference, and put points to the
right and left on the circumference on the south side, repeating the process
on the north side. From the four points thus obtained draw lines intersecting
the center from one side of the circumference to the other. Thus we shall
have an eighth part of the circumference set out for Auster and another
for Septentrio. The rest of the entire circumference is then to be divided
into three equal parts on each side, and thus we have designed a figure
equally apportioned among the eight winds. Then let the directions of your
streets and alleys be laid down on the lines of division between the quarters
of two winds.
8. On this principle of arrangement the disagreeable force of the winds
will be shut out from dwellings and lines of houses. For if the streets
run full in the face of the winds, their constant blasts rushing in from
the open country, and then confined by narrow alleys, will sweep through
them with great violence. The lines of houses must therefore be directed
away from the quarters from which the winds blow, so that as they come
in they may strike against the angles of the blocks and their force thus
be broken and dispersed.
9. Those who know names for very many winds will perhaps be surprised
at our setting forth that there are only eight. Remembering, however, that
Eratosthenes of Cyrene, employing mathematical theories and geometrical
methods, discovered from the course of the sun, the shadows cast by an
equinoctial gnomon, and the inclination of the heaven that the circumference
of the earth is two hundred and fifty-two thousand stadia, that is, thirty
one million five hundred thousand paces, and observing that an eighth part
of this, occupied by a wind, is three million nine hundred and thirty-seven
thousand five hundred paces, they should not be surprised to find that
a single wind, ranging over so wide a field, is subject to shifts this
way and that, leading to a variety of breezes.
10. So we often have Leuconotus and Altanus blowing respectively to
the right and left of Auster; Libonotus and Subvesperus to the right and
left of Africus; Argestes, and at certain periods the Etesiae, on either
side of Favonius; Circias and Corus on the sides of Caurus; Thracias and
Gallicus on either side of Septentrio; Supernas and Caecias to the right
and left of Aquilo; Carbas, and at a certain period the Ornithiae, on either
side of Solanus; while Eurocircias and Volturnus blow on the flanks of
Eurus which is between them. There are also many other names for winds
derived from localities or from the squalls which sweep from rivers or
down mountains.
11. Then, too, there are the breezes of early morning; for the sun on
emerging from beneath the earth strikes humid air as he returns, and as
he goes climbing up the sky he spreads it out before him, extracting breezes
from the vapor that was there before the dawn. Those that still blow on
after sunrise are classed with Eurus, and hence appears to come the Greek
name as the child of the breezes, and the word for "tomorrow," named from
the early morning breezes. Some people do indeed say that Eratosthenes
could not have inferred the true measure of the earth. Whether true or
untrue, it cannot affect the truth of what I have written on the fixing
of the quarters from which the different winds blow.
12. If he was wrong, the only result will be that the individual winds
may blow, not with the scope expected from his measurement, but with powers
either more or less widely extended. For the readier understanding of these
topics, since I have treated them with brevity, it has seemed best to me
to give two figures at the end of this book: one designed to show the precise
quarters from which the winds arise; the other, how by turning the directions
of the rows of houses and the streets away from their full force, we may
avoid unhealthy blasts. Let A be the center of a plane surface, and B the
point to which the shadow of the gnomon reaches in the morning. Taking
A as the center, open the compasses to the point B, which marks the shadow,
and describe a circle. Put the gnomon back where it was before and wait
for the shadow to lessen and grow again until in the afternoon it is equal
to its length in the morning, touching the circumference at the point C.
Then from the points B and C describe with the compasses two arcs intersecting
at D. Next draw a line from the point of intersection D through the center
of the circle to the circumference and call it E F. This line will show
where the south and north lie.
13. Then find with the compasses a sixteenth part of the entire circumference;
then center the compasses on the point E where the line to the south touches
the circumference, and set off the points G and H to the right and left
of E. Likewise on the north side, center the compasses on the circumference
at the point F on the line to the north, and set off the points I and K
to the right and left; then draw lines through the center from G to K and
from H to I. Thus the space from G to H will belong to Auster and the south,
and the space from I to K will be that of Septentrio. The rest of the circumference
is to be divided equally into three parts on the right and three on the
left, those to the east at the points L and M, those to the west at the
points N and O. Finally, intersecting lines are to be drawn from M to O
and from L to N. Thus we shall have the circumference divided into eight
equal spaces for the winds. The figure being finished, we shall have at
the eight different divisions, beginning at the south, the letter G between
Eurus and Auster, H between Auster and Africus, N between Africus and Favonius,
O between Favonius and Caurus, K between Caurus and Septentrio, I between
Septentrio and Aquilo, L between Aquilo and Solanus, and M between Solanus
and Eurus. This done, apply a gnomon to these eight divisions and thus
fix the directions of the different alleys.
Chapter VII
The Sites for Public Buildings
1. Having laid out the alleys and determined the streets, we have next
to treat of the choice of building sites for temples, the forum, and all
other public places, with a view to general convenience and utility. If
the city is on the sea, we should choose ground close to the harbor as
the place where the forum is to be built; but if inland, in the middle
of the town. For the temples, the sites for those of the gods under whose
particular protection the state is thought to rest and for Jupiter, Juno,
and Minerva, should be on the very highest point commanding a view of the
greater part of the city. Mercury should be in the forum, or, like Isis
and Serapis, in the emporium: Apollo and Father Bacchus near the theater:
Hercules at the circus in communities which have no gymnasia nor amphitheaters;
Mars outside the city but at the training ground, and so Venus, but at
the harbor. It is moreover shown by the Etruscan diviners in treatises
on their science that the fanes of Venus, Vulcan, and Mars should be situated
outside the walls, in order that the young men and married women may not
become habituated in the city to the temptations incident to the worship
of Venus, and that buildings may be free from the terror of fires through
the religious rites and sacrifices which call the power of Vulcan beyond
the walls. As for Mars, when that divinity is enshrined outside the walls,
the citizens will never take up arms against each other, and he will defend
the city from its enemies and save it from danger in war.
2. Ceres also should be outside the city in a place to which people
need never go except for the purpose of sacrifice. That place should be
under the protection of religion, purity, and good morals. Proper sites
should be set apart for the precincts of the other gods according to the
nature of the sacrifices offered to them.
The principle governing the actual construction of temples and their
symmetry I shall explain in my third and fourth books. In the second I
have thought it best to give an account of the materials used in buildings
with their good qualities and advantages, and then in the succeeding books
to describe and explain the proportions of buildings, their arrangements,
and the different forms of symmetry.
How To Build Catapults >> Vitruvius
Ten Books of Architecture >> Book 1
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