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Vitruvius
The Ten Books on Architecture
Book V
Introduction
1. Those who have filled books of unusually large size, Emperor, in
setting forth their intellectual ideas and doctrines, have thus made a
very great and remarkable addition to the authority of their writings.
I could wish that circumstances made this as permissible in the case of
our subject, so that the authority of the present treatise might be increased
by amplifications; but this is not so easy as it may be thought. Writing
on architecture is not like history or poetry. History is captivating to
the reader from its very nature; for it holds out the hope of various novelties.
Poetry, with its measures and metrical feet, its refinement in the arrangement
of words, and the delivery in verse of the sentiments expressed by the
several characters to one another, delights the feelings of the reader,
and leads him smoothly on to the very end of the work.
2. But this cannot be the case with architectural treatises, because
those terms which originate in the peculiar needs of the art, give rise
to obscurity of ideas from the unusual nature of the language. Hence, while
the things themselves are not well known, and their names not in common
use, if besides this the principles are described in a very diffuse fashion
without any attempt at conciseness and explanation in a few pellucid sentences,
such fullness and amplitude of treatment will be only a hindrance, and
will give the reader nothing but indefinite notions. Therefore, when I
mention obscure terms, and the symmetrical proportions of members of buildings,
I shall give brief explanations, so that they may be committed to memory;
for thus expressed, the mind will be enabled to understand them the more
easily.
3. Furthermore, since I have observed that our citizens are distracted
with public affairs and private business, I have thought it best to write
briefly, so that my readers, whose intervals of leisure are small, may
be able to comprehend in a short time.
Then again, Pythagoras and those who came after him in his school thought
it proper to employ the principles of the cube in composing books on their
doctrines, and, having determined that the cube consisted of 216 lines,
held that there should be no more than three cubes in any one treatise.
4. A cube is a body with sides all of equal breadth and their surfaces
perfectly square. When thrown down, it stands firm and steady so long as
it is untouched, no matter on which of its sides it has fallen, like the
dice which players throw on the board. The Pythagoreans appear to have
drawn their analogy from the cube, because the number of lines mentioned
will be fixed firmly and steadily in the memory when they have once settled
down, like a cube, upon a man's understanding. The Greek comic poets, also,
divided their plays into parts by introducing a choral song, and by this
partition on the principle of the cubes, they relieve the actor's speeches
by such intermissions.
5. Since these rules, founded on the analogy of nature, were followed
by our predecessors, and since I observe that I have to write on unusual
subjects which many persons will find obscure, I have thought it best to
write in short books, so that they may the more readily strike the understanding
of the reader: for they will thus be easy to comprehend. I have also arranged
them so that those in search of knowledge on a subject may not have to
gather it from different places, but may find it in one complete treatment,
with the various classes set forth each in a book by itself. Hence, Caesar,
in the third and fourth books I gave the rules for temples; in this book
I shall treat of the laying out of public places. I shall speak first of
the proper arrangement of the forum, for in it the course of both public
and private affairs is directed by the magistrates.
Chapter I
The Forum and Basilica
1. The Greeks lay out their forums in the form of a square surrounded
by very spacious double colonnades, adorn them with columns set rather
closely together, and with entablatures of stone or marble, and construct
walks above in the upper story. But in the cities of Italy the same method
cannot be followed, for the reason that it is a custom handed down from
our ancestors that gladiatorial shows should be given in the forum.
2. Therefore let the intercolumniations round the show place be pretty
wide; round about in the colonnades put the bankers' offices; and have
balconies on the upper floor properly arranged so as to be convenient,
and to bring in some public revenue.
The size of a forum should be proportionate to the number of inhabitants,
so that it may not be too small a space to be useful, nor look like a desert
waste for lack of population. To determine its breadth, divide its length
into three parts and assign two of them to the breadth. Its shape will
then be oblong, and its ground plan conveniently suited to the conditions
of shows.
3. The columns of the upper tier should be one fourth smaller than those
of the lower, because, for the purpose of bearing the load, what is below
ought to be stronger than what is above, and also, because we ought to
imitate nature as seen in the case of things growing; for example, in round
smooth stemmed trees, like the fir, cypress, and pine, every one of which
is rather thick just above the roots and then, as it goes on increasing
in height, tapers off naturally and symmetrically in growing up to the
top. Hence, if nature requires this in things growing, it is the right
arrangement that what is above should be less in height and thickness than
what is below.
4. Basilicas should be constructed on a site adjoining the forum and
in the warmest possible quarter, so that in winter business men may gather
in them without being troubled by the weather. In breadth they should be
not less than one third nor more than one half of their length, unless
the site is naturally such as to prevent this and to oblige an alteration
in these proportions. If the length of the site is greater than necessary,
Chalcidian porches may be constructed at the ends, as in the Julia Aquiliana.
5. It is thought that the columns of basilicas ought to be as high as
the side aisles are broad; an aisle should be limited to one third of the
breadth which the open space in the middle is to have. Let the columns
of the upper tier be smaller than those of the lower, as written above.
The screen, to be placed between the upper and the lower tiers of columns,
ought to be, it is thought, one fourth lower than the columns of the upper
tier, so that people walking in the upper story of the basilica may not
be seen by the business men. The architraves, friezes, and cornices should
be adjusted to the proportions of the columns, as we have stated in the
third book.
6. But basilicas of the greatest dignity and beauty may also be constructed
in the style of that one which I erected, and the building of which I superintended
at Fano. Its proportions and symmetrical relations were established as
follows. In the middle, the main roof between the columns is 120 feet long
and sixty feet wide. Its aisle round the space beneath the main roof and
between the walls and the columns is twenty feet broad. The columns, of
unbroken height, measuring with their capitals fifty feet, and being each
five feet thick, have behind them pilasters, twenty feet high, two and
one half feet broad, and one and one half feet thick, which support the
beams on which is carried the upper flooring of the aisles. Above them
are other pilasters, eighteen feet high, two feet broad, and a foot thick,
which carry the beams supporting the principal raftering and the roof of
the aisles, which is brought down lower than the main roof.
7. The spaces remaining between the beams supported by the pilasters
and the columns, are left for windows between the intercolumniations. The
columns are: on the breadth of the main roof at each end, four, including
the corner columns at right and left; on the long side which is next to
the forum, eight, including the same corner columns; on the other side,
six, including the corner columns. This is because the two middle columns
on that side are omitted, in order not to obstruct the view of the pronaos
of the temple of Augustus (which is built at the middle of the side wall
of the basilica, facing the middle of the forum and the temple of Jupiter)
and also the tribunal which is in the former temple, shaped as a hemicycle
whose curvature is less than a semicircle.
8. The open side of this hemicycle is forty-six feet along the front,
and its curvature inwards is fifteen feet, so that those who are standing
before the magistrates may not be in the way of the business men in the
basilica. Round about, above the columns, are placed the architraves, consisting
of three twofer timbers fastened together. These return from the columns
which stand third on the inner side to the antae which project from the
pronaos, and which touch the edges of the hemicycle at right and left.
9. Above the architraves and regularly dispersed on supports directly
over the capitals, piers are placed, three feet high and four feet broad
each way. Above them is placed the projecting cornice round about, made
of two twofer timbers. The tie beams and struts, being placed above them,
and directly over the shafts of the columns and the antae and walls of
the pronaos, hold up one gable roof along the entire basilica, and another
from the middle of it, over the pronaos of the temple.
10. Thus the gable tops run in two directions, like the letter T, and
give a beautiful effect to the outside and inside of the main roof. Further,
by the omission of an ornamental entablature and of a line of screens and
a second tier of columns, troublesome labor is saved and the total cost
greatly diminished. On the other hand, the carrying of the columns themselves
in unbroken height directly up to the beams that support the main roof,
seems to add an air of sumptuousness and dignity to the work.
Chapter II
The Treasury, Prison and Senate House
1. The treasury, prison, and senate house ought to adjoin the forum,
but in such a way that their dimensions may be proportionate to those of
the forum. Particularly, the senate house should be constructed with special
regard to the importance of the town or city. If the building is square,
let its height be fixed at one and one half times its breadth; but if it
is to be oblong, add together its length and breadth and, having got the
total, let half of it be devoted to the height up to the coffered ceiling.
2. Further, the inside walls should be girdled, at a point halfway up
their height, with coronae made of woodwork or of stucco. Without these,
the voice of men engaged in discussion there will be carried up to the
height above, and so be unintelligible to their listeners. But when the
walls are girdled with coronae, the voice from below, being detained before
rising and becoming lost in the air, will be intelligible to the ear.
Chapter III
The Theater; Its Site, Foundations and Acoustics
1. After the forum has been arranged, next, for the purpose of seeing
plays or festivals of the immortal gods, a site as healthy as possible
should be selected for the theater, in accordance with what has been written
in the first book, on the principles of healthfulness in the sites of cities.
For when plays are given, the spectators, with their wives and children,
sit through them spell-bound, and their bodies, motionless from enjoyment,
have the pores open, into which blowing winds find their way. If these
winds come from marshy districts or from other unwholesome quarters, they
will introduce noxious exhalations into the system. Hence, such faults
will be avoided if the site of the theater is somewhat carefully selected.
2. We must also beware that it has not a southern exposure. When the
sun shines full upon the rounded part of it, the air, being shut up in
the curved enclosure and unable to circulate, stays there and becomes heated;
and getting glowing hot it burns up, dries out, and impairs the fluids
of the human body. For these reasons, sites which are unwholesome in such
respects are to be avoided, and healthy sites selected.
3. The foundation walls will be an easier matter if they are on a hillside;
but if they have to be laid on a plain or in a marshy place, solidity must
be assured and substructures built in accordance with what has been written
in the third book, on the foundations of temples. Above the foundation
walls, the ascending rows of seats, from the substructures up, should be
built of stone and marble materials.
4. The curved cross aisles should be constructed in proportionate relation,
it is thought, to the height of the theater, but not higher than the footway
of the passage is broad. If they are loftier, they will throw back the
voice and drive it away from the upper portion, thus preventing the case
endings of words from reaching with distinct meaning the ears of those
who are in the uppermost seats above the cross aisles. In short, it should
be so contrived that a line drawn from the lowest to the highest seat will
touch the top edges and angles of all the seats. Thus the voice will meet
with no obstruction.
5. The different entrances ought to be numerous and spacious, the upper
not connected with the lower, but built in a continuous straight line from
all parts of the house, without turnings, so that the people may not be
crowded together when let out from shows, but may have separate exits from
all parts without obstructions.
Particular pains must also be taken that the site be not a "deaf" one,
but one through which the voice can range with the greatest clearness.
This can be brought about if a site is selected where there is no obstruction
due to echo.
6. Voice is a flowing breath of air, perceptible to the hearing by contact.
It moves in an endless number of circular rounds, like the innumerably
increasing circular waves which appear when a stone is thrown into smooth
water, and which keep on spreading indefinitely from the center unless
interrupted by narrow limits, or by some obstruction which prevents such
waves from reaching their end in due formation. When they are interrupted
by obstructions, the first waves, flowing back, break up the formation
of those which follow.
7. In the same manner the voice executes its movements in concentric
circles; but while in the case of water the circles move horizontally on
a plane surface, the voice not only proceeds horizontally, but also ascends
vertically by regular stages. Therefore, as in the case of the waves formed
in the water, so it is in the case of the voice: the first wave, when there
is no obstruction to interrupt it, does not break up the second or the
following waves, but they all reach the ears of the lowest and highest
spectators without an echo.
8. Hence the ancient architects, following in the footsteps of nature,
perfected the ascending rows of seats in theaters from their investigations
of the ascending voice, and, by means of the canonical theory of the mathematicians
and that of the musicians, endeavored to make every voice uttered on the
stage come with greater clearness and sweetness to the ears of the audience.
For just as musical instruments are brought to perfection of clearness
in the sound of their strings by means of bronze plates or horn , so the
ancients devised methods of increasing the power of the voice in theaters
through the application of harmonics.
Chapter IV
Harmonics
1. Harmonics is an obscure and difficult branch of musical science,
especially for those who do not know Greek. If we desire to treat of it,
we must use Greek words, because some of them have no Latin equivalents.
Hence, I will explain it as clearly as I can from the writings of Aristoxenus,
append his scheme, and define the boundaries of the notes, so that with
somewhat careful attention anybody may be able to understand it pretty
easily.
2. The voice, in its changes of position when shifting pitch, becomes
sometimes high, sometimes low, and its movements are of two kinds, in one
of which its progress is continuous, in the other by intervals. The continuous
voice does not become stationary at the "boundaries" or at any definite
place, and so the extremities of its progress are not apparent, but the
fact that there are differences of pitch is apparent, as in our ordinary
speech in sol, lux, flos, vox; for in these
cases we cannot tell at what pitch the voice begins, nor at what pitch
it leaves off, but the fact that it becomes low from high and high from
low is apparent to the ear. In its progress by intervals the opposite is
the case. For here, when the pitch shifts, the voice, by change of position,
stations itself on one pitch, then on another, and, as it frequently repeats
this alternating process, it appears to the senses to become stationary,
as happens in singing when we produce a variation of the mode by changing
the pitch of the voice. And so, since it moves by intervals, the points
at which it begins and where it leaves off are obviously apparent in the
boundaries of the notes, but the intermediate points escape notice and
are obscure, owing to the intervals.
3. There are three classes of modes: first, that which the Greeks term
the enharmonic; second, the chromatic; third, the diatonic. The enharmonic
mode is an artistic conception, and therefore execution in it has a specially
severe dignity and distinction. The chromatic, with its delicate subtlety
and with the "crowding" of its notes, gives a sweeter kind of pleasure.
In the diatonic, the distance between the intervals is easier to understand,
because it is natural. These three classes differ in their arrangement
of the tetrachord. In the enharmonic, the tetrachord consists of two tones
and two "dieses." A diesis is a quarter tone; hence in a semitone there
are included two dieses. In the chromatic there are two semitones arranged
in succession, and the third interval is a tone and a half. In the diatonic,
there are two consecutive tones, and the third interval of a semitone completes
the tetrachord. Hence, in the three classes, the tetrachords are equally
composed of two tones and a semitone, but when they are regarded separately
according to the terms of each class, they differ in the arrangement of
their intervals.
4. Now then, these intervals of tones and semitones of the tetrachord
are a division introduced by nature in the case of the voice, and she has
defined their limits by measures according to the magnitude of the intervals,
and determined their characteristics in certain different ways. These natural
laws are followed by the skilled workmen who fashion musical instruments,
in bringing them to the perfection of their proper concords.
5. In each class there are eighteen notes, of which eight in all the
three classes are constant and fixed, while the other ten, not being tuned
to the same pitch, are variable. The fixed notes are those which, being
placed between the moveable, make up the unity of the tetrachord, and remain
unaltered in their boundaries according to the different classes. Their
names are proslambanomenos, hypate hypaton, hypate meson, mese, nete synhemmenon,
paramese, nete diezeugmenon, nete hyperbolaeon. The moveable notes are
those which, being arranged in the tetrachord between the immovable, change
from place to place according to the different classes. They are called
parhypate hypaton, lichanos hypaton, parhypate meson, lichanos meson, trite
synhemmenon, paranete synhemmenon, trite diezeugmenon, paranete diezeugmenon,
trite hyperbolaeon, paranete hyperbolaeon.
6. These notes, from being moveable, take on different qualities; for
they may stand at different intervals and increasing distances. Thus, parhypate,
which in the enharmonic is at the interval of half a semitone from hypate,
has a semitone interval when transferred to the chromatic. What is called
lichanos in the enharmonic is at the interval of a semitone from hypate;
but when shifted to the chromatic, it goes two semitones away; and in the
diatonic it is at an interval of three semitones from hypate. Hence the
ten notes produce three different kinds of modes on account of their changes
of position in the classes.
7. There are five tetrachords: first, the lowest, second, the middle,
third, the conjunct, ; fourth, the disjunct, the fifth, which is
the highest.. The concords, of which human modulation will naturally admit,
are six in number: the fourth, the fifth, the octave, the octave and fourth,
the octave and fifth, and the double octave.
8. Their names are therefore due to numerical value; for when the voice
becomes stationary on some one note, and then, shifting its pitch, changes
its position and passes to the limit of the fourth note from that one,
we use the term "fourth"; when it passes to the fifth, the term is "fifth."
9. For there can be no consonances either in the case of the notes of
stringed instruments or of the singing voice, between two intervals or
between three or six or seven; but, as written above, it is only the harmonies
of the fourth, the fifth, and so on up to the double octave, that have
boundaries naturally corresponding to those of the voice: and these concords
are produced by the union of the notes.
Chapter V
Sounding Vessels in the Theater
1. In accordance with the foregoing investigations on mathematical principles,
let bronze vessels be made, proportionate to the size of the theater, and
let them be so fashioned that, when touched, they may produce with one
another the notes of the fourth, the fifth, and so on up to the double
octave. Then, having constructed niches in between the seats of the theater,
let the vessels be arranged in them, in accordance with musical laws, in
such a way that they nowhere touch the wall, but have a clear space all
round them and room over their tops. They should be set upside down, and
be supported on the side facing the stage by wedges not less than half
a foot high. Opposite each niche, apertures should be left in the surface
of the seat next below, two feet long and half a foot deep.
2. The arrangement of these vessels, with reference to the situations
in which they should be placed, may be described as follows. If the theater
be of no great size, mark out a horizontal range halfway up, and in it
construct thirteen arched niches with twelve equal spaces between them,
so that of the above mentioned "echea" those which give the note nete hyperbolaeon
may be placed first on each side, in the niches which are at the extreme
ends; next to the ends and a fourth below in pitch, the note nete diezeugmenon;
third, paramese, a fourth below; fourth, nete synhemmenon; fifth, mese,
a fourth below; sixth, hypate meson, a fourth below; and in the middle
and another fourth below, one vessel giving the note hypate hypaton.
3. On this principle of arrangement, the voice, uttered from the stage
as from a center, and spreading and striking against the cavities of the
different vessels, as it comes in contact with them, will be increased
in clearness of sound, and will wake an harmonious note in unison with
itself.
But if the theater be rather large, let its height be divided into four
parts, so that three horizontal ranges of niches may be marked out and
constructed: one for the enharmonic, another for the chromatic, and the
third for the diatonic system. Beginning with the bottom range, let the
arrangement be as described above in the case of a smaller theater, but
on the enharmonic system.
4. In the middle range, place first at the extreme ends the vessels
which give the note of the chromatic hyperbolaeon; next to them, those
which give the chromatic diezeugmenon, a fourth below; third, the chromatic
synhemmenon; fourth, the chromatic meson, a fourth below; fifth, the chromatic
hypaton, a fourth below; sixth, the paramese, for this is both the concord
of the fifth to the chromatic hyperbolaeon, and the concord of the chromatic
synhemmenon.
5. No vessel is to be placed in the middle, for the reason that there
is no other note in the chromatic system that forms a natural concord of
sound.
In the highest division and range of niches, place at the extreme ends
vessels fashioned so as to give the note of the diatonic hyperbolaeon;
next, the diatonic diezeugmenon, a fourth below; third, the diatonic synhemmenon;
fourth, the diatonic meson, a fourth below; fifth, the diatonic hypaton,
a fourth below; sixth, the proslambanomenos, a fourth below; in the middle,
the note mese, for this is both the octave to proslambanomenos, and the
concord of the fifth to the diatonic hypaton.
6. Whoever wishes to carry out these principles with ease, has only
to consult the scheme at the end of this book, drawn up in accordance with
the laws of music. It was left by Aristoxenus, who with great ability and
labor classified and arranged in it the different modes. In accordance
with it, and by giving heed to these theories, one can easily bring a theater
to perfection, from the point of view of the nature of the voice, so as
to give pleasure to the audience.
7. Somebody will perhaps say that many theaters are built every year
in Rome, and that in them no attention at all is paid to these principles;
but he will be in error, from the fact that all our public theaters made
of wood contain a great deal of boarding, which must be resonant. This
may be observed from the behavior of those who sing to the lyre, who, when
they wish to sing in a higher key, turn towards the folding doors on the
stage, and thus by their aid are reinforced with a sound in harmony with
the voice. But when theaters are built of solid materials like masonry,
stone, or marble, which cannot be resonant, then the principles of the
"echea" must be applied.
8. If, however, it is asked in what theater these vessels have been
employed, we cannot point to any in Rome itself, but only to those in the
districts of Italy and in a good many Greek states. We have also the evidence
of Lucius Mummius, who, after destroying the theater in Corinth, brought
its bronze vessels to Rome, and made a dedicatory offering at the temple
of Luna with the money obtained from the sale of them. Besides, many skillful
architects, in constructing theaters in small towns, have, for lack of
means, taken large jars made of clay, but similarly resonant, and have
produced very advantageous results by arranging them on the principles
described.
Chapter VI
Plan of the Theater
1. The plan of the theater itself is to be constructed as follows. Having
fixed upon the principal center, draw a line of circumference equivalent
to what is to be the perimeter at the bottom, and in it inscribe four equilateral
triangles, at equal distances apart and touching the boundary line of the
circle, as the astrologers do in a figure of the twelve signs of the zodiac,
when they are making computations from the musical harmony of the stars.
Taking that one of these triangles whose side is nearest to the scaena,
let the front of the scaena be determined by the line where that side cuts
off a segment of the circle (A-B), and draw, through the center, a parallel
line (C-D) set off from that position, to separate the platform of the
stage from the space of the orchestra.
2. The platform has to be made deeper than that of the Greeks, because
all our artists perform on the stage, while the orchestra contains the
places reserved for the seats of senators. The height of this platform
must be not more than five feet, in order that those who sit in the orchestra
may be able to see the performances of all the actors. The sections (cunei)
for spectators in the theater should be so divided, that the angles of
the triangles which run about the circumference of the circle may give
the direction for the flights of steps between the sections, as far as
up to the first curved cross aisle. Above this, the upper sections are
to be laid out, midway between (the lower sections), with alternating passage-ways.
3. The angles at the bottom, which give the directions for the flights
of steps, will be seven in number (C, E, F, G, H, I, D); the other five
angles will determine the arrangement of the scene: thus, the angle in
the middle ought to have the "royal door" (K) opposite to it; the angles
to the right and left (L, M) will designate the position of the doors for
guest chambers; and the two outermost angles (A, B) will point to the passages
in the wings. The steps for the spectators' places, where the seats are
arranged, should be not less than a foot and a palm in height, nor more
than a foot and six fingers; their depth should be fixed at not more than
two and a half feet, nor less than two feet.
4. The roof of the colonnade to be built at the top of the rows of seats,
should lie level with the top of the "scaena," for the reason that the
voice will then rise with equal power until it reaches the highest rows
of seats and the roof. If the roof is not so high, in proportion as it
is lower, it will check the voice at the point which the sound first reaches.
5. Take one sixth of the diameter of the orchestra between the lowest
steps, and let the lower seats at the ends on both sides be cut away to
a height of that dimension so as to leave entrances (O, P). At the point
where this cutting away occurs, fix the soffits of the passages. Thus their
vaulting will be sufficiently high.
6. The length of the "scaena" ought to be double the diameter of the
orchestra. The height of the podium, starting from the level of the stage,
is, including the corona and cymatium, one twelfth of the diameter of the
orchestra. Above the podium, the columns, including their capitals and
bases, should have a height of one quarter of the same diameter, and the
architraves and ornaments of the columns should be one fifth of their height.
The parapet above, including its cyma and corona, is one half the height
of the parapet below. Let the columns above this parapet be one fourth
less in height than the columns below, and the architraves and ornaments
of these columns one fifth of their height. If the "scaena" is to have
three stories, let the uppermost parapet be half the height of the intermediate
one, the columns at the top one fourth less high than the intermediate,
and the architraves and coronae of these columns one fifth of their height
as before.
7. It is not possible, however, that in all theaters these rules of
symmetry should answer all conditions and purposes, but the architect ought
to consider to what extent he must follow the principle of symmetry, and
to what extent it may be modified to suit the nature of the site or the
size of the work. There are, of course, some things which, for utility's
sake, must be made of the same size in a small theater, and a large one:
such as the steps, curved cross aisles, their parapets, the passages, stairways,
stages, tribunals, and any other things which occur that make it necessary
to give up symmetry so as not to interfere with utility. Again, if in the
course of the work any of the material fall short, such as marble, timber,
or anything else that is provided, it will not be amiss to make a slight
reduction or addition, provided that it is done without going too far,
but with intelligence. This will be possible, if the architect is a man
of practical experience and, besides, not destitute of cleverness and skill.
8. The "scaena" itself displays the following scheme. In the center
are double doors decorated like those of a royal palace. At the right and
left are the doors of the guest chambers. Beyond are spaces provided for
decoration places , because in these places are triangular pieces of machinery
which revolve, each having three decorated faces. When the play is to be
changed, or when gods enter to the accompaniment of sudden claps of thunder,
these may be revolved and present a face differently decorated. Beyond
these places are the projecting wings which afford entrances to the stage,
one from the forum, the other from abroad.
9. There are three kinds of scenes, one called the tragic, second, the
comic, third, the satyric. Their decorations are different and unlike each
other in scheme. Tragic scenes are delineated with columns, pediments,
statues, and other objects suited to kings; comic scenes exhibit private
dwellings, with balconies and views representing rows of windows, after
the manner of ordinary dwellings; satyric scenes are decorated with trees,
caverns, mountains, and other rustic objects delineated in landscape style.
Chapter VII
Greek Theaters
1. In the theaters of the Greeks, these same rules of construction are
not to be followed in all respects. First, in the circle at the bottom
where the Roman has four triangles, the Greek has three squares with their
angles touching the line of circumference. The square whose side is nearest
to the "scaena," and cuts off a segment of the circle, determines by this
line the limits of the "proscaenium" (A, B). Parallel to this line and
tangent to the outer circumference of the segment, a line is drawn which
fixes the front of the "scaena" (C-D). Through the center of the orchestra
and parallel to the direction of the "proscaenium," a line is laid off,
and centers are marked where it cuts the circumference to the right and
left (E, F) at the ends of the half circle. Then, with the compasses fixed
at the right, an arc is described from the horizontal distance at the left
to the left hand side of the "proscaenium" (F, G); again with the center
at the left end, an arc is described from the horizontal distance at the
right to the right hand side of the "proscaenium" (E, H).
2. As a result of this plan with three centers, the Greeks have a roomier
orchestra, and a "scaena" set further back, as well as a stage of less
depth. There the tragic and comic actors perform on the stage, while other
artists give their performances in the entire orchestra; hence, from this
fact they are given in Greek the distinct names "Scenic" and "Thymelic."
The height of this "logeum" ought to be not less than ten feet nor more
than twelve. Let the ascending flights of steps between the wedges of seats,
as far up as the first curved cross aisle, be laid out on lines directly
opposite to the angles of the squares. Above the cross aisle, let other
flights be laid out in the middle between the first; and at the top, as
often as there is a new cross aisle, the number of flights of steps is
always increased to the same extent.
Chapter VIII
Acoustics of the Site of a Theater
1. All this having been settled with the greatest pains and skill, we
must see to it, with still greater care, that a site has been selected
where the voice has a gentle fall, and is not driven back with a recoil
so as to convey an indistinct meaning to the ear. There are some places
which from their very nature interfere with the course of the voice, as
for instance the dissonant, the circumsonant, ; again the resonant,and
the consonant. The dissonant are those places in which the first sound
uttered that is carried up high, strikes against solid bodies above, and,
being driven back, checks as it sinks to the bottom the rise of the succeeding
sound.
2. The circumsonant are those in which the voice spreads all round,
and then is forced into the middle, where it dissolves, the case endings
are not heard, and it dies away there in sounds of indistinct meaning.
The resonant are those in which it comes into contact with some solid substance
and recoils, thus producing an echo, and making the terminations of cases
sound double. The consonant are those in which it is supported from below,
increases as it goes up, and reaches the ears in words which are distinct
and clear in tone. Hence, if there has been careful attention in the selection
of the site, the effect of the voice will, through this precaution, be
perfectly suited to the purposes of a theater.
The drawings of the plans may be distinguished from each other by this
difference, that theaters designed from squares are meant to be used by
Greeks, while Roman theaters are designed from equilateral triangles. Whoever
is willing to follow these directions will be able to construct perfectly
correct theaters.
Chapter IX
Colonnades and Walks
1. Colonnades must be constructed behind the scaena, so that when sudden
showers interrupt plays, the people may have somewhere to retire from the
theater, and so that there may be room for the preparation of all the outfit
of the stage. Such places, for instance, are the colonnades of Pompey,
and also, in Athens, the colonnades of Eumenes and the fane of Father Bacchus;
also, as you leave the theater, the music hall which Themistocles surrounded
with stone columns, and roofed with the yards and masts of ships captured
from the Persians. It was burned during the war with Mithridates, and afterwards
restored by King Ariobarzanes. At Smyrna there is the Stratoniceum, at
Tralles, a colonnade on each side of the scaena above the race course,
and in other cities which have had careful architects there are colonnades
and walks about the theaters.
2. The approved way of building them requires that they should be double,
and have Doric columns on the outside, with the architraves and their ornaments
finished according to the law of modular proportion. The approved depth
for them requires that the depth, from the lower part of the outermost
columns to the columns in the middle, and from the middle columns to the
wall enclosing the walk under the colonnade, should be equal to the height
of the outer columns. Let the middle columns be one fifth higher than the
outer columns, and designed in the Ionic or Corinthian style.
3. The columns will not be subject to the same rules of symmetry and
proportion which I prescribed in the case of sanctuaries; for the dignity
which ought to be their quality in temples of the gods is one thing, but
their elegance in colonnades and other public works is quite another. Hence,
if the columns are to be of the Doric order, let their height, including
the capital, be measured off into fifteen parts. Of these parts, let one
be fixed upon to form the module, and in accordance with this module the
whole work is to be developed. Let the thickness of the columns at the
bottom be two modules; an intercolumniation, five and a half modules; the
height of a column, excluding the capital, fourteen modules; the capital,
one module in height and two and one sixth modules in breadth. Let the
modular proportions of the rest of the work be carried out as written in
the fourth book in the case of temples.
4. But if the columns are to be Ionic, let the shaft, excluding base
and capital, be divided into eight and one half parts, and let one of these
be assigned to the thickness of a column. Let the base, including the plinth,
be fixed at half the thickness, and let the proportions of the capital
be as shown in the third book. If the column is to be Corinthian, let its
shaft and base be proportioned as in the Ionic, but its capital, as has
been written in the fourth book. In the stylobates, let the increase made
there by means of the "scamilli impares" be taken from the description
written above in the third book. Let the architraves, coronae, and all
the rest be developed, in proportion to the columns, from what has been
written in the foregoing books.
5. The space in the middle, between the colonnades and open to the sky,
ought to be embellished with green things; for walking in the open air
is very healthy, particularly for the eyes, since the refined and rarefied
air that comes from green things, finding its way in because of the physical
exercise, gives a clean cut image, and, by clearing away the gross humors
from the eyes, leaves the sight keen and the image distinct. Besides, as
the body gets warm with exercise in walking, this air, by sucking out the
humors from the frame, diminishes their superabundance, and disperses and
thus reduces that superfluity which is more than the body can bear.
6. That this is so may be seen from the fact that misty vapors never
arise from springs of water which are under cover, nor even from watery
marshes which are underground; but in uncovered places which are open to
the sky, when the rising sun begins to act upon the world with its heat,
it brings out the vapor from damp and watery spots, and rolls it in masses
upwards. Therefore, if it appears that in places open to the sky the more
noxious humors are sucked out of the body by the air, as they obviously
are from the earth in the form of mists, I think there is no doubt that
cities should be provided with the roomiest and most ornamented walks,
laid out under the free and open sky.
7. That they may be always dry and not muddy, the following is to be
done. Let them be dug down and cleared out to the lowest possible depth.
At the right and left construct covered drains, and in their walls, which
are directed towards the walks, lay earthen pipes with their lower ends
inclined into the drains. Having finished these, fill up the place with
charcoal, and then strew sand over the walks and level them off. Hence,
on account of the porous nature of the charcoal and the insertion of the
pipes into the drains, quantities of water will be conducted away, and
the walks will thus be rendered perfectly dry and without moisture.
8. Furthermore, our ancestors in establishing these works provided cities
with storehouses for an indispensable material. The fact is that in sieges
everything else is easier to procure than is wood. Salt can easily be brought
in beforehand; corn can be got together quickly by the State or by individuals,
and if it gives out, the defense may be maintained on cabbage, meat, or
beans; water can be had by digging wells, or when there are sudden falls
of rain, by collecting it from the tiles. But a stock of wood, which is
absolutely necessary for cooking food, is a difficult and troublesome thing
to provide; for it is slow to gather and a good deal is consumed.
9. On such occasions, therefore, these walks are thrown open, and a
definite allowance granted to each inhabitant according to tribes. Thus
these uncovered walks insure two excellent things: first, health in time
of peace; secondly, safety in time of war. Hence, walks that are developed
on these principles, and built not only behind the "scaena" of theaters,
but also at the temples of all the gods, will be capable of being of great
use to cities.
Chapter X
Baths
1. In the first place, the warmest possible situation must be selected;
that is, one which faces away from the north and northeast. The rooms for
the hot and tepid baths should be lighted from the southwest, or, if the
nature of the situation prevents this, at all events from the south, because
the set time for bathing is principally from midday to evening. We must
also see to it that the hot bath rooms in the women's and men's departments
adjoin each other, and are situated in the same quarter; for thus it will
be possible that the same furnace should serve both of them and their fittings.
Three bronze cauldrons are to be set over the furnace, one for hot, another
for tepid, and the third for cold water, placed in such positions that
the amount of water which flows out of the hot water cauldron may be replaced
from that for tepid water, and in the same way the cauldron for tepid water
may be supplied from that for cold. The arrangement must allow the semi
cylinders for the bath basins to be heated from the same furnace.
2. The hanging floors of the hot bath rooms are to be constructed as
follows. First the surface of the ground should be laid with tiles a foot
and a half square, sloping towards the furnace in such a way that, if a
ball is thrown in, it cannot stop inside but must return of itself to the
furnace room; thus the heat of the fire will more readily spread under
the hanging flooring. Upon them, pillars made of eighteen bricks are built,
and set at such a distance apart that twofer tiles may be used to cover
them. These pillars should be two feet in height, laid with clay mixed
with hair, and covered on top with the twofer tiles which support the floor.
3. The vaulted ceilings will be more serviceable if built of masonry;
but if they are of framework, they should have tile work on the under side,
to be constructed as follows. Let iron bars or arcs be made, and hang them
to the framework by means of iron hooks set as close together as possible;
and let these bars or arcs be placed at such distances apart that each
pair of them may support and carry an unflanged tile. Thus the entire vaulting
will be completely supported on iron. These vaults should have the joints
on their upper side daubed with clay mixed with hair, and their under side,
facing the floor, should first be plastered with pounded tile mixed with
lime, and then covered with polished stucco in relief or smooth. Vaults
in hot bath rooms will be more serviceable if they are doubled; for then
the moisture from the heat will not be able to spoil the timber in the
framework, but will merely circulate between the two vaults.
4. The size of the baths must depend upon the number of the population.
The rooms should be thus proportioned: let their breadth be one third of
their length, excluding the niches for the washbowl and the bath basin.
The washbowl ought without fail to be placed under a window, so that the
shadows of those who stand round it may not obstruct the light. Niches
for washbowls must be made so roomy that when the first comers have taken
their places, the others who are waiting round may have proper standing
room. The bath basin should be not less than six feet broad from the wall
to the edge, the lower step and the "cushion" taking up two feet of this
space.
5. The Laconicum and other sweating baths must adjoin the tepid room,
and their height to the bottom of the curved dome should be equal to their
width. Let an aperture be left in the middle of the dome with a bronze
disc hanging from it by chains. By raising and lowering it, the temperature
of the sweating bath can be regulated. The chamber itself ought, as it
seems, to be circular, so that the force of the fire and heat may spread
evenly from the center all round the circumference.
Chapter XI
The Palaestra
1. Next, although the building of palaestrae is not usual in Italy,
I think it best to set forth the traditional way, and to show how they
are constructed among the Greeks. The square or oblong peristyle in a palaestra
should be so formed that the circuit of it makes a walk of two stadia.
Let three of its colonnades be single, but let the fourth, which is on
the south side, be double, so that when there is bad weather accompanied
by wind, the drops of rain may not be able to reach the interior.
2. In the three colonnades construct roomy recesses (A) with seats in
them, where philosophers, rhetoricians, and others who delight in learning
may sit and converse. In the double colonnade let the rooms be arranged
thus: the young men's hall (B) in the middle; this is a very spacious recess
(exedra) with seats in it, and it should be one third longer than it is
broad. At the right, the bag room (C); then next, the dust room (D); beyond
the dust room, at the corner of the colonnade, the cold washing room (E).
At the left of the young men's hall is the anointing room (F); then, next
to the anointing room, the cold bath room (G), and beyond that a passage
into the furnace room (H) at the corner of the colonnade. Next, but inside
and on a line with the cold bath room, put the vaulted sweating bath (I),
its length twice its breadth, and having at the ends on one side a Laconicum
(K), proportioned in the same manner as above described, and opposite the
Laconicum the warm washing room (L). Inside a palaestra, the peristyle
ought to be laid out as described above.
3. But on the outside, let three colonnades be arranged, one as you
leave the peristyle and two at the right and left, with running tracks
in them. That one of them which faces the north should be a double colonnade
of very ample breadth, while the other should be single, and so constructed
that on the sides next the walls and the side along the columns it may
have edges, serving as paths, of not less than ten feet, with the space
between them sunken, so that steps are necessary in going down from the
edges a foot and a half to the plane, which plane should be not less than
twelve feet wide. Thus people walking round on the edges will not be interfered
with by the anointed who are exercising.
4. This kind of colonnadeis where athletes, during the winter season,
exercise in covered running tracks. Next to this "xystus" and to the double
colonnade should be laid out the uncovered walks which we term "xysta,"
into which, in fair weather during the winter, the athletes come out from
the "xystus" for exercise. The "xysta" ought to be so constructed that
there may be plantations between the two colonnades, or groves of plane
trees, with walks laid out in them among the trees and resting places there,
made
of "opus signinum." Behind the "xystus" a stadium, so designed that great
numbers of people may have plenty of room to look on at the contests between
the athletes.
I have now described all that seemed necessary for the proper arrangement
of things within the city walls.
Chapter XII
Harbors, Breakwaters and Shipyards
1. The subject of the usefulness of harbors is one which I must not
omit, but must explain by what means ships are sheltered in them from storms.
If their situation has natural advantages, with projecting capes or promontories
which curve or return inwards by their natural conformation, such harbors
are obviously of the greatest service. Round them, of course, colonnades
or shipyards must be built, or passages from the colonnades to the business
quarters, and towers must be set up on both sides, from which chains can
be drawn across by machinery.
2. But if we have a situation without natural advantages, and unfit
to shelter ships from storms, it is obvious that we must proceed as follows.
If there is no river in the neighborhood, but if there can be a roadstead
on one side, then, let the advances be made from the other side by means
of walls or embankments, and let the enclosing harbor be thus formed. Walls
which are to be under water should be constructed as follows. Take the
powder which comes from the country extending from Cumae to the promontory
of Minerva, and mix it in the mortar trough in the proportion of two to
one.
3. Then, in the place previously determined, a cofferdam, with its sides
formed of oaken stakes with ties between them, is to be driven down into
the water and firmly propped there; then, the lower surface inside, under
the water, must be leveled off and dredged, working from beams laid across;
and finally, concrete from the mortar trough the stuff having been mixed
as prescribed above must be heaped up until the empty space which was within
the cofferdam is filled up by the wall. This, however, is possessed as
a gift of nature by such places as have been described above.
But if by reason of currents or the assaults of the open sea the props
cannot hold the cofferdam together, then, let a platform of the greatest
possible strength be constructed, beginning on the ground itself or on
a substructure; and let the platform be constructed with a level surface
for less than half its extent, while the rest, which is close to the beach,
slopes down and out.
4. Then, on the water's edge and at the sides of the platform, let marginal
walls be constructed, about one and one half feet thick and brought up
to a level with the surface above mentioned; next, let the sloping part
be filled in with sand and leveled off with the marginal wall and the surface
of the platform. Then, upon this level surface construct a block as large
as is required, and when it is finished, leave it for not less than two
months to dry. Then, cut away the marginal wall which supports the sand.
Thus, the sand will be undermined by the waves, and this will cause the
block to fall into the sea. By this method, repeated as often as necessary,
an advance into the water can be made.
5. But in places where this powder is not found, the following method
must be employed. A cofferdam with double sides, composed of charred stakes
fastened together with ties, should be constructed in the appointed place,
and clay in wicker baskets made of swamp rushes should be packed in among
the props. After this has been well packed down and filled in as closely
as possible, set up your water screws, wheels, and drums, and let the space
now bounded by the enclosure be emptied and dried. Then, dig out the bottom
within the enclosure. If it proves to be of earth, it must be cleared out
and dried till you come to solid bottom and for a space wider than the
wall which is to be built upon it, and then filled in with masonry consisting
of rubble, lime, and sand.
6. But if the place proves to be soft, the bottom must be staked with
piles made of charred alder or olive wood, and then filled in with charcoal
as has been prescribed in the case of the foundations of theaters and the
city wall. Finally, build the wall of dimension stone, with the bond stones
as long as possible, so that particularly the stones in the middle may
be held together by the joints. Then, fill the inside of the wall with
broken stone or masonry. It will thus be possible for even a tower to be
built upon it.
7. When all this is finished, the general rule for shipyards will be
to build them facing the north. Southern exposures from their heat produce
rot, the wood worm, shipworms, and all sorts of other destructive creatures,
and strengthen and keep them alive. And these buildings must by no means
be constructed of wood, for fear of fire. As for their size, no definite
limit need be set, but they must be built to suit the largest type of ship,
so that if even larger ships are hauled up, they may find plenty of room
there.
I have described in this book the construction and completion of all
that I could remember as necessary for general use in the public places
of cities. In the following book I shall consider private houses, their
conveniences, and symmetrical proportions.
How To Build Catapults >> Vitruvius
Ten Books of Architecture >> Book 5
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