The Emergence of Modern Architecture: A Documentary History, from 1000 to 1810Liane Lefaivre, Alexander Tzonis Routledge, 2004 M07 31 - 552 pages A cognitive history of the emergence of modern architecture. Cutting across disciplinarian and institutional divisions as we know them today, this book reconstructs developments within the framework of a cognitive history of the past. Modern is here taken to mean the radical re-thinking of architecture from the end of the tenth century in Europe to the end of the eighteenth century. Among the key debates that mark the period are those that oppose tradition to innovation, canon to discovery, geometrical formality to natural picturesqueness, the functional to the hedonistic. |
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... built anew. In addition, it was, as Duby remarked, Glaber's 'admirable metaphor' to suggest that an ideological and institutional renovation was nascent at this moment. The consciousness that there had been a Middle Ages was expressed ...
... built anew. In addition, it was, as Duby remarked, Glaber's 'admirable metaphor' to suggest that an ideological and institutional renovation was nascent at this moment. The consciousness that there had been a Middle Ages was expressed ...
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... built into his cathedral. He accompanied these statements with the declaration that he was 'transferring what is material to that which is immaterial'. In this 'anagogical way' the archaic divine model was compromised but not disposed ...
... built into his cathedral. He accompanied these statements with the declaration that he was 'transferring what is material to that which is immaterial'. In this 'anagogical way' the archaic divine model was compromised but not disposed ...
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... built it out of vain love of glory but also with the aim to incite a campaign for the regeneration of the city (Romae veterem renovarem decorem). The campaign did not succeed but the building is a first precedent of the use of ...
... built it out of vain love of glory but also with the aim to incite a campaign for the regeneration of the city (Romae veterem renovarem decorem). The campaign did not succeed but the building is a first precedent of the use of ...
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... built examples of the ancients, rather than the text of Vitruvius, should be the source of authority. He refused to recognise the more theoretical repercussions of these remarks. Thus Desgodet did not manage to have a fair hearing. He ...
... built examples of the ancients, rather than the text of Vitruvius, should be the source of authority. He refused to recognise the more theoretical repercussions of these remarks. Thus Desgodet did not manage to have a fair hearing. He ...
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... built up, of marvellous greatness and beauty which was covered all over with stones and adorned with many stories, and fenced with bronze railings all around, with golden peacock. ... At the four sides of the temple were four horses of ...
... built up, of marvellous greatness and beauty which was covered all over with stones and adorned with many stories, and fenced with bronze railings all around, with golden peacock. ... At the four sides of the temple were four horses of ...
Contents
I270 | |
I435M36 | |
completed | |
Francesco Giorgi or Zorzi Memorandum for S Francesco della | |
Philibert de IOrme New Inventions for Building Economically 131 | |
CharlesAugustin dAviler Coursdarchitecture 1691 255 | |
Johann Bernhard Fischer von Erlach Entwurfeinerhistorischen Architecktur 1721 285 | |
Robert Castell The Villas of the Ancients 293 | |
John Searle Plan of Popes garden 1745 303 | |
Epistle to Lord Burlington 300 | |
CharlesEtienne Briseux Lart de bdtirles maisons decampagne 17431761 315 | |
Contents | |
Marc Antoine Laugier Eisai sitr architecture 1753 338 | |
Giacomo Barozzio da Vignola Cinque Ordini 1563 159 | |
Antonio Rusconi DellArchitettura 1590 160 | |
i59i El Greco Domenico Theotocopoulos Marginalia to Daniele | |
Jaques Perret Des Fortifications et artifices architecture et perspective 1601 166167 | |
Federigo Zuccaro The Idea of Painters Sculptors and Architects 168 | |
Vincenzo Scamozzi DeII Idea dell architettura universale 1615 171 | |
Ben Jonson Neptunes Triumph 175 | |
Galileo Galilei Discorsi intomo a due nuove scienze 1638 187 | |
published J D Cassini 198 | |
Sir Christopher Wren Tracts on Architecture 203 | |
Juan Caramuel de Lobkowitz Architectura Civil recta y obliqua 1678 223225 | |
written Guarino Guarini Civil Architecture 226 | |
Guarino Guarini Architectura Civil 1678 230231 | |
Antoine Desgodetz Les Edifices antiques de Rome 1682 239 | |
Antoine Desgodetz The Antique Buildings of Rome 236 | |
Michel de Fremin A Critical Report on Architecture Containing the True | |
Anthony Earl of Shaftesbury Characteristics of Men Manners Opinions | |
Sir William Chambers Designs for Chinese Buildings 1757 349 | |
Julien David Le Roy Ruines des plus beaux monuments de la Grece 1758 361 | |
Giovanni Battista Piranesi Carceri dinvenzione 1760 365 | |
i78i Francesco Milizia Principles of Civil Architecture 428 | |
composed AntoineChrysostome Quatremere de Quincy On Egyptian | |
Nicolas Caritat Marquis de Condorcet Report on Hospitals 442 | |
Jacques Rene Tenon Reports on the Hospitals of Paris 456 | |
Richard Elsam Essay on Rural Architecture 476 | |
ClaudeNicolas Ledoux Concerning Architecture Seen From the Point | |
Illustration | |
CharlesFrancois Viel On the Impotence of Mathematics to Insure | |
Bibliography and references 502 | |
Poliphili 77 | |
Francis Bacon On Building The Essays 180 | |
Index 526 | |
Sir Christopher Wren Surveyors Report on the Condition ofSt Pauls | |
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Common terms and phrases
according admirable agreeable ancient Andrea Palladio angle anticlassicism antiquity appear archi architect architecture architrave artists authority beauty Blondel body building built called cause century Charles Nicolas Cochin church classical canon Claude Perrault columns considered construction Corinthian Corinthian Order cornice decoration deformation dimensions disposition doors Doric drawing edifice effect example facade Francesco Further reading garden genius geometry give Gothic Gothic architecture Greek Guarino Guarini height houses idea imagination imitation invention Ionic Order Jeremy Bentham kind light manner matter mind modern Modern architecture monuments nature necessary never objects Oblique observed ornaments painting palace Palladio perfect person Pierre Patte pilasters pleasing pleasure principles proportions reason Rome rules Sebastiano Serlio seen sense Serlio shape square stone style sublime taste tecture temples things tion town treatise trees true Tzonis variety vault Vitruvius walls whole Wiebenson