The Ten Books on Architecture (Bks. I-X)
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Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #158758 in Books
- Published on: 1960-06-01
- Original language: Latin
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 331 pages
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Marcus Vitruvius Pollio (late 1st century B.C.), was a Roman military architect and engineer, and an expert in ballistic machines in particular. Robert Tavernor studied architecture in London, Rome and Cambridge and practices as a consultant architect. He was professor of Architecture at the universities of Edinburgh and Bath, and is currently Professor of Architecture and Urban Design at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). Richard Schofield read Classics at Oxford in the late 1960s, then architectural history at the Courtauld Institute of Art, London. After working at the University of Nottingham for many years, he moved to the Istituto universitario di architettura di Venezia in 1997, where he is the Professor of the History of Architecture.
Customer Reviews
describes the ancient roman traditions of design & building
When I first read this book back in 1991 when I was doing my thesis on courtyard housing I found the descriptions made by Vitruvius on the Roman Domus (courtyard house) invaluable to my understanding.
Over the last 8 years it has been a valuable asset in my Library, full of information on lime plasters for walls, ceilings and floors, the makign of Pozzalana concrete, finding water, understanding the winds and energy patterns of the land and a guide to designing better sustainable buildings.
Topics include -
I -Education of an architect, principles of design, for city, town and home
II The selection of materials - how they are made and used
III - The proportions of the Orders, Doric, Ionic
IV - Applications of the Orders - Temples
V -The design of the Public Buildings - Theatres, Basilicas, Baths, Forums, Harbours, Shipyards
VI - Design of the Courtyard House
VII - Plastering:- technique, materials and application
VIII - Water Locating, storage and transportation - aqueducts
IX- The stars - Suns moon and 12 planets
X - War machines and other instruments
At the current Price, this book is a bargain and you will most likely reread it many times, cause its full of useful information.
If you are involved in Green building, design, like History, want to build a really nice healthy house, then I suggest this is an ideal book for you.
Roman Empire's Most Influencial Contribution to Architecture
Vitruvius' contribution was not as Ciceronian literature, but as a hands-on, researched, handbook of practical architecture. The explanations are simple with not a wasted word for the aesthetic quality of the work.
Vitruvius found what made the most ancient monuments such durable constructions. He found WHY they were built they way they were. For example, he explains in enough detail for the "then" architect to understand how to construct for best auditory sound enhancements using examples from Greek engineering and Roman building practices. (There is a detailed description on harmonics based on Pythagorean principles.) He also explains the true meaning of proportion developing constructs from the "golden mean" as seen in the various modes of ancient column design (as well as a description of "stasis" and other logical variants applied to columnal construction).
The book is often referenced in medieval documents explaining the training of medieval cathedral (especial gothic era) builders and the practical construction of these cathedrals that still stand and are useful today.
I highly recommend this book for any art history student or student of architecture at any level. It is a reminder that great thinking and analysis has no technical limitation.
Roman architecture, and so much more.
This is an architecture book written by a Roman, during the classical period. It strongly influenced many of the great minds of the Renaissance. The historical significance of the book would make it worth looking over, for anyone interested in classical architecture.
This book contains an immense number of digressions from architecture that are perhaps of greater interest than the actual architectural content. There is a section on degenerate, abstract, modern art that could have been written today! Also, there is a good explanation of how architects have contributed to siege warfare, and instructions on the proper construction of siege devices such as catapults and tortoises. Other topics include how to divine water (without recourse to superstitious practices), and how the fundamental elements (earth, air, fire, and water) in stones influence their suitability as building materials.




