The Architecture of the Renaissance, Volume 1This volume forms part of the 2 volume facimile Architecture of the Renaissance. This set considers the effect of the new artistic culture on the changes that took place in the fifteenth century Italian cities and then throughout Europe. |
Contents
one The inventors of the new architecture | 9 |
two Towards the ideal city | 127 |
1 | 130 |
three Beginning and end of the third style | 231 |
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Common terms and phrases
activities Alberti already ancient Antonio arches architect architecture artists Baccio Pontelli became braccia Bramante Bramante's Brunelleschi building built cathedral centre chapel Chastel church classical completed cornice Cosimo court courtyard culture decoration designed dome Ducal Palace economic elements European experiments façade Federigo Federigo da Montefeltro Ferrara fifteenth century figurative arts Filippo Florence Florentine Fra Giocondo Francesco di Giorgio frescoes Giovanni Giuliano Giuliano da Sangallo grid plan ground plan Ibid ideal important Italian Italy large number later layout Leonardo linked loggia Lorenzo Mantua Maria Medici medieval ment Michelangelo Milan models modern Montefeltro monumental motif Naples onwards organism painters painting Palazzo perspective Pienza Piero della Francesca pilasters political possible programme Raphael Renaissance repertoire roads Roman Rome sacristy Sangallo sculpture Sforza sixteenth Sixtus space square St Peter's streets theoretical tion town town-planning traditional treatise Uffizi urban Urbino Vasari Venetian Venice Villa walls whole



