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COLLEGE
HISTORIES OF ART
EDITED
BY
JOHN
C. VAN DYKE, L.H.D.
HISTORY
OF ARCHITECTURE
A.
D. F. HAMLIN
COLLEGE
HISTORIES OF ART
EDITED
BY
JOHN
C. VAN DYKE, L.H.D.
PROFESSOR OF THE HISTORY OF ART
IN
RUTGERS COLLEGE
HISTORY
OF PAINTING
By
JOHN C. VAN
DYKE,
the Editor of the Series. With
Frontispiece and 110
Illustrations,
Bibliographies, and Index. Crown 8vo,
HISTORY
OF ARCHITECTURE
By
ALFRED D. F. HAMLIN, A.M.
Adjunct Professor of Architecture,
Columbia College,
New
York. With Frontispiece and 229 Illustrations and
Diagrams, Bibliographies,
Glossary,
Index of Architects, and a General Index. Crown
8vo,
HISTORY
OF SCULPTURE
By
ALLAN MARQUAND,
Ph.D., L.H.D. and ARTHUR
L. FROTHINGHAM,
Jr., Ph.D.,
Professors
of Archæology and the History of Art in
Princeton University. With
Frontispiece
and 112 Illustrations. Crown 8vo,
THE
PARTHENON, ATHENS, AS RESTORED BY
CH. CHIPIEZ.
(From
model in Metropolitan Museum, New
York.)
A
TEXT-BOOK
OF
THE
HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE
BY
A.
D. F. HAMLIN, A.M.
PROFESSOR
OF THE HISTORY OF
ARCHITECTURE
IN
THE SCHOOL OF
ARCHITECTURE,
COLUMBIA
UNIVERSITY
SEVENTH
EDITION
REVISED
L
O N G M A N S , G R E E N , A N D C O.
91
AND 93 FIFTH AVENUE, NEW
YORK
LONDON,
BOMBAY, AND CALCUTTA
1909
PREFACE.
THE aim of this work has been to
sketch the various periods and
styles of
architecture
with the broadest possible strokes, and
to mention, with such
brief
characterization
as seemed permissible or necessary, the
most important works
of
each
period or style. Extreme
condensation in presenting the leading
facts of
architectural
history has been necessary,
and much that would rightly claim place
in
a
larger work has been omitted
here. The danger was felt to be
rather in the direction
of
too much detail than of too little.
While the book is intended
primarily to meet the
special
requirements of the college student,
those of the general reader
have not been
lost
sight of. The majority of the technical
terms used are defined or
explained in the
context,
and the small remainder in a glossary at
the end of the work. Extended
criticism
and minute description were out of the
question, and discussion of
controverted
points has been in
consequence as far as possible
avoided.
The
illustrations have been
carefully prepared with a view to
elucidating the text,
rather
than for pictorial effect. With the
exception of some fifteen
cuts reproduced
from
Lübke's Geschichte
der Architektur (by kind
permission of Messrs. Seemann,
of
Leipzig),
the illustrations are almost all
entirely new. A large number are from
vi
original
drawings made by myself, or under my
direction, and the remainder
are,
with
a few exceptions, half-tone reproductions
prepared specially for this work
from
photographs
in my possession. Acknowledgments are
due to Messrs. H. W.
Buemming,
H. D. Bultman, and A. E. Weidinger for valued
assistance in preparing
original
drawings; and to Professor W. R. Ware, to
Professor W. H. Thomson, M.D.,
and
to the Editor of the Series for much helpful
criticism and suggestion.
It
is hoped that the lists of monuments
appended to the history of each
period down
to
the present century may prove useful for
reference, both to the student and
the
general
reader, as a supplement to the body of
the text.
A.
D. F. HAMLIN.
Columbia
College, New York,
January
20, 1896.
The
author desires to express
his further acknowledgments to
the friends who have
at
various
times since the first
appearance of this book
called his attention to
errors in the text
or
illustrations, and to recent
advances in the art or in
its archæology deserving of
mention
in
subsequent editions. As far as
possible these suggestions
have been incorporated in
the
various
revisions and reprints which
have appeared since the
first publication.
A.
D. F. H.
Columbia
University,
October
28, 1907.
GENERAL
BIBLIOGRAPHY.
(This
includes the leading
architectural works treating of
more than one period or
style. The
reader
should consult also the
special references at the
head of each chapter.
Valuable
material
is also contained in the
leading architectural periodicals
and in monographs too
numerous
to mention.)
DICTIONARIES AND ENCYCLOPEDIAS.
Agincourt,
History
of Art by its Monuments;
London.
Architectural
Publication Society, Dictionary
of Architecture;
London.
Bosc,
Dictionnaire
raisonné d'architecture;
Paris.
Durm
and others, Handbuch
der Architektur;
Stuttgart. (This is an
encyclopedic
compendium
of architectural knowledge in many
volumes; the series not yet
complete.
It is referred to as the Hdbuch.
d. Arch.)
Gwilt,
Encyclopedia
of Architecture;
London.
Longfellow
and Frothingham, Cyclopedia
of Architecture in Italy and
the Levant;
New
York.
Planat,
Encyclopédie
d'architecture;
Paris.
Sturgis,
Dictionary
of Architecture and
Building; New
York.
GENERAL HANDBOOKS AND HISTORIES.
Bühlmann,
Die
Architektur des klassischen
Alterthums und der
Renaissance;
Stuttgart.
(Also
in English, published in New
York.)
Choisy,
Histoire
de l'architecture;
Paris.
Durand,
Recueil
et parallèle d'édifices de tous
genres;
Paris.
Fergusson,
History
of Architecture in All
Countries;
London.
Fletcher
and Fletcher, A
History of Architecture;
London.
Gailhabaud,
L'Architecture
du Vme. au XVIIIme.
siècle;
Paris.--Monuments
anciens et
modernes;
Paris.
Kugler,
Geschichte
der Baukunst;
Stuttgart.
Longfellow,
The
Column and the
Arch; New
York.
Lübke,
Geschichte
der Architektur;
Leipzig.--History
of Art, tr. and rev.
by R. Sturgis;
New
York.
Perry,
Chronology
of Mediæval and Renaissance
Architecture;
London.
Reynaud,
Traité
d'architecture;
Paris.
Rosengarten,
Handbook
of Architectural Styles;
London and New York.
Simpson,
A
History of Architectural
Development;
London.
Spiers,
Architecture
East and West;
London.
Stratham,
Architecture
for General Readers;
London.
Sturgis,
European
Architecture; New
York.
Transactions
of the Royal Institute of
British Architects;
London.
Viollet-le-Duc,
Discourses
on Architecture;
Boston.
THEORY,
THE
ORDERS,
ETC.
Chambers,
A
Treatise on Civil
Architecture;
London.
Daviler,
Cours
d'architecture de Vignole;
Paris.
Esquié,
Traité
élémentaire d'architecture;
Paris.
Guadet,
Théorie
de l'architecture;
Paris.
Robinson,
Principles
of Architectural Composition; New
York.
Ruskin,
The
Seven Lamps of
Architecture;
London.
Sturgis,
How
to Judge Architecture; New
York.
Tuckerman,
Vignola,
the Five Orders of
Architecture; New
York.
Van
Brunt, Greek
Lines and Other
Essays;
Boston.
Van
Pelt, A
Discussion of Composition.
Ware,
The
American Vignola;
Scranton.
HISTORY
OF ARCHITECTURE.
INTRODUCTION.
A
HISTORY of architecture is a record of
man's efforts to build beautifully.
The
erection
of structures devoid of beauty is
mere building, a trade and not an
art.
Edifices
in which strength and stability alone
are sought, and in designing which
only
utilitarian
considerations have been
followed, are properly works
of engineering.
Only
when the idea of beauty is added to that
of use does a structure take
its place
among
works of architecture. We may, then,
define architecture as the art
which
seeks
to harmonize in a building the
requirements of utility and of beauty. It is
the
most
useful of the fine arts and the
noblest of the useful arts. It
touches the life of
man
at every point. It is concerned not only in
sheltering his person and
ministering
to
his comfort, but also in
providing him with places for worship,
amusement, and
business;
with tombs, memorials, embellishments for
his cities, and other
structures
for
the varied needs of a complex
civilization. It engages the services of
a larger
portion
of the community and involves greater
outlays of money than any
other
occupation
except agriculture. Everyone at
some point comes in contact with
the
work
of the architect, and from this universal
contact architecture derives
its
significance
as an index of the civilization of an
age, a race, or a
people.
xxii
It
is the function of the historian of architecture to
trace the origin, growth, and
decline
of the architectural styles which have
prevailed in different lands and
ages,
and
to show how they have reflected the great
movements of civilization. The
migrations,
the conquests, the commercial, social,
and religious changes
among
different
peoples have all manifested
themselves in the changes of their
architecture,
and
it is the historian's function to show this. It is
also his function to explain
the
principles
of the styles, their characteristic forms
and decoration, and to describe
the
great
masterpieces of each style and
period.
STYLE
is a
quality; the "historic styles"
are phases of development.
Style
is
character
expressive
of definite conceptions, as of grandeur,
gaiety, or solemnity. An historic
style
is the
particular phase, the characteristic
manner of design, which prevails at
a
given
time and place. It is not the result of
mere accident or caprice, but
of
intellectual,
moral, social, religious, and
even political conditions.
Gothic architecture
could
never have been invented by
the Greeks, nor could the Egyptian
styles have
grown
up in Italy. Each style is based upon
some fundamental principle
springing
from
its surrounding civilization, which
undergoes successive developments until
it
either
reaches perfection or its
possibilities are exhausted,
after which a period of
decline
usually sets in. This is
followed either by a reaction and the
introduction of
some
radically new principle leading to the
evolution of a new style, or by the
final
decay
and extinction of the civilization and
its replacement by some
younger and
more
virile element. Thus the history of
architecture appears as a connected
chain of
causes
and effects succeeding each
other without break, each
style growing out of
that
which preceded it, or springing out of the
fecundating contact of a higher with
a
lower
civilization. To study architectural
styles is therefore to study a branch of
the
history
of civilization.
xxiii
Technically,
architectural styles are
identified by the means they employ to
cover
enclosed
spaces, by the characteristic forms of
the supports and other
members
(piers,
columns, arches, mouldings,
traceries, etc.), and by their
decoration. The plan
should
receive special attention,
since it shows the arrangement of the
points of
support,
and hence the nature of the structural
design. A comparison, for example,
of
the
plans of the Hypostyle Hall at Karnak (Fig.
11, h)
and of the Basilica of
between
the two edifices, and hence a difference
of style.
STRUCTURAL
PRINCIPLES. All
architecture is based on one or
more of three
fundamental
structural principles; that of the
lintel, of the
arch
or
vault, and of
the
truss. The
principle of the lintel
is that of
resistance to transverse strains,
and
appears
in all construction in which a cross-piece or
beam rests on two or
more
vertical
supports. The arch
or
vault
makes
use of several pieces to
span an opening
between
two supports. These pieces
are in compression and exert
lateral pressures or
thrusts
which
are transmitted to the supports or
abutments. The thrust must be
resisted
either by the massiveness of the
abutments or by the opposition to it
of
counter-thrusts
from other arches or vaults.
Roman builders used the
first, Gothic
builders
the second of these means of
resistance. The truss
is a
framework so
composed
of several pieces of wood or
metal that each shall best
resist the particular
strain,
whether of tension or compression, to
which it is subjected, the whole
forming
a compound beam or arch. It is
especially applicable to very wide
spans, and
is
the most characteristic feature of
modern construction. How the adoption of
one or
another
of these principles affected the
forms and even the decoration of the
various
styles,
will be shown in the succeeding
chapters.
HISTORIC
DEVELOPMENT. Geographically
and chronologically, architecture
appears
to have originated in the Nile xxiv
valley. A second centre of
development is
found
in the valley of the Tigris and
Euphrates, not uninfluenced by the
older
Egyptian
art. Through various channels the Greeks
inherited from both Egyptian and
Assyrian
art, the two influences being discernible
even through the strongly
original
aspect
of Greek architecture. The Romans in
turn, adopting the external details
of
Greek
architecture, transformed its
substance by substituting the Etruscan
arch for
the
Greek construction of columns and
lintels. They developed a complete
and
original
system of construction and decoration and
spread it over the civilized
world,
which
has never wholly outgrown or
abandoned it.
With
the fall of Rome and the rise of
Constantinople these forms
underwent in the
East
another transformation, called the
Byzantine, in the development of
Christian
domical
church architecture. In the North and West,
meanwhile, under the growing
institutions
of the papacy and of the monastic orders
and the emergence of a feudal
civilization
out of the chaos of the Dark Ages, the
constant preoccupation of
architecture
was to evolve from the basilica type of
church a vaulted structure, and
to
adorn it throughout with an appropriate
dress of constructive and
symbolic
ornament.
Gothic architecture was the
outcome of this preoccupation, and
it
prevailed
throughout northern and western Europe
until nearly or quite the close
of
the
fifteenth century.
During
this fifteenth century the Renaissance
style matured in Italy, where it
speedily
triumphed
over Gothic fashions and
produced a marvellous series of
civic
monuments,
palaces, and churches, adorned with
forms borrowed or imitated
from
classic
Roman art. This influence
spread through Europe in the sixteenth
century,
and
ran a course of two centuries, after
which a period of servile classicism
was
followed
by a rapid decline in taste. To this
succeeded the eclecticism and
confusion
of
the nineteenth century, to xxv which the rapid growth
of new requirements and
development
of new resources have largely
contributed.
In
Eastern lands three
great schools of
architecture have grown
up
contemporaneously
with the above phases of Western art;
one under the influence of
Mohammedan
civilization, another in the Brahman and
Buddhist architecture of
India,
and the third in China and Japan. The
first of these is the richest and
most
important.
Primarily inspired from Byzantine art,
always stronger on the
decorative
than
on the constructive side, it has
given to the world the mosques and
palaces of
Northern
Africa, Moorish Spain,
Persia, Turkey, and India. The other two
schools
seem
to be wholly unrelated to the first, and
have no affinity with the architecture
of
Western
lands.
Of
Mexican, Central American, and
South American architecture so little is
known,
and
that little is so remote in history and
spirit from the styles above
enumerated,
that
it belongs rather to archæology than to
architectural history, and will not
be
considered
in this work.
NOTE.--The
reader's attention is called to
the Appendix to this volume,
in which are
gathered
some of the results of
recent investigations and of
the architectural progress of
the
last
few years which could not
readily be introduced into the
text of this edition.
The
General
Bibliography and the lists
of books recommended have
been revised and brought
up
to
date.
TABLE
OF CONTENTS.
CHAPTER
I.
PRIMITIVE AND PREHISTORIC ARCHITECTURE
CHAPTER
II.
EGYPTIAN ARCHITECTURE
CHAPTER
III.
EGYPTIAN ARCHITECTURE, Continued
CHAPTER
IV.
CHALDÆAN AND ASSYRIAN ARCHITECTURE
CHAPTER
V.
PERSIAN,
LYCIAN,
AND JEWISH ARCHITECTURE
CHAPTER
VI.
GREEK ARCHITECTURE
CHAPTER
VII.
GREEK ARCHITECTURE,
Continued
CHAPTER
VIII.
ROMAN ARCHITECTURE
CHAPTER
IX.
ROMAN ARCHITECTURE,
Continued
CHAPTER
X.
EARLY CHRISTIAN ARCHITECTURE
CHAPTER
XI.
BYZANTINE ARCHITECTURE
CHAPTER
XII.
SASSANIAN AND MOHAMMEDAN ARCHITECTURE--ARABIAN,
MORESQUE,
PERSIAN,
INDIAN,
AND
TURKISH
CHAPTER
XIII.
EARLY MEDIÆVAL ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY AND FRANCE
CHAPTER
XIV.
EARLY MEDIÆVAL ARCHITECTURE IN GERMANY,
GREAT
BRITAIN,
AND SPAIN
CHAPTER
XV.
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE
CHAPTER
XVI.
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE IN FRANCE
ix
CHAPTER XVII.
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE IN GREAT BRITAIN
CHAPTER
XVIII.
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE IN GERMANY,
THE
NETHERLANDS,
AND SPAIN
CHAPTER
XIX.
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY
CHAPTER
XX.
EARLY RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE IN ITALY
CHAPTER
XXI.
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE IN
ITALY--THE
ADVANCED RENAISSANCE AND
DECLINE
CHAPTER
XXII.
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE IN FRANCE
CHAPTER
XXIII.
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE IN GREAT BRITAIN AND
THE NETHERLANDS
CHAPTER
XXIV.
RENAISSANCE ARCHITECTURE IN GERMANY,
SPAIN,
AND PORTUGAL
CHAPTER
XXV.
THE CLASSIC REVIVALS IN EUROPE
x
CHAPTER XXVI.
RECENT ARCHITECTURE IN
EUROPE
CHAPTER
XXVII.
ARCHITECTURE IN THE UNITED STATES
CHAPTER
XXVIII.
ORIENTAL ARCHITECTURE--INDIA,
CHINA, AND
JAPAN
APPENDIX
GLOSSARY
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