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         Vitruvius:     more books (100)
  1. A translation of Vitruvius and copies of late antique drawings in Buonaccorso Ghiberti's Zibaldone (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society ; v. 69, pt. 1) by Gustina Scaglia, 1979
  2. Vitruvius: Webster's Timeline History, 46 BC - 2007 by Icon Group International, 2010-03-10
  3. Homage to Vitruvius by John K. Ryan, 1981
  4. VITRUVIUS: THE TEN BOOKS ON ARCHITECTURE With Illustrations and Original Designs by VITRUVIUS, 1111
  5. The Proportions Of The Human Figure, As Handed Down To Us By Vitruvius: From The Writings Of The Famous Sculptors And Painters Of Antiquity (1872) by Joseph Bonomi, 2010-05-23
  6. Notes On Vitruvius by Morris Hicky Morgan, 2010-05-25
  7. Greek and Roman Methods of Painting: Some Comments on the Statements Made by Pliny and Vitruvius About Wall and Panel Painting [ 1910 ] by A. P. (Arthur Pillans) Laurie, 2009-08-10
  8. The Elements of Civil Architecture, According to Vitruvius and Other Ancients, and the Most Approved Practice of Modern Authors Especially by Henry Aldrich, 2010-03-25
  9. Between Science and Drawings: Renaissance Architects on Vitruvius"s Educational Ideas (Humaniora, 339) by Liisa Kanerva, 2006
  10. Vitruvius Und Seine Zeit (German Edition) by Ludwig Sontheimer, 2010-01-10
  11. The Elements of Civil Architecture, According to Vitruvius and other Ancients, and the Most Approved by Annoumys, 2009-11-10
  12. The Music of the Eye: Or, Essays On the Principles of the Beauty and Perfection of Architecture, in the Three First Chapters of Vitruvius by Peter Legh, 2010-01-09
  13. The Elements of Civil Architecture, According to Vitruvius and Other Ancients, and the Most Approved Practice of Modern Authors Especially Palladio by Henry Aldrich, 2010-04-22
  14. The elements of civil architecture, according to Vitruvius and other ancie by Henry Aldrich, 2009-08-21

41. Vitruvius - LoveToKnow 1911
vitruvius (MARCUS vitruvius POLL10), Roman architect and engineer, author of a celebrated work on architecture.. Nothing is known concerning him except what
http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Vitruvius
Vitruvius
From LoveToKnow 1911
VITRUVIUS (MARCUS VITRUVIUS POLL 10), Roman architect and engineer, author of a celebrated work on architecture .. Nothing is known concerning him except what can be gathered from his own writings. Owing to the discovery of inscriptions relating to the Gens Vitruvia at Formiae in Campania (Mola di Gaeta ), it has been suggested that he was a native of that city,. and he has been less reasonably connected with Verona on the strength of an existing arch of the 3rd century, which is inscribed with the name of a later architect of the same family name- "Lucius Vitruvius Cerdo, a freedman of Lucius." From Vitruvius himself we learn that he was appointed, in the reign of Augustus, together with three others, a superintendent of balistae and other military engines, a post which, he says, he owed to the friendly influence of the emperor's sister, probably Octavia De Architectura, i. pref.). In another passage (v. I) he describes a basilica and adjacent aedes Augusti, of which he was, the architect. From viii. 3 it has been supposed that he had served in Africa in the time of Julius Caesar, probably as a military engineer, but the words hardly

42. Vitruvius
vitruvius Pollio (? 50 26 B.C.) is the author of a remarkable book on the art of Architecture, which was published probably in 28 B.C., and was for the
http://community.middlebury.edu/~harris/Texts/Vitruvius.html
VITRUVIUS: DE ARCHITECTURA
Vitruvius Pollio (? 50 -26 B.C.) is the author of a remarkable book on the art of Architecture, which was published probably in 28 B.C., and was for the Romans and much later for the world of the classical Renaissance, the master treatise on the art of building. But it was far more than that, it ranges in its ten books over everything of interest and importance to the building trades, from the mixing of mortar from proper materials, to the acoustics in a stone threaten, and even to the art work which as fresco style was used to decorate gentlefolks' villas. There is little that Vitruvius did not touch on, one way or another. His books had a huge influence on the West since l500, and only well into the 20th century did its influence start to break down with the new ideas from the BauHaus and modernism, along with the use of steel as the primary building material for large edifices. If you see Post Offices everywhere with Roman imitation columns in front, that is a sign that Vitruvius has been there. Classicists tend to be literary snobs, and always remark that his writing "has no literary merit...". But his style is one of the few remaining examples of how Romans actually wrote down their information, how they documented their extensive knowledge in a dozen areas from construction of building, to medicine, to law. So I have made a selection of a few pages of Vitruvius as an example of that rare phenomenon "ordinary Latin writing". Caesar's commentaries are stylistically extraordinary, not at all what they seem to the student puzzling over the ablative absolutes and indirect discourse. Plautus has passages which even in verse are ordinary, but all is cast in a Grecizing play format, so you Ave to extract the ordinary wording from what is after all a comic play.

43. Science And Society Picture Library - Search
Text page from vitruvius Teutsch , (‘German vitruvius’), the first German translation of ‘De architectura’ (Of architecture) by the Roman architect and
http://www.scienceandsociety.co.uk/results.asp?image=10423645

44. DJ Vitruvius - House Music Shenanigans
Posted by vitruvius on February 11th, 2008 filed in Events Posted by vitruvius on November 14th, 2007 filed in Mixes
http://www.djvitruvius.com/
@import url( http://www.djvitruvius.com/wp-content/themes/DarkLightMine/style.css );
DJ Vitruvius
House Music Shenanigans
Touch Supper Club - 02.16.08
Posted by vitruvius on February 11th, 2008 filed in Events
Snap Back To The Rhythm
Posted by vitruvius on November 16th, 2007 filed in Events Check out Snap Back To The Rhythm this Sunday, 4:30p-2:30a at the Twist Social Club on the corner of W 117th and Clifton.
The Sloth Pit Sessions, Vol. 1
Posted by vitruvius on November 14th, 2007 filed in Mixes The Sloth Pit Sessions, Vol. 1 The Playlist:
  • Grant Nelson - The Sound [Swing City] Bon Johnson - A Day In The Live Of Bon Holmes [Boston All Starz EP - Inuendo] George Kranz - Din Daa Daa (Frank Boissy Remix) [Chez] Tribal Man - Sax My Drums [Royal Drums] The Sound Republic - Get Loose (Take A Breath) [Ill At Ease - Spatula City]
  • Posted by vitruvius on July 24th, 2007 filed in Events Waterloo Arts Festival this Saturday from 7-10pm at Cafe Marika . Expect some slightly more relaxed action: jazzy, funky and all that good stuff, but still containing 100% danceable beats. Click on flyer to enlarge.

    45. Vitruvius
    Marcus vitruvius Pollio (born ca. 80/70 BC?; died ca. 25 BC) was a Roman writer, architect and engineer, active in the 1st century BC.
    http://www.mlahanas.de/Greeks/LX/Vitruvius.html
    Vitruvius
    Marcus Vitruvius Pollio (born ca. 80/70 BC?; died ca. 25 BC) was a Roman writer, architect and engineer, active in the 1st century BC. Little is known about his life. Even his first name Marcus and his cognomen Pollio are uncertain. They are only mentioned by Cetius Faventinus. Most data about his life are extracted from his own work. Whether these writings were actually written by one author or whether they were compiled by later librarians and copyists, remains an open question.
    Design for a Vitruvian water-screwHe was born a free Roman citizen, most likely at Formiae in Campania. He is believed to have served in the Roman army in Spain and Gaul under Julius Caesar. He was probably one of the army engineers, constructing war machines for sieges. In later years he was employed by his sponsor, the emperor Augustus, entitled with a pension to guarantee his financial independence. His date of death is unknown, which suggests that he had enjoyed only little popularity during his lifetime.
    He is said to be the author of De architectura, known today as The Ten Books of Architecture, a treatise written of Latin and Greek on architecture, dedicated to the emperor Augustus. It is the only surviving major book on architecture from classical antiquity. Mainly known for his writings, Vitruvius was himself an architect. Frontinus mentions him in connection with the standard sizes of pipes (Aq. I.25). The only building, however, that we know Vitruvius to have worked on is, as he himself tells us (de Arch. V.i.6), a basilica at Fanum Fortunae, now the modern town of Fano. The basilica has disappeared so completely that its very site is a matter of conjecture.

    46. Wiley::Architectural Theory: An Anthology From Vitruvius To 1870, Volume 1
    Architectural Theory vitruvius to 1870 is a landmark anthology that surveys the development of the field of architecture from its earliest days to the year
    http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1405102586.html
    United States Change Location

    47. Vitruvius Design Build Construction
    vitruvius 9221 Sandifur Parkway Suite A. Pasco, WA 99301. phone 509 547 3800 fax 509 547 8912 Contractor License VITRUDC988DQ
    http://www.vitconstruction.com/
    HOME REPRESENTATIVE PROJECTS DESIGN BUILD PROCESS ABOUT US / CONTACT US VITRUVIUS 9221 Sandifur Parkway Suite A. Pasco, WA 99301 phone 509 547 3800 fax 509 547 8912 Contractor License # VITRUDC988DQ www.vitconstruction.com

    48. ELISABETH LEGGE ANTIQUE PRINTS: Vitruvius
    vitruvius BRITANNICUS. COLEN CAMPBELL. ROYAL HOSPITAL, GREENWICH, 1725 SOLD. IN THIS REMARKABLE COLLECTION OF COPPER ENGRAVINGS, COLEN CAMPBELL CAPTURED THE
    http://www.leggeprints.com/vitruvius.htm
    E L I S A B E T H L E G G E F I N E A N T I Q U E P R I N T S
    VITRUVIUS BRITANNICUS
    COLEN CAMPBELL

    ROYAL HOSPITAL, GREENWICH, 1725 SOLD IN THIS REMARKABLE COLLECTION OF COPPER ENGRAVINGS,
    COLEN CAMPBELL CAPTURED THE ARCHITECTURAL FLAVOUR OF
    THE EARLY 18th CENTURY BRITISH GENTRY. THIS IS THE THIRD
    VOLUME OUT OF FIVE OF THIS SERIES OF ARCHITECTURAL
    RENDERINGS. THIS IS ESTEEMED TO BE THE MOST
    IMPORTANT COLLECTION OF BRITISH HOUSES THAT WAS
    EVER PRODUCED ON THE COPPER PLATE. IT IS OF NOTE THAT ALL OF THE PEOPLE
    INVOLVED IN THIS PRODUCTION HAD THE ROYAL WARRANT
    INDICATING THEIR SKILL AS CRAFTSMEN. CAMPBELL BEING
    BOTH THE DESIGNING ARCHITECT AND PUBLISHER OF THIS WORK PARTNERED WITH THE GREAT ARCHITECT SIR JOHN VANBRUGH. AS WELL AS HAVING ASSOCIATIONS WITH INIGO JONES, NICHOLAS HAWKSMOOR (FORMER CLERK TO CHRISTOPHER WREN) THE ENGRAVER H. HULSBERG AND OTHER MEN OF IMPORTANCE IN THE FIELD OF DESIGN, HE SET THE PALLADIAL STYLE AS THE MOTIF OF CHOICE IN BAROQUE ENGLAND.

    49. Www.quondam.com/16/1552.htm
    1. see sorry vitruvius, sorry da Vinci formerly at www.quondam.com. This set of pages concisely documents the appearance of the circle/square juncture
    http://www.quondam.com/16/1552.htm
    From: Stephen Lauf
    To: architecthetics
    Subject: Re: finding the NT buried in snow
    Date: In an email sent to me directly, Saul Fisher wrote:
    Dear Stephen,
    I know it's impolitic to ask people what their poetic allusions are supposed to mean, but your latest missive is a bit unclear, even from a poetic perspective. What would you have us make of the Kahn quote that you provided from Scully? It would be interesting to hear what anyone else, Scully included, has made of that particular quote. Your notion that the NT is to be found, buried in the snow, as a trope on Kahn's quote seemed to me a little elliptical. Is this supposed to comment on Kahn's self-conception as regards his Jewish identity? It strikes me that the clearest thing one can say about Kahn's explorations of his own social/ethnic/religious identity is that he spent a great amount of time and effort working on Jewish-related projects (not just the crucial Hurva synagogue plans, but also the Trenton Jewish Community Center, the Mikveh Israel Synagogue (Philadelphia), Mechanical Engineering Building (Tel Aviv University), and the Memorial to Six Million Jewish Martyrs).
    Cheers, Saul

    50. Vitruvius Americanus
    Colonial Newport in the Palladian Tradition, including Ten Important 18thCentury Newport Buildings with Precedents From Architectural Treatises,
    http://www.redwoodlibrary.org/vit1.html
    V ITRUVIUS A MERICANUS Colonial Newport in the Palladian Tradition Introduction Ten Important 18th-Century Newport Buildings with Precedents From Architectural Treatises Palladian Gallery ... Acknowledgements Published by on the occasion of an exhibition for THE NEWPORT SYMPOSIUM April 1996 This publication is made possible in part by a grant from the the
    Rhode Island Commitee for the Humanities
    an affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
    50 Bellevue Avenue Newport, Rhode Island 02840 Tel (401) 847-0292 Essentials What's New Treasures Booklist ... About this Website

    51. Vitruvius: 'Ten Books On Architecture' - Cambridge University Press
    vitruvius Ten Books on Architecture , vitruvius, Edited by Ingrid D. Rowland, Thomas Noble Howe, 9780521002929, Cambridge University Press.
    http://www.cambridge.org/us/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521002929

    52. Ten Books On Architecture By Vitruvius - Project Gutenberg
    Download the free eBook Ten Books on Architecture by vitruvius.
    http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/20239
    Online Book Catalog Quick Search Author: Title Word(s): EText-No.: Advanced Search Recent Books Top 100 Offline Catalogs ... Main Page Project Gutenberg needs your donation! More Info Did you know that you can help us produce ebooks by proof-reading just one page a day? Go to: Distributed Proofreaders
    Ten Books on Architecture by Vitruvius
    Help Read online Bibliographic Record Creator Vitruvius Title Ten Books on Architecture Language English EText-No. Release Date Base Directory /files/20239/
    Download this ebook for free
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    53. Vitruvius' Roman Theatre
    The most authoritative source of information on Roman architecture is the ten book treatise, De Architectura by Marcus vitruvius Pollio.
    http://www.wayneturney.20m.com/vitruvius.htm
    Home Page Acting Resume Playwrighting Resume Directing Resume Teaching Resume Hickory Hideout Theatre Administration Biography Essays, etc. Olio Actor's Equity Association, SAG, AFTRA A Glimpse of Theater History Vitruvius' De Architectura
    The most authoritative source of information on Roman architecture is the ten book treatise, De Architectura by Marcus Vitruvius Pollio. Using both extant treatises on architecture and his own experience as an architect and builder, Vitruvius wrote a detailed study of existing buildings and made recommendations about how to build new ones. The fifth book deals with the theater. In the fourth chapter he discusses such subjects as site selection, foundations, and acoustics. The sixth chapter is concerned with the auditorium and the stage building. He even includes sections on scenery and scene shifting by means of triangular prisms (periaktoi), etc. The publication of De Architectura in 1486 greatly influenced Renaissance theorists and architects, especially Andrea Palladio in constructing the Teatro Olympico in Vicenza which still stands.

    54. Vitruvius
    Architect The lookout of an architect by vitruvius. Fundamental principles By vitruvius. The sites for public places By vitruvius.
    http://library.thinkquest.org/22866/English/Architecture/Vitruvius.html
    Vitruvius
    Back


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    55. Vitruvius: Blogs, Photos, Videos And More On Technorati
    Videos about vitruvius. An Eye for Architectural Theory Who vitruvius Was? Mentions by Day. Posts tagged vitruvius per day for the past 30 days.
    http://technorati.com/tag/vitruvius

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  • Vitruvian Man
    http://100swallows.wordpress.com/ 2007/ 12/ 11/ vitruvian-man/ Leonardo da Vinci’s man in a circle is reproduced everywhere. What does it mean? He was simply following Vitruvius’s measurements of good proportion. And who was Vitruvius? A Roman architect who lived at the time of Augustus (and Christ). He wrote a treatise on architecture that Renaissance artists considered almost a Bible. 111 days ago in The Best Artists Authority: 19
    Elevator Etiquette
    http://godsleuth.blogspot.com/ 2007/ 10/ elevator-etiquette.html
  • 56. BuildingGreen.com - Bibliography: A Green Vitruvius
    A Green vitruvius is a wonderful resource that certainly lives up to its subtitle, if not its title (which alludes to the classic text The Ten Books on
    http://www.buildinggreen.com/biblio/item.cfm?itemID=740

    57. Vitruvius
    Marcus vitruvius Pollio was a Roman architect and military engineer who had served both Julius Caesar and Caesar Augustus. We are grateful to him for his
    http://www.dl.ket.org/latinlit/historia/people/vitruvius.htm
    People People Menu
    Vitruvius
    (1st century BC) Marcus Vitruvius Pollio was a Roman architect and military engineer who had served both Julius Caesar and Caesar Augustus. We are grateful to him for his treatise De Architectura , 10 books on architecture and engineering. He drew from his own experience and that of other architects to discuss townplanning, building materials, designs for temples, civic and private structures, pavement techniques, water supply, geometry, astronomy, and machinery, both civil and military. More information on Vitruvius Source: Oxford Classical Dictionary, Oxford University Press, 1970 J.Jahnige June 1999
    Famous Romans: Roman Heroes:
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    58. Vitruvius / Drops
    Translate this page Arquitextos Cadastro Concurso Documento Entrevista Evento Institucional Livraria Minha Cidade Noticiário Resenhas RG vitruvius
    http://vitruvio.com.br/drops/drops.asp
    Naturezas artificiais drops 01 drops 07 drops 13 drops 19 ... Vitruvius

    59. VITRUVIUS MOZAMBICANUS - Amancio Guedes
    The situation produces the philosophy, and that s the best sort, the one that flows from the situation ..Friedrich Schroeder Sonnenstern
    http://www.guedes.info/guedesintro.htm
    "The situation produces the philosophy, and that's the best sort, the one that flows from the situation".. Friedrich Schroeder Sonnenstern Pancho Guedes is the father, the inventor of all the art works. He cannot tell the difference between painting, sculpture and architecture. He does all three with intermittent outbursts of success and notoriousness. He is obsessive and difficult. He sometimes works until he collapses. He believes it is possible to be a Renaissance man in all this decadence and he has literary pretensions. At home he is called Dada by his children and all their friends, which pleases him no end. is the spirit of Pancho Guedes , first revealed internationally in the pages of the Architectural Review. It was discovered by Banham who descended with him, to the bar basement at Queen Anne's Gate in 1960. It is the name that persists in frequent adverts and assessments. A. d'Alpoim Guedes

    60. A Green Vitruvius
    A Green vitruvius Principles and Practice of Sustainable Architectural Design A Green vitruvius is a wonderful resource that certainly lives up to its
    http://www.earthscan.co.uk/?tabid=674

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