Vitruvius' de Architectura: the Roman World in Renaissance Architecture - HIST 1061, The Rise and Fall of Ancient Rome (Jobin) - Rare Books Collection - Research Guides at University of Colorado Boulder
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HIST 1061, The Rise and Fall of Ancient Rome (Jobin) - Rare Books Collection: Vitruvius' de Architectura: the Roman World in Renaissance Architecture
Introduction
Writing in the Roman World: Materials and Processes
A Roman Foundation: Virgil's Aeneid
Roman History and Literature
The History of Rome in the Late Middle Ages
Early Printed Christian Works, 1450-1550
Early Christianity in a Roman World: the Lives of the Saints in the Late Middle Ages
Vitruvius' de Architectura: the Roman World in Renaissance Architecture
Rare and Distinctive Collections
rad@colorado.edu
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Classroom: Norlin N345
Reading Room: Norlin M350B
Vitruvian Heirs
Vitruvius served as a military engineer, architect, and theoretician under Caesar Augustus in the first century BCE. His Ten Books on Architecture ( de Architectura), written roughly 20-30 BCE, focused on the following themes: firmitas (strength), utilitas (functionality), and venustas (beauty). A lthough critical to architectural theory for over two millennia, Vitruvius' ten books were rooted in the experiential knowledge of craftsmanship, with engineering and the materials of building a focus in eight of the ten books.
The only work on architecture to survive antiquity, de Architectura was lost for much of the Middle Ages before being rediscovered by Poggio Braccolini (secretary to one of three contenders for the papacy during the Council of Constance) in 1416/17 in the library of the monastery of St. Gall. The rediscovered theoretical and practical work of Vitruvius proved to be highly influential among Renaissance and modern architects. To name only a few, Leonardo da Vinci, Francisco di Giorgio Martini, Sebastiano Serlio, Andrea Palladio, and Thomas Jefferson, incorporated both Vitruvian design and theory that built on the relationship between the human form and the built environment.
Francesco di Giorgio Martini
Trattati di Architettura Ingegneria e Arte Militare
Beinecke Rare Books and Manuscript Library
Trattato di Architettura, Facsimile Edition
Special Collections, CU Boulder Libraries
The British Library holds an early manuscript of Vitruvius' treatise, which may have been copied at the scriptorium associated with the court of Charlemagne and which may have served as the source for later manuscripts.
Vitruvius' work is readily available in print, translated and augmented by later architects. Special Collections holds Claude Perrault's Les Dix Livre d'Architecture de Vitruve (1684), for example, which includes Perrault's copious notes and detailed engravings, that below detailing the development of the Corinthian order.
A fully digitized, searchable copy of this French edition is available through the Internet Archive.
Vitruvius, Les Dix Livre d'Architecture de Vitruve, Paris: Coignard, 1684.
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Special Collectons, CU Boulder Libraries
Special Collections holds early printed editions of the work of Sebastiano Serlio (Terzo libro di Sabastiano Serlio Bolognese) and Andrea Palladio (The First Book of Architecture), both of which are featured below.
Access Sebastiano Serlio's work at the Avery Architectural and Fine Arts Library, Columbia University (The Digital Serlio Project), which features his manuscripts and published editions as well as essays on his work.
Sebastiano Serlio, di Architettura di Sebastiano Serio di Bolognese, Venice, 1555.
Special Collections, CU Boulder Libraries
Andrea Palladio, The First Book of Architecture, London, 1663
Special Collections, CU Boulder Libraries
Andrea Palladio's First Book of Architecture (this first English edition was published by Godfrey Richards in 1663) features an engraved title page, with a muse holding a dividing compass and detailed architectural plans.
Access Special Collections' digitized copy of Palladio's First Book on Architecture here.
The City of Rome
Giovanni Battista Piranesi, Teatro di Marcello, c. 1757
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Beyond the importance of the theoretical work of Vitruvius in the early modern and modern architectural imagination was the presence of the city of Rome itself. Poorly preserved ruins and re-purposed Roman structures alike contributed to the mystic of Rome, serving as inspiration for architects and artists such as Giovanni Battista Piranesi.
The Theatre of Marcellus, seen here, was begun under Julius Caesar and dedicated by Caesar Augustus to his deceased nephew Marcus Claudius Marcellus in 13 BCE.
For this image of the theatre, see the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
This etching is also held by the CU Art Museum, along with other Piranesi holdings.
Giovanni Battista Piranesi, 1749-50
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Working in the eighteenth century, Piranesi romanticized ancient Roman remains with...