An Encyclopaedia of Architecture, Historical, Theoretical, and PracticalLongmans, Green, 1876 - 1395 pages |
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Page 411
... material in the box was filled with the pounded stone , the lower part being supposed of material which could not communicate pressure . But if the whole of the box had been filled with the same material , the requisite thickness would ...
... material in the box was filled with the pounded stone , the lower part being supposed of material which could not communicate pressure . But if the whole of the box had been filled with the same material , the requisite thickness would ...
Page 445
... material , and the only possible way of constructing a beam which will return to its original form after the load is removed , is a compound or trussed beam , put together in such a way that the permanent alteration of one material ...
... material , and the only possible way of constructing a beam which will return to its original form after the load is removed , is a compound or trussed beam , put together in such a way that the permanent alteration of one material ...
Page 530
... material , if it be not properly manufactured , will always cause a preference for carved work . 1839f . STONEWARE is a dense and highly vitrified material , impervious to the action of acids , and of peculiar strength . Until about ...
... material , if it be not properly manufactured , will always cause a preference for carved work . 1839f . STONEWARE is a dense and highly vitrified material , impervious to the action of acids , and of peculiar strength . Until about ...
Contents
ARCHITECTURE OF VARIOUS COUNTRIES | 4 |
Basements and Attics | 13 |
Jewish and Phoenician | 24 |
22 other sections not shown
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Common terms and phrases
15th century aisles architect architecture axis base beam breadth bricks building built called cast iron Castle cathedral cement centre of gravity chapel choir church circle circumference colour columns construction Corinthian order cube cubic foot curve decorated depth describe diameter divided dome Doric order draw edifices ellipsis employed entablature equal erected examples extrados feet girder given Gothic granite half horizontal houses inches inclined intercolumniations joints length lime limestone marble mortar mouldings nave obtained oolite ornaments palace parallel parallelogram perpendicular piece piers placed plane plates portico Prop proportion pyramid quarries radius rafters rectangle ribs right angles right line Roman Roman architecture Rome roof sandstone side similar sofite solid square stone strength style surface tangent temple thickness tiles timber tons tower transepts triangle upper vault vertical Vitruvius voussoirs walls weight whereof width wood