Publications, Issue 35Royal Asiatic Society, 1834 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 74
Page iii
... Hindú , would seem to mark an epoch not only in the history of the science but also in that of the Hindús themselves ... Hindus possessed treatises on architecture of a very ancient date , pescribing the rules by which these edifices ...
... Hindú , would seem to mark an epoch not only in the history of the science but also in that of the Hindús themselves ... Hindus possessed treatises on architecture of a very ancient date , pescribing the rules by which these edifices ...
Page iv
Oriental Translation Fund. As of most other sciences among the Hindus , the rules and pre- cepts of architecture and sculpture had been , with some solitary exceptions , locked up in the Sanscrit language ; and , as the study of this ...
Oriental Translation Fund. As of most other sciences among the Hindus , the rules and pre- cepts of architecture and sculpture had been , with some solitary exceptions , locked up in the Sanscrit language ; and , as the study of this ...
Page viii
... Hindú . Satisfied that it was so , this gentleman , his early patron , who besides the several offices which he held in the civil department of the Madras Government , was also Senior Member of the College of Fort St. George , gladly ...
... Hindú . Satisfied that it was so , this gentleman , his early patron , who besides the several offices which he held in the civil department of the Madras Government , was also Senior Member of the College of Fort St. George , gladly ...
Page x
... Hindú architecture , and with most of the terms used in the art . With his valuable aid I have already been enabled to solve many intricate problems , and to remove many difficulties against which I had long been struggling . It is a ...
... Hindú architecture , and with most of the terms used in the art . With his valuable aid I have already been enabled to solve many intricate problems , and to remove many difficulties against which I had long been struggling . It is a ...
Page xi
... Hindú Archi- tecture by an early opportunity ; but I fear I have been too premature in forming such a hope . I little calculated upon the time that would be necessarily required for me to surmount the various difficulties with which I ...
... Hindú Archi- tecture by an early opportunity ; but I fear I have been too premature in forming such a hope . I little calculated upon the time that would be necessarily required for me to surmount the various difficulties with which I ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
a-quarter angulas Arabic architecture architrave artists Brahmans breadth building called campa cant'ha capital capóta Cásyapa cavetto chapter chunam cima recta cimbia collarino column contains cornice cupola dandás Day & Haghe deities Demy Octavo Demy Quarto diameters high edifice entablature equal in height erected fillet five given gnomon gnomon projects gópura Gopura consisting Grecian half hastha Hindú architects History Honourable India Indian architecture intercolumniations latter Lithographed lotus lower Madras Mánasára mantapa middle moulding Octavo ornaments ovolo padma Paul of Aleppo pedestals and bases Persian pillar pinnacle Plate plinth points porticoes prastara projection proportions pyramidal Quarto resembles respect Royal Asiatic Society rules sculpture seven shaft sides Siva Society by Day sorts Sri Rangam STANISLAS JULIEN sthapati stone streets temples thickness three and a-half three-quarters torus translated by Professor treatises twelve stories upper base village VIMÁNA CONSISTING Vishnu whole William Ouseley ם ם ם
Popular passages
Page 21 - ... proportions of symmetry." (p. 15.) The third chapter treats of the nature and quality of ground on which buildings are to be erected ; it is very copious and very curious. Minute directions are given for constructing a plough, and for ploughing the ground on which the house is to be built. This being done, " let sesamum seeds, pulse, and kidneybeans be sown, with incantations pronounced over them; and let due reverence be paid to the spiritual teacher ; and let the oxen, and the plough to which...
Page 17 - Wo to them who dwell in a house not built according to the proportions of symmetry. in building an edifice, therefore, let all its parts, from the basement to the roof, be duly considered.
Page 18 - The ground to be avoided is described in a special manner as follows : " That which has the form of a circle, a semicircle, containing three, five, or six angles, resembling a trident or a winnow, shaped like the hinder part of a fish, or the back of an elephant, or a turtle, or the face of a cow, and the like ; situated opposite to any of the intermediate quarters northwest, and the like ; abounding with human sculls, stones, worms, ant-hills, ON THE ARCHITECTURE OF THE HINDUS.