The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


google search for The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete

Return to Master Book Index.

Page
595 596 597 598 599

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225

Pl. XCVIII (P. V., 182. No. d'ordre 2386). In the midst of a hilly  
landscape rises an artificial mountain in the form of a gigantic  
cone, crowned by an imposing temple. At two thirds of the height a  
terrace is cut out with six doorways forming entrances to galleries,  
each leading to three sepulchral halls, so constructed as to contain  
about five hundred funeral urns, disposed in the customary antique  
style. From two opposite sides steps ascend to the terrace in a  
single flight and beyond it to the temple above. A large circular  
opening, like that in the Pantheon, is in the dome above what may be  
the altar, or perhaps the central monument on the level of the  
terrace below.  
The section of a gallery given in the sketch to the right below  
shows the roof to be constructed on the principle of superimposed  
horizontal layers, projecting one beyond the other, and each  
furnished with a sort of heel, which appears to be undercut, so as  
to give the appearance of a beam from within. Granite alone would be  
adequate to the dimensions here given to the key stone, as the  
thickness of the layers can hardly be considered to be less than a  
foot. In taking this as the basis of our calculation for the  
dimensions of the whole construction, the width of the chamber would  
be about 25 feet but, judging from the number of urns it  
contains--and there is no reason to suppose that these urns were  
larger than usual--it would seem to be no more than about 8 or 10  
feet.  
597  


Page
595 596 597 598 599

Quick Jump
1 306 613 919 1225