The Notebooks of Leonardo Da Vinci Complete


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to a height of twenty eight braccia and a half; and at this height  
the architrave, frieze and cornice were placed which surrounded the  
temple having a length of eight hundred braccia. At the same height,  
and within the temple at the same level, and all round the centre of  
the temple at a distance of 24 braccia farther in, are pillars  
corresponding to the eight pillars in the angles, and columns  
corresponding to those placed in the outer spaces. These rise to the  
same height as the former ones, and over these the continuous  
architrave returns towards the outer row of pillars and columns.  
[Footnote: Either this description is incomplete, or, as seems to me  
highly probable, it refers to some ruin. The enormous dimensions  
forbid our supposing this to be any temple in Italy or Greece. Syria  
was the native land of colossal octagonal buildings, in the early  
centuries A. D. The Temple of Baalbek, and others are even larger  
than that here described. J. P. R.]  
V. Palace architecture.  
But a small number of Leonardo's drawings refer to the architecture  
of palaces, and our knowledge is small as to what style Leonardo  
might have adopted for such buildings.  
Pl. CII No. 1 (W. XVIII). A small portion of a facade of a palace  
in two stories, somewhat resembling Alberti's Palazzo  
Rucellai.--Compare with this Bramante's painted front of the Casa  
607  


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