Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INDEX TO THE ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- THE STONES OF VENICE
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION (1851)
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION (1874)
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO THE TRAVELLERS' EDITION (1879)
- CHAP. I THE QUARRY
- CHAP. II THE VIRTUES OF ARCHITECTURE
- CHAP. III THE SIX DIVISIONS OF ARCHITECTURE
- CHAP. IV THE WALL BASE
- CHAP. V THE WALL VEIL
- CHAP. VI THE WALL CORNICE
- CHAP. VII THE PIER BASE
- CHAP. VIII THE SHAFT
- CHAP. IX THE CAPITAL
- CHAP. X THE ARCH LINE
- CHAP. XI THE ARCH MASONRY
- CHAP. XII THE ARCH LOAD
- CHAP. XIII THE ROOF
- CHAP. XIV THE ROOF CORNICE
- CHAP. XV THE BUTTRESS
- CHAP. XVI FORM OF APERTURE
- CHAP. XVII FILLING OF APERTURE
- CHAP. XVIII PROTECTION OF APERTURE
- CHAP. XIX SUPERIMPOSITION
- CHAP. XX THE MATERIAL OF ORNAMENT
- CHAP. XXI TREATMENT OF ORNAMENT
- CHAP. XXII THE ANGLE
- CHAP. XXIII THE EDGE AND FILLET
- CHAP. XXIV THE ROLL AND RECESS
- CHAP. XXV THE BASE
- CHAP. XXVI THE WALL VEIL AND SHAFT
- CHAP. XXVII THE CORNICE AND CAPITAL
- CHAP. XXVIII THE ARCHIVOLT AND APERTURE
- CHAP. XXIX THE ROOF
- CHAP. XXX THE VESTIBULE
- AUTHOR'S APPENDIX
- Plate section
AUTHOR'S APPENDIX
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- INDEX TO THE ILLUSTRATIONS
- INTRODUCTION TO THIS VOLUME
- BIBLIOGRAPHICAL NOTE
- THE STONES OF VENICE
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION (1851)
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION (1874)
- AUTHOR'S PREFACE TO THE TRAVELLERS' EDITION (1879)
- CHAP. I THE QUARRY
- CHAP. II THE VIRTUES OF ARCHITECTURE
- CHAP. III THE SIX DIVISIONS OF ARCHITECTURE
- CHAP. IV THE WALL BASE
- CHAP. V THE WALL VEIL
- CHAP. VI THE WALL CORNICE
- CHAP. VII THE PIER BASE
- CHAP. VIII THE SHAFT
- CHAP. IX THE CAPITAL
- CHAP. X THE ARCH LINE
- CHAP. XI THE ARCH MASONRY
- CHAP. XII THE ARCH LOAD
- CHAP. XIII THE ROOF
- CHAP. XIV THE ROOF CORNICE
- CHAP. XV THE BUTTRESS
- CHAP. XVI FORM OF APERTURE
- CHAP. XVII FILLING OF APERTURE
- CHAP. XVIII PROTECTION OF APERTURE
- CHAP. XIX SUPERIMPOSITION
- CHAP. XX THE MATERIAL OF ORNAMENT
- CHAP. XXI TREATMENT OF ORNAMENT
- CHAP. XXII THE ANGLE
- CHAP. XXIII THE EDGE AND FILLET
- CHAP. XXIV THE ROLL AND RECESS
- CHAP. XXV THE BASE
- CHAP. XXVI THE WALL VEIL AND SHAFT
- CHAP. XXVII THE CORNICE AND CAPITAL
- CHAP. XXVIII THE ARCHIVOLT AND APERTURE
- CHAP. XXIX THE ROOF
- CHAP. XXX THE VESTIBULE
- AUTHOR'S APPENDIX
- Plate section
Summary
FOUNDATION OF VENICE
I find the chroniclers agree in fixing the year 421, if any: the following sentence from De Monaci may perhaps interest the reader:—
“God, who punishes the sins of men by war sorrows, and whose ways are past finding out, willing both to save the innocent blood, and that a great power, beneficial to the whole world, should arise in a spot strange beyond belief, moved the chief men of the cities of the Venetian province (which, from the border of Pannonia, extended as far as the Adda, a river of Lombardy), both in memory of past, and in dread of future distress, to establish states upon the nearer islands of the inner gulphs of the Adriatic, to which, in the last necessity, they might retreat for refuge. And first Galienus de Fontana, Simon de Glauconibus, and Antonius Calvus, or, as others have it, Adalbertus Falerius, Thomas Candiano, Comes Daulus, Consuls of Padua, by the command of their King and the desire of the citizens, laid the foundations of the new commonwealth, under good auspices, on the island of the Rialto, the highest and nearest to the mouth of the deep river now called the Brenta, in the year of Our Lord, as many writers assure us, four hundred and twenty-one, on the 25th day of March.”
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Works of John Ruskin , pp. 417 - 473Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1903