Cyclopedia of architecture, carpentry, and building : a general reference work . Development of Doric Columns. in plan. We find instances of just this stage of developmentin some of the rock-cut tombs at Beni-Hassan in Egypt, where twocolumns of a form similar to that just described were used in antis(Fig. 31). The process of chamfering off the corner angles would leave uswith a pier of sixteen sides, while the Greeks adopted the numberof twenty for the Doric work of the best periods. This was un-doubtedly after due experimentation, when it was found that six-teen flutes were too coarse for th


Cyclopedia of architecture, carpentry, and building : a general reference work . Development of Doric Columns. in plan. We find instances of just this stage of developmentin some of the rock-cut tombs at Beni-Hassan in Egypt, where twocolumns of a form similar to that just described were used in antis(Fig. 31). The process of chamfering off the corner angles would leave uswith a pier of sixteen sides, while the Greeks adopted the numberof twenty for the Doric work of the best periods. This was un-doubtedly after due experimentation, when it was found that six-teen flutes were too coarse for the best effect. At Psestum we findevidences of this process. There, in the Great Temple, the exterior 89 02 STUDY OF THE ORDERS Order of very large columns has twenty-four flutes. The interiorlower Order has twenty, and the upper Order sixteen flutes, evidentlyproportioned with regard to the size and girth of the whole of thecolumn quite as much as to their distance from the eye. In some such way as this was developed the character of the fluting and capital of the Greek Doric.


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