Cyclopedia of architecture, carpentry, and building : a general reference work . ^JUPITER-OLYIVPU^ •ATHENE- -ROME,- PLATE Lll. (A reproduction at small size of Portfolio Plate LII.) i STUDY OF THE ORDEl^ 213 also to the entablature itself, which later it may be interesting to com-pare with that used on the Monument of Lysicrates, along with someof the later Roman entablatures. There are only two types of bases used with the Corinthian col-umn by the Romans. Both of these types are shown in Fig, 126. AtA is shown the base moulding from the Temple of Hadrian at Athens;and at C, the form given by


Cyclopedia of architecture, carpentry, and building : a general reference work . ^JUPITER-OLYIVPU^ •ATHENE- -ROME,- PLATE Lll. (A reproduction at small size of Portfolio Plate LII.) i STUDY OF THE ORDEl^ 213 also to the entablature itself, which later it may be interesting to com-pare with that used on the Monument of Lysicrates, along with someof the later Roman entablatures. There are only two types of bases used with the Corinthian col-umn by the Romans. Both of these types are shown in Fig, 126. AtA is shown the base moulding from the Temple of Hadrian at Athens;and at C, the form given by Palladio. This latter example may betaken as the most nearly typical form of Corinthian usage; those on theBasilica of Antoninus and Faustina and the Arch of Constantine, forexample, are even simpler, being the same as the Palladian Ionic basesshown at C in Fig. 122. More elaborate forms, but forms that arerarely used to-day, probably because the modern Corinthian Order. 1,M _£.Mr C -c^ r t y_ c


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