Byzantine and Romanesque architecture . laces to the poor and strangers. Thereare committed murders, robberies, and all crimes whichhaunt obscurity\ Even the dogs which have only dis-appeared within the last year or two are said to havebeen there, wandering about in the rubbish, and fillingthe town with their howls and Xhe type of house in the later days of the Empire houses 1 1 r seems to have lasted for some time even after the con-quest if we may judge from such examples as those in thedistrict of the Phanar (Plate XXIV), which though thewindows of the upper storey are evi


Byzantine and Romanesque architecture . laces to the poor and strangers. Thereare committed murders, robberies, and all crimes whichhaunt obscurity\ Even the dogs which have only dis-appeared within the last year or two are said to havebeen there, wandering about in the rubbish, and fillingthe town with their howls and Xhe type of house in the later days of the Empire houses 1 1 r seems to have lasted for some time even after the con-quest if we may judge from such examples as those in thedistrict of the Phanar (Plate XXIV), which though thewindows of the upper storey are evidently inspired byTurkish taste, show by the massive corbelling of theprojecting first floor that the traditions of Byzantine art 1 Quoniam autem in hac urbe vivitur sine jure, quae tot quasi dominoshabet quot divites, et pene tot fures quot pauperes, ibi sceleratus quisquenee metum habet nee verecundiam. * * * in omnibus modum excedit: namsicut divitiis urbes alias superat, sic etiam vitiis. Odo de Deogilo, Lib. cit. Plate XXIV.


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Keywords: ., bookauthorjacksont, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1913