10 THE
ARCHITECTURE
OF
HUMANISM
true
halting-place.
Thus
the term
'Renaissance
architecture,'
which
originally
denoted
no
more than
theearlier
stages,has
gradually
and
inevitably
come
tobeextended
tothework
ofallthis
period.
It is true that
during these
years
many
phases
of
architectural
style, opposed
inaimand
contradic--
tory
infeeling,successively
arose
;
butthelanguage
in which
they disputed
was one
language, the
dialects they
employed were
all akin
;
and at
no
momentcan wesay
thatwhat
followsisnotlinked
to what
went before by
common reference to a
great
tradition, by a general
participation in a
single
complexofideas.
Andincompatibleasthese
several phases
—the primitive, classic,
baroque,aca-
demic, rococo—may at
their climax appear to
be,
yet, for
the mostpart, they,
grewfromoneanother
by gradual
transitions. The margins
which divide;
themarecuriouslydifficultto
define. Theyform,in
fact, a
completechapterin architecture,tobe
read]
consecutively and as a whole.
And at the two
momentswith
whichourstudybeginsandends,
the
sequenceofarchitectureisradically
cleft. Thebuild-
ing of the Pazzi Chapel in Florence marks
a clear
break with the mediaeval past, and with it rises
a
tradition which was never fundamentally deserted,
until in the nineteenth century traditionalism itseU
wascastaside.
Itis in Italy,
where Renaissancearchitecture
was