INTRODUCTION
'
ii
native,that
weshallfollowthistradition. Thearchi-
tectureof Francein theseventeenthandeighteenth
centuriesand,
inalesserdegree,thatoftheGeorgian
periodinEngland,mightfurnishbrilliantexamplesof
thesamemannerofbuilding.
TheItalianexperiment
enabled the architects of France, amid their more
favourable environment,
to create a succession of
styles, in some ways more splendid, and certainly
more exquisite
and complete. Yet,_if we wish to
watcharchitecturalenergywhereitis mostconcen-
trated,most
vigorous,
andmost
originalitistoItaly
that^_wemustturn. Andinastudywhichistodeal
ratherwith the principlesthan with thehistory of
Renaissancearchitecture,it will
be
convenientthus
torestrictitsscope.
From whatpointof viewshould thisarchitecture
bejudgedsoasbesttorevealitsunityanditsintent
?
Ageneralsurveyoftheperiodwillshowgroundsfor
decidingthat,whileamechanical
analysisorasocial
analysismaythrowlightonmanyaspectsofRenais-
sance architecture, it is only an aesthetic
analysis,
andanaestheticanalysisinthestrictest
sense,which
can renderitshistory
intelligible,orour enjoyment
of it complete. If the essence, and not
the acci-
dents merely,of
thisarchitectural traditionisto
be
recognised, and
some estimate of it obtained
that
does not wholly misconstrue
its idea, this
ground
of analysis
must be consistently maintained.
The