The Encyclopedia of Ancient Natural Scientists: The Greek tradition and its many heirs

(Ron) #1

probably contemporaries, and their common source was probably A, whom
he cites (7.pr.14).
Vitruuius is often more “prescriptive” than descriptive, that is, arguing for innovations
based on experience and critical evaluation rather than summing up current standard prac-
tice. The chorobates (surveyors’ level, 8.6.1–3) is otherwise unattested in antiquity, and his
recommendations for items such as polygonal fortification towers (1.5.1–8), sounding vessels
in theaters (5.5.1–8), a peculiar form of castellum aquae (8.6.1–2), and fire-resistant larch
(2.9.15) were not then standard Roman practice.


A. Boethius, “Vitruvius and the Roman Architecture of his Age,” in Dragma Martin Nilsson (Acta Ist. Sue
Rom. 1) (1939) 114–143; H. Knell, Vitruvs Architekturtheorie (1991); P. Fleury, La méchanique di Vitruve
(1993); P. Gros, A Corso, and E. Romano, Vitruvio, De Architectura (1997); I. Rowland and Thomas
Noble Howe, Vitruvius, Ten Books on Architecture (1999).
Thomas Noble Howe


V R ⇒ E


Analemma (geometry of sundial construction) from Vitr. 9.7.1– 7 © Howe


M. VITRUUIUS POLLIO
Free download pdf