Renaissance Construction COMMONWEALTH of AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969

Renaissance Construction COMMONWEALTH of AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969

ABPL 90085 CULTURE OF BUILDING Renaissance construction COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA Copyright Regulations 1969 Warning This material has been reproduced and communicated to you by or on behalf of the University of Melbourne pursuant to Part VB of the Copyright Act 1968 (the Act). The material in this communication may be subject to copyright under the Act. Any further copying or communication of this material by you may be the subject of copyright protection under the Act. do not remove this notice Brunelleschi San Antonio, Padua, 1232-1307 Heinrich Klotz, Filippo Brunelleschi: the Early Works and the Mdi lTditi (L d 1990) 138 Sagrestia Vecchia, or Old Sacristy of San Lorenzo, Florence, by Filippo Brunelleschi, 1421-8 Eugenio Battisti Brunelleschi (London 1981), p 94 Old Sacristy of S Lorenzo, view of vault and dome Battisti, Brunelleschi, p 94 Old Sacristy of S Lorenzo axonometric view Klotz, Filippo Brunelleschi, pl VII Pazzi Chapel, Santa Croce, Florence, by Filippo Brunelleschi & Guiliano da Maiano, c 1443-9 & -1461: dome view & diagram Battisti, Brunelleschi, p 94.view ; Fine Arts, 172/F632/2CR/PAZINT/14; RE20.33.64 Duomo, Florence Duomo Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence, 1296-1462 George Tibbits Duomo Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence, stages of construction Miles Lewis, based on a drawing by G Rich, 1969, in F D Prager & Gustina Scaglia, Brunelleschi: Studies of His Technology and Inventions, Cambridge [Massachusetts 1970), p 3 Duomo, Florence: the dome from above & below Philip Goad; George Tibbits Duomo, Florence, model of the dome built by F Gizdulich, 1995, Istituto e Museo di Storia della Scienza, Florence Paolo Galluzzi, Renaissance Engineers from Brunelleschi to Leonardo da Vinci (Giunti, Florence 2001), p 95 Duomo, Florence, section of the dome Piero Sanpaolesi, ‘La cupola di Santa Maria del Fiore ed il mausoleo di Soltanieh’ Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz, XVI, 3 (1972), p 227 Duomo, Florence, cutaway isometric of dome Rowland Mainstone, ‘Brunelleschi’s Dome Revisited’, Construction History, 24 (2009), p 19 the Oljeitu Mausoleum, Soltaniyeh, Iran, c 1310 Miles Lewis the Oljeitu Mausoleum, drawing of the structure courtesy Mohammad Reza Bazldjou the structure of the cupola, based on georadar investigation L Giorgi & P Matracchi, ‘New Studies on Brunelleschi’s Dome in Florence’, in Dina D’Ayala & Enrico Fodde [eds], Structural Analysis of Historic Construction: Preserving Safety and Significance [proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Structural Analysis of Historic Construction, 2-4 July, Bath, United Kingdom] (2 vols, CRC Press, London 2008), I, p 194 the herringbone brickwork between the north and north-east segments Giovanni Fanelli & Michele Fanelli, Brunelleschi’s Cupola: Past and present of an Architectural Masterpiece (Mandragora, Florence 2004), p 190 Duomo, Florence, detail of the circle within the two shells & diagram of the circle within the outer shell King, Brunelleschi's Dome, p 108 Duomo, Florence, brick rib construction Piero Sanpaolesi, ‘La cupola di Santa Maria del Fiore ed il mausoleo di Soltanieh’ Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz, XVI, 3 (1972), pp 257, 258 Sainte Chapelle, Paris, 1243-8 Miles Lewis section of the dome above the second internal ambulatory, showing the mattoni d’archo and the spinapesce bond Rowland Mainstone, ‘Brunelleschi’s Dome Revisited’, Construction History, 24 (2009), p 34 Duomo, Florence: the sandstone chain; the stone armature of the dome King, Brunelleschi's Dome, p 73; Battisti, Brunelleschi, p 141 Duomo, Florence, diagram of the dome with the location of the chains Giovanni Fanelli & Michele Fanelli, Brunelleschi’s Cupola: Past and present of an Architectural Masterpiece (Mandragora, Florence 2004), p 17 Duomo, Florence: the chains in the dome Battisti, Brunelleschi, p 137 detail of the first macigno [stone] chain L Ippolito & C Peroni, La Cupola di Santa Maria del’ Fiore (NIS, Rome 1997), reproduced in Fanelli, Brunelleschi’s Cupola, p 182 Duomo, Florence, timber base chain Piero Sanpaolesi, ‘La cupola di Santa Maria del Fiore ed il mausoleo di Soltanieh’ Mitteilungen des Kunsthistorischen Institutes in Florenz, XVI, 3 (1972), p 251 Duomo, Florence section of a median vertical in a segment of the dome Battisti, Brunelleschi, p 144 the space between the inner and outer shell with one of the passages through a spur Giovanni Fanelli & Michele Fanelli, Brunelleschi’s Cupola: Past and present of an Architectural Masterpiece (Mandragora, Florence 2004), p 168 stairway across the upper part of the dome, connecting the third and fourth walkways Giovanni Fanelli & Michele Fanelli, Brunelleschi’s Cupola: Past and present of an Architectural Masterpiece (Mandragora, Florence 2004), p 169 Duomo, Florence, schematic cross section of the dome indicating, from archival records the levels achieved in the different building campaigns L Giorgi & P Matracchi, ‘New Studies on Brunelleschi’s Dome in Florence’, in Dina D’Ayala & Enrico Fodde [eds], Structural Analysis of Historic Construction: Preserving Safety and Significance [proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Structural Analysis of Historic Construction, 2-4 July, Bath, United Kingdom] (2 vols, CRC Press, London 2008), I, p 191 Duomo, Florence, reconstruction of the loading platform in place and the ‘great hoist’ and ‘great crane’ in operation at the level of the the second walkway H Saalman, Filippo Brunelleschi: the Cupola of Santa Maria del Fiore (Zwemmer, London 1980) Duomo, Florence, dome of 1420-36: Brunelleschi's scaffolding as reported by Nelli, 1755 Prager & Scaglia, Brunelleschi: Studies, p 28 Duomo, Florence, plan of scaffolding holes and reconstruction of working platform Battisti, Brunelleschi, p 123 Duomo, Florence: building the ribs Sanpaolesi, ‘Santa Maria del Fiore ed Soltanieh’, p 250 Duomo, Florence: conjectural reconstruction of the first stage of construction, with scaffolding attached to the interior Battisti, Brunelleschi, p 139 Duomo, Florence, sections with conjectural reconstruction of scaffolding Battisti, Brunelleschi, p 166 Duomo, Florence, plan and section of scaffolding and centring at the top, as conjectured by F Gattari & A Vartolo Battisti, Brunelleschi, p 167 later domes & vaults St Peter’s, Rome old St Paul’s, London present St Paul’s, London Residenz, Wurzburg Neresheim & Die Vies St Peter's, Rome, dome by Michelangelo, modified by Giacomo della Porta, 1546-64 Fine Arts 172 / V345 / 11PE / RE 99.091.09 Old St Paul's Cathedral, London: dome proposed by Christopher Wren, 1666 elevation & section Kerry Downes, The Architecture of Wren (2nd ed, Reading [Berkshire] pls 20, 21 St Paul's Cathedral, London, by Sir Christopher Wren, as designed, 1675: south elevation Downes, Architecture of Wren, pl 58. St Paul's Cathedral, London, as designed by Wren, 1675, section Downes, Architecture of Wren, pl 59 Dôme des Invalides, Paris, by Jules Hardouin- Mansart, 1680-1 Diapofilm, Architecture Classique Dome des Invalides, drawing of the timber dome framing, and model at the Musée des Arts et Métiers, Paris E L Tarbuck [ed], Encyclopædia of Practical Carpentry and Joinery (2 vols, A H Payne, Leipzig, no date), II, pl 43. Connaissance des Arts (Musée des Arts et Métiers, Paris 2000), p 24 dome of St Paul's Cathedral, as built by Wren, 1675-1710 Lewis, Architectura, p 223 dome of St Paul's, as built by Wren, 1675-1710 section & plan of carpentry, axonometric section Francis Price, The British Carpenter (London 1753), facing p 30 Margaret Whinney, Wren (London 1971), p 121 Baptistery, Pisa, by Dioti Salvi, 1153-1278 unspecified: slide 31 Baptistery, Pisa: original and present elevations & sections E H Swift, Roman Sources of Christian Art (New York 1951), after Rouhault de Fleury, Les Monuments du Pise St Maria Birnbaum, near Augsburg, Germany, by Konstantin Pader, 1661-8 R Barthel, H Maus & C Kayser, 'Maria Birnbaum - Construction History, Conservation History', in Dina D’Ayala & Enrico Fodde [eds], Structural Analysis of Historic Construction (CRC Press, London 2008) II, p 1424. St Maria Birnbaum, longitudinal section through the roof structure and tower; bottom, isometric view of the main roof Barthel, Maus & Kayser, 'Maria Birnbaum', p 1425 the Residenz, Wurzburg, Germany, by Balthasar Neumann, 1732: section Langschnïtt, 1732, Kunstbibliotek, Berlin Residenz, Wurzburg, upper surface of main vault Otto, Space into Light, pl 76 Convent Church at Neresheim, Swabia, by Balthasar Neumann, c 1750: plan and section Pierre Charpentrat, Living Architecture: Baroque, Italy and Central Europe (London 1967 [1964]), p 106 Pilgrimage Church, Die Wies, Germany, by Dominikus & Johann Baptist Zimmerman, 1745-54: structural detail of the main vault Hans-Joachim Sachse, Die barocken Dachwerks- und Gewölbekonstruktionen der Abteikirche zu Neresheim (1975) Baroque basilica at Ottobeuren, Germany, 1737-66: roof plan David Yeomans,’A Visit to Bavarian Roofs’, CHS Magazine, no 90, December 2011, pp 18-19 basilica at Ottobeuren, 1737-66: roof space over the main dome David Yeomans,’A Visit to Bavarian Roofs’, CHS Magazine, no 90, December 2011, p 21 hoisting machinery scaffolding for the nave of St Peter's Church, Rome, c 1550 E L Tarbuck [ed], Encyclopædia of Practical Carpentry and Joinery (2 vols, A H Payne, Leipzig, no date),II. p 49 Tower of Babel, by Pieter Brueghel the Elder, 1563 Tower of Babel, details the construction of two arches; drum-like lifting device based on a treadmill and a block and tackle Scientific American (March 1978), p 135 treadmill

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