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INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER I: THE ORIGINS OF THE THREE ORDERS, AND THE PROPORTIONS OF THE CORINTHIAN CAPITAL
CHAPTER II: THE ORNAMENTS OF THE ORDERS
CHAPTER III: PROPORTIONS OF DORIC TEMPLES
CHAPTER IV: THE CELLA AND PRONAOS
CHAPTER V: HOW THE TEMPLE SHOULD FACE
CHAPTER VI: THE DOORWAYS OF TEMPLES
CHAPTER VII: TUSCAN TEMPLES
CHAPTER VIII: CIRCULAR TEMPLES AND OTHER VARIETIES
CHAPTER IX: ALTARS
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BOOK I
BOOK II
BOOK III
BOOK IV
BOOK V
BOOK VI
BOOK VII
BOOK IX
4. There are also other kinds of temples, constructed in the same symmetrical proportions and yet with a different kind of plan: for example, the temple of Castor in the district of the Circus Flaminius, that of Vejovis between the two groves, and still more ingeniously the temple of Diana in her sacred grove, with columns added on the right and left at the flanks of the pronaos. Temples of this kind, like that of Castor in the Circus, were first built in Athens on the Acropolis, and in Attica at Sunium to Pallas Minerva. The proportions of them are not different, but the same as usual. For the length of their cellae is twice the width, as in other temples; but all that we regularly find in the fronts of others is in these transferred to the sides.
Vitruvius: The Ten Books on Architecture. Vitruvius. Morris Hicky Morgan. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. London: Humphrey Milford. Oxford University Press. 1914.
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- Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), ARIĀ“CIA
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