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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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3. However, since our plan calls for it, we set it forth as we have received it from our teachers, so that if anybody cares to set to work with attention to these laws, he may find the proportions stated by which he can construct correct and faultless examples of temples in the Doric fashion. Let the front of a Doric temple, at the place where the columns are put up, be divided, if it is to be tetrastyle, into twenty-seven parts; if hexastyle, into forty-two. One of these parts will be the module (in Greek ἐμβάτης); and this module once fixed, all the parts of the work are adjusted by means of calculations based upon it.
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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- Lewis & Short, mŏdŭlus
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