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Corinthian order

The Corinthian order (Greek: Κορινθιακός ρυθμός, Korinthiakós rythmós; Latin: Ordo Corinthius) is the last developed of the three principal classical orders of Ancient Greek architecture and Roman architecture. The other two are the Doric order which was the earliest, followed by the Ionic order. In Ancient Greek architecture, the Corinthian order follows the Ionic in almost all respects other than the capitals of the columns.[1]

A Corinthian capital from the Pantheon, Rome, which provided a prominent model for Renaissance and later architects
Corinthinan peripteros of the Temple of Bacchus in Baalbek, Lebanon

When classical architecture was revived during the Renaissance, two more orders were added to the canon: the Tuscan order and the Composite order. The Corinthian, with its offshoot the Composite, is the most ornate of the orders. This architectural style is characterized by slender fluted columns and elaborate capitals decorated with acanthus leaves and scrolls. There are many variations.[2]

The name Corinthian is derived from the ancient Greek city of Corinth, although the style had its own model in Roman practice, following precedents set by the Temple of Mars Ultor in the Forum of Augustus (c. 2 AD).[3] It was employed in southern Gaul at the Maison Carrée, Nîmes and at the comparable Temple of Augustus and Livia at Vienne. Other prime examples noted by Mark Wilson Jones are the lower order of the Basilica Ulpia and the Arch of Trajan at Ancona (both of the reign of Trajan, 98–117 AD), the Column of Phocas (re-erected in Late Antiquity but 2nd century in origin), and the Temple of Bacchus at Baalbek (c. 150 AD).[4]

Description

Greek Corinthian order

The Corinthian order is named for the Greek city-state of Corinth, to which it was connected in the period. However, according to the architectural historian Vitruvius, the column was created by the sculptor Callimachus, probably an Athenian, who drew acanthus leaves growing around a votive basket. Its earliest use can be traced back to the Late Classical Period (430–323 BC). The earliest Corinthian capital was found in Bassae, dated at 427 BC.

Roman Corinthian order

 
Bucrania with festoons decorating the Temple of Vesta from Hadrian's Villa (Tivoli)
 
Corinthian columns of the Arch of Septimius Severus, in the Forum Romanum
 
Corinthian columns of the Arch of Septimius Severus in Leptis Magna

Proportion is a defining characteristic of the Corinthian order: the "coherent integration of dimensions and ratios in accordance with the principles of symmetria" are noted by Mark Wilson Jones, who finds that the ratio of total column height to column-shaft height is in a 6:5 ratio, so that, secondarily, the full height of column with capital is often a multiple of 6 Roman feet while the column height itself is a multiple of 5. In its proportions, the Corinthian column is similar to the Ionic column, though it is more slender, and stands apart by its distinctive carved capital.[5]

The abacus upon the capital has concave sides to conform to the outscrolling corners of the capital, and it may have a rosette at the center of each side. Corinthian columns were erected on the top level of the Roman Colosseum, holding up the least weight, and also having the slenderest ratio of thickness to height. Their height to width ratio is about 10:1.[5]

One variant is the Tivoli order, found at the Temple of Vesta, Tivoli. The Tivoli order's Corinthian capital has two rows of acanthus leaves and its abacus is decorated with oversize fleurons in the form of hibiscus flowers with pronounced spiral pistils. The column flutes have flat tops. The frieze exhibits fruit festoons suspended between bucrania. Above each festoon has a rosette over its center. The cornice does not have modillions.

Gandharan capitals

 
Figure of the Buddha, within a Corinthian capital, Gandhara, 3–4th century, Musee Guimet.
 
Capital of the Column of Phocas
 
Vincenzo Scamozzi offers his version of the Corinthian capital, in a portrait by Veronese (Denver Art Museum)

Indo-Corinthian capitals are capitals crowning columns or pilasters, which can be found in the northwestern Indian subcontinent, and usually combine Hellenistic and Indian elements. These capitals are typically dated to the 1st centuries of our era, and constitute important elements of Greco-Buddhist art of Gandhara.

The classical design was often adapted, usually taking a more elongated form, and sometimes being combined with scrolls, generally within the context of Buddhist stupas and temples. Indo-Corinthian capitals also incorporated figures of the Buddha or Bodhisattvas, usually as central figures surrounded, and often in the shade, of the luxurious foliage of Corinthian designs.

Renaissance Corinthian order

During the first flush of the Italian Renaissance, the Florentine architectural theorist Francesco di Giorgio expressed the human analogies that writers who followed Vitruvius often associated with the human form, in squared drawings he made of the Corinthian capital overlaid with human heads, to show the proportions common to both.[6]

The Corinthian architrave is divided in two or three sections, which may be equal, or may bear interesting proportional relationships, to one with another. Above the plain, unadorned architrave lies the frieze, which may be richly carved with a continuous design or left plain, as at the U.S. Capitol extension. At the Capitol the proportions of architrave to frieze are exactly 1:1. Above that, the profiles of the cornice mouldings are like those of the Ionic order. If the cornice is very deep, it may be supported by brackets or modillions, which are ornamental brackets used in a series under a cornice.

The Corinthian column is almost always fluted, and the flutes of a Corinthian column may be enriched. They may be filleted, with rods nestled within the hollow flutes, or stop-fluted, with the rods rising a third of the way, to where the entasis begins. In French, these are called chandelles and sometimes terminate in carved wisps of flame, or with bellflowers. Alternatively, beading or chains of husks may take the place of the fillets in the fluting, Corinthian being the most flexible of the orders, with more opportunities for variation.

Elaborating upon an offhand remark when Vitruvius accounted for the origin of its acanthus capital, it became a commonplace to identify the Corinthian column with the slender figure of a young girl; in this mode the classifying French painter Nicolas Poussin wrote to his friend Fréart de Chantelou in 1642:

The beautiful girls whom you will have seen in Nîmes will not, I am sure, have delighted your spirit any less than the beautiful columns of Maison Carrée for the one is no more than an old copy of the other.[7]

Sir William Chambers expressed the conventional comparison with the Doric order:

The proportions of the orders were by the ancients formed on those of the human body, and consequently, it could not be their intention to make a Corithian column, which, as Vitruvius observes, is to represent the delicacy of a young girl, as thick and much taller than a Doric one, which is designed to represent the bulk and vigour of a muscular full grown man.[8]

History

 
Ancient Greek capital from Tarentum with addorsed sphinxes, 4th–3rd centuries BC, made of limestone, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City)
 
Detailed illustration of a Corinthian capital, circa 1540–1560, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art

The oldest known example of a Corinthian column is in the Temple of Apollo Epicurius at Bassae in Arcadia, c. 450–420 BC. It is not part of the order of the temple itself, which has a Doric colonnade surrounding the temple and an Ionic order within the cella enclosure. A single Corinthian column stands free, centered within the cella. This is a mysterious feature, and archaeologists debate what this shows: some state that it is simply an example of a votive column. A few examples of Corinthian columns in Greece during the next century are all used inside temples. A more famous example, and the first documented use of the Corinthian order on the exterior of a structure, is the circular Choragic Monument of Lysicrates in Athens, erected c. 334 BC.

A Corinthian capital carefully buried in antiquity in the foundations of the circular tholos at Epidaurus was recovered during modern archaeological campaigns. Its enigmatic presence and preservation have been explained as a sculptor's model for stonemasons to follow[9] in erecting the temple dedicated to Asclepius. The architectural design of the building was credited in antiquity to the sculptor Polykleitos the Younger, son of the Classical Greek sculptor Polykleitos the Elder.

The temple was erected in the 4th century BC. These capitals, in one of the most-visited sacred sites of Greece, influenced later Hellenistic and Roman designs for the Corinthian order. The concave sides of the abacus meet at a sharp keel edge, easily damaged, which in later and post-Renaissance practice has generally been replaced by a canted corner. Behind the scrolls the spreading cylindrical form of the central shaft is plainly visible.

Much later, the Roman writer Vitruvius (c. 75 BC – c. 15 BC) related that the Corinthian order had been invented by Callimachus, a Greek architect and sculptor who was inspired by the sight of a votive basket that had been left on the grave of a young girl. A few of her toys were in it, and a square tile had been placed over the basket, to protect them from the weather. An acanthus plant had grown through the woven basket, mixing its spiny, deeply cut leaves with the weave of the basket.[10]

 
The origin of the Corinthian order, illustrated in Claude Perrault's translation of the ten books of Vitruvius, 1684

Claude Perrault incorporated a vignette epitomizing the Callimachus tale in his illustration of the Corinthian order for his translation of Vitruvius, published in Paris, 1684. Perrault demonstrates in his engraving how the proportions of the carved capital could be adjusted according to demands of the design, without offending. The texture and outline of Perrault's leaves is dry and tight compared to their 19th-century naturalism at the U.S. Capitol.

A Corinthian capital may be seen as an enriched development of the Ionic capital, though one may have to look closely at a Corinthian capital to see the Ionic volutes ("helices"), at the corners, perhaps reduced in size and importance, scrolling out above the two ranks of stylized acanthus leaves and stalks ("cauliculi" or caulicoles), eight in all, and to notice that smaller volutes scroll inwards to meet each other on each side. The leaves may be quite stiff, schematic and dry, or they may be extravagantly drilled and undercut, naturalistic and spiky.

In Late Antique and Byzantine practice, the leaves may be blown sideways, as if by the wind of Faith. Unlike the Doric and Ionic column capitals, a Corinthian capital has no neck beneath it, just a ring-like astragal molding or a banding that forms the base of the capital, recalling the base of the legendary basket.

Most buildings (and most clients) are satisfied with just two orders. When orders are superposed one above another, as they are at the Colosseum, the natural progression is from sturdiest and plainest (Doric) at the bottom, to slenderest and richest (Corinthian) at the top. The Colosseum's topmost tier has an unusual order that came to be known as the Composite order during the 16th century. The mid-16th-century Italians, especially Sebastiano Serlio and Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola, who established a canonic version of the orders, thought they detected a "Composite order", combining the volutes of the Ionic with the foliage of the Corinthian, but in Roman practice volutes were almost always present.

In Romanesque and Gothic architecture, where the Classical system had been replaced by a new aesthetic composed of arched vaults springing from columns, the Corinthian capital was still retained. It might be severely plain, as in the typical Cistercian architecture, which encouraged no distraction from liturgy and ascetic contemplation, or in other contexts it could be treated to numerous fanciful variations, even on the capitals of a series of columns or colonettes within the same system.

During the 16th century, a sequence of engravings of the orders in architectural treatises helped standardize their details within rigid limits: Sebastiano Serlio; the Regola delli cinque ordini of Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola (1507–1573); I quattro libri dell'architettura of Andrea Palladio, and Vincenzo Scamozzi's L'idea dell'architettura universale, were followed in the 17th century by French treatises with further refined engraved models, such as Perrault's.

Notable examples

 
The Maison Carrée in Nîmes, France, built in circa 14 BC
 
The Corinthian order as used in extending the United States Capitol in 1854: the column's shaft has been omitted
 
Corinthian columns in Jerash, Jordan
 
Corinthian capital from the Colosseum with gorgoneia
 
Corinthian capitals in the Temple of Hercules Victor, Rome
 
The Constantinian basilica of Santa Sabina interior, with spolia Corinthian columns from the Temple of Juno Regina.

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "Corinthian Columns". Architect of the Capitol. Retrieved 2019-03-24.
  2. ^ "Corinthian Columns". Architect of the Capitol. Retrieved 2019-03-24.
  3. ^ Mark Wilson Jones, "Designing the Roman Corinthian order", Journal of Roman Archaeology 2:35-69 (1989).
  4. ^ Jones 1989.
  5. ^ a b Peter D'Epiro; Mary Desmond Pinkowish (22 December 2010). What are the Seven Wonders of the World?: And 100 Other Great Cultural Lists--Fully Explicated. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. p. 133. ISBN 978-0-307-49107-7.
  6. ^ Francesco di Giorgio's sheet with the drawings, from the Turin codex Saluzziano of his Trattati di architettura ingegneria e arte militare, c. 1480–1500, is illustrated by Rudolf Wittkower, Architectural Principles in the Age of Humanism (1962) 1965, pl. ic
  7. ^ Quoted by Sir Kenneth Clark, The Nude: A Study in Ideal Form, 1956, p. 45.
  8. ^ Chambers, A Treatise on the Decorative Part of Civil Architecture (Joseph Gwilt ed, 1825:pp 159–61).
  9. ^ Alison Burford (The Greek Temple Builders at Epidauros, Liverpool, 1969, p. 65) suggests instead that it was spoilt in the carving, one volute being incorrectly detached from its field; Hugh Plommer, reviewing it for The Classical Review (New Series, 21.2 [June 1971], pp 269–272), remarks that the error involved an excess of work and remains convinced that the capital was a model.
  10. ^ Vitr. 4.1.9-10

References

External links

  •   Media related to Corinthian columns at Wikimedia Commons
  • Classical orders and elements

corinthian, order, greek, Κορινθιακός, ρυθμός, korinthiakós, rythmós, latin, ordo, corinthius, last, developed, three, principal, classical, orders, ancient, greek, architecture, roman, architecture, other, doric, order, which, earliest, followed, ionic, order. The Corinthian order Greek Korin8iakos ry8mos Korinthiakos rythmos Latin Ordo Corinthius is the last developed of the three principal classical orders of Ancient Greek architecture and Roman architecture The other two are the Doric order which was the earliest followed by the Ionic order In Ancient Greek architecture the Corinthian order follows the Ionic in almost all respects other than the capitals of the columns 1 A Corinthian capital from the Pantheon Rome which provided a prominent model for Renaissance and later architects Corinthinan peripteros of the Temple of Bacchus in Baalbek Lebanon Two Corinthian pilasters in Saint Sulpice Paris When classical architecture was revived during the Renaissance two more orders were added to the canon the Tuscan order and the Composite order The Corinthian with its offshoot the Composite is the most ornate of the orders This architectural style is characterized by slender fluted columns and elaborate capitals decorated with acanthus leaves and scrolls There are many variations 2 The name Corinthian is derived from the ancient Greek city of Corinth although the style had its own model in Roman practice following precedents set by the Temple of Mars Ultor in the Forum of Augustus c 2 AD 3 It was employed in southern Gaul at the Maison Carree Nimes and at the comparable Temple of Augustus and Livia at Vienne Other prime examples noted by Mark Wilson Jones are the lower order of the Basilica Ulpia and the Arch of Trajan at Ancona both of the reign of Trajan 98 117 AD the Column of Phocas re erected in Late Antiquity but 2nd century in origin and the Temple of Bacchus at Baalbek c 150 AD 4 Contents 1 Description 1 1 Greek Corinthian order 1 2 Roman Corinthian order 1 3 Gandharan capitals 1 4 Renaissance Corinthian order 2 History 3 Notable examples 4 Gallery 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksDescription EditGreek Corinthian order Edit The Corinthian order is named for the Greek city state of Corinth to which it was connected in the period However according to the architectural historian Vitruvius the column was created by the sculptor Callimachus probably an Athenian who drew acanthus leaves growing around a votive basket Its earliest use can be traced back to the Late Classical Period 430 323 BC The earliest Corinthian capital was found in Bassae dated at 427 BC Roman Corinthian order Edit Bucrania with festoons decorating the Temple of Vesta from Hadrian s Villa Tivoli Corinthian columns of the Arch of Septimius Severus in the Forum Romanum Corinthian columns of the Arch of Septimius Severus in Leptis Magna Proportion is a defining characteristic of the Corinthian order the coherent integration of dimensions and ratios in accordance with the principles of symmetria are noted by Mark Wilson Jones who finds that the ratio of total column height to column shaft height is in a 6 5 ratio so that secondarily the full height of column with capital is often a multiple of 6 Roman feet while the column height itself is a multiple of 5 In its proportions the Corinthian column is similar to the Ionic column though it is more slender and stands apart by its distinctive carved capital 5 The abacus upon the capital has concave sides to conform to the outscrolling corners of the capital and it may have a rosette at the center of each side Corinthian columns were erected on the top level of the Roman Colosseum holding up the least weight and also having the slenderest ratio of thickness to height Their height to width ratio is about 10 1 5 One variant is the Tivoli order found at the Temple of Vesta Tivoli The Tivoli order s Corinthian capital has two rows of acanthus leaves and its abacus is decorated with oversize fleurons in the form of hibiscus flowers with pronounced spiral pistils The column flutes have flat tops The frieze exhibits fruit festoons suspended between bucrania Above each festoon has a rosette over its center The cornice does not have modillions Gandharan capitals Edit Main article Indo Corinthian capital Figure of the Buddha within a Corinthian capital Gandhara 3 4th century Musee Guimet Capital of the Column of Phocas Vincenzo Scamozzi offers his version of the Corinthian capital in a portrait by Veronese Denver Art Museum Indo Corinthian capitals are capitals crowning columns or pilasters which can be found in the northwestern Indian subcontinent and usually combine Hellenistic and Indian elements These capitals are typically dated to the 1st centuries of our era and constitute important elements of Greco Buddhist art of Gandhara The classical design was often adapted usually taking a more elongated form and sometimes being combined with scrolls generally within the context of Buddhist stupas and temples Indo Corinthian capitals also incorporated figures of the Buddha or Bodhisattvas usually as central figures surrounded and often in the shade of the luxurious foliage of Corinthian designs Renaissance Corinthian order Edit During the first flush of the Italian Renaissance the Florentine architectural theorist Francesco di Giorgio expressed the human analogies that writers who followed Vitruvius often associated with the human form in squared drawings he made of the Corinthian capital overlaid with human heads to show the proportions common to both 6 The Corinthian architrave is divided in two or three sections which may be equal or may bear interesting proportional relationships to one with another Above the plain unadorned architrave lies the frieze which may be richly carved with a continuous design or left plain as at the U S Capitol extension At the Capitol the proportions of architrave to frieze are exactly 1 1 Above that the profiles of the cornice mouldings are like those of the Ionic order If the cornice is very deep it may be supported by brackets or modillions which are ornamental brackets used in a series under a cornice The Corinthian column is almost always fluted and the flutes of a Corinthian column may be enriched They may be filleted with rods nestled within the hollow flutes or stop fluted with the rods rising a third of the way to where the entasis begins In French these are called chandelles and sometimes terminate in carved wisps of flame or with bellflowers Alternatively beading or chains of husks may take the place of the fillets in the fluting Corinthian being the most flexible of the orders with more opportunities for variation Elaborating upon an offhand remark when Vitruvius accounted for the origin of its acanthus capital it became a commonplace to identify the Corinthian column with the slender figure of a young girl in this mode the classifying French painter Nicolas Poussin wrote to his friend Freart de Chantelou in 1642 The beautiful girls whom you will have seen in Nimes will not I am sure have delighted your spirit any less than the beautiful columns of Maison Carree for the one is no more than an old copy of the other 7 Sir William Chambers expressed the conventional comparison with the Doric order The proportions of the orders were by the ancients formed on those of the human body and consequently it could not be their intention to make a Corithian column which as Vitruvius observes is to represent the delicacy of a young girl as thick and much taller than a Doric one which is designed to represent the bulk and vigour of a muscular full grown man 8 History Edit Ancient Greek capital from Tarentum with addorsed sphinxes 4th 3rd centuries BC made of limestone in the Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City Detailed illustration of a Corinthian capital circa 1540 1560 in the Metropolitan Museum of Art The oldest known example of a Corinthian column is in the Temple of Apollo Epicurius at Bassae in Arcadia c 450 420 BC It is not part of the order of the temple itself which has a Doric colonnade surrounding the temple and an Ionic order within the cella enclosure A single Corinthian column stands free centered within the cella This is a mysterious feature and archaeologists debate what this shows some state that it is simply an example of a votive column A few examples of Corinthian columns in Greece during the next century are all used inside temples A more famous example and the first documented use of the Corinthian order on the exterior of a structure is the circular Choragic Monument of Lysicrates in Athens erected c 334 BC A Corinthian capital carefully buried in antiquity in the foundations of the circular tholos at Epidaurus was recovered during modern archaeological campaigns Its enigmatic presence and preservation have been explained as a sculptor s model for stonemasons to follow 9 in erecting the temple dedicated to Asclepius The architectural design of the building was credited in antiquity to the sculptor Polykleitos the Younger son of the Classical Greek sculptor Polykleitos the Elder The temple was erected in the 4th century BC These capitals in one of the most visited sacred sites of Greece influenced later Hellenistic and Roman designs for the Corinthian order The concave sides of the abacus meet at a sharp keel edge easily damaged which in later and post Renaissance practice has generally been replaced by a canted corner Behind the scrolls the spreading cylindrical form of the central shaft is plainly visible Much later the Roman writer Vitruvius c 75 BC c 15 BC related that the Corinthian order had been invented by Callimachus a Greek architect and sculptor who was inspired by the sight of a votive basket that had been left on the grave of a young girl A few of her toys were in it and a square tile had been placed over the basket to protect them from the weather An acanthus plant had grown through the woven basket mixing its spiny deeply cut leaves with the weave of the basket 10 The origin of the Corinthian order illustrated in Claude Perrault s translation of the ten books of Vitruvius 1684 Claude Perrault incorporated a vignette epitomizing the Callimachus tale in his illustration of the Corinthian order for his translation of Vitruvius published in Paris 1684 Perrault demonstrates in his engraving how the proportions of the carved capital could be adjusted according to demands of the design without offending The texture and outline of Perrault s leaves is dry and tight compared to their 19th century naturalism at the U S Capitol A Corinthian capital may be seen as an enriched development of the Ionic capital though one may have to look closely at a Corinthian capital to see the Ionic volutes helices at the corners perhaps reduced in size and importance scrolling out above the two ranks of stylized acanthus leaves and stalks cauliculi or caulicoles eight in all and to notice that smaller volutes scroll inwards to meet each other on each side The leaves may be quite stiff schematic and dry or they may be extravagantly drilled and undercut naturalistic and spiky In Late Antique and Byzantine practice the leaves may be blown sideways as if by the wind of Faith Unlike the Doric and Ionic column capitals a Corinthian capital has no neck beneath it just a ring like astragal molding or a banding that forms the base of the capital recalling the base of the legendary basket Most buildings and most clients are satisfied with just two orders When orders are superposed one above another as they are at the Colosseum the natural progression is from sturdiest and plainest Doric at the bottom to slenderest and richest Corinthian at the top The Colosseum s topmost tier has an unusual order that came to be known as the Composite order during the 16th century The mid 16th century Italians especially Sebastiano Serlio and Jacopo Barozzi da Vignola who established a canonic version of the orders thought they detected a Composite order combining the volutes of the Ionic with the foliage of the Corinthian but in Roman practice volutes were almost always present In Romanesque and Gothic architecture where the Classical system had been replaced by a new aesthetic composed of arched vaults springing from columns the Corinthian capital was still retained It might be severely plain as in the typical Cistercian architecture which encouraged no distraction from liturgy and ascetic contemplation or in other contexts it could be treated to numerous fanciful variations even on the capitals of a series of columns or colonettes within the same system During the 16th century a sequence of engravings of the orders in architectural treatises helped standardize their details within rigid limits Sebastiano Serlio the Regola delli cinque ordini of Giacomo Barozzi da Vignola 1507 1573 I quattro libri dell architettura of Andrea Palladio and Vincenzo Scamozzi s L idea dell architettura universale were followed in the 17th century by French treatises with further refined engraved models such as Perrault s Notable examples Edit The Maison Carree in Nimes France built in circa 14 BC The Corinthian order as used in extending the United States Capitol in 1854 the column s shaft has been omitted Corinthian columns in Jerash Jordan Corinthian capital from the Colosseum with gorgoneia Corinthian capitals in the Temple of Hercules Victor Rome The Constantinian basilica of Santa Sabina interior with spolia Corinthian columns from the Temple of Juno Regina Argentina Palace of the Argentine National Congress Bangladesh Tajhat Palace Rangpur France Maison Carree Nimes The July Column Germany Palatine Chapel Aachen The Reichstag Berlin Greece Choragic Monument of Lysicrates Athens Temple of Olympian Zeus Athens Palestine Seat of the Universal House of Justice Haifa Italy Pantheon Rome Temple of Mars Ultor Temple of Vesta Tivoli Jordan Jarash Jabal al Qal a Amman Philippines St La Salle Hall Don Enrique T Yuchengco Hall Enrique M Razon Sports Center Portugal Templo de Diana Evora Column of Pedro IV Lisbon Romania New Saint George Church of Bucharest Royal Palace of Bucharest The Church from the Antim Monastery Central University Library of Bucharest Monteoru House Russia Winter Palace Saint Isaac s Cathedral Singapore Old City Hall South Africa Houses of Parliament Cape Town Syria Bosra Damascus Temple of Jupiter Latakia Colonnade of Bacchus Palmyra Ukraine Great Lavra Belltower fourth tier 8 columns Independence Monument United Kingdom Nelson s Column in Central London University College London United States of America United States Capitol United States Supreme Court Building The Rotunda University of Virginia New York Stock ExchangeGallery Edit Hadrian s Library on the north side of the Acropolis of Athens created by Roman Emperor Hadrian in 132 AD Reconstructed Corinthian capital with original colors Xanten Byzantine Corinthian capital in Basilica of Sant Apollinare Nuovo Ravenna Italy Feast in the House of Levi by Paolo Veronese from 1573 In the background appear many Corinthian columns Illustrations of Corinthian pilasters from Germany in the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum from New York City The Temple of Love in the gardens of the Petit Trianon at the Gardens of Versailles in Versailles France Corinthian pilaster capital in the Cathedrale Saint Louis des Invalides Paris Pair of Corinthian capitals in the Chapel of St Peter and St Paul at the Greenwich Hospital London The fake Roman ruins from the gardens of the Schonbrunn Palace Austria built in 1778 and based on Giovanni Battista Piranesi s depictions of the Roman Temple of Vespasian and Titus The Hotel Baudard de Saint James from Paris with Corinthian columns and pilasters Romanian Revival balustrade made of small Corinthian columns in Bucharest Romania City house in Bucharest with Corinthian pilasters at its windowsSee also EditGiant order Superposed orderNotes Edit Corinthian Columns Architect of the Capitol Retrieved 2019 03 24 Corinthian Columns Architect of the Capitol Retrieved 2019 03 24 Mark Wilson Jones Designing the Roman Corinthian order Journal of Roman Archaeology 2 35 69 1989 Jones 1989 a b Peter D Epiro Mary Desmond Pinkowish 22 December 2010 What are the Seven Wonders of the World And 100 Other Great Cultural Lists Fully Explicated Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group p 133 ISBN 978 0 307 49107 7 Francesco di Giorgio s sheet with the drawings from the Turin codex Saluzziano of his Trattati di architettura ingegneria e arte militare c 1480 1500 is illustrated by Rudolf Wittkower Architectural Principles in the Age of Humanism 1962 1965 pl ic Quoted by Sir Kenneth Clark The Nude A Study in Ideal Form 1956 p 45 Chambers A Treatise on the Decorative Part of Civil Architecture Joseph Gwilt ed 1825 pp 159 61 Alison Burford The Greek Temple Builders at Epidauros Liverpool 1969 p 65 suggests instead that it was spoilt in the carving one volute being incorrectly detached from its field Hugh Plommer reviewing it for The Classical Review New Series 21 2 June 1971 pp 269 272 remarks that the error involved an excess of work and remains convinced that the capital was a model Vitr 4 1 9 10References EditLawrence A W Greek Architecture 1957 Penguin Pelican history of artExternal links Edit Media related to Corinthian columns at Wikimedia Commons Classical orders and elements Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Corinthian order amp oldid 1137413537, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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