Photograph of Vitruvius.
Vitruvius

Overview

Marcus Vitruvius Pollio (born ca. 80/70 BC?; died ca. 25 BC) was a Roman writer, architect and engineer (possibly praefectus fabrum or architectus armamentarius of the apparitor status group), active in the 1st century BC.

Biography

Little is known about Vitruvius' life. His first name Marcus and his cognomen Pollio are uncertain as they are only mentioned by Cetius Faventinus. Most inferences about his life are extracted from his only surviving work De Architectura.

Born a free Roman citizen, most likely at Formiae in Campania, he served the Roman army under Julius Caesar in Hispania and Gaul. As an army engineer he specialized in the construction of war machines for sieges. In later years the emperor Augustus, through his sister Octavia Minor, sponsored Vitruvius, entitling him with a pension to guarantee his financial independence. His date of death is unknown, which suggests that he had enjoyed only little popularity during his lifetime.

De Architectura

Vitruvius is the author of De architectura, known today as The Ten Books on Architecture, a treatise written of Latin and Greek on architecture, dedicated to the emperor Augustus. This work is the only surviving major book on architecture from classical antiquity. Mainly known for his writings, Vitruvius was himself an architect. Frontinus mentions him in connection with the standard sizes of pipes. The only building, however, that we know Vitruvius to have worked on is, as he himself tells us, a basilica at Fanum Fortunae, now the modern town of Fano. The basilica has disappeared so completely that its very site is a matter of conjecture.

Vitruvius is most famous for asserting in his book De architectura that a structure must exhibit the three qualities of firmitas, utilitas, venustas - that is, it must be strong or durable, useful, and beautiful. According to Vitruvius, architecture is an imitation of nature. As birds and bees built their nests, so humans constructed housing from natural materials, that gave them shelter against the elements. When perfecting this art of building, the ancient Greek invented the architectural orders: Doric, Ionic and Corinthian. It gave them a sense of proportion, culminating in understanding the proportions of the greatest work of art: the human body. This led Vitruvius in defining his Vitruvian Man, as drawn magnificently by Leonardo da Vinci: the human body inscribed in the circle and the square (the fundamental geometric patterns of the cosmic order).

Vitruvius is sometimes loosely referred to as the first architect, but it is more accurate to describe him as the first Roman architect to have written on his field. He himself cites older but less complete works. He was less an original thinker or creative intellect than a codifier of existing architectural practice. It should also be noted that Vitruvius had a much wider scope than modern architects. Roman architects practised a wide variety of disciplines; in modern terms, they could be described as being engineers, architects, landscape architects, artists, and craftsmen combined. Etymologically the word architect derives from Greek words meaning 'master' and 'builder'. The first of the Ten Books deals with many subjects which now come within the scope of landscape architecture.

It is something to note that Vitruvius advises that lead should not be used to conduct drinking water. He comes to this conclusion in Book VIII of De Architectura after observing the apparent laborer illnesses in the plumbum founderies of his time. In 1986 the United States banned the use of lead in plumbing due to lead poisonings neurological damage.

Rediscovery

His book De architectura was rediscovered in 1414 by the Florentine humanist Poggio Bracciolini. To Leon Battista Alberti (1404-1472) falls the honour of making this work widely known in his seminal treatise on architecture De re aedificatoria (ca. 1450). The first known edition of Vitruvius was in Rome by Fra Giovanni Sulpitius in 1486. Translations followed in Italian (Como, 1521), French (Jean Martin, 1547 , English, German (Walter H. Ryff, 1543) and Spanish and several other languages. The original illustrations had been lost. New woodcut illustrations, based on descriptions in the text, were added in the 16th century, probably by Fra Giovanni Giocondo in Venice in 1511. The surviving ruins of Roman antiquity, the Roman Forum, temples, theatres, triumphal arches and their reliefs and statues gave ample visual examples of the descriptions in the Vitruvian text. This book then quickly became a major inspiration for Renaissance, Baroque and Neoclassical architecture.

Trivia

A small lunar crater has been named after Vitruvius and also an elongated lunar mountain Mons Vitruvius close-by. This crater was near the valley that served as the landing site of the Apollo 17 mission.

References

*Indra Kagis McEwen, Vitruvius: Writing the Body of Architecture. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2004. ISBN O-262-63306-X *B. Baldwin, "The Date, Identity, and Career of Vitruvius." In Latomus 49 (1990), 425-34.

External links

* The Ten Books on Architecture online: cross-linked Latin text and English translation * The Ten Books on Architecture at the Perseus Classics Collection. Latin and English text. Images. Latin text has hyperlinks to pop-up dictionary. * Latin text, version 2 * (Morris Hicky Morgan translation with illustrations) *Vitruvius on line: http://www.cesr.univ-tours.fr/architectura/Traite/Auteur/Vitruve.asp * Leonardo da Vincis Vitruvian man as an algorithm for the approximation of the squaring of the circle *Vitruvius' theories of beauty - a learning resource from the British Library
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This biography says:

...On abusing dead authors Zoilus, Homeromastix, Ptolemy I Soter, Philadelphus On divergence of the visual rays Agatharcus, Aeschylus, Democritus, Anaxagoras...

That biography says:

...The entire series of revolving boards were linked to each other by a series of pulleys and machinery, thus allowing scene changes to be almost instantaneous. While Lanci did not invent this mechanism himself, (indeed Vitruvius, had described these three-sided units revolving in the Roman era) he was instrumental in its further development...

This biography says:

List of physicists Thales, Democritus, Anaxagoras, Xenophanes...

This biography says:

...On plagiarism Aristophanes, Ptolemy I Soter, Attalus...

That biography says:

...The Frogs was given the unprecedented honor of a second performance. According to a later biographer, he was also awarded a civic crown for the play. According to Vitruvius (vii., introduction) Aristophanes first came to public attention as the 7th judge in a literature contest...

This biography says:

...List of kings Croesus, Alexander the Great, Darius...

That biography says:

...Since the early years of the 17th century it was not unusual for the well-educated gentleman, (</i>virtuosi), to take up architecture as a gentlemanly activity; a pursuit widely accepted as a branch of applied mathematics. This is implicit in the writings of Vitruvius and explicit in such sixteenth-century authors as John Dee and Leonard Digges. When Wren was a student at Oxford, he became familiar with Vitruvius' De architectura and absorbed intuitively the fundamentals of the architectural design there...

This biography says:

...Born a free Roman citizen, most likely at Formiae in Campania, he served the Roman army under Julius Caesar in Hispania and Gaul. As an army engineer he specialized in the construction of war machines for sieges...

That biography says:

...It was published with woodcut illustrations at Venice in 1615. Scamozzi depended for sections of his treatment of Vitruvius to Daniele Barbaro's commentary, published in 1556 with illustrations by Palladio; he also discussed issues of building practice...

That biography says:

...The first book is a history of ancient art. Ghiberti reinforces the view of Vitruvius that the artist needs an intellectual basis for his practice, and postulates that the art practitioner must have both a natural talent and formal instruction...

That biography says:

...He made a first trip to Rome in 1536 to make measured drawings of Roman temples, with a thought to publish an illustrated Vitruvius. Then François I called him to Fontainebleau, where he spent the years 1541 1543. Here he probably met his fellow Bolognese, the architect Sebastiano Serlio and the painter Primaticcio...

This biography says:

...List of Artists Leochares, Bryaxis, Scopas, Praxiteles, Timotheus (Timotheos)...

That biography says:

Vitruvius (vii, praef. 13) lists Praxiteles as an artist on the Mausoleum of Maussollos and Strabo (xiv, 23, 51) attributes to him the whole sculpted decoration of the Temple of Artemis at Ephesus...

That biography says:

...To a lesser extent, he also held that the setting out of buildings should be guided by principles first described by ancient Roman writer Vitruvius. Jones's best known buildings are the Queen's House at Greenwich, London (started in 1616, his earliest surviving work) and the Banqueting House at Whitehall (1619) – part of a major modernisation by him of the Palace of Whitehall – which also has a ceiling painted by Peter Paul Rubens...

That biography says:

...In his epistles he describes how he recovered Quintilian, Statius' Silvae, part of Valerius Flaccus, and the commentaries of Asconius Pedanius at St. Gallen. Manuscripts of Lucretius, Columella, Silius Italicus, Manilius and Vitruvius were unearthed, copied by his hand, and communicated to the learned. Wherever Poggio went he carried on the same industry of research...

That biography says:

...An Arabic translation was commissioned in the ninth century by the Caliph Al-Ma'mun. He is cited by Vitruvius, Stephanus of Byzantium and Stobaeus. Several accounts of his life are extant, by anonymous Greek writers...

That biography says:

...4; Valerius Maximus, Facta et dicta memorabilia, iv. 6; Suda, s.v. "Artemisia", "Mausolos" Vitruvius, De architectura, ii. 8

This biography says:

...As an army engineer he specialized in the construction of war machines for sieges. In later years the emperor Augustus, through his sister Octavia Minor, sponsored Vitruvius, entitling him with a pension to guarantee his financial independence. His date of death is unknown, which suggests that he had enjoyed only little popularity during his lifetime.

This biography says:

...List of writers on machinery Diades of Pella, Archytas, Archimedes, Ctesibius, Nymphodorus, Philo of Byzantium, Diphilus, Democles, Charias, Polyidus, Pyrrus, Agesistratus...

That biography says:

...This machine, which its inventor called The Pigeon, may have been suspended on a wire or pivot for its flight. Archytas also wrote some lost works, as he was included by Vitruvius in the list of the twelve authors of works of mechanics. Thomas Winter has suggested that the pseudo-Aristotelian Mechanical Problems is an important mechanical work by Archytas, not lost after all, but misattributed...

That biography says:

...His detailed observations, included in De re aedificatoria (1452, Ten Books of Architecture), were patterned after the De architectura by the Roman architect and engineer Vitruvius (fl. 46-30 B.C.). The work was the first architectural treatise of the Renaissance. It covered a wide range of subjects, from history to town planning, and engineering to the philosophy of beauty...

This biography says:

...On plagiarism Aristophanes, Ptolemy I Soter, Attalus...

That biography says:

...The important role of Jones' pupil Webb in transmitting the palladian—neo-palladian heritage was not understood until the 20th century. Burlington's Palladio drawings include many reconstructions after Vitruvius of Roman buildings, which Burlington planned to publish. In the meantime, in 1723 he adapted the palazzo facade in the illustration for the London house of General Wade in Old Burlington Street, which was engraved for Vitruvius Britannicus iii (1725)...

That biography says:

...Vitruvius (in the De Architectura), Quintilian (in his Institutiones Oratoriae) and Statius (in the Silvae) also show great admiration for the De Rerum Natura.
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