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قراءة كتاب Cathedral Cities of Italy

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Cathedral Cities of Italy

Cathedral Cities of Italy

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CATHEDRAL CITIES
OF ITALY

UNIFORM WITH THIS VOLUME

CATHEDRAL CITIES OF ENGLAND.
By George Gilbert. With 60 reproductions from water-colours by W. W. Collins, R.I. Demy 8vo, 16s. net.

CATHEDRAL CITIES OF FRANCE.
By Herbert and Hester Marshall. With 60 reproductions from water-colours by Herbert Marshall, R.W.S. Demy 8vo, 16s. net. Also large paper edition £2 2s. net.

CATHEDRAL CITIES OF SPAIN.
Written and illustrated with 60 reproductions from water-colours by W. W. Collins, R.I. Demy 8vo, 16s. net. Also large paper edition (limited) £2 2s. net.

BOOKS ILLUSTRATED BY JOSEPH
PENNELL

ITALIAN HOURS.
By Henry James. With 32 plates in colour and numerous illustrations in black-and-white by Joseph Pennell. Large crown 4to. Price 20s. net.

A LITTLE TOUR IN FRANCE.
By Henry James. With 94 illustrations by Joseph Pennell. Pott 4to. Price 10s. net.

ENGLISH HOURS.
By Henry James. With 94 illustrations by Joseph Pennell. Pott 4to. Price 10s. net.

ITALIAN JOURNEYS.
By W. D. Howells. With 103 illustrations by Joseph Pennell. Pott 4to. Price 10s. net.

CASTILIAN DAYS.
By the Hon. John Hay. With 111 illustrations by Joseph Pennell. Pott 4to. Price 10s. net.

London: William Heinemann
21 Bedford Street, W.C.

S. PETER'S, ROME
S. PETER'S, ROME



CATHEDRAL CITIES
OF ITALY



WRITTEN AND ILLUSTRATED
BY
W. W.   C O L L I N S,   R. I.



colophon



LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN
NEW YORK: DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY
1911



All rights reserved
Copyright, London, 1911, by William Heinemann
and Washington, U.S.A., by Dodd, Mead & Co.



PREFACE

THE cathedral cities of Italy, the heir of all the ages in art, are as full of enchantment to the lover of architecture as to the poet, the painter, and the historian. Side by side with the great churches that give them their crowning splendour are the public buildings, universities, palaces, and fountains that tell the story of the glorious past, and form the best monument of their great creators. These architectural jewels are often set amidst scenes of great natural beauty, which relieve and enhance the perfection of their art. Every traveller in Italy will recall the emotion with which he first saw Rome rising from the green stretches of the Campagna, recognised the domes and campaniles of Florence, or lifted up his eyes to one of those towered "cities set upon an hill, which cannot be hid"—Siena, Perugia, or Orvieto. Among the many appeals which Italy makes to æsthetic appreciation is that of infinite variety. In no country are the different styles and periods so wonderfully exemplified. Here we may range from Rome and Verona, with their relics of the antique world—amphitheatres, temples, and thermæ—to the Byzantine glories of Ravenna and Venice, the Romanesque grandeur that finds typical expression in the cathedral of Pisa, and thence to the manifestations of that Gothic art which, though it was alien to the climate and character of Italy and so struck no deep roots into the soil, intervened between Romanesque architecture and that of the Renaissance as a brilliant episode, and finds stupendous expression in the thousand pinnacles of Milan.

It is with Christian Italy that we have to deal, the Italy of cathedrals, and it is at Ravenna and at Venice that we may trace the decline of Roman architectural methods and the gradual merging of these into Byzantine forms. Though the great Basilica Ursiana of the fourth century has disappeared, Ravenna has preserved many famous monuments of the fifth century: the votive church of Galla Placidia, sister of the Emperor Honorius, the Baptistery, the aulic church of the Gothic conqueror Theodoric, Sant' Apollinare Nuovo, and the churches of San Vitale and Sant' Apollinare in Classe. Venice, rising to power and splendour when Ravenna fell on evil days, secured the heritage of her glory, and carried on the Byzantine tradition in the cathedral of Torcello, the church of San Zaccaria, and above all in the incomparable San Marco. At Pisa the Romanesque evolution culminated in a unique group of buildings, famous throughout the world, while at Milan and in the surrounding district the local type of Romanesque became sufficiently individual to figure as an independent style under the title of Lombard architecture. Of this subdivision of Romanesque the prototype seems to have been the great church of Sant' Ambrogio at Milan, while San Michele at Pavia is another early and important example. Italy's essays in Gothic are scattered throughout the length and breadth of the peninsula, from Como to Naples. The Broletto at Como and the monastic buildings at Vercelli are said to have inaugurated them. Good examples are the cathedral at Como, the church of San Francesco at Assisi, the cathedral of Orvieto, San Petronio and San Francesco at Bologna, and San Lorenzo at Genoa.

But it is to the Renaissance architecture of Italy that many of us will turn as the most intimate expression of the Italian spirit, to the works of Brunellesco, Michelozzo, and Cronaca at Florence, of Palladio at Venice and Vicenza, of Bramante, and, above all, of Michelangelo at Rome, notably in his great life-work, the church of St. Peter. The exuberant later style that resulted from a too ardent application of the principles of Michelangelo and is known as Baroque, though generally reprobated at present, must not be too sweepingly condemned. It had an exponent of great talent in Bernini, and it will hardly be denied that it gave grandiose expression to the tendency of a splendour-loving age, and that Rome owes to its exponents much of the scenic effectiveness of her streets and the impressive magnificence of her interiors.



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