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  • Dec. 20, 1862
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Dec. 20, 1862: Page 5

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    Article ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT ABSTRACTEDLY CONSIDERED. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 5

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Architectural Development Abstractedly Considered.

may have affected them , they show us more the native uninfluenced character of early Asiatic architecture or a family likeness to the Pelasgian . We may note , unlike the monumental character of Egyptian architecture—the Assyrian and Persian was chiefly palatial . The Ionic forms are justly considered by some to be derived from Persepolitan ones .

It would be interesting to discover how far Assyrian and Persian elements moulded Grecian architecture ; and how far Egyptian features characterised it . as well as the extent of the influence which Lycian ancl Pelasgic forms had in giving Grecian expression . - The admixture of foreign elements confusedly , —without the concurrence of those princiles which are common

p to all styles , or the discretion necessary to their proper combination , and which principles must always direct architectural composition , —would be fraught with results much akin to some of our debased Elizabethan and Jacobean examples , or to the still worse attempts of the ¦ cinque-cents rococo productions of a Louis XIV and XV age .

These attempts , though entitled to be called styles , from the fact of their being the exponents of the disingenuousness and meretriciousness of their respective ages , will always be considered contemptible from the circumstance of their violating those canons of sound taste which have invariably moulded the finest and most distinctive developments of art .

True styles have always required time to acclimatise the _ foreign features they have adopted , as well as to nationalise them with the native elements to which they are united . Thus , the columnar ordinances the Eomans adapted from the Greeks , were gradually transmuted and localised : the masculine Doric of the Parthenon was attenuated and elaborated to the beautiful , though less majestic column seen in the Theatre of Marcellns ; the Grecian Ionic of the Erechtheium was modified to that of the Temple of Concord , though it lost in simplicity

and elegance ; the Corinthian of the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates was enriched and profusely elaborated as at the Pantheon and Temple of Jupiter Stater ; from the Corinthian the Eoman Composite order emerged , ivhich , though a combination , was yet a happy one , and deserves less the strictures of those who would concede no intrinsic merits to Eoman composition ; the Grecian colonnade

was Etruscanised , or Eomanised into the Arcade ; while the severe , simple , and rectangular temple , as the Parthenon , was transfigured into the Pantheon , and the super-eoluunliated Colosseum , in which the arch , dome , and a variety of plan ( truly national adaptations ) relieved the monotony of the beam system , and gave Eoman architecture a locality and a name . The multifarious

requirements of the Eomans needed a more varied architecture . Their temples , basilicas , amphitheatres , thenn _ s , & c , prove how they met these requirements , and how they nationalised their architecture . It must be forgetful of these to say they never possessed a truly national style , or that it lacked originality . Again , the Gothic and Lombard invaders of the Eoman

Empire nationalized to their own wants and tastes the arched system of their predecessors ; infusing into the enervated and expiring forms of Pagan art that Teutonic vigorousness which was destined to develops Mediajval Architecture . They eagerly seized on the arched features , and carried out what the Eomans themselves ivould have done , had they continued free from corruption , a distinct roundarched st

- yle . From the time of Justinian , in the 6 th century , the Byzantine became more distinct and individualized as an Eastern style allied to the Greek Church ; and from Charlemagne ' s accession to the Empire of the West , in the Sth century , the western varieties ofthe Eomanesque had received various local expressions . « Even the intermixture of race , which the Astro-Gothic nations created under Theodoric the Great ' s monarchy after the extinction of the Western Empire , in the latter part of the Sth century , was not destructive to that

indigenousness of character , if we may so call it , which pervaded the Scandinavian and Teutonic races no less than their architecture ; the Roman elements of which , like the old institutions , being preserved under Theodoric ' s rule . The Western styles of the Visigoths also retained the native peculiarities of their several countries , though compounded with new features : Voluntary

native growth , then , is an essential ingredient of national styles , as it is in a language or a literature , and hence the assertion we previously made , that a true style must be a " spontaneous , indigenous development out of preceding styles , " is confirmed , though some may have misinterpreted it . Indeed , we may say that it is to the want of an indigeneous character we must attribute the

debasement of art of the 16 th century , or to a national disaffection . Neither fusion of styles , nor the emanations of creative fancy alone , will ever realize a style adapted to the present day , any more than hasty fusion of different languages or dialects , or the effusions of one or two gifted imaginations , would realise a new language or literature .

What would become of our architecture , for instance , if one were to mix Egyptian with Gothic features ; another , Grecian with Chinese ; a third , Egyptian with Moorish or Italian ? We leave our readers to guess . Creative fancy—though the life of a style , an element in design which counteracts an overdue attachment to literalism or undue imitation , and gives a charm to

many an otherwise prosaic structure , as it sparkles in many a poem , or glows in many a romance—is like the oxygen we breathe , and requires to be kept in check by combination with other elements of an antagonistic kind , to subserve the requirements of a national architecture so essentially utilitarian as our own . Hence the hypothesis may be assumed that architectural design , to be really flexible and expressive of our wants , should represent the various constituent qualities of a nation ' s character : that they should be translated

into those material forms of beauty and of expression , which aptly utter its sentiments , and which a style of art should embody and convey in proper proportions . The undue prominence of any one of these is destructive , as representing only one section or element of national character ; in other words , as this character is the joint effect of many opposite moral and intellectual qualities ,

so a national architecture is the joint result of the like dispositions translated into the language of art . To make a style too versatile , is to destroy its claims to be called one—a certain share of individuality and homogeneity being necessary . The Saracen style , in which creative ancl poetic fancy had more play than any otherstill shows in all its varieties a directing spirit as

, well as the association of local elements . The Syrian and Egyptian developments , derived more or less from the Byzantine , are less distinctive than subsequent ones , though the latter style shows in its later forms of the 13 th and 14 th centuries , as seen in the mosques of Cairo , distinctive peculiarities . The Persian and Indian varieties of the 14 th and 15 th

centuries exhibit a still more advanced stage , though the earlier germs of the former are not to be traced , early Persian architecture having been of a temporary natuz-e . During the 14 th , 15 th , and 16 th centuries , mosques arose out of the zeal of the devotees of Ali and his martyred sons , in which a greater luxuriance of fancy and richness of colouring wore manifested . The Indian development

£ > roduced tombs and mosques in which no Arabic elements are discernible ; the conquerors of this country being of the Tartar race , infused a Tartar character into the old local Hindu style , thereby giving it an individual peculiarity . In Spain the phase it assumed was , perhaps , more characterised by fertility of imagination ; but even here it was controlled by conventional treatment , by Eoman and Byzantine influences , and by local habits—the pointed arch seldom occurring in Southern parts .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1862-12-20, Page 5” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 30 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_20121862/page/5/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
THE GRAND LODGE PROPERTY. Article 1
FROM WEST TO EAST—FROM EAST TO WEST.* Article 2
ARCHITECTURAL DEVELOPMENT ABSTRACTEDLY CONSIDERED. Article 4
OUR PUBLIC STATUES AND MEMORIALS. Article 6
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 9
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 10
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH. Article 15
MARK MASONRY. Article 15
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 15
Poetry. Article 16
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 17
THE WEEK. Article 17
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Architectural Development Abstractedly Considered.

may have affected them , they show us more the native uninfluenced character of early Asiatic architecture or a family likeness to the Pelasgian . We may note , unlike the monumental character of Egyptian architecture—the Assyrian and Persian was chiefly palatial . The Ionic forms are justly considered by some to be derived from Persepolitan ones .

It would be interesting to discover how far Assyrian and Persian elements moulded Grecian architecture ; and how far Egyptian features characterised it . as well as the extent of the influence which Lycian ancl Pelasgic forms had in giving Grecian expression . - The admixture of foreign elements confusedly , —without the concurrence of those princiles which are common

p to all styles , or the discretion necessary to their proper combination , and which principles must always direct architectural composition , —would be fraught with results much akin to some of our debased Elizabethan and Jacobean examples , or to the still worse attempts of the ¦ cinque-cents rococo productions of a Louis XIV and XV age .

These attempts , though entitled to be called styles , from the fact of their being the exponents of the disingenuousness and meretriciousness of their respective ages , will always be considered contemptible from the circumstance of their violating those canons of sound taste which have invariably moulded the finest and most distinctive developments of art .

True styles have always required time to acclimatise the _ foreign features they have adopted , as well as to nationalise them with the native elements to which they are united . Thus , the columnar ordinances the Eomans adapted from the Greeks , were gradually transmuted and localised : the masculine Doric of the Parthenon was attenuated and elaborated to the beautiful , though less majestic column seen in the Theatre of Marcellns ; the Grecian Ionic of the Erechtheium was modified to that of the Temple of Concord , though it lost in simplicity

and elegance ; the Corinthian of the Choragic Monument of Lysicrates was enriched and profusely elaborated as at the Pantheon and Temple of Jupiter Stater ; from the Corinthian the Eoman Composite order emerged , ivhich , though a combination , was yet a happy one , and deserves less the strictures of those who would concede no intrinsic merits to Eoman composition ; the Grecian colonnade

was Etruscanised , or Eomanised into the Arcade ; while the severe , simple , and rectangular temple , as the Parthenon , was transfigured into the Pantheon , and the super-eoluunliated Colosseum , in which the arch , dome , and a variety of plan ( truly national adaptations ) relieved the monotony of the beam system , and gave Eoman architecture a locality and a name . The multifarious

requirements of the Eomans needed a more varied architecture . Their temples , basilicas , amphitheatres , thenn _ s , & c , prove how they met these requirements , and how they nationalised their architecture . It must be forgetful of these to say they never possessed a truly national style , or that it lacked originality . Again , the Gothic and Lombard invaders of the Eoman

Empire nationalized to their own wants and tastes the arched system of their predecessors ; infusing into the enervated and expiring forms of Pagan art that Teutonic vigorousness which was destined to develops Mediajval Architecture . They eagerly seized on the arched features , and carried out what the Eomans themselves ivould have done , had they continued free from corruption , a distinct roundarched st

- yle . From the time of Justinian , in the 6 th century , the Byzantine became more distinct and individualized as an Eastern style allied to the Greek Church ; and from Charlemagne ' s accession to the Empire of the West , in the Sth century , the western varieties ofthe Eomanesque had received various local expressions . « Even the intermixture of race , which the Astro-Gothic nations created under Theodoric the Great ' s monarchy after the extinction of the Western Empire , in the latter part of the Sth century , was not destructive to that

indigenousness of character , if we may so call it , which pervaded the Scandinavian and Teutonic races no less than their architecture ; the Roman elements of which , like the old institutions , being preserved under Theodoric ' s rule . The Western styles of the Visigoths also retained the native peculiarities of their several countries , though compounded with new features : Voluntary

native growth , then , is an essential ingredient of national styles , as it is in a language or a literature , and hence the assertion we previously made , that a true style must be a " spontaneous , indigenous development out of preceding styles , " is confirmed , though some may have misinterpreted it . Indeed , we may say that it is to the want of an indigeneous character we must attribute the

debasement of art of the 16 th century , or to a national disaffection . Neither fusion of styles , nor the emanations of creative fancy alone , will ever realize a style adapted to the present day , any more than hasty fusion of different languages or dialects , or the effusions of one or two gifted imaginations , would realise a new language or literature .

What would become of our architecture , for instance , if one were to mix Egyptian with Gothic features ; another , Grecian with Chinese ; a third , Egyptian with Moorish or Italian ? We leave our readers to guess . Creative fancy—though the life of a style , an element in design which counteracts an overdue attachment to literalism or undue imitation , and gives a charm to

many an otherwise prosaic structure , as it sparkles in many a poem , or glows in many a romance—is like the oxygen we breathe , and requires to be kept in check by combination with other elements of an antagonistic kind , to subserve the requirements of a national architecture so essentially utilitarian as our own . Hence the hypothesis may be assumed that architectural design , to be really flexible and expressive of our wants , should represent the various constituent qualities of a nation ' s character : that they should be translated

into those material forms of beauty and of expression , which aptly utter its sentiments , and which a style of art should embody and convey in proper proportions . The undue prominence of any one of these is destructive , as representing only one section or element of national character ; in other words , as this character is the joint effect of many opposite moral and intellectual qualities ,

so a national architecture is the joint result of the like dispositions translated into the language of art . To make a style too versatile , is to destroy its claims to be called one—a certain share of individuality and homogeneity being necessary . The Saracen style , in which creative ancl poetic fancy had more play than any otherstill shows in all its varieties a directing spirit as

, well as the association of local elements . The Syrian and Egyptian developments , derived more or less from the Byzantine , are less distinctive than subsequent ones , though the latter style shows in its later forms of the 13 th and 14 th centuries , as seen in the mosques of Cairo , distinctive peculiarities . The Persian and Indian varieties of the 14 th and 15 th

centuries exhibit a still more advanced stage , though the earlier germs of the former are not to be traced , early Persian architecture having been of a temporary natuz-e . During the 14 th , 15 th , and 16 th centuries , mosques arose out of the zeal of the devotees of Ali and his martyred sons , in which a greater luxuriance of fancy and richness of colouring wore manifested . The Indian development

£ > roduced tombs and mosques in which no Arabic elements are discernible ; the conquerors of this country being of the Tartar race , infused a Tartar character into the old local Hindu style , thereby giving it an individual peculiarity . In Spain the phase it assumed was , perhaps , more characterised by fertility of imagination ; but even here it was controlled by conventional treatment , by Eoman and Byzantine influences , and by local habits—the pointed arch seldom occurring in Southern parts .

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