ARCHITECTURE BOOK by Jacques Androuet, du Cerceau. IN WHICH ARE VARIOUS ORDERS OF PLANTS AND BUILDINGS OF BUILDINGS FOR LORDS, Gentlemen, & others who will want to build in the fields: even in no of them are taught, the short bass, with their particular conveniences: also the gardeners and orchards. VERY USEFUL AND NECESSARY FOR THOSE WHO WANT TO BUILD, THAT THEY BE EDUCATED, & KNOW THE COSTS AND THE EXPENDITURE THAT IT CONUCTS TO DO. IN PARIS For Jacques Androuet, du Cerceau. AT THE ROY. 1 Sire, being your majesty at Montargis, iereceus cebien de vostre accouftumee benignité & clemence, to listen to me to speak to you about several excellent buildings of your kingdom; And among other things asked me if I p cheuois the bindings of French buildings: Mo ni! age and indisposition were legitimate excuses, having no means, without your liberality, to transport me on the spot, in order to take the deifeingsi to then bring them to light, & satisfy your commandments. The will is not diminished in any way, but the effect and the means are luent, without the help of your Majesty. While wanting to give you some pleasure & contentment, I used the feiour of my old years to draw up a book of instruction to all those who want to build & build: houses in the fields, according to their means & ask: to show them, not only the order that they will have to keep according to the desseings, & plants contained in said book, but still to instruct them of the expense & costs that he will want them to do, having each building made the calculation at) more iufte than he was possible for me, both from the masonry and carpentry roofing, as well as generally from any other task: hoping (besides the pleasure, that your Majesty will take at the expense of such desseings) that your sub-, jets will receive infiruction & profit. Very humbly begging your Majesty, to have for pleasure this mine work that I dedicate you SC dedicates, Waiting that by your means ie I can visit the castles & excellent buildings which remain to be by means of you see & print, for! satisfy the contentment of your Royal virtues. j Devostre Majesty the very obedient & very affectionate syringe maker, I A Q V E S ANDROVET, D V CERCEAV. TO THE READER. BEFORE making a particular declaration of each baftiïnent it mafemblé ejlre necejjaire make heard to those who want to shatter the total sum of the defbenfe of the house quonUoudrafaire edifier, both for masonry, load Cree, pane or tiling of floors, window work., Ironwork, & roofing : In short Àauovbeut -,, - - - D - "1 n: / l P-mount the entire defense in a building, to make it accomplished & perfect. Confident that this is not the case with big & good wings, it is difficult to stitch up expert & able workers, to prove reason * certainty of what [fus. Because in places where is found maiflresffficientans to undertake tauure, the Lord has only done Jinon only to provide money to the contractor, to make the building In its perfetf ion. So turn pushing those who do not have such means> & aujjipourfatisfier to pray e which was done to me by no Lords, other my friends 3 we will disturb cy after regulation & inftrufhon for cognoistre & tugerd'kelle total deftenfe, at the end that everyone measures [the means. & rientreprise more than he can ejfetfuer 3 because fouuent argue that the costs ejlans greater than we thought, the building remains imperfect! + the purse seen empty, (0 may be ire defeu efyerance C eluy reue re-ceflepeine Jji meHrement (Ù soig noisy isse settled & led by this fleeing mine influélion, Table of Choftl that must be heard. Royal foot. Measuring rod. From the arpent. Lime. Fable. Moist, or blockage. Pebble. Neighborhood stone. Odds and ends. Quarreau, Tile. Slate. Latte is spinning. Latte quarree. Counter batten. Nail. The royal foot, of which the measured size is marked at the Chastelet de Paris, contains twelve long hens, and in its quarrec surface, one hundred and forty & four hens. The cubic foot contains twelve times one hundred and forty-four, four to one thousand seven hundred and twenty-eight massive hens. The square meter contains six feet long, and fixed wide in its area, which is thirty and six feet. The cubic height meter contains six times thirty & six feet, standing at two hundred and sixteen feet massive, which is useful for the calculation of the draining of massive earths. The pole, a measure of the Chastelet de Paris, is three toises long, which are ten hundred feet, making its square area three hundred twenty to four feet, which are worth nine square meters. Some call the pole pole. The arpent measure of the Viconté & Preuosté de Paris, contains ten poles long, & ten poles wide, which make a hundred square poles, the arpent reuenant à neuf cens toises. Es circumuoifins places of Viconté & Preuosté de Paris, the pole or rope contains twenty feet long, & twenty feet wide, which multiply by foy, make four hundred feet, which are worth nineteen toises four feet square, getting the arpent to nineteen cents Fifteen toises four feet: exceeding that of France of two hundred and nineteen toises four feet, which is that arpent of which turns the buildings of this book is measured. In other places, as in Beausse, the pole contains twenty & two feet long, & twenty & two feet wide, which multiply, make four hundred and eighty four square feet, making the pole thirteen toises sixteen square feet, & the arpent at thirteen hundred and forty & four toises [elze pieds. By the above measures, & according to the pole of the place, one can know for sure the contents of the area of the dwelling, covered with iceluy, its gardens, & lands which depend on it, also the quantity of drainage for caues, pits to be taken , dig from the enclosure of the house, & cognoistre the quantity of the cubic height, as said is cy above. The lime barrel contains two punches. d The three punches make two muids, returning to a barrel & half, But because the lime which is made of hard stone is the best, doing & drawing much more work than that which is made of soft stone, & that she suffers from having more sand in it than at the last: Considered also that there is sand which loses weight and lime more than the other, like that of oil, which is more ardent than that of sablôniere: Cest cause it is very necessary that the mason has great consideration: & mainly to make well mix together said lime & sablon: & notwithstanding such diuerfitez, ie did not leave aualluer as close as possible to the vray, how much material can enter each of the masonry rods below specified. The most ordinary means of assembling the said materials is by dumpers, which however are not altogether equal, thus more or less, depending mainly on whether they go near or near the said materials, and also according to the strength of the cheaux which shoot. This nonetheless did not fail to make an assessment of the number that would be necessary for the epessors of each of the masonry charts which ensued, and this by the smallest, and those who held the least. To make a wall measure of a foot and a half of thickness, you need the third part of a lime punch, three dumpers of sand, & five dumpers of marrow, or blockage. For the wall measurement of two feet of thickness, half a lime punch is needed, a little less, with four dumpers of sand, & seven of marrow, or blocking, a little less. Two-thirds of a lime punch, six knuckles of fable, & ten dumpers of marrow or blockage, are required for the three-footed wall-to-wall measurement. For the wall measurement of a height gauge, you need a punch & a third of lime, twelve dumpers of sand, & twenty dumpers of marrow, or blockage. Knowing the price of lime, sand, & marrow, one can easily judge how much the height rod costs according to its weight, including the days of masons & helpers. And it should be noted, that any wall made of pebble instead of blocking, must be more thickened, because the pebble does not bind so well from the beginning with lime, because of its roundness, than does the marrow: & having its sufficient profess, masonry is very good & durable. To make a square meter of masonry, the face of which is of cut stone, the back being covered with marrow, forty & eight feet of stone are needed, to assemble four stones each in assize, each of which will be two feet long: two of these will face, the other two in between in-between to make the connection of the wall, the said stepping stones one foot high: there will be six seats at the height, which will make forty eight feet cy above. To make a masonry of freestone masonry parpeine of two feet of thickness, as sometimes it is necessary, and mainly in trenches, it takes seventy & twelve feet of stone to the rod. n - .c _ = ..- .oS. ",; r- A ** a» rl \ rn negate before the bricque huict long hens, four wide hens, & two eessess hens, you need twenty! two bncques & dcmie.comprins the mortar, reuenat la toise has eight hundred and ten odds and ends For another wall of bricque of eight thighs of effeffer, cfl-a "'t is the bricque of length, width, & thickness than above , you need fifteen briciques at the foot, which is for the height chart five hundred forty bricques, including the ioings. If you want to make a wall of heavy swordsmanship, all of bricque, you re r d ui il l r icelle prorata, & the reason that above is said. l To paué rooms, bedrooms, & storerooms, quarreaux of four chickens in quarre, nine quarreaux are needed for the foot, & three cens twenty & quatre pour la tOlfe. "The tile is not the same length everywhere & width, but the most ordinary has nine hens & a half long, & six hens wide: the thousand of it will make three toises of color, and that of the great quality of Paris will make five toises. To use and supply a thousand ordinary tiles, you need a hundred and a half of square batten, but when the tile is large, there is less batten to the height, per cc | that the latter should only be so close to the ordinary tile. For each square batten, at least five nails are needed. The thousand slate from Angers is four and a half toises long. 1 A thousand slates require a hundred and a half of latte poultry. ! Each latte turns, you need ten nails for the estroitte, but the latte being wide it takes fifteen. From a thousand slates, you need ten to twelve toises of counter-batten. i Each slate requires two nails, and sometimes three. The slate of Mesieres is not so wide, not so beautiful as that of Angers, but it is more thick, and it takes more for the height. r The declarations contained above, do to instruct those who are not aware of such matters, to judge how much, & how much is needed for the building they want to make: But by the warnings contained here, it will make it easy and easy for them to count on the desseings & portraicts more or less, the defense that he conuiendta do for the necessary matters. As much as going into expense to build, it is very necessary to draw up and stop the plan and design of the building, to hear the conveniences from within, both from the first, and from other stages from above alff-i symmetry from the outside, so that the bastimé is perfect, the master & lord of iceluy does not regret the expense by luy do because often is honored, only for not having observed the symmetries, measures seen, & orders necessary, instead of receiving contentment, we would have wanted the building to be on the ground. Il Or having well & dyingly arrested the plan & desseing, it will be easy to measure & .: measure all the masonry of the building, & know the number of rods, & as well will receive the rod, for cut stone, stone , lime, bricque, & other materials, with the way, including coatings, & the price of the height rod arrested, will already easily knock the numbers of the height rods of the total masonry: And if the crossings, dormer doors do not include the same reason for the height chart, make a separate market, Cui: "uant which you will judge the expense apart, & after adesster the whole together. For the gaze of the fireplaces, we also customarily market them separately, according to the prescriptions and enrichments of them: because some want to have rashes, others are content with a plain task, considering only the coats projections, iambages, tongues, hoses, & their heights: but as for the enri- cipulations that one wants to be made there, that passes the cognizance of those who order them, or very often of those who undertake it: And is needed consider l mm- by lp menu. so that celuv who puts his hand on the stock market, & the other who is between- / taker, do not be abused. Because very well such master will undertake a ordinance of chimney at a hundred escus in a way, ocvn other will want to make it less than two cens escus, & aduicndra however that the master of the house will have cheaper that of two cens cfcus potir excellence of the fencing, that the other, which costs only half of it, being the task of the expert, well-done insurer, with science and art, and the other, poorly done, with ignorance. As for the mismanagement and squaring of the rooms, bedrooms, and lobbies, it will be easy, because what we say cy denus.de to know how high the height is: ôc feulement me - surer the areas of each member, & make vn number & total sum. For the others, pay offices, if you want them to be made of gravel, or of stone: hard, you have to know that the height is worth it on the spot, to estimate the number, and make the total of said paué. To know that the carpentry will sew, it will be necessary to draw up a state, or memory of the number of tricks, both of the quotes and of the roof: Assauoir how much a. each stage there are trawls, the quantity of soliues of each hatch, the number of fowls, the length & cessor of these, sum the price they will have cost: fcrez the similar of each trauec, looking at the price of each soliueau, & sum the streak, & other sum of all streaks in the building. For the roof space, you also have to see the number of tracks, cheurons, & trim of each of them, worth such sum: And of all the said trakes will make sum up: And similarly of all lumber of carpentry. You also have to look separately at what will sew the way of each thing apart, both from the hollows and from the attic, and whether everything is well declared, after having sold out completely, or separately, if you wish. Observing this order, knock on what all of said carpentry will sew. For the look of the roofs, either tile or slate, you will easily see on the plan & design the quantity & number of the rods. And by what cy above has been declared the way of knowing that each rod will sew, either the vn or the other, you will calculate the total according to its value & price. For carpentry, if you want to supply the wood, give an order that it should be dry for two or three years at least, as long as putting it in place. You will walk for the ways separately, both for the crossover so, according to the way you want it, and similarly for the assembly doors, & strong doors: & at all will make total sum. For the locksmith, you will know the master locksmith who will sew the hardware of each cross to the frame chassis with six windows, & from two chassis to four windows, & according to the price, & the number of these crossed, order the total number: do the similar of each frame fitted with fittings, pommels, rods, crampons, & depending on the price of one ticket, order the total. Also count the number of yards for the window panes of the windows: facing the price of one ticket, will stop the total number of yards, & by the above amounts will stop one total for the fact of the locksmith. For the windows, you will know how much we sell the glass foot of France, & how much that of Lorraine, which is not so beautiful not so expensive, & choose which one you want to have: consider after how many feet will contain each sign, how many there are panes at the cross, & put it all by memory, & of the total number of said feet or panes, total sum. Finely made of all the sums arrested, a total, and by that will see the expense of your building, & measure your means to not incur in costs greater than you can bear. - -, This desseing I. E desseing demonstre vn place enclosure das vn quarré paralelogramma, fifty & five toises in width, & twenty & five in depth (which are thirteen hundred and seventy-five toises in area, which are worth five quarters of land, minus one rope, or enuiron) which at the mid line place on the back is the house of the Lord, having the court over the deuant of the locIS. The side window of this is a garden, and the right side is the short slap. b This place is closed by walls. tallut portans in the pits, & és four quinces of iceluy, there are four battens tusks along the curtains, of which that of the cofté of the deuac of the short baff serves as dovecote., which by bottom has a small desired alley, elected from six to seven feet high. In the middle & center of the ground floor of iceluy is a pillar, on which the said will will be carried, making its circumference both around iceluy and on the walls of the loft. She can go seven or eight feet large, & will do not fray for batteries along the curtains, but also of bedding: above it will make the loft. The entrance to the place is right in the middle of the curtain wall on the deuant, where the pont-leuis sits, from which you come to a place in the manner of a small court, to which in dexter & in windows form two small main buildings , to each of which is a lower room, a gardobbe, & attics above. That of the garden cofté will serve for suruenars, looks good on the other for the metay brightening up his bakehouse with its convenience. From this place we go to the short slap by the cost dexter, having its barn & press, & a small stable in between. From the cost of the entrance, there are estables, one of which will be used for horses, and the others for bestail. From the above place you have to climb four or five degrees to the court of the Lord, which is fifteen toises wide and eight deep. It was closed from the cost of the entrance, and from the short court, only from a supporting wall three feet high, the Lord's house having its gaze on the top to unearth it. At the entrance to the Lord's lodge is a round porch, to which one climbs the two sides to a gallery made in half circumference, from which one enters its members & make use of the dwelling. Below on the ground floor in the square Oualle, which is between the two climbs of the staircase, can be erected a fountain, and there is this very clean place, even if the Lord has near it some source, and let him see it do the despence. The shape of this bastimet makes two lids, & a small main building between them, in which is in the middle a small alleyway swirling through, from which we go to a small terrace being between the two lids on the back. In the middle of this one descends from the two sides to another terrace baffe standing on the ditch. And from this one goes to j vn terraut in round shape planted with alders, having a table of stone or slate in the middle, & this place is only used for beauty, estat iceluy circui de dit in circoference. The two pauillons elect two estages above the steps, and their galletas above. Below the steps are the offices, ausquelles must descend from the ground floor | earth of three or four feet, & icelles will accommodate according to the plan. In the small main building in the middle, which is between these pauillons, is the staircase, with a few cabinets, the above passage of which is between two. From this staircase, we will defend to the office, & who will want to be defected by the steps. 'i The garden is on the window side of the lord's house which is twenty toises wide, it is twenty & five deep, all enclosed in the square, as said is. J The fence of the curtains and small forts, (to take three toises from the bottom of the foundation;; ment iusques above the support or parapel, & for the loft, to take j foundation iusques to its entablemét eight toises also tallut regnam;:; from the house of the Lord of the cost of the ditch) reuicnt to five hundred and eighty toises, i All the masonry of the short slap, with the eleuations of the reigning enclosures around the place from ten to seventy feet high above the talluts, & the two small main buildings (except the counterscarps, which reign around the ditch from the outside , & which I do not mention, & also that there is no need to despise) received at six hundred and seventy toises. All the masonry of the Lord's home (from the foot of the foundation to its entablature, seven and a half toises, folding down the wall, tallut, from the cost of the ditch already counted) cost six hundred and thirty toises. The offices and caues, meet at seventy-five toises. For the gaze of the paué des offices, it will only be necessary to pauper the kitchen, of which I did not make any calculation. The tiling of the three floors is a hundred and fifty toises. At each floor there are fourteen crossings, which make twenty & eight for both: however this will only be windows without a mint: the frames put down the cross panels. Seventeen small dormers, & seventeen small glazed windows, for the upstairs of offices & caues. The cover of the Lord's home was seven hundred yards tall. The opening of the whole dwelling of the bass court was at two hundred and thirty toises. On each floor there are two fireplaces, one in each bedroom, and not in the gardobbes, which make six for the three floors, and one on the office floor. In all, there will be the Lord's lodge forty doorframes or about, & fifteen large than small with short slaps. There are six crates on each floor, & two chickens, without the little ones from the small body in the middle, & the attic. The three small quinces of the quinces are defensive, and will be cut with stone, pyramidal in shape, as appears by the desseing of the eleuation. II. E design shows a mass of building of fairly light order, has only one manageable trough, which is elected from the ground floor from five to six feet: & below it will be possible to make some caues, or celiers, like the first - foreground the figure: the court will be on the second, & the garden on the back. The contents of the building court, not including the yard, are twenty to six yards wide, twenty to three deep, which are five to six toises in area, which are worth half an acre, minus four and a half toises, or about . From the court we will climb four or five feet to come to a closed terrace of three sides of baffle, iét, & on the deuat of the court, of a support three feet high. From this terrace you have to climb again a few two feet to enter by two quinces és comoditez d'iceluy estage, which make vne room, vn cabinet, & vn greenhouseI tablecloth. From the right side of this room is a bedroom with its wardrobe, closet &! Priory: on the other side of the window is a kitchen, the pantry, the staircase, a bedroom, and a cabinet. Above are galleras, or granaries. ", Of the two sides of the building, make two alleys to pass from the court to the garden, closed in costé d'icelle by two doors, above which also on a part of the alleys, make prins two cabinets, vn of each costé, which do those which we have by cy deuant said, which are used for the rooms. In the court, from the cost of the entry to dextral and to windows, make two small bodies of hostel of light order: one for seruir to stables, the other for a small room 6c gardobbe. ! Similarly to the two costes of the court, both dextral and fenestral, will be planted six trees, which will make twelve for the two costé, & will make monster like two small l. terra- terraces corresponding to the large body to the two small ones on the second will be able to choose these terraces to last the court of a half-foot, & to pauer them with stone & will be covered with the leaves of the trees: you will see as it is shown by the plan of the ground of court floor, which follows after the fueillet of his eleuation. All the masonry of this building (to be taken from the foot of the foundation up to the entablature that four and a half toises, not including the walls of the enclosures, thus only the two small pauillons ioignans the body) received at four hundred and fifty toises. The masonry of the fence of the whole court to the garden, and of the two small bodies on the deuant, were ninety toises tall. The tiled floor and the galletas, or attics, were ninety toises high. The covering of the whole building, with the two double-walled cabinets, is seven and six toises tall. there are vnze crosses with nine, only half that bastardes. Plus fifteen holes, both large and small, & make the counters counted only for one: but the room for four: the more the roof space to the adjoining. In all this building there are only four fireplaces, one for the hall, two for the two bedrooms, & one for the kitchen, which would not want to do it in the galletas to be used for rooms instead of attics. Over twenty frames. The color of the two little bodies of deuant, reuienr at fifty toises. More a chimney at the end of the small windows. Ps aucc four liulfferics & six small windows, & four small dormers. III. E design demonstre vne closture or purpris, in which sits vn lordly house, & on the back of iceluy vn iardin, & deuant vne short slap: which, understand its conveniences, at thirty five toises wide, & twenty deep , which make seven cens toises in surface. The logis sei- gneurial contains, both in the court and in the bastimets, twenty-one wide and fourteen deep canvases, which make seven and twenty four toises in area. The garden is thirty & four toises wide, seventeen deep, which are five hundred seventy & seventh toises plain, which is fourteen hundred thirty to two toises, which are worth five quarters, & four cords of land, somewhat less . Around the fence reigns a terraut of ten feet wide, except that the two sides of the Lord's house make two larger places, one to dexter, the other to half: in which will be possible to practice two small forts of cyprez trees, or laurels: in the middle of them some table, for everyone reduces the place more pleasant & pleasant. We must go to these two places by the court of the Lord. All the land surrounding the enclosure is closed by a ditch of three or four yards, depending on the road. goodness of the Lord. The entrance to the house is via the lower courtyard which is the Leuis bridge. A dexter & fenestre of it are housed, as much for the sharecropper, as for the rowdy ones, with the esceuries & stable for the cattle: & on the back of it, as much of cost as of other, are similarly two bodies of house, one for seruir de grãge, the other for press & foulerie. From the entrance you pass through the short slap to go to the stately home, by a sidewalk, or else plastered with costly & other elms. At the end of which is a short court where I climb two or three degrees to get there from the short slap. And from that must again be driven to a small terrace four degrees, in which is vn perrõ, by which one climbs again to go to the convenience of the stately home, which is composed of a main building of twelve canvases in length, with two other small pauillons, one at dexter, the other at the window of the terrace. The conveniences of the stately home make of a staircase in the middle: & of a cost of iceluy is a room, & of the other a room & a cabinet. The two little igning bodies are two gardobbes, one for the convenience of the room, the other for the service of the room. In the desoussouss of these members, mainly for the big body, make caues, esquelles one descends from the two costes by the court of the Lord, as appears by the design of the eleuation. Above the room, bedroom, and pantry, are galletas of such conveniences Es two quinces of the grad body of the cost of the garden, are like two small pauillõs, which will seruir each floor of small cabinets: & who will not want to make them seruir from the bottom it will be possible to go crazy each time an arcade wanted very pleasant on the garden . All the masonry of the lower court (so many fences, which will have two toises high from the ground floor, & three feet of foundation, that all the bastimẽts included in icelle, except the stately home) received four hundred and fifty toises. The stately home, taking the foot of its foundation (up to the wrapping, five toises in height, both for offices & caues) and for the upper story, as also for what is elected for the galletas, all received at three hundred and sixty toises. The fence of the garden, to take two toises from the foot of the foundation until its eleuation, received two hundred and thirty toises. The color of all the buildings of the short baffle, received two hundred toises. The covering of the whole stately home, received a hundred and fifteen toises. The wishes, both of offices and of little caues, meet at sixty toises. The tiling of two floors of the stately home, receives a hundred fathoms, not close to the offices of autãt that what is for offices must be poor, or make large quarreau. The tiling of the metayer's house, & the similar house, sitting opposite it, which will do for the superintendent, are twenty and two toises tall. There are twelve chimneys in the Lord's lodge, and two in the short slap. There are crosses with the large body, and four half with the two small. Similarly huict: skylights in galletas, & four half, without the small windows, both for the day of the offices, that of the two small pauillons. There are huict traéese in the house of the Lord, & as many in the galletas, done in roof spaces, & three poultres, without the small trauees of the small pauillons. In the short slap, there are two houses, six holes, and as many in the attics, & two chickens, one for each thimble. There are twenty & two huyz in all the floors of the stately home. In the short slap, there are twelve, without the big door of two, and also some small ones in the estables. IIII. This design represents a closed place of all costs of fbuez, which is seventy toises wide, and twenty deep, which is fourteen hundred toises in area, which make five quarters a cord, or about, not including the bankruptcies of the little eyelids of the quinces. Of costé fenestre of this place, is the short slap with its conveniences, & of the cost dexter, is the stately home. Between the short ones there is a ditch, having a bridge in the middle, to allow passage from one to the other. In this place there are two entrances, one at the court of the Lord, the other at the slap conl "t, & each at a leuis bridge. Said slap runs at forty fathoms from the tear and twenty deep, in which the necessary bastimates make cõprins, which are seated on the back, opposite Veuë from the entrance. In the middle is the shed, with two costes of which on the deuant do, - of them two estables, one to dextrus the other to fenestre, eleuees feulemet of seven to huict feet By the outside of it make two alleys, one to dextrus, the other to senestre for the ground floor of the short see the ditch above the supports or else who would like to practice a donkey ride under the tallut, averaging a bow, by which we would drink the bestail, but there keep some order of defense, to prevent entry to those who would like to harm it. You are two costers, and in addition to the aisles there are two main buildings, one of them feruting to remove a sharecropper, or plowman, with stable for channels, the other will ferment for stable for cattle. In these two small efcalliers suspended to go to the attics Es two quince of this short slap, from the outside make two eleuations: that of before will make a dovecote, at the bottom of which will be a wanted eleuee from seven to eight feet. And in this place will do the laundromat, from which we will cut the length of the pit At the other quince will likewise fail a small fort of seven feet in peeling furrow, & run in pyramidal shape, whose seam will end at the corner of the fence, from which strong we will also cover along the pit. The court of the Lord has wine gt toises in quarré: on the dextral cofté of this is the Janis du Seigneur, having a terrace of two toises wide, or enuiron.loignant iceluy, it is necessary to climb from the court to icelle terrace by vn stoop seated in the middle, from which one can climb from both sides. At the two ends of this terrace there are two small pauillons each of them cofee, feruans for the large body of ascent and priory. The main building is accommodated by members deffeigne on the plan. The quinces of iceluy from the outside make two unequal pauillons, feruans as much to accommodate each floor, as to unearth along the pit. 1 On the first floor, on the ground floor of the court, you could do and do the services, and accommodate them: fleeing & like you have designated them on the other hand, with the land of which (above mentioned: & must be the terrace will be elected from the height of the desires of the orcs!, which will be nine to ten feet high. Below Icelle terrace will be a gallery with arches, & wanted as shown in the eleuation made from the face of the court. The upper floor, on the ground floor of the gallery, will make the commodities indicated on the plan shown on the bass court. Above will make galktas accommodate such members as the lower stage. The pauillons estans es quinces,, will eleuez a vnage more than the big body, to seruir to the galleras of iceluy, & J also to give beauty to the place, The ditch on which will sit the two bridges or make the entrances, is enlarged in half circumference, for alliours to give more foliity to the follies. Leiardin (being on the backside) holds the entire contents of the length of the square, which is seventy-two toises in square, with the bankruptcy of the pauillons, in which, in the manner of a cross, they are planted with trees , with separate retailers & in the four-part iardincn. As soon as they occur, 1-i seems good, make parquet floors all equal, or else dilute them with ordinances, and enrich as I aduifera, with which strong duerfes can be troubled by vn liure that agueres ji ay highlighted. Still that i have closed ôc closed by my desseings the iardin of digging, & tallut walls, both from the cofté of the iardin, and from outside the ditch: neant- less if it seems good, the said garden can be closed with a hedge, & also that no calculation is made of it when counting. All the fence of the place, assauoir talluts elect from the bottoms of the walls up to the cord, two toises and a half high, the whole received at four hundred and fifty, fifty counters, not counting the counterscarp, which can be closed with hedge , or laif- (iron without fence, which would do the best. All the masonry, both of the short slap and its fences, having two toises high, received at five hundred and eighty ten toises,.,. All the masonry of the main building of the Lord, and of the fence of its court, with the point separating the two towers, was at seven hundred toises. The offices wished, received at a rate of ten toises. The tiles of all the members of the Lord's lodge, received two hundred toises, not counting that of the offices, which could be mainly impoverished in the place of the kitchen. The covering of the whole house of the Lord received nine and ten yards. The color of the whole slap runs at three hundred and fifty toises. There are eight fireplaces in all of the Lord's house, and two in the house of the short slap. Plus ten crossings in the Lord's lodge, with ten dormers in the galletas, & fourteen simple windows for the pauillons, & other places. Plus twelve hunts at the Lord’s lodge, both large and small, & four chickens: twelve other hunts for the roof space. Thirty frames are needed in the Lord's lodge. A short slap takes fifteen small windows, and as many little bears for the attics. More to said short slap, about thirty frames. V. E bastiment est vn petit loç-is) avatît vne court sur le deuat, vn iardin derriere, & two small gardens to fruits to dextre & to fenestre d'iceluy All the contents of the place received three to sixty & four toises of surface, which make a third of an acre of land, less half a cord, or about. The entrance to this place is by a short one at the deuant of the house, which has five fathoms in depth, & huid: half wide. The main building with a daughter in a floor, and the galletas above, accompanied by four small protruding pauillons and quinces: each of them has two floors, & a small galletas above. The conveniences of the house are, a room twenty feet wide, on six toises two feet long: the angles of this, make four small gullies, which enter the said main building, which make & partially make the room square as a room: & of the two sides of it, there are two arches, one of each cost, want parquet floors, which give beauty to the room by means of these reinforcements. In each of these arches there will be a cross, strong that the day will be found in the said room or room of the four costes. The place of the bed will be placed against a window of the crossings, ioignat the chimney, which will be closed from the kitchen, and will work for a small cabinet, as it is shown on the plan, & will go in this cabinet, between the chimney & the liâ. It must be understood that the two behind this room or room do the same, and whoever wishes, of the same symmetry. Likewise the reinforcements of the cost dexter & windows of this room will do the same. Beneath the depth of these extensions, which is seven feet to each, there are two passages, each of which is costed, to go to the accommodation of the pauillons: the one of which will rise, and the other behind:,. the other cabinet opposite: the other two, gardcrobbes. On the second floor of the said room or room, galletas will do: but the floors of the pauillons will still be on the floor, because they are elected higher than the body of the middle: & mesine that above the second floor of them, will still vn galletas, to which we will go by vn a small staircase practiced at their second stage inside, as it is designated on the plan of the vn. This place is furnished with a small stable for four cheuaux, with a small court & a small place to shoe the harnesses, & sleep the valets, & that of the cost dexter of the court: the other cost opposite, to fenestre, is vn bakery having such a small court & place place than the above. In addition to the said dextral & windowed court, there are two other small places to use for things that are found to be necessary. From the ground floor we go up three degrees, to go into view of the small terrace being between the two projections of the two dauant lids, & ioignãt the body of Wis: from which this terrace we enter through the vn of the restaurant in a kitchen , & on the other side opposite, to the staircase, to which is a pasture to go to one of the small gardens, & from there, to the large garden. To go to the other little garden, you have to go through the small square, being the cost of the fire. The two sides of the big garden, towards the border, between the bankruptcies of the little pauillons, make two cradles of galleries, figure in the dcuein. So the entrance of the said garden is crazy for one of them. All the contents of the masonry, both the house and the enclosures & members enclosed therein, meet four to eighty toises. The tiling of the whole house was eighty toises tall. There are nine fireplaces for everything. There are five crossings with half a half for the four small lids, & five lights for the galletas of the middle body, & four small for the four small lids. The cover of the Lord's house is one hundred and ten toises. The color of the stable; from the bakery & small places, were seventy toises. There are nine tracks in the Lord's lodge, both large and small, with two chickens. No longer strauees to the cables, without the next two small attics of the stable, & the bakehouse. There are, both at the Lord's home and at the bass court, thirty frames, or about. VI. The building is seated in a square of an imperfect square of twenty-four, three yards wide, sixteen deep. The square as well as the plan co-wears, reaching three hundred and eighty four toises in surface area, which make a third of an acre of land, & a rope or around, not com- prizing taken the circulating pits at all angles., deffeingdu plan. The principal of this building, is a main building, seated on the back of the court, accompanied by two small bodies at the ends of iceluy, one at dextrus, the other at windows, fiO "urez in pauillons, at each of which is attached to a small gallery with arcades at the bottom, & on the terrace above: through which from the graded body we come to two other small stallions on the deuat of the court, seated from quince to quince, & between which is a small gallery from below, going from one to another, & above a terrace, & closing the court on the second. The middle of it is designated in half circumference, in which is the entrance of the place, with its pontleuis. There are two mascots fontgarnis of cõmodite shown on the map. Below the large body, and similarly to the first stage of the two small pauillons, the two costes will do the necessary offices there. At the top of the terrace is the ground floor of the first floor of the large body, to which two floors form, and the gallet dcnus. As for the two small bodies of the ground floor, there is only one floor, & galletas on it. The first floor designee at the eleuation, is used for the office floor, that is said above, which corresponds to the height of the terrace. In these small bodies, the staircases of the large body are coprinated, like the desseing of the eleuation the monster. Each stage of iceluy grad body is accommodated, drained by the cost dextrus, of there & l, gardobob, & the little igneous body, of chamber, gardobob, & staircase. At the other side of the window is an anteroom, its closet & bedroom. And with the small adjoining body, a back room, and a pantry, with the staircase. On the middle of this large body is a bulge of a half imperfect circumference, in the middle of which is gone to pass to a small oual body, to which is a staircase reigning in all stages, at the top of which is a dosme doubly elected to have the look of all coste. On the ground floor, there is a reigning terrace surrounded by the outside, seven feet wide and wide, starting from the said two sides of the oual staircase, & ending with the two little pauillons which make on the second. This terrace sits on the tall floor. All the masonry of this building (including the talluts, both inside the counterscarp and all the bodies) was sixteen to eighty toises. The offices of the underside of the large body, and of the two small ones, received a hundred and fifty toises. The tiling of all the floors of the building (except the offices; which will look like stone) was three to twenty toises. The cover of the whole house was two hundred and thirty toises. In all the stages there are seventeen chimneys. In the large body, in each stage there are six eroisées, which make twelve for the two stages, & two for the small bodies, & as many skylights above, with ten bastard windows, & twelve towers down from the offices. More in all, the house twenty & six rows, & fourteen chickens, large than small, without the roof space. More in all the house fifty doorframes. VII. This design represents an aniseed building in four parallelograms of twenty toises in width, and fifteen in depth, which make three hundred toises in area, which are worth a quarter of an acre of land, & two ropes, vn little less. This place is closed to four costes of curtains: four quinces are four forts in round shape, all enclosed by water. The curtains, & talluts, with the forts, will be made of earth without any other material, giving good wheelbase to the talluts. For the gaze of the parapel, which will be on talus, it will be good to let the terraux sit down, & the tall tall estans made at their height, some half a year, to sag the earth: & after let sit two or three feet parapel, and that sitting, let it still rest two or three months: then after sitting again another plate of parapel on the first, of the height that you want: so that the earth can more easily sag on the first, without being corrupted : or if you want to make your talluts, parapel, & forts of lawns & fassines, your homes will do everything closed without great expense of masonry. For the look of the building, it is a mass of three main buildings, link together, two on the second, & vn on the back, having on the face of two fourteen toises in width, & huict & a half in depth; each body has three stages, the first serves as offices & caues: it is necessary to descend there from the earth of four or five feet, & above it cft vn another stage in galictas. Around the house reigns a short, fourteen foot wide terrace, between the wall of the house, and the parapel. First of the ground floor to enter the house, you have to drive two or three feet in a place in the shape of a small short closed with three sides of the three main buildings, --.- - ôc & from this moter again to a small terrace two or three degrees, & from this terrace we enter the landings of the climbs, estans és quinces of the said terrace: from which landings we go by the cost to the room, & from the room to rooms, & at the cõmoditez of the stage, Above is the galletas, accommodated with such conveniences as the previous one. The whole building (having five toises since its foundation up to the entablature) received three hundred and fifty toises. The wishes of the lower storey of offices & caues, reuiénent to foixate & fifteen toises, The tiling of the two estages, auec the landings of the degrez, reuiẽt at a hundred and twenty tcircs. There are eight fireplaces on the two floors, and one at the dining room, offices, which is the kitchen, There are crossed paths, and half ists. Nine skylights, & small huict. Making only three tracks in the room, & two in each room, with two of the gardobobs, making nine tracks, & four fowls. So many hunts at the galletas, however in the roof. In all, the house requires thirty doors, or about. The colouration of the five pauillons, like the design of the eleuation and the inoniter, re- ceives at a height of twenty toises. At the entrance there will be a baffle to Ace on a good tall stone, or else a bridge over it, with a few small windows on the climbs, which will be cast in the form of a dome, responding however to the angles. VIII. E place for the gaze of its comoditez is wars dissimilar to the previous one: Being similarly in vn square parallelograme, twenty & four toises in width, & sixteen in depth, not including the epessor of the parapel & tallut, similarly the bankrupt of the forts, which make three cens eighty four toises of area, which make a third of an acre, 6c a pole of earth, & a few toises, or about, having four forts quarrez es four quinces. The curtains, the forts and the tallest, all will be done on the ground, practicing small days or gunners for batteries. This design makes a monster of a barrel six to seven feet wide, of carpentry, or vine trellis, or couldroyes over the terraces, & drawing the curtains: And this to give some convenience or beauty to get there 'Esté à couuert, for the warmth of the Sun. The curtains and forts will not cease to remain in their entirety 6c strength. For the gaze of the piles reaching the leuis bridge, they will be made of tall stone, as it is depicted in Peleuation's design. As for the mass of the main building, there are seventeen toises wide, & nine deep, the terraux of about three and a half toises wide, of which the alley of trellis is included. The bodies of this building have two floors, 6c the attics above. By crazy bottom the room, will be caues, & the rest of the two costez will do offices. From the ground floor you have to climb two feet to a small court, in the form of a terrace, being in front of the room, five toises wide by four deep, and from this terrace you go up by two degrees of each cost, estans on the behind two corners of the said terrace where I go to the stairs, as they enter the hall & the bedrooms. The first floor is accommodated in a room with two closets, one of each cost, for the convenience of this. Plus two bedrooms, two closets, & two closets, with two staircases. The second floor will make such conveniences, 8c the attics above. But then we wanted to move from the lower level of the offices, not wanting to spends, we can seruire the gardobbe of one of the chainbres (which has two toises half and a half long by two wide), by means of a small passage between the room & icelle cuisine: & ioignant the staircase, the small square, which will remain pro;., chain of the allee, will serve as a pantry. However wanting to seruir the ballast down to oiffces, below one of the rooms will be cooking, with its pantier fous keep it obstructed. And for the other room of the other cost will be in a bakehouse, with some conveniences. Under the room will be caues, all the time there will be a four-foot aisle, wanted, reigning from the kitchen to the bakery, to go from there. one to the other, in the middle of which will make the entrance to the cue. The foundations of the house will be two and a half toises, below the first esteau eleué last of earth, crazy which will take the caues & offices, as cy above said: & d'eleluy estage eleué of the ground floor, up to the 'entablature four and a half toises, which would be wall height, from the foundation up to the top, seven toises. All the masonry, counting the ballast of iffces & caues, received at six to twenty toises. Lavoulte de la caue & oiffces, received eighty toises. The tiles, both on the first floor of the ground floor, and the second, Se celuy des greniers, were two hundred and ten toises tall. The coverings of all bodies, run down in pauillons, like the design of the monster's leuation, amount to one hundred and eighty toises. There are five fireplaces on each floor, and two on this one, which make twelve for the whole. There are four floors each, and fourteen and a half, which make huid crosses and twenty and eight and a half, for the dwelling, with sixteen windows, both simple and fpporal, for the whole of the floor of the offices & caues. Also four skylights, with four small doors or veues, which will make in the way of small skylights. It will be good to make five hunts in the hall, as it would require four fowl, for the reason that there are only three, the hunts are too wide and weak. Doing so will make thirteen traps at each stage, and fixed hens, which will make for the two stages twenty & six trays at twelve fowls, and half for the roof space. There are in all the floors of the house forty doorframes, or around. IX. E design represents a small place, having however a lot of convenience. And firstly the stately home with its short slap, the gardens, so much to fruicts, that the ordinary garden: then prez & vines with a lake, at the end of which the garden & said stately home are contained. For the look of the contents of the enclosure, in which is included the short slap, the garden, and the alley of the deuant of the entry, the whole contains fifteen hundred and thirty toises in surface, which are worth an arpent, quarter & half of land , or about. The stately home is as said in the summer, seated on the tail of the lake, surrounded by water from all sides: it consists of a body of a hostel only, with four small pauillons and four quinces of iceluy. This body is accommodated in a room six toises long, four wide. Adjoining this is a room of three square toises. Four little pauillons which make four quinces, one of two stairs, the other of a small kitchen, the other two on the back are fermenting in the room, one to shoe the linen & dishes, the other of garderobbe: vn each of them has in the eye two toises two feet from a corté, about ten feet from the other. This main building has only one storey, 5c per gallet on which galletas will do the mesines commoditez that on the first estage. The small pauillons exceed in height the main building of some height, so that height can more easily gain the comoditate, to seruir to the members of the galletas, And for the look of the three pauillons where is the staircase it can be done by their second stage, a few small climbs against the walls in certain places, some two feet wide, to climb from their second stage to the third stage which would be in galletas, as well as there would be some small conveniences for said stage: or else not wishing to do ausaux pauillons that two stages, the second can be done paneled on the carpentry. At deuant d'iceluy logis is a small terrace between the two pauillons, across the width of the bankruptcy of iceux. In the middle of which is the Leuis bridge, by which you come from here to a closed allee, the foliage of a support, both from the cofté des iardins à fruicts and from the pond, as well as from the bass court, which is three feet high from the cost of the pond, however seated on a wall carrying a tallut in the said pond. Likewise, the wall enclosing the baffle runs to the lake, is only three feet high from the cofté d'icelle: still from the cost of the lake it wears on a tallut, as do the two costes garden. Ceste allee is at the entrance to the bridge from the outside, & is trauantsante, having four roofs wide on the loncytictit- at the end of which, from the cost of the pond, there is seen descent by round degrez to descend to water: on the other side of it is the entrance to the short slap, & at the end of said alley between the home of the metayer & the iardin in fruias, is a small iardin for said metayer, having its home in the entrance to the said short slap, which is accompanied by its bakehouse, & gardeobbe. On the costée fenestre is the stable & stable for beasts. In the middle is the barn ten toises long, & four wide. At the end, & at the end of the court is a main building of the same length and width as the house of the sharecropper, and this to correspond to the symmetry of the place. Iceluy corps will make press, foullerie, & vince., Near which will make the loft. The main garden has twenty & six toises in square: és four encogneuses d'iceluy, four small turrets of seven to huict feet wide, in none of which can be made some cave, to the others some small niceties like fountains, cabinets, or what that good will seem. We go to Iceluy iardin by the short slap, or by a small postern, which is behind the lodge of the Lord. On the back, along the length of the yard of the short slap, and of the pond, there are some aisles marked out in the prezes, besides which make vines. b At the deuant of the entrance to the house is a straight alley, enclosed by a wall five fathoms wide, so long that it will seem good, the cost of which are two fruit gardens. All the walls & fences, as well of the garden, the short slap, the tallut, esta, bles, barns, as the four small towers of the garden, the whole of this received at seven hundred toises of wall, some strong, the others weak. The masonry of the entire main building of the Lord (taking two toises below the cord, up to the bottom) was three hundred and sixty toises. The tiling of the two floors, with the small terrace on the deuant, is a hundred yards. The couuerture, state of the body that of the four little pauillõs, receives a hundred and ten fathoms, In all the house make whispers seven chimneys. Six crosses with a large body. Large body audit six skylights. , Huict fenestres bastards with four little pauillons. Four small dormer windows with four small pauillons. Three body traps on the first floor, with a poultry. Eight little hunts with four little eyelids. The height of the main building. The roof of the little pauillons. The color of the four small turrets of the garden, is twenty eight toises. The color of the dovecote, and the two bodies of the barn, and of all the stalls, were two hundred and seventy toises. There are forty frames in the whole house. X. , Ebastiment sits in view in the form of a paralelogram ', which is square more long than wide, & of twenty & two canvases and a half wide, by twenty seven and a half deep, which makes in number six hundred eighteen toises & half vn quarter in area, which is half an acre five per- ches & a half of land, or around. This place is a gravel pit of all costs, closed with a hedge, having the tallut of earth against it. The four quinces make four small flanks to beat along the curtains, & hayes. The building is made up of four main buildings, the short one in the middle, which part of the short slap, & part of a high terrace reaching the body, which is in front of the entrec) & the house of the Lord. Iceluy body is four toises wide & sixteen in length without opening. The court has ten toises two feet wide, and fifteen and a half deep, including the terrace of the court: you have to climb six or seven degrees to climb to this terrace , from which we go to the house of the Lord. The body of the latter is accomodated by a barn with a cost, and on the other with a wine press. The entrance to the place is between the two, on which the loft is elected. The pontleuis sits on two wall stacks at the end of the terrace, on the deuant. Said terraut reigns around the building, having three widths iceluy wide, & closed from the above-mentioned hedge. The two main buildings of the court, the dextral and fenestrate accommodate stables, with four other small estables, which will apply for the seruice of the bass court: more than two climbs, one cost each, having each its own behind, some of which must be climbed from each room to go to the summer attics on the estables. On the contrary you have to descend a few degrees to go to the priué. The rest of the two igneous bodies at both ends serve as conveniences for the home of the Lord. The large main body is accommodated with a room, a light, and cabinet, with two bedrooms, two light, and a rise. The two gardobbes take center stage in the body of the dexter and window, as it is said before, until the advancement of the terrace, which is sixteen feet. Above is the galletas furnished with such members of commoditez. From each gardobbe can be practiced the ease of a private, bringing up from the bottom a duct of each pod, up to the height of said gardobbes. I made it the cover of all the bodies of this house in gables & without crouppe, except the two gardobobs which make couuerces in pauillon. Under the lodge of the Lord, & fous the two gardero bbes will be the leveling of the offices, to which we will descend as much by the degree of the body of the Lord, as by the degrees of the short slap, as I have taught some descendants straight lines, which continue to the bottom of the offices, which I have made a separate plan for the desseing of the design, which includes the body of the Lord's building, the case and two rings. Joining one of the dexterity hoops will cook and his keeper: leading to the other in the window is the bakery, with a place under the body of the gardobbe below, to be used as a bluterie. -n.,, La The branches will want to be: but the kitchen & bakehouse, with which the next places will not be wanted, as planks as desired, and as I did the calculation. The whole building received five hundred and eighty yards of wall. The wishes of the caues & caueaux à thirty toises. The tiling of the whole house at one hundred and forty toises; not understand the terrace, which will pau, & do not make any calculation. Seven skylights & six small windows. Seven crosses with four and a half for the Lord's house, & twenty, both bastard windows, and small dormers, for the short slap. Dixsept trauees large than small, without the attic of the galletas. Six fowl for the two low stages. Two hundred and seventy toises of cover, included the loft. Eight chimneys for the three floors. Thirty frames for the Lord’s home, large and small, & ten for the short bass. XI. This building sits in a quadrangle thirty to one yard wide, twenty and eight deep, which makes eight hundred and sixty to eight yards in area, which make three quarters, three ropes of earth, or about: not including the four salient forts in the ditch of two toises of cha- no cost. The building is built of four main buildings, the court, which is eighteen and a half toises wide and twelve and a half deep. The four quinces of the building are four protruding towers in addition to the body of two toises, which is the diameter of the interior of each of these towers. Around the house is a terrace, or terrace of three wide canopies, where u enuiron: on the edge of which is a haye three or four feet wide, seated on the spime of the tallut, which is of earth. The first body of this building, facing the deuant, is ordered by two pauillons, & a gallery in between. In the middle of it is the entrance. This galleric is arched & wanted: above is a terrace. Each of the two pauillons (which make two main buildings) is elected from two estages, & the galletas above: below from below what make celiers. The great main body is likewise elected from two estates, & the galletas above: below below they are offices. The two bodies est dextral & to the window of the court, are each of width two toises in a cracked opening, elect from the ground floor of the court, and the galletas desfus: the gallery seruant arcaded by the deuant on the court: above this is a gallery in galletas, with skylights: the other opposite body is of similar width, & height, in which it is possible to take some conveniences necessary for your home: crazy two bodies is necessary to do offices, so it will be caues. All the bodies of the aforementioned house accommodate members deffeigne on the plan. Es two angles of the court making the sketch of the main house, & small houses, make two stairs accommodating both the big house and the small ones. For the look of the curtains and forts, seated in the corner, I mean that they are only earthly, like the fortresses, at the ends of which can be made a haye strong of three or four feet of hope, which being stunted, in a few time the iettons of this will be able to bind & intertwine the vns in the other with the help: strong that in three or four years will be a haye, or espallier so strong that wall, & will reign this - - - -: - - - - -. '_-.' : ::,: '. "r" j "'-'—" * - - espallier by all the curtains, & around the forts: And must let the hedge be erupted, or espalier four or five feet high, & at the trauers do there & practice some small gunners to unearth along the curtains. have done so and declared this way, for those who do not have the will or the power to make the costs it incurs to make the fences and masonry defenses. The masonry of all this building, taking a base of height in the attics and offices, was seventeen hundred and fifty toises. The madmen wanting the great fermenting body of offices, with the wills of the towers and the two caues, meet at eighty ten toises. The tiling of all the floors of said home, four of these four come toises. There are twenty-six chimneys in all. The color, both of the large body and of the four towers & the two dolphins, and similarly of the two small bodies of the two sides of the court, all received at three hundred and seventy toises. In the main building behind, on the first floor are thirteen crossings, & on the second fourteen. Fourteen ucarnesau gailetas. In addition to the two deuantiums, on each first stage, there are eight windows, on the second stage as much with two averages for the two climbs, also eight small dormers for their galletas, & two others for the climbs. Sitting some thirty small windows, both és two small bodies as their towers, none of which are in small dormers. For the look of the hunts, there are vnze on each floor of the large body from behind, with five fowls, which make twenty & two hunts & ten fowl, without the cables. The two lids on the second, each have two stages without the roof space, & racks below. And in each of the said stages three lines & a fowl, which is for each eye two hens & six lines: & for the two together, four chickens & twelve hunts. The two small bodies will have only one trap, each defected He will reign from the eyelids of two to the bodies behind, and their roof above. In each of the four towers there will be three stages, in each of them two rows, which will make for the four, eight rows, with the dofmes above. On the first floor of all four bodies & towers, there will be a trestle & two frames, in the second, twenty & nine, & in the galletas twenty & two, & twenty in the offices, caues, & celiers, which will number one hundred and three, or about. XII. ESTE place is vn square parallelograme, of twenty & two toises of width, on tenfept of depth, which make three hundred seventy and fourteen toises in surface, which is a third of arpent & a quarter of rope or around. Es four quinces of this place, will be made four turns or casemattes quarrees, wanted, failures of a height in the ditch. These towers, in addition to reducing the stronghold, are very suitable for housing, and can be run on their stone or large bricque wills, running in the shape of a dosme, to better represent strength. In the middle of the curtain deuãt will do a rocking seruãt de põt-leuis. The building will have three stages: the first is on the ground floor, which will lead to offices 3c caues. From the ground floor we go up by a porch of the two sides, to go to a landing or place, which is used for the staircase, & for the comoditez of the floor. Next to this staircase window, is the room twenty and four feet wide on a quarte long, accomodated by a large cabinet, being behind the staircase. In the same way, a gardner with another small cabinet, and a small prinse place from a small pauil- Ion, who is in the quince of the main building. On the back of the other right side of the staircase is a twenty- and four-foot square bedroom, with its pantry eighteen feet long, fifteen feet wide, and two small places like the fufditres, standing inside the other pauillon, which is at the other quince of said main building, & similar to the previous one: esquelles places we go there from the room by a small alley, separating the gardobbe from icelles, of which the small will be able to seruir de priué , especially as it is next to the gardobbe. The third stage is a gallet of such conveniences, if one does not want to make seruir the room, of room & closet, by means of some partitions. The staircase will reign over a gallery above the galletas, at which, similarly at the next place on the other, will remain a place which can be used to withdraw arms or make a study of it. Around this is a short terrace, four toises wide or around in places, as shown by the plan, The four towers, or square squares, with curtains, with two toises and a half of eleuation of their foundation, are received at three hundred and seventy toises. The masonry of the whole building, counting six toises high from the foot of the foundation iusques above the enrablenlent, receive at five to thirty toises, Wanting the first stage by all, the wanted will receive at a hundred toises. The tiling of each floor, received sixty & ten fathoms, of which there are three, to be seated the first which is useful for offices, the second & the galletas above, would be for the three, two hundred and ten fathoms. The color of the whole house, with the two pauillons behind, received seven toises. The fireplaces, counting two for the first floor where the openings are made, four on the second floor, & two on the galletas, are eight fireplaces for the whole dwelling. On the first floor where the offices are, there are nine bastard windows, with four half. On the second floor there are ten crossings with five and a half. In the galletas there are nine skylights & a crossed window, with five small doors, or small dormers with lids, with four small dormers in the attic. On each floor there are ten frames, which will make thirty-six throughout the house. For carpentry on the second floor, there are ten holes as large as small, with three poultres on the east side of the galletas, the large roof in pauillon, & the two small roofs in pauillons, with the color of the eleuation above overcome it. XIII. This design represents a lordly bastimẽt, having its short slap on the deuant, & the iardin on the back, closed from the pit of all coste. The place and the content, as it behaves, are thirty & six toises in width, and fifty & five in depth, which make nineteen eighty toises, which are worth walking three quarters, three strings, somewhat more. The entrance to this place is by the short slap, above which is the colom bier. At costé fenestre d'icelle is the house of the metayer, barn, & cattle sheds. From the costée fenestre are stables, press, & vinee, auec other commoditcz. From the entrance of this short baffle we go up as by a right staircase, the entrance of which is above a closed wall of a support wall three feet high in oual shape, & from here we come to a terrace being at the second of the house, & containing in length the width of iceluy, elected from nine or ten feet of earth. From this terrace you enter the stately home, which has only one floor on the ground floor in eleuation, and its galletas above. On the ground floor of the court, up to the terrace, you can do the upstairs of offices & caues: from the convenience of the upstairs you ---.------- --- ---------. -------- -—-- will see by plan desseing. Besides the body of the building on the back of the garden curd, there is a terrace, from which you descend from the iceluy stage by degrees made in half circumference. From this terraceon goes to two little pauillons, estans és two quinces of the short slap sitting on the ditch, which they have their gaze, both on the bass court, iardin, and of all skateboarding. Said terrace has such a look. On the back of the trailing line of the garden is a small pauillon ouuert à pilla- ftres: the rest will be knocked by the designs, both from the plan of the building, from the general plan, and also from that of the elution of all the contents . b The masonry of the site fence, so many the court that of the garden (taking it from the foot of the foundation to the top of the chappon of the wall, which forms the fence) has three toises, and were received at the rate of twenty toises, of which a part of the height will do for the convenience of the short slap . The rest of the masonry of the commoditez of the short slap, received at four to thirty toises, The masonry both from the house of the Lord on the terrace which reigns of the cotot, as well as small pauillons, received at seven hundred and fifty toises. The tiling of the three stages, and that of the house of the metayer, received at two hundred and eighty toises. The color of the house of the Lord, and of the three pauillons, was two hundred and ten toises. The color of the whole short slap was three hundred and seventy toises. There are twelve crossovers & two half. Plus twelve skylights & two half, & eight bastard windows for upstairs offices. Over ten fireplaces, & vne at the metayer's house. Plus twelve fowls & twenty tracks. More the roof spaces, as well of the house of the Lord, as those of the short slap. Plus twenty five frames for the Lord's home, & eighteen for the short slap. XIIII. E desseing demonstre a mass of building sixteen and a half toises wide, eight deep, which is one hundred and thirty-two toises in surface, which are worth half a quarter of land, it takes half a cord, some little less, not counted the bankruptcies of the pauillons estants és four corner gs. This building has two floors, and the galletas above. On the mass of the body, above the galletas, is an attic the length and width of which is the size of the galletas. The first floor is on the ground floor, & will be used for offices, & is wanted as the plan of his design the demonster. There is a passage in the middle, by which we will go from the court which will be on the second, to the garden, which must be on the rear. From one of the costes of it will make a caue, from the other side will make caueaux: all the rest make necessary conveniences to olficcs, COMMC appears by said plan. The second stage is accommodated by manageable members, of which above the aisles, caue, & caueaux, is a room containing in length the width of the mass of the body, having two crossings for watching on the court, and two others on the garden. Everything else is accommodated by necessary members of both sides of the room. The galletas estage will make such members, as the second estage, which is below iceluy: On which will make an attic of the length & width that the roof of said galletas will carry. All the masonry of the building, having six toises from the foot of the foundation up to the entablature, which will make seven and a half feet of foundation, counted the same ---- .- --'-- - lement All refurbishments, or in-between, all received at six hundred toises. The wishes of the offices meet at sixty ten toises. The tiling of the three floors, without that of the attic, which I do not count, such as two hundred and sixty toises. The coatings, both of the whole mass, and of the four-quince pauillons, as they behave, cost two hundred and forty toises. On the second floor there are twenty & two huts, & eight pigs, both large and small. At the galletas aurant, according to the roof, whose attic is located inside. 1 There are fourteen chimneys for the three floors. i There are thirty-eight crossings on the first and fertile floor for the large body, so there are four half-closed for the staircases, and four-half for the two small pauillons on the side of the court. Plus eighteen cross dormer windows for the grad body, & two small windows for the two staircases, & four half dormer windows for the two pauill dus of the courtyard with other small windows for the attic, which will be carpentry, More about fifty frames for all stages. XV. E monster desseing a mass of building closed with water of all costs! . This building has only one storey, and the galletas above it, except that we wanted to make a storey low in the tallut, and wanting it, and here doing the offices & caues: however I have not specified it calculated. And not making a low floor for these offices, it would be necessary to have one of the bedrooms and pantries, which in the end are costes, cooks of food and pantry, and accommodate the rest in lodging. All the contents of this building, received a hundred and ninety toises of surface, which are worth half third of an acre & half rope, somewhat less. This building in its first stage is accommodated in a room, having eight toises in length by four in width. Of the two skirts of this make two small rooms, each of sixteen feet long by thirteen and a half wide, soiroir east, vne of each cofté. More angles of this room, there are two places of ten feet from lõg on seven and a half feet wide, one for a cabinet, the other for shoeing linen & silver dishes. More és deux costez of the staircase, are two châbres, the one with dextrus, the other with fenestre d'iceluy, each of twenty & two feet 5th half in square, furnished with their gardobob, of sixteen feet of long by thirteen feet wide. You can cook and eat as soon as possible, as iay ditcy above. And there would be the first floor (kitchen, pantry, dining room, tablecloth, cupboard), three bedrooms, and a pantry. The second floor, which is taught in galletas, will be accommodated by such members. If the Lord's will is to make two good rooms above the room, by means of a few partitions, each of them would have four square toises, garnished with gardobbes, which would make prinses in the aforementioned small rooms, leading to the room each with its own cabinet, which would be the two places at the corners of the room. In addition to this galletage estage, there would still be the two bedrooms located on the stairs of the staircase, each one has its own conservatory: Forty in this gallctas estage, there are four bedrooms, four gardobbes, & two closets. For the look of attics, & other necessary things, it would go away with the short slap. And for what the wills of men do diuerses, the vns wanted to have in their rl-nc -1 — f- 1 n - want to have the place where they make their home free of all other things If the whole thing only turns out to be habitable, holding the rest to the blunder short. On this occasion I wanted to bring in a group of all strongholds of bastimets to bring together each. j The tallut reigning around this building, having since its foundation iusques to the foliage cord two toises, is eighty toises tall. All the masonry received at three hundred and fifty toises, All the masonry received at two hundred and ten toises. r The tiled floors of the two floors are nine toises tall. On each floor there are seven fireplaces, which make fourteen for the two: but wanting to make two bedrooms in the hall in the hall, there will have to be a top chimney, which would be fifteen. On the first floor there are fifteen large as small traps, and six fowls. More roof space. There are twelve crossings on the first floor, with ten bastard windows. Plus twelve dormers in the galletas, & ten small, There are for the whole house twenty & five doorframes. XVI. The building is seated in a square parallelogram, twenty & nine toises in width, and thirteen in depth, which make three hundred seventy & seventeen toises in area, which are worth a third of earth, half a rope, or enuirõ, not including bankrupt small forts of quinces, do the bankruptcy of half a circle conference, which is on the second where is the entrance & pont-leuis, nor similarly the bankrupt of the terrace by the place of the staircase on the back, between the two forts. In this building make three main buildings joined one to the other: the one behind is the largest, which is twenty & two toises in length from the outside, & four in width in the way. In the middle of which is the staircase, failing on the back in the ground, which reigns around the house. The other two main buildings each have eight toises in length from the outside, & three and a half in length: Between which, & in the middle is a short terrace-style, eight and a half toises long, twenty in depth four feet. Each of them has two floors, and the galletas above: below them do the offices accommodate as the design shows. The two floors & galletas above the ground floor, accommodate members, as you can see by the plan: However if it seems good, on the second floor can be done above the room two bedrooms, & this by means of partitions applied there. All the circuit, with the four small forts, having three toises from the foundation up to the cord, & above three feet of support, received at three hundred and sixty toises. The whole building contains (including the office floor and a foundation board below) eight hundred and four toises. The wishes of the offices meet at nine twenty toises. The tiling of the three floors received three hundred and thirty toises, not including the co-stage of the offices. The cover of all the dwellings was three hundred yards high. Twenty fireplaces, six on each floor, & two in the offices. Fifty four crossings. Twenty & eight skylights. - t "trapped as large as small, & fourteen fowls. -- -- ".- --- not_ -- Fifty & five frames, both for stages and for offices XVII. The building is a mass of three main buildings linked together, a water table in the middle, and two other closers and two ends, which are twenty to five feet wide, twenty and five feet wide, not including terraces & staircases, ioignants iceluy of the two costes. The two bodies of the aforesaid ends, vn each of them is divided into three, vn in the middle, & vn at each of its ends, which close it, and will turn into pauillons: And have the three together eighteen toises long over the width of five 5 outside the door, & without the bankruptcies of the two costes, made in pauillon. The large body in the middle is a gallery with arcades, which from end to other goes to the standing buildings at its two ends, and this is an elected gallery of earth of seven or eight feet. Two and two are two terraces of two toises wide, each elected from the above-mentioned height: & to go there you must climb by four climbs of right degrees, two of each cost. Which degrez will go to four staircases standing at four angles of the gallery, & ignignant bodies to it. Icous staircases feruants to go to the stages of the abovementioned bodies, & also to the upper stage of the gallery, which is another gallery made in galletas. For the look of the houses, at the ends of the gallery, they exceed in height the said gallery of an estace, & make them complete bodies of commoditez, like the monstrous, so much the plan of the first stage, which is two or three feet lower that the ground floor, that the second plan, to which the manageable commoditées are seen: with which the design of the eleuation will show you & will give to hear the remainder. The masonry of all the contents, received at nineteen hundred toises, The wills, as much of all the offices & caues, as of the gallery, received at four hundred and sixty toises. The tiling of all the floors was six hundred and fifty. The roof of all the roofs was sixty and sixty yards tall. Twenty & two crossings at each stage, which make for the two stages, forty & four. Twelve half crossed on each floor, which make for the two twenty & four, Twenty & two large dormers in the galletas, twelve small, & fourteen medium for the gallery. Twenty & eight rows at each stage, which make fifty & six for the two stages, & fourteen roof spaces, plus twenty & four fowls for the two stages. Plus the gallery, nine roof spaces. Twenty & six fireplaces for all floors. j Eighty frames for everything. ; XVIII. The building is a small mass of fourteen toises wide, nine deep, without the bankrupt steps. Iceluy building has three floors, and the attic above. -.,! - The first floor is on the ground floor, which will have to accommodate a coste, a kitchen & pantry, & the other cost of a bakery: the rest will be caues, or j celiers. Make the earth, we will climb by the two sides of the porch, which holds a half circumference: & from the porch we come to a terrace making the entire circumference: - And from this terracc we go to the conveniences, both from the room, from the staircase, that at the bedrooms : bres estants in this second estage. ! From the staircase, which is between the round terrace and the lodgings, we drive to the third platform, which has the same limbs as below: above this is the (galletas, as we have said above). 1 All the masonry of this building, to take eight toises from the foundation up to the entablature, cost five hundred and forty toises. ¡The tiling of all the floors, except the cue, is two hundred and forty toises tall, not counting the round terrace, which will lean. r The roofs of all the roofs, are seven seventy toises. There are nine paths for all the stages. Plus seventeen large windows, the frames of which will make the mesneaux, with six half: however of the same height. Plus four bastards, & four half for the kitchen, the bakehouse, & their mods. Plus three large skylights & four small rods inside the frontispieces. Plus twenty-two hunts for all stages, with ten fowl, without the granaries or, galletas, to which ten hunts will be required, of which there will be nine full. 1; Plus twenty & four frames for all stages. XIX. E desseing demonstre vn a building closed with double fences & channels, having its garden on all sides in the environment. Around iceluy logis, on the four sides of the terrace, four quinces of it make four small forts, the ditch circuit the terrace of all parts: Besides the ditch is the iardin, which is similarly closed by another ditch: iceluy iardin is seventy-six toises wide, and sixty-two deep, which make four thousand seven hundred and twelve toises, which are worth four arpents vn quarter of land, less a rope, or about. This place is accom pagnéde its short court, which is on the deuant, & must pass to the trauers & middle of it (to come to the house of the Lord) by a nne aisle of nine toises wide, separating this short bass in two. At the donkey, at dexter cost, there is the house of the sharecropper, the barn, & cattle sheds, also the dovecote. On the other side senestre, there is the wine press & vineyard, with barns for cheuaux, all closed & closed with canals. Next to the window are some fruit gardens. As soon as entering the short slap, you have to go through a large alley through the park of eighteen toises wide. On the cost of the garden, in addition to the large ditch, are prez diuifez by channels & alleys, of which that behind the iardin will correspond to a lake, as appears by the design of the general plan. For the look of the building, it consists of a room four toises wide, eight of a logger's, furnished with a cabinet and a place to shed linen. This room only has: J.1: age & galletas on it. To each of these rooms there are two bedrooms, each one has its own closet & its private. Above is still a similar stage accommodated with such members. On these two stages is a galletas, or attic. Between these rooms, each of them has a curved aisle of a wide height coming from the hall, through which one goes to a small terrace, being bankrupt from the cost of the building. Also go to these rooms. After a coste on the first floor, we will seruir one of the bedrooms & wardrobes to a kitchen & pantry. There are still enough members there without doing office training. It will be necessary to make below the first stage, some caues & celiers. on the second and back of the room, make two closed terraces on both sides of the room, in addition to the room. This building is furnished with two staircases for the convenience of rooms. The masonry of the Lord's bastiment, laugh at a rate of fifty toises. The fence of the garden, to take two canvases of the foundation iusques above the support, (not counting the counterscarp which will be made of earth) received at two hundred seventy-five toises. The tiles are two hundred and sixty toises. 8 The color was two hundred and forty toises. Ten fireplaces for the two floors. Twenty & a traueée for the first stage, & sixteen for the second, with twelve fowl for the two stages. More roof space. Thirteen crossings on the first floor, & half for the four small quince pauillons: & in the second floor for today, & huict half, & four bastard skylights Dixfept, large than small, More than fifty window frames. For the look of the short slap, ie do not make any calculation, leaving it at will, & also that the previous desseings in aueu veu several strong. XX. E desseing demonstre une place of fifty & eight toises in square, which make three thousand three hundred sixty & four toises of area, making three arpens three poles of land, somewhat less, in the bankruptcy of rauelins & entrecs. For the look of the building, it is in the shape of a circumference of thirty toises in diameter from the outside: In the middle & center of which is the courtyard of such a form of sixteen toises and a half in diameters, surrounded by which, in the body of the building, is a desired gallery twenty feet wide, with staircases on the outside, which are ten feet wide. Surrounded by and outside this circular body, four main buildings are designed, separate the houses from the others, which means that at angles from the outside there are included four yards reflecting the quince of the square: each garden is twelve toises in squared. These main buildings make up two estates, & the galletas above. Vn each for his look, made monster of three bodies, because of the two separate, pheasants bankrupt & height of two stages, besides that of the middle, on which on the second stage make pratticate some small gardens in the manner of terrace. This place has its four entrances to the four main buildings, each of which there are two storeys and the roof above. The first serves as entrance and passage, to go from here to below a terrace, carried by arches to the house: &: to the second stage, one goes there by the terrace above the arches. small gardens. Inside the first eftage of the large eracirconference body, is the desired gallery: & the second stage above is ~ similarly a desired gallery & with windows, on which is seen terrace prevailing around the circumference, from which we go to the gal- letas of the four igneous bodies. you will not be told of the conveniences of the members of each body, insofar as the design of the plan will give you plain intelligence of these, which can be made the same, both on the second floor and on the first. For the look of the galletas, ie there were no dormer windows, having left this at will, there is also a statement of iffces, which can be taken & made at the bottom of the building, in the height of talluts. This desseing is more out of curiosity, than out of hope of being fleeing: but mad shade of five or six cestrange buildings which make in this volume, that will collect no cfprits to compose others strong to their pleasure. The four rauelins & curtain walls, having the foot of the fundulation up to the cord; four toises, is at twelve hundred and eighty toises. The contents of this building, comprising all the bodies, received six thousand four hundred and fifty toises. The tiled rafts the floors of all the bodies of this building, received sixteen to fifty fathoms. On the first stage of all the bodies, except that on the circumference, there are forty crossings: & on the second forty-four, with the half heats: & on the body on the circumference, there are sixteen from the inside on the court, & twelve from the outside. Plus sixteen low dormers. On each floor there are twenty-four fireplaces, which would be forty-eight for the two floors: & wanting to accommodate the gallet of members, it would be necessary to adore other twenty & four. On the two floors of all the bodies there are one hundred and twelve frames, or about, not counting those of the galletas. There are each stage of the large body twenty & four rows, which make forty & huict for the two stages. The rest is wanted because of the gardens above it. More than twenty & four hives. Plus twelve hunts to the four bodies where the pont-leuis do: & will be hunter-hunted on the second floor, because the first will be wanted, and as many hunts. XXI. This building is a quadragle-shaped body, sixteen toises wide, on a huict, less than a foot and a half deep, without the bankruptcy of the front porch, & of degrees in half circumference from behind, being composed of three ioint bodies together, to know two opposites the vn of the tre, & the third in the middle of the sky. Which make in the manner of two eyelids having each one four stages, and that of the middle in three whining. The first stage of this building, is two or three feet lower than the ground floor of the court: & to which we descend from below the porch, which is on the deuant in the middle: And sererez iceluy estage for offices, of which we ascend by the porch to descend, or else to descend by the two staircases, estans és two costez appear on the plan. From the ground floor you have to climb seven or eight feet by the said porch, to come to a terrace being in the hall. And between the two efcalliers, from which we go to the room of each costed by the bearings of said efcalliers. In this main building is the room, & above it there is only the galletas, which can be done in such a room as below: or separating it by partitions to make a room, gardeobbe, cabinet, & passage. The two other estan bodies in the form of pauillons of the two costes, have at each of their estage, bedroom, & pantry, with the staircase, & above is the galletas. On the back of the house there is a terrace in the same way as that of two, being also at my same level, seruant to go from the rooms to the garden by a porch in round shape, being in the middle of said terrace. I made it here some prescriptions of light bastimens, without their strong no short bass: all the more that several wanting to bastir, do not want to change not to touch their short slap, being satisfied with some small dwelling only, have their short slap in their metayrie: which is the cause that I have saved you in this volume of five or six different forts, to get rid of it as you see fit. 1 All the masonry of this building, received five hundred and four wines and ten toises. The wishes of the omces.rcuicnnenc at eighty ten toises, j II it will be enough, as for the level of the offices, to pau only the kitchen, pantemanger, & some other place: The rest will do for convenience of caues & celiers. Forty toifes of paué will do all for the said offices. The paué of the two terraces, the assauoir of that of deuanr, & that of behind, each received seven toises, which make fourteen for the two. The tiling of all the floors was one hundred and eighty ten toises. The cover of the whole house was a hundred and seventy toises. There are nine fireplaces in the whole house. On the two floors above the offices, there are twenty & two crossings & eight and a half. More at the galletasvnze dormer windows, with thirteen small ones, for the small garniers above. More vnze little days for offices. On each floor there are nine huts, & four fowl, which are eighteen hunts & eight fowl, for the two above hops. Plus the offices & attics of the galletas. For all floors, thirty & five frames, XXII. This design represents a body of a building of twenty to one and one-half toises in length, out of five wide apart from the door, which are one hundred and seven and a half toises in area. This body contains three stages: the first on the ground floor is dedicated to offi- these, which ic designates wanted on its plan: However it will be possible to make floor if it seems good. In the second will be a room, two bedrooms, lobbies, closets, & other places, as the second plan shows it. The third estage est in galletas will be the same the conveniences that the second, except that above the room can be made into a bedroom, accompanied by a closet & closet, and this by means of partitions. The coat of this whole body is only a big eyelid, in the middle of which, on the top of the room, will be the coatings of this one, which come out of the two sides, in two half circumferences, which will close in the color of the great body, like the desseings of the eleuations, both of the face of two, and of the face behind the monstrous. All the masonry of this building, reux a hundred hundred toises. The wishes of the first stage are a hundred and ten toises. The tiling of the three floors was two hundred and thirty toises. All the color was two hundred and twenty toises. There are fourteen fireplaces for all three stages. There are three crossings for the first two storeys, and fourteen dormer windows for the storey of the galletas, with two crossings, and four and a half, being half circumferences of iceluy. there are fifteen hunts, large than small, & four hens on the second floor. Plus the attic of the gallet reuenant to the x trauees dn estage. There are for all stages, uarante frames, or cnuiron. XXIII. This design represents a bastimetric body of twenty & six toises and a half in length, on four and a half toises in depth outside the opening, and not including the bankruptcies of the two eyelids at the ends, born from that in the middle. The first stage is ordered to offices, which must be wanted, & must - 11 descend here from the ground floor, some seven or eight feet, as long as the grand staircase, was. in the middle of the body, q ue by the two small motées figurés & prinses és two lids on both ends. By the design of the plan the practical convenience is knocked. All the last stages of this bastimet, as much of the main building, as of the pauillons are wanted: By means of which i'enten the lacouuerture of iceluy on the terrace, as it is void by the elevation above the plan. As for the convenience of iceluy, they are easily noticed by the said plan. There are three stages, the first one of the offices, which is partly in the ground, then the main stage; & above iceluy vn another small estagebastard. The eyelids have a higher rating. Joining the eyelids at the two ends, some galleries are designated, which one can make reign of the two costes iusques the body on the deuant, which I do not make any mention of it: & the court would be found in the middle, closed of all coste. The height & width of these galleries, are marked with the eleuation of the lids of the two ends at the first desseing, where the void & cognoist, both the first gallery at the bottom3 and a prattiquee above, reeuenant it at the level of the upstairs, prins below the vouIrcs) & above the floor of the room. The eleuation is shown at the top, demonstrating the face of the body from the outside of the cost of the gardens. With the scime of the staircase can be made some small dosme squared, sitting on the want, as you see that the desseing the monster. All the masonry of this body reuce at eight hundred toises. The wishes, both of the offices, and those above, are received at two hundred Cinquetetoises. The tiling of the two floors was eighty to ten yards. The terraut des offices, with the terraces, receives the same number of eighty ten toises. It is necessary to pauau this offices, & to cover the terraces of good flat stone, with ioints overlapped. The colouration of the small dosme, received nine fathoms. For the estage above, the offices, twelve windows, which will not carry trauers or mesneau. They are only four feet wide on their height: the wooden frames apply to it will make the mesneaux & trauers. Eighteen small round windows are needed, prinsées below the crossings, from which the day will flow in glassis at the convenience of offices. More than about forty bastard windows, which are square, both for the top of the eyelids, and for the bodies of them. There are about thirty frames. Plus fifteen fireplaces. There will be only one stage, to plaster, which will require twelve hunts & five fowl. XXIIII. The place which is vn parallelograme, is fifteen toises in width, on ten in depth, which make a hundred and fifty toises in surface. In this place is seated a main building with three storeys: a large part of the top of that of the offices is on the terrace, rising in steps of one to the other, as he voids himself at the desseing. The other two floors have the necessary limbs for the convenience of the dwelling. In the first place, therefore, you have to leave the court, (dot ie ne fay metion) by degrez in half circoference, in a high ground floor terrace of some four or five feet, only two toises two feet wide, on the logger from seven toises two r.ICRK A n Y two costez from icelle to dextral & fenestral, must go up eight or nine degrees, to go to the two terrestrial estants on both ends of which you enter from below arches to another terrace elected above the first, and facing the first said of a chosen wall, having in this case three bastard windows, for give a day to a cave, being prinse between the offices & caues contained in the first efta