SJB€ not a big. he lovers of churches. Ge by knowing that GOTTals is a gei.t, .on in the most common time New Te.taments thus not much is served, .ondern more with divine and from above temples of the heart: .o has the full F-SK-RSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . en Architectoni.chen Werckes Z/Z * which, by the grace of G €von pages of the Kun.t-loving Lord Publisher and good .au.um has won from the Le.er .either requires that I adhere to the.e matter of all possible diligence Applied. Because€die vornehm.ten€und€ auchet other churchwoman Kupffer out .ind like the.elbige .owohl to those, .o the Architecturexprofe.. š.tudiren, as to those .o .I only to their gallantry and erudition or around a .ichern Judici because of .olchen things, when in Raths-Collegiis, as openly preparative about it is deliberirt, in it. In books I know .on.t of die.er matter nothing at all, because what Daviler in the Cur.u Architecture about the Vignola of it ge.chrieben i.t ja ja vor#€ Of the construction the big one. en Kuppen wi.. en the little.te, .onderlich in Teut.chland what before great. E and important bedencken€.ind much less how to re-build the building Mt.. e. In books, however, i.t bit there even little helpful news about it publicret and keep it the largest.. e.ten ItaliŠni.chen Bau-Mei.ter still under their Arcanis. From Prote.tanti.chen Kirchen .ind still little good mu.ter in nature and i do not feel more than zweyaus on my Rei.en succinct example to have the new Lutheri.che church in rain PUrg/ and which becomes Am.terdam which is the Lutheri.che Pott. From medium mŠ.. goodness has still been in Holland and Berlin.€ and still etchŽ-like ordinified castle churches, as to Woffenbźttel. Since the € chitŽroni.che ornamental salys of SŠulengantz ab.urd .ind, which come from dŠ.igem Bau Mei.ter, but the Di.po.ition of the church quite kind and pleasant i.t, which from the gei.t of a higher Per.ohn ent.prungen to Wei #und to Ei .enberg. I don't count the ones at Coburg, whether .ie .chon not he§lich i.t, because .ie quite achurch similar to i.t .o .i at a Prote.tanti.chen place €be.ten .chicket; even smaller capelles, than to Charlotten burgbey Berlin, which also in something € PŠb.ti.chen Zierrathen Ute cket and to SalzthalenbeyWolffenbźttel by die.en alle but .ind still no news and Abri.. e by the pressure. Anwei.ungen but .ie can be planted no och au.. the little tract-eater, which I .tatt an apology against unsatisfactory splinter judges published a few years ago € Schwerin under the titul of a dent of an appeal of small Prote.tanti.chen Kirchen, de.. en Ri.. e zwar in the er.ten An.eheneinerle with the here prege.tellten€ .eyn.cheinen but more accurate sub.uchung€ gar .ehr differo will be found. Zweifflederowegen gantz does not mean that I'm looking at the matter by fortune. en habe aller.eits will find Gun.t and Beyfall The double-leafed church is prepared / if you beydes the hall and the Sacri.tey behind the choir zwey columns widen wide./.on.ten the church with the pros and back arbors made and zwey rope seilen columns all around .ezere. When but one die.er jetzo be.chriebenen the inner.te. but that the fields remain ceilings, .o one has a fal.ch double-smiled church It is, however, to suggest that die.er be. talt, the general behavior of the o.a. Eren height to length and width does not respect the ab.e.e. as well as the fore-leubes and the Hor- and ŠrŠubige. However, in those with Ab.eiten/the in deninnen .teckende make the church higher in front of and behind the church / that the Sen.ter would be above the Ab.e.. Al.o mź.. en we confess that the wall church still has the be.te relationship. e and similarity. But the square churches would be bi.her according to the nature of the Richt-HŠu.er their relationship. e Erlangen: Here too, we want to Kun.t eager WTachricht ertheilen. When to create a church in the style of a old Richt-3Šu.es as the er.te Chri.tenheit pflegere / wants to specify, .o does the Ship width from one Ach.e to the other .o much as the column high i.t with its subs .atze: The Unter.atz .oll in the low prdnungen double nemlich zwey module high .eyn in the sublime just simple / nimuly a Modu.. The Ur.ache i.t die.e so that the.e width of the ship is calculated on drey columns widths with which all other pillars then agree on vastness. Because if the low orders get a sub.a of zwey modules, the whole column height, and consequently also the iffs width eight-toed module, which drey columns Wei of .echs module, and the.e .chicken .I also with the half module to make sheet statements of twelve modules, which are related to that column-widthju.t. Al.o if high columns with a sub.atz can be taken from a module, ent.tehet the whole height one and twenty modules, which bring drey column widths of .ieben module, or drey arc widths of 14 small modules, but one wants to use mediocre orders, .o kanman .ie without Unter.atz, and thus gets drey column widths of .echs Mšdul, or € b them a Unter.atz of drey module, .o bekšmmt OCUll. The length of the€doppelt .o hold much than the width and above Creutz Vaults half the width of the ship's boch. After that .oll one to make the length beyder.eits Ab.eiten, which zwey column-widths wide .eyn. In the ab.eiten on the walls .ollen arch positions and column-widths to.agen .echs on each side of their module .oll half .o large .eyn as the large. pillars but the arches.ol len inner-hearted Capellen with Creutz-gewšlben€ Uber the arches .ollen choirs .eyn, or actually to .agen. Althane/ which have a railing against the ship. Uber the Althanen .olten on the wall 2arch-tellungen with column chairs .eyn/from inside you could make arches-fen.ter. Dj.. columns .olten carry the Creutz vaults, which cover the ship and the eastern of the Creuz vaults over the ab.eite then the other helffte would be carried from the walls. On the O.t side, a Thurm .eyn .o thick era could be on the ship wide -and behind the Thurme er.t the choir in itnmj € € passages through the Churm the choir i.t .o wide as the ship and also .oiangals wide but that at the back there will still be a half-krei§ in it, I'm die.es'll find some when in a church the choir of the Ship through a .olchen narrow passage .ote ab.chj€ i.t bither no Erem pel of a .olchen churches somewhere to the Vor.chein kommj€n but through all four Stonen spatial passage through.like Archesmjš would be Goo not in which this reflects. The strength to .eyn believes." Sje also .o because the Pro digt chair in the middle of the.em Thurn can't find a place To be beureien i.t also that Goldmann the thickness of the Moors to the.em Thurn and .a no hint of nimble healing has not diminished from this one.j€.icher kšmte. Inde.. en i.t easy to remember that the passage after the choir .ehr klein.eyn mź.. E €nn the Cane about it couldn't be too high wish that he would have shown how to go to the E and doc i§.tand and all Irre€ dabey€kšnne.€€€-A make and follow twelve foot high, which in an .o ro.. en building only as a chlupff Lok would.ehen .o would come the Canzedrey toe a ejede foot up to .tehen, wel ches .chon would be too high to ge.chweigen how bad the Tjbringen lŠ.. T To Z. (o) "ESZSZ" 7 To the right and to the right and to the thurme, the Sacri.teyen .eyn and in the.en the Wendel-Stiegen, as you can get to the choirs or althanes. On the pre-wall E Regangekan an arch leaves to .tatt a hall to be prepared / .ieben long after the Waa.. e of the inner arches and a wide arch. The.en Pre-Lauben delicately affixed also needs good Kun.t, and would be de.because but wish that un.er goldman would have pointed at dabey, like the rest of the decoration. the FaciatŠ.eyn .olle, so .ie probably accordire with it. A great one. e Kirch-Thźri.t .on.t the be.te ornament, through the.en arch-laube, since the arches are not large.. he as eight feet wide .echtoes high, on the other hand, would like to easily wake up the Urtheil.en / which .o the Am.terdammi.che Rathhau§ has rightly reprimanded. Since the entrance is also .ieben o bows ge.chiehet. But I have diligently die.es De.a Goldmanns in the Tables B. . o to do well than I could do to make him a good one, and to get it from swearing, as Goldmann would do without even less .chwer to face all objections if he were € in life. Ge.chweige zwey main reasons, which can be said to be a defoundationment, that he does not have a specimen of a well-built church, .ondern an imitation of the old Ba.ilica to present.tellen, namely a .o light, which is of the beginners in the construction-kun.t easy could fate. and rather show that die.es De.. en .onder error .ey. Because er.tlich kan the throw-in from the arches at the Am.terdam mi.chen Rathhau.e here in none Con.ideration come, because die.es .ind completely .chlechte arches without all ornamental wall pillars plentiful decorated buildings, and to it only .echs foot-wide twelvef high on a Building, which bi. to the roof eight and eighty feet high i.t. On the other hand .ind the arches at current De.. a petite with orders indicated on a wall that .on.t has no rei chere Zierrath and .ind eight feet wide, .echzehen high on a wall that is only eight and forty feet high i.t bit to the roof. The passage through the Thurm after the choir i.t also from Miss.tand to be freyen, if he rises from the bottom to .o the columns with.amt their balls .ind, and .o far as the whole widening-width of the column out, quite open and through.ichtig i.t, and can bring the in .olchen with a magnificent colonnatageed passage the initn bquete can§el little hindering the Ge.i. , and the stairs € can go up five times behind the pillars as if from the bottom crack to er. Pupils' choir and the organ canget over the BeŠlckeder columns under the vault of the churches be well affixed as if to be taken from the profile. The preaching chair i.t at the Thurme opposite the main door. Uber's preaching chair came to be the e-de- The Door .ollen drey .eyn an of the We.t-sides one in the middle of the width of the ship and in each ab.eite a j each Capelle could also have a thźr .eyn so al.o the amount of volck by .o much Thźren ge.chwinde outla.. en. The church at .ich .elb.t could be from the inside, and also the arbors of au.. en/Šner from the five-f orders. But the church and the Thurm can from au.. with Rie.en pastries by type of Temple of Peace. Nevertheless, in die.er way, we cannot die.es bey go that the pillars behave to many the things of the preacher. It is also necessary to wšh to merck that the Leo-bewolkeed over the round large. en pillars although ej Shaft, however, make him .oll only .o large .eyn, as he enters the krei§ desoberndźnneren Tribal can be entered.chrieben. It is usually surprising that one .onderlich bey work of the Prote.tanti.chen Kirchenni to the old Ršmi.chen €€i.t. Which all€ which ones have .ollen there a great. e Quantity of Volcks on a narrow š.Š bey.ammen .eyn, and to a place one that can da.tehet and talk. It € Church i.t after the Fannien, the new Lutheri.che church m.terdam. The round churches .eyn though bey the old brŠuchlich gewe.en / and would still be too if you do not need the Ko.ten be.orgere because the Šlb-ball vault whose goods under, .o Amanšen sermon-stźh er .ey in the middle or at the Wall, everywhere .ehen. However, mź.. the capelles remain. In addition, one came from the Pantheo Tachricht €n which PŠlladius has with hšch.tem Flei.e be.chrieben. Die.es mź.. we do not verweigen to the guard that the inner sšhe just .o great i.t than the perme.. He. But when a Vor.chopff or arbors is made, .oll's of the Half-me.. hes length. B 2 If 8 -ESZSZ" (o) ESZSZ" If you don't want to make .chon bullet vaults round up churches .o but the roofs fall .ehr ko.tbar, and the whole Con.truction .very uncomfortable, by doing the good that .on.t in die.er form of churches would be .to be greatly damaged. The Creutz-Rirchen .tehen bey den Chri.ten .ehr wohl and could from a Shaft/ since a double shaft on each side would be prepared. But herein .oltenum and around Wauren not pillars or pillars .eyn. Much less .oll the Thurm above the middle.ten shaft on four pillars .tehen: Because die.es .treiter against the Aus.prźche un.erer Kun.t all too.ehr. But in the insanuation that the.e form from au.. en .ehr wohi.tehet 1 we have taken the trouble to verbe.elbe Kun.t-according to. Ern. DerohŠben fertilizes me / you can create a good Chun church The following wei.e indicate that in the middle of a churn would be led out of the reason and on each side a church. The drey churches could be suited to the drey per.without the GOerheit the fourth against rise can be at .tatt of the choir .eyn to all dreyen churches and .ehen all inside fa.t like the wall church. The side of the shaft of the Thurms .olte four and twenty large.. e module hold the double shafts of the church .olten each four and twenty M7odul wide and eight and forty module long .eyn. The column width would be eight modules in the wall pillars and al.o would have the long wall .echs column widths / which with five-f WNand columns from the Ršmi.chen or Corinthi.chen order. The.e wall pillars carry a beam, which would be unloaded over the wall pillars a module equal to .ie .elber, darzwi.chen on the wall. From a wall column to opposite .tehender .olte an arc .eyn which would be .o wide / as the upper half-me.. he the wall pillars and between the arch could creuz Vault .eyn. The Moors of the churches could have one and a half dul dicke.eyn. The doorcould on the sides, which against the churm ź ber.tehet / drey .eyn / and the Wittlern against over on the € of the sermon Chair and above the organ: On the beyden sides of the sermon chair, thuringians could lead through passageways into the opposite church; .olcher ge.talt wźr en lead up the Wittel and the corners of the Thurm from the bottom up. Let's do the memorized scope be.chreiben: In the.em .olte the module half .o large .eyn as the inner-inner-female vor of the church-thźre .olren double bow Laźben .eyn, in which the columns -Further twelve module hold lŠng.t of the Gor wall come drey arches / one in the middle / afterwards remain doaurs with double wall pillars, which four modules to.ammen .tehen, and because beyder.eits arches, and again double columns. And has al.o the hall drey arches and in front of the Hall and around the whole church come arched foliage; €ber die forder.te Bogen Lauben on the pretext .olten in the length are led al.o, that one could walk around the whole church and become four churchyards / which would be surrounded with the boen arcades of the churches and with the.en continued on all four sides al.o that each churchyard would have .echs arch on each side. But in the he ten € at the inner corners .olten simple, .on.t everywhere double wall pillars .eyn: Al.o will hold the length dreybunder and eight wodul. And die.es i.t al.o in the lower row. In the other row / .olten over the arches / Bow-Fen.ter / .echs small or drey gro.. e). Wodul wide and five-fold high. In the walls of length .olte under each arch a doorin go to the church. he Thurm .olte .o high .eyn as the length of the church named drey hundert and eight small module, the i.t one hundred four and finffzig large. e. The Thurm .olte bi. to the effteviereckicht nemlich shaft-shaped .eynjch Crejfšrmig with four and finally round jedoch al.o, that everything would be brought up from the bottom up še. The roof of the church .olte twelve-foot-small module high .eyn and a pastry from Rie .en-Wercke. But all be.ondere pieces.eyn not exactly no to be seery. I don't think anyone, from what before religionists always .ey, when he's the figure on.e het, which I drew in my er.ten edition of Goldmann quite prejch of the Auctortext deein Goldmann's die.es in the.em pieces approbirej that the choir of dreyen Aj.eyn .oll, al.o. he lies to the ge.icht of all drjen church. So even the little ones would like to like the fact that the churches have no abs. or capelles at all. Thirdly, I.t also considering that an .o gro.. it vault of four j twenty great. or eight and forty feet in the Ge.preng is geled on just zweymodule or four-foot-thick moors. But from the rest archiodoni.chen anordnung de.. every Kun.t-Who .tŠndiger and Unpartheyi.cher confess mź.. that something .onderlich .chšnes and tackled "EZZ" (o) nESS?" 9 I want to die.es De.. here. in Tab. C and D. al.o. €bey €das Vornehm.te always i.t nothing changed, even .on.t nothing Eijondern only a few be.ondere Um.tŠnde and hopefully thereby a quite impeccable, Jr. He.. a church in front of the Ršmi.ch-Cooholi.chen Deodien.t Bring. I want the arched foliage that is attached to the long sides of the four churches, A.. jellen in die.elbige drag the Thurm, which oho. According to Goldmann's text, the .chlank against .a height weLo beyden sides around a column-wide widen, so that jernSpace inward.elbenget, also wants on all sides drey bows and per church, and above in the Thurm la.. that the inter-marriage and jch the Liecht invades through twenty-four arches in the.elben, although also above jeh by twelve Fen.ter Liechkan. will be. Sochergea I now wanted four Make little, and dedicate to the four Evangeli.ten and make the Thurn a mean choir before j, in de.. en middle an .olcher altar could come to .tehen, as the one with four jColumns of the Bernini Invention in St. Peter's Church in Rome. In addition to each Kir €nunzwo Capellen in front of the noble.ten people of the city to their burial. Au.. En j Arched foliage, .o in the enlarged the whole church, could be in front of slightly lower BegrŠbni.. e angeleget and grave-meal right in the upper arch-lauhemanden jSides of the Church. In the four farms, the common Leuthebe can those whose rich ones. but au.. en at the capelles can erect grave mahe la.. En: In the lower arch arbors can proce.. iones are held and above i.t a Ferr.che jenadetheils under freyen sky,theilsbeyden Epitaphis, under theupper arch Arcades. The other kind of too.ammenge.etzten Figures i.t -if you attach to a double Shaft on the long sides zwey Halbs Krei.e, and at the back a half-krei§ adds / and al.o in gllen € Halb Krei.e around: Die.e form would be lovely in the eyes fall: But against recurrited .olte a Vor.chopff in the form of an arch arbor. The allgemei ne Abme.. al.o .eyn. Theilet the O.t side in four theils, .o give the zwey middle theile the meme.. he of the Halb-Krei.es, the Asides are er.te lich in zwey same theile getheilet / her according to i.t each theil .ogreat than the width and becomes equal.š gethelet, and an abb tear on it be.chrieben: The chirms could be at beyden ends of the Vor.chopffs to everyone be fabricated. The aosation can be made of palladiivierdte beech, And .o much likes from the temples.prochen .eyn. Further guide Ter Reguln to indicate good churches, Eildie type of Šu.. Eottesdien.tes in the Pontifical Church Of A.t be .chaffen i.t, than in the other churches, which .I getrenneth from the Pab.tthum G B. ben and whether .ie .o again become sectengethelet in manyley, but in the Ej tial pieces of the Godsdien.tes, From the Pontifical Churches. FN die.en is more concerned with seeing than listening, and not just the € Um.tŠnde, thatmo D amplifying aus.ehen within and by heart after % of all custom .i be.e.. gte, weisjMitten everything wosjźhren not ej I error, .ondern the artod the bottom of the G…ttesdien.tes .elb.t require .olches nothwen dig, therefore you are not alone on magnificent bell-thźrme .i beflei.. must be, .ondern also to that one attaches an ope woh.an. Which nothing other than a big one. E round Thurn, which is between the S and the ship .tehet, innnen quite hollow and frey i.t bite to the ball vault, with which .ie are covered, and a .honorable roomy and bright C place IO -ZSZ" (o) SZSo Space require which little.tens to something size.. he must be at the diameter .eyn when the ship or the choir far .ind. In addition to the choir, the dome and the ship, many capelles are required, the i.t, departed places, which one offtmahls also ver.chlie.. et, in which a klei altar .tehen kan, and about a magnificent burial supper. Then because .olche Capellen mei.tens of rich and noble per.ohnen or whole families wi.. en Saints to Ehrenge.tiftet to which the.elbige Per.ohn or family has a .onderbar good trust, .o want to .olche Leuthe also have their burials in there. - by the way.olche churches mei.tentheils require a lot of space, thatan.olennen Fe.ten a large.. E A lot of Volckes can come to.ammen, if now die.es everything is taken into account, .o happens .i in general dabey a lot of heavyness with the roof, .onderlich where you can mei.te with brick ceilings, and with the Liquor, because everything is billich bright in the church .eyn .oll, € the Great. e of the room, however, and because of the many pillars even many obstacles of the Liecht incidents. Although now .ovielauserle.ene.chšne Mu.ter and example of €Kirchen to Rome, To Paris and other.wo has been signed off and brought in Kupffer that little Ca.us .ind, which one does not find discussed there.elb.t, .o i.t nevertheless the lack of rubs of the.elben .ehr gro§, an formally anwei.ung, but . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . es € not yet. Derowegen probably wants it to be .eyn, that I give here a proper instruction: and of all pre-ordered pieces in more detail, for which the Invention on AB . Bit V. will serve primarily, I feel like. en have all the main conversions common to the famous.ten churches, and gleich.am e.. ential .ind, and yet a Dipo.ition that would have been something new, and built by all biter under.chiedenes. From the Sint healing. M er.ten i.t to deny a little of the figure and whole healing, because €Sź€€€€€€€Am Ambro.i & Carsozu Rome, as the largest. e.ten and an.ehnlich.ten da.elb.t to other many as well as to Paris the bey of the Soonne, which an val de Gracu and that of the Minimes and to Londen in Engelland the magnificent Church of St. Paul (which, after the next St. Peter's Church in Rome, however, does not understand why a .olche form a reformed Godsdien.t have been elected) all the agreements in which a Dome (A) below a square and lŠnglicht ship B top a flat.o further but shorter except the Sorbonne of Paris and St. Paul at Londen, since the choir .o lang as the Ship i.t, ) and with a half-rounding ge.chlo.. ener Choir C, an.tš.. et, and beyden Sei ten still zweygro.. e D and E, which are too.ammen a latinini.ches Creutzformiren. The Unter.chied aber ent.tehet nach from the next to it built abbs F. and Capellen G. da demei.ten among pre-adopted churches have no Ab.eiten.jern only Capellen. In the Church of St. Paul .ind only Ab.eiten, without very light gjelen only as church chairs in the €€€€€ a lot to Rome and to Paris there for a Great.. e Kundling or long rounding only all sorts of capelles in the like I au in€ € € d P .ind, i also he die.es .oll not .o necessary, than previously depleted pieces, but billicheine Hal le in front of the ship .eyn, like M. So besides € € Š bell-thźrne I,€€€ but next to the Chor mź.. no rooms in front of the Prie.ter .eyn, which one Sacri.teyen nennet. "But the.e Stźckjoch can be used more from the Klo.ter- than from the parish churches.. will be. - "The dome below 0 feet in lady do not have that in current Ri.. e holds Aekh. The Dooder Dome. Rome holds j Pjgemeine Teut.che E-shoes, the same as grš.wohl.o easy to grow. The Wide €chiffes and the choir kan hšch.tens not ever Djee der Kup pe, wo oe.er €energomache under drejj but not easy betra en: The width of the ship of St. Peter's Church to Rš€pjdejjgemeine erck Fu§.o also .same to Grš.. enichjrd. In current Have I aŠ€€€Šjegen Ehe. The gedes€he €nahmehraj.ene width as in the €Kirche €non. but to all against the Weijte behaving. In the length against the expanse like zweygjelches before the .chšn.te Pro-A-and is even made by Goldmann into a regu. In the St. Paul Church must have the ship fourmeal .o long as far wej .onderliche Rai.ons because it does not want to find appršj according to the common regulations. The bigger.. he the space between the pillars, which finer the vault of theSj€gjie '' SSZ S. (o) m.SZSZ" er .elb.t .ind doch unbe.chadet der hšrigen StŠrcke je be.. er and .chšner i.t's. In st. Peter's church .ind the arcades between the pillars 4th foot far, which the balbe expanse of the€ i.t, and in the St. Pauli church 25th foot, and also half the width of the ship. But there .ind the pillars dazwi.chen over 30 feet wide in die.er only eight feet which. arch and on the.elbigen to carry the main vault. It also includes the one with Fźg at the Pe ters-church to rebuke that the arches between the pillars do not have the right proportion of arcades and from below bite at theemore more than the width of the arches to the height. I've got the reason in my De.. prefer the proportion of arcades exactly in eight and come there the arches twelvef module, whose ship 4 far i.t, the pillars but between the arcs of holding module. But the arches onfrey.tehende single columns to .etzen and afterwards do not carry the pastry directly over the pillars, .ondern over the arches, as it is still in the not too old and .on.t .ehr .chšnen Je.uiter-Church to Ant who has been made, finds bich under construction-ver.tŠndigen no approval, ob.chon not to lŠugnen.tehet that .olche Bau-Artauchbeyden ancient Romans not unused wewe.en. Because it i.t a .olche support against the underlying La.t in the That too disproportionate -and theile .o belong to each other, which alone error enough i.t. But the arches onfrey.tehende cupped columns over their beaculous. €€' size.. e.ten beauties, and i.t the De.. a TAB, Ill. and . That's what we're looking for. -L The choir is billich like the ship in width, but on the formal.ten but just .o long than wide straight and then with half a Circul be.chlo.. like .chon the same proportion of Goldmann has been made into a regulatory. Because I can't be primal .ache from the Godsdien.t find, .o a large.. longer. From the Ar chitecturkan one.o bring little ration than the some who are in the church of the Sorbonne to Paris i.t ob.erviret that the Ein the center over the church ge.tellet and the place that the ship hei.. et, with which the choir is gennet, into a completely Uniformity comes, and from the Centro of the dome .owohl in length as width of the kir che an same austhealing sides .ey. But this can not be taken exactly in eight, i.t also at be.agter church has not been taken into account, since at one sei te the choir with a half-rounding still deepi.t, which on the other side beyder haupt Don't i.t, even .I wouldn't have liked. But here is a Rai.on before the Bau-Mei.ter remain, but heydie.em Caluparticulari., because the one long side of the church i.t the courtyard of the S€hie.. et .o make it against the.elbigen a rich €n.e that da.elb.t also a main-thźre and straight above it to .tehen the dome in the middle kšmmt. But bey of the St. Paul's Church in Londen I can't get out of it. Choir fa.t just .o long, and yet not to make too long, and yet no equality Healing from the centro of the dome-zuordinires. Before €, .ie always nurtured the Choir through a gate werck.ondern, which today is not taken into account today .ogar exactly. But if you want to do it, .oll .olches Gatterwerck is not alone through.ichtig, .ondern also low donot much about man's height, to mei.ten not over ehen Fu§hoch.eyn, so that the ro.e altar at the back of the choir, which is commonly the Eoder Church to .eyn Pfleget, to whom .o come into the church right into the exteriors M .oll. - 9 The Capellen shall be open to salvation, theils with gates ver.chlo.. en macheted. You .ollen .o have a lot of room for an altar to be an epitaphist, although some may also have the EjŠphia gladly au.. ena noter.e§en, whereby the Capelle ver.chlo.. en i.t. It i.t but .o a lot be.. er, when .owohl Ver.chlo.. ene as Unver.chlo.. ene .owohl Gro.. e as a small narrow so that .ie can be removed under mehrerley Gjźvon Leutheil. The figure takes manwie.chs because of the wall-worm at be.ten .chicket, roundoval, octagonal, square, but initially build on the churches Unko.ten only completely .chlecht with smooth walls, so that the .onachdonoohe capelle from the church hereditonal bring to .I, de.tomehr Freyheit and have the opportunity to decorate .ie according to their well-being Won domes in.onderheit. FSA§ the today to the Ršmi.ch-Catholi.chen, .onderlich in Italy .ehr common Sliche Kuppeln den Kirchendaalerherrlich.te € € i.t au.. he doubts but also sure that .ie not only the grš.e.te Unko.ten, .ondern also the grš.. e.te Wi.. en.chafft at all buildings. De.omehr i.t to be suggest that .ogar little or fa.t nothing to Anwei.ung .olche building well-being has been carried out in public schrifften tra'tiret. Because what Blondel has in .a Cur.u Architecture of it, Part. IV. cŠp. VI. and VII. i.t at all little and imperfect, and what Daviler put forward in .a Vignola of it, i.t before nothing to C z. chŠtzen, I2. EFTZ (o) "ESZSZ" .chŠtzen. Bonanni has in .a.r.-recovery of the St. Peters-Churches some Hi.toria of .elbigem Mei.ter.tuck of a dome, which, however, is a reflection of the students of the Architecturdienete, i.t am little.ten reported. I haven't had the opportunity to perform a .olches building. vieless .elb.t with hands. Notwithstanding this, I will use diligence to Le.er of die.er important subject matter die.es. Werck everywhere .a titul a suffice thue. It will act, however.eyn, er.tlich from the inventors die.er building, on the other hand of their shelter, thirdly of the domes .elbisgn the vault, fourth of the rź.tung moreover vault fiveftens of the vault .elb.t .ech.tens of the um.tndens of the vault and of wooden dome roofs and finally .iebendens of theLanterne, dahey above.t must be shown, I through the domes actually only the theil die.er great. en round Magnificent building ver.tehe, which stands out above the roof of the church, through its but build what is inside the church and its roof .tehet. ?. That er.te now in question i.t probably no doubt that the reason for this from the antiquen run the temples, .onthesame have been taken from the Pantheon, but in nature one does not know of any .olchen high building, than the ethes. .ind, still boldly built by.o, in which the lower building is further inside i.t, as the upper one, which actuallya. et, as we will soon be heard with several men MŠ here message I can not find of the emergence die.er kind building, than bey the Valani in the life-recovery of the ItaliŠni.chen Baumei.ter, sculptor and Mahler PŠrt. 2.p. 21. It has nimbly towards the end of the€Seculi of Anno Chri.ti 1294. to 139o, the city of Florence a church of Maria Delfiores by a tree egg.ter Arnolfo Lapierbauen la.. en, in which between the ship and the choir an octagonal inside quite open Thurn angeleget, which from .ehr gro.. space and no less amazed. The high-altitude bouquet bite at the knobs, and the expanse over a hundred and funfzig. But it is the Baumei.ter long before the completion of the construction, the.elbe although has been brought to perfection, but no roof has yet been brought over the dome. or vaultge we.en, which does not dare to carry out a tree egg even after the ancendus death, since inde.. en to sway i.t da. the er.te announcer Arnolfo Lapi mź.. ewź.t, how he wanted to bring a vault to it, .on.t he would not have made the plant .o large. Anno 14, but has a sculptor Philippo Brunnelechi, in the desire by making a .olchen Bau.chheboast .I on the Architectur, and in.pecijde Kun.t a .o mighty vault to build emptied has also been created by .an excellent ingenium and tireless diligentness-es dahi-n brought, that he may make it to everyone's astonishment from Qua the.tźcken famously excarried out, as of it the whole coursef with .ehr viegar bedejcklichen Um.tŠnden in oben€Authore with pleasure to € €€ Werck € Michael Angelo vows to build the no less aeand and artificial dome to St. Peter, according to which all others then built but bitdie.e sinstilled still no equal j The. They are in Liechten .ieben and .iebenZig Ellen far, and from the hallway of the church up to the creuz zwey hundred and twenty-four egg high, that one al.o can be the.elbige in an an oralike whole church with a .honorly high Doorm.etzen II. On the other hand from the substructure i.t to merck that in general four .ehr gro.. e Arches intos Gevierdte zu.ammenge.etzet .ind. that insgemei .ehr gro.. e Bows i to example at the church of St. Jgnaii des Skiffter of the Everuiter Order to Rome .ehen, .olche four bows each a hal ben Footweit in Liechtenaufvierachtzehen Foot-thick Pfeilerjj begreijnen Viereckij € in .i, which is in the length and Š echzig feet€uj€.tehet € uppe, which is also .echzig foot in Liechten, but around i.t, and al.o only at four ends above the in the middle of the four arches rested, but by the way, the jeje. Derowegen .ind aus -C the four corners of the cracked pieces of bogen, Ein a tip too.ammen and make that the square .choben into a rounding end. On the.e Rźndung i.t For built up that .ie gleich.am in the Luffjnbe.Šgtej Curved pieces is worn, which is the eye-inch.ames Spectaculgiebet. In of St. Peter's Church, the sub-building of the uppel an octagon of four large. en Sei of five-foot and .iebenzigfeet, since the Large. en eben.owe through iten arches, and four small zwey andfunfzig and half a foot wide, the ma.. V from the four-fifth-square-foot edging pillars for n, which are at the perme.. he a hundred and €ŠŠŠ #€ and .echzg-oniehten. The round dome aberjarover built i.t, hŠtj and four Š fifty feet from the octagon s around and around the aeve /€€v /€? L (ll) M MUeren€freytehenden€sod to open the upper dome. their wall from the ground underconstruction , with de olen , and only with-the .ech.ten Theil. -r źbri MUL la' craggy arches rests, or ratherfrey in the Luff € € on vorbe.agten Now -ZSZ (o) ESS-13 -Now it is not only the Vernunfft who teaches that .olches must hold. e if only the under pillars .tark enough .ind that .ie do not yield the little.te, .ondern the experience it has also confirmed by adding .chon .o much .olche buildings over a hundred years .tehen, and none occurred. But .tehet does not allow that .ie fa.t all Ri.. have received e, and, A .tarckes earthquake at a .olchen village would come, too mahlgro.. e Run the risk of †rzen. Inde.. en i.t also a lot of heavyness dabey, if you want to straighten the domes from scratch which the ItaliŠner Hardie.e .ehr ent.chuldiget, which .on.ten less to decompose .chuldigen would be if .ie were just for the sake of the ur.ache .o hazardireten, because it verwunder.am aus.iehet, if .olche gro.. e Building gleich.am in the Lufft to .chweben .cheinen. Because if the dome just like the substructure four or octagonal, as reported Dome to Florence al.o octagonal quite builder, .o goes not only to the beauty of the Ge and a merckliche simbly, .ondern the vault of the dome i.t much .chwerer nug.amer ability and connection. But if you want to build the building right away from on round lead, .o i.t's even .chwer the flybows of the great. en four arches to make good, .on of hewn stones. But do it, as I do in the De.. a stick. III. gethan, the diameter of the dome above. he as the diameter of the octagon below, .o rob the Sim.e, which walk around the octagon, the Ge.ichte .ehr much of the upper run dung. Inde.. i do not believe that the gravity because of the flybows, when the building is run from the ground up, the low.te .ey and the.e Con.truction as the Be.te prefer to all others .ey, and i.t certain that .olcher Ge.talt the building will come out much more nehmer, as if it draws .I above against nature closer to.ammen, since it extends to the regulators of nature according to .I billich inwards .oll, .o as it belongs .I belong that it au.. beyder.eits of the Grźndbreiter.ey, as the building on it and also quite with it comes to .tehen. According to .olchem F€.ind the De.. a tabl. and V. was set up by me, although I am r.tern slightly muthma.. en kan that the Mei.ten the four arches, because .ie is quite ger .ind than the choir and the ship will not be whl.tehen, although .he will be, that I could have easily continued . But there would be .olche arches as which four and twenty feet far .ind €yem .olchen place, since the amount of volck snot even too big-zź.ammen came, which Ca.us even offt, far enough .eyn. That but one only wanted to great beauty. ere arches have each basic Š .intemahl one thing in one piece another in another piece .have a beauty can, as in die.em De.. a the beauty that is one great.. erer € would, by zwey on top of each other. Bow er.etzet i.t. Also i.t known that .I am not extending the Ge.icht bey .o, where a walk or walk-sgal or alley in a garden in a wide eat must before .I have as if a healing is made by tighter openings, which Ob.ervation the Franzo.en need among others in gardens .ehr useful. Al.o would also here the church an An.ehwehrerer length and Grš.. e when the choir, the dome j the ship by closer openings from each other under.chieden .ind. It is also certain that that buildings for the pleasure of the eyes .very much thut, if .ie not on a meal everything in Get to get.it, .ondern in the go-to always discover something new. Al.o if one in the church the beauty of the ship efergnźgen clearly the dome but €ndjic and imperfectly in mind, .ie would delight him after de.o more if he came in and saw him as completely aerated. In addition to the Ur.ache, I also have the Ab.eiten with the Thźren C and D. unter.chieden. By the way, it will not be possible to purify nendŠ§ by .olche Con.truction to the steel of the building .ehr much cšntribuiret will be, which jan must be at allmei.ten and own, al.o is die.er throw-in by the too far-fling small arches thoroughly rebutget .eyn. III. We continue to delineate the order that was made to the cin.truction of the actual Adome. Die.e.šjźr Hšhe hšch.tens die Helffte, and little.tens a ite of their perseverance.. ers get, andjegrš.. he the dome.angeleget, jenŠhervjder Heffte against the third Theiltaken. In the Defein Tab, I have the Heffte, in which fabjija's third theil to the height genommjeil no dome lightly smaller than in that En.. en .oll and no size.. as in the.ejangemacher. It .oll but the whole Com po.ition billich a complete order, and above it still hold a small Attique. So that the pillars are now probably elongated, .owohl inside as au.. en, it is necessary to Di.pooafter size.. e.ten Perme.. jerjŠu.erbŠnde Rafters offešder bi. To Šu.. er.t at the bottom of the column trunk and after Kleine.ten the behind the spar head to the krantz, or to the column trunk. richflei.. ig out be counted. Because now the.e bill is pretty .chwer i.t, and not whl other. than with Help the Tabularum .inuum€, I want to be an example .olcher bill the example Tab.I. So i.t now the good radius of the dome .echs and drey.ig: T The - I4 " SZFSZ-(o) "LSZ. Tz of the € .echs and forty feet, and .o high must also the height of the dome up to its be vaulted. Now I do a healing of the column-widths as well-willedly ,(because I have the The not acura wants to an example of the bill, because it even to .chwer .eyn by using the column widths inside nine the sjitj inside, and the Column widths c. inside .ieben module have taken) nemlchjen the column widths a. €nneun. The columns Weitenbvšndrey module machju.tjerj .echzig Wei €jed€Modul or 92 Modul or Rafters€D€DŠ€j Pelt, and thus dividire the 362nd Gradus of the Circulsoder 26oo. Mjtenbringejn. Seeunden, which I put in the Sinubus.chlage, and find 1636, which are taken twice, 3272. in front of the chordam of a module. Sj al.o in the Regul de Tri: the radius as .inus totus 190090. gives the rafter width as Chorju 3272: what gives the radius in inches 432. inches? facit 12" Zol in front of the module da .before I now that the module does not come out to any -because I can not probably theilen theilen theilen order and a proportional Uber.atz. I want the big one because of that. e Ser widths take only from eight module, .o come on the outline 176. Rafters widths. The.e number taken twice makes zunddjn Circul dividiret brings a degree a minute secundes. What I do Sinum.je 78th and the.en doubles 357o. the …šrdj. Striking.. e now again as above, .o I get Aes. Zol in front of the Tooo* Aeodujoire I thus the height of footšdj€ .o I find that the.e height .olcher Module bej 3. or unspecified €, € .echs in front of a column chair, AeeiervordasGebŠcke, .o remain the €n 7th module in front of the Uber.atz, wel not too much i.t. Continue to do so. ereSŠulen-Weitenal.o 36 foot giving what give 46.facit a 3 Iot €das module, on which I have to reckon a be.onders pastry, as I in my …fficinaj econis perfecta with clear and .ejAjej Have. Who does not pay the bill a.s€kan, € ) .ung to this .ehr gro.. e Ri.. e make, and bring it after .o ice gro.. er trouble .uchen €mit € he.uchen, But it is necessary to set up the column positions .o oel possible al.o, that many Oeffnun E Aenolittle Mauerwerckdajen€ possible i.t, that nevertheless jder l #€ €€ € in the.em piece the dome at the Paj U5 Church of Londen be.. as at the Peters-Ki U Kom, which is a weni i.t, and have in my de.. a Tabijd Vj elche a little to .chwer angeleget ener nachgeahmet You must finally also comfortable stairways wi.chen the beyden middle column-widths en Create pages and .o gutŠls€Damit no mis-tand awakens from it.e also Mt.. en on the big. en Sim.en under and above the pot. GeŠnderj Ei.ej drey Fu§ CS De €.t€ i.t, ei.erjgehen, šcher wo otovounten on not to .pźhren€ as well as occasionally,in the - Wall la.. so that you can energise rings all the time. ere Gerź.te uud Sj Gib.er, Mahler - .o to do something about it or to reparirenjommen, € before Gib.er, Mahler and others, .chaffen able .ey. W€Nnon we come to the vornehm.ten and kźn.tli cf H. eln, netnli for their cover either with carpenter €€ jeje ge.chahlet and clothed with ghi, au.. also with ettern, and on it with Kupffer or Bley is covered; or with .teinern vaults, which also o.. en jedecker zuj Maintain. Bey must first consider the Rź.tj .eyn, without which one .ie not ears. In books, however, majdjon chts, au.. he in an Etonian.chen Bje €rlo Fontana, who has the gerź.te €Peters-Kij be.chrieben, from the afterwards Bonnani something little and Blondel in .a Courj ArchitectureP. V. chap. VII. nor we change with a notable error aegypti, js bow-gerź.te to the Vault of the shipŠ"€netd€Gerźj .ooooch even far from it unter.chij.tj's bow-gerź.te kan but not well if nota's size. jenTheis with a .olchen DŽ ke źberleger i.t that the Zimmerleuthej ro.. he Can anzahj henchmen run around on it, eie cheek slinging and lifting. Uh €obengj€ € ih€n can and would ij wi.. whether he thought anything of it M k well from the €€Šer of the Ae.h.chen €uhjj €ches also the Mei.ten in anderj imitiren € .ie al.o .chreiben, that one €€€ but nevertheless jehźgej / Cell iMD. L§ Because of mu§e.j C inger not our a .chweren way jej .ondern also I here quite without predecessor no ------------but per gift which lent me i.t, verhšffejchj complete€ by the "A" (o) a.SZ -15 But because above gemed Philippo Brunnele.chi the big. e Dome€ Florence without arch how he had to go before, since he had to lei.ten ver.prach, in front of a wahnwitzi men.chen everyone, on the other hand, Michael Angelo kept it on an arch-gerź. which requires a covering of the dome with a running floor, as vorge.aget, dert, .o I want to show how to do beydes, and here of the necessary rebuke to beyderley Art. To the er.ten kind it needs. No .onderliche Kun.t a quite .icher gerź.t to because up to a. in bey.tehening figure must be the omrdentliche from below, led to go to gerź.e. This is where the Piece of vaults from b to ,guf dreyzehen up to four-toed foot high on bucks, .o man on the geotherm .etzet, even slightly mutilated ret if you but toe foot have come high with it, the € d e. enamned and on top of it a wedge is emptied, after that the wall even continue to be maurge still zwey to drey Foot above. If the Stź zen a d. under it, .o kan man .o because .icher Queer Woods, Bret ter and railings build on it, and there on toe F further mauren, but if you get .ieben foot higher again al.o Rź.t-hšlzer €, which can be easily taken off again if only the keylo§ - .chlagen. The large wood to die.er rź.tung .ind pieces wey and drey.. ig foot iang .ieben bite eight inches thick Inde.. en i.t no doubt dadgewšlbe much more accurate and convenient could be gemgchef when a right teaching etc. is built under the whole vault, whether e. . chon jer ko.tet. When you want to put a blanket over the whole dome, present per €rbeiter .icher handthere Šgen der gro.. en height the among them i.t quite .icher j you will.chwer. A shorter-range Eericheren way. jfab. V. in which he.ten and other figure had prege.tellet. There will be four jnd .echzig .chuhige Balcken 1.23e at the Circumferenz geled around and then and afterwards €(jcin Fig.9. g. €n on the.e encoded and plate afterwards atmiret je er.te Balcken, .o as the third figure suggests, so that .ie .I can not bend. On the middle of the others, jaws other than 7, 8, 9, 20, 22, 23, j and those after € eben the Wei.e armiret. and .o one goes on in order, j Numbers of the figure anwei.e Ader to lay other woods and because the che.e. €.o you finally become the whole cup with not much baling. €€€Šen, that if you e.g. again only completely .chwach wood and above A .o .o floor gets the one hundred or more Lj, jerdie.es .ehr gro.. e Aea .icher trŠget. The er.te figure i.t the dome (from €Figurguide Kuppe. V. Al.o come on the big. e Dome Aweed- e Balcken. To make their every body, to me and to be up do not bring easily to eno place higher than € €.chbelauffen kan the small woods and jwill I vor five Ehanehmen kšmmt the whole ceiling 430. Rthal. To jdjnach vorachter €t vor šRtha can sell againthat al.o the whole Ko.ten die.es Wercks zoo. Rthal. which is in front of the great e Dien.te die es lei.tet, Šn an .olchen importanten Werck would not be expected before anything. We finally come to the bow-gerź.te, where a carpenter,bearing, dasajjit Bretternoherbe.chlagen ju.t has the figure that gets the vault .oll. Therefore, when the vault get deepfee fields .oll, the whole We.talt and jaa§ der.elbigen raised on dyormeldboards made. Here i.t now the question how you're to a .o grau.am big. en Gewšlbj .olche Form de.. elbeen of bau-wood and Bret core .oll. . From the arch of the etc., which has been used to the dome of St. Peter's Church, praisesBonanni in .a Hi.toria TempliVaticani pog al.o. But with that the experienced Kźn.tler a .o wunder.ames Lu.t. -Doo .icher auffźhrere/ he has a hšl 2, -Bern 16 "HGZFSZ. (o) -HSZFS rafters-werck designed to underlay the La.t, which will be asurprise, wo i.t. De.. drawing Fontanapagzz has leaked (which is also from here bey.tehender Figure to .ehen i.t) It be.tund from tau.endein hundert Balcken which verb into each other djrejdjunter hjn.šcher thickness were that .ie by zwey man not accounts are regrouped. But I can't find out from the crackthe number. Holz†r.ache why it has been ge.etzet, do not be put out to it like an .olche veroin dungkan. Whoever has the all-gr. book of Fontan came to it.chla gen. If the figure there um.tŠndlich explains i.t. In the videnTab I have a .olches smell.te On a width of 108th footI wants to go in the fourth figure. Many other connection with all rationibus .o clearly presamate that one does not just think of every piece Holtz, why it ge.etzet i.t,€ ondern also on any before ommenden Sa.am of the same rumours at all times due to jer.tŠndig nenkgn. What, because at the same time the smell is off. Vijlig will be veranden After the inner arch of the projected vault, the Maa§-Staabdrawn, and .o far from it anjer Krei§ drawn parallel, as the thickness of the boards extends on it the vault€ nemlich zwey, Drey, hšch.ten's four inches (Here he continues to wey no ae the Measure of four inches not to be significantly removed i.t.) Under each inner Circul-Bogen pulls a Choram (Aa) al.o that its .inus ver.us or the arrow (beya) .o becomes greater than the largest.. e.te woodthickness i.t, .o man get kan downj€jšbenhey F .chneidet man the .charffen Winckel, which the choir with the Bogejab that the Ab.chnitt just to eight Zobreit remains, .o one has the maa§ujrm of an arch of wood de the other all at the number .o. But it only dries jfoot thick .eyn, the A all are drawn with the saw four to €dickege.chjachdeme I but, wood as bey A. drawn on a square wood € (alsŠ) I must a bal en whole vault through as go drawnjA again an arch wood (Een above the again a balk hi draw each an arc HoC) and above again a balk .m, and .ofort to j" Die.e Balcken but come all of a .chršckish length as the under.te fg F. "foot long the fogo after and A a little shorter but all bi. on the above.ten fa.oij€n .ie from a wood not have kan, .ondern from a number of pieces€ "The whole thing now Kun.t on how to make the.e long to.ammenge €t .o befe.tigen kan that .ie without .i in the low.te-n. There verfahrenujo See where from A. to a Hol .olang you have it kan Ejr. to .echj€d .echzig foot to a balk al.o drawn by €, to the Erempe MM €otherer €c€ beyr that of there to the mittan. His half-hoŠnge .ey .o kan man on a bey A. and so W SZ¨ (o) HS-To 17 ten ring of .tarckem Holoinsge.amt oo, foot made, zwey .olche support woods Ar. Aźber and a spanner Riegelrt. dazwi.chen, źnd eben .o another Ver.atzung ins Creuz (which to judge the .chwere.te i.t bey to the whole gerź.te) because if he.t die.er chair Ereu and befe.tiget i.t, the rest of the support woods, Ar, with her clamping strap (whose in everything still around four .eyn mź.. en bey a .ogar gro.. the vault sedtle as the LabV vorge.tellet i.t) slightly erect, and after die.es ge.che also the stutz bands will be o around, each 32 feet long, and al.o of the Chair of the whole Sparrwerck finished i.t, .o it is with the ereching of the rest completely easy to do. To merck. to the following.chlag that die.er stool .olcherge.talterfšder nine woods 64 feet. Afoot, if die.es. and the brooms, gelled over it, and in the supports of a chair befe.tiget. According to the.em now kander BalckeUhi from drey pieces, each .echs and forty o long tos .ammenge.etzet, and on the Spann-Riegers as well as on .a bow-Holtzb.ruhenher after still .echs €acken each from a piece of .echsundforty feet, and one of drey and twenty feeta eated up, and all in the Middle. zu.ammenge.to.. En. Too over-the-bottom ver.icherung with .I the props. Poor do not bend because of their length can von whole .chwachem ge.chnittenem wood zwey hanging bands XY. heyder.eits angeleget and bebefe.tiget with are nails, which to.ammen eight BauHš Make each of drey and twenty feet. According to die.em, the BŠckgen fg will also be Tingumhergelet the remaining arched woods of one of the other five-foot-wide. be judged. Die.es .o makes below beya. drey and ninety woods, each to five-foot to the ring and five and eighty bow-swells each to twenty feet, above bej b. zwey and eighty woods to the ring of five-foot and four and .iebenzgbow woods when die.es al.o bey.ammen .ehet, which .I j .ehr fe.t zu.ammen, will still to several befe.tigung a hanging Werck angget about it. Die.es be.tehe on each ro dio of the geotherm in a hanging column YZ of .echtoes foot a strehe wood ah of and a clamping bar from 23. which enters into the middle .tarcke Spille iq which 3 feet ang, zweyfoot thick.eyn and octagonal .eyn must. But because the Face woods h too long .ind, mź.. still stź§en cd below. BeyY is die.es Werck is now hung with Egg.en. If die.es directed i.t, the Balckenj, and bow woods oder€ng beyh, and other arched woods to.ammengerich. tet and al.o also Do.e €rden, the jaws are all eight each zig Fu§ang der Ring Woosweyundeightundeightpieces five-footed-mouthmŠche.dj the eight .tarcken bow woods still eight and jfig Aej € but the.e balcken in by the hanging columns YZ.chšn are pretty under.tźtzed, i.t j do not overflow. ig that .ie €hein hanging-werck befe.tiget. To do this .ind € the slopes sŠuleng everyei. hoch the spannriegelghjwšlff footangjd€ be-woods forty feet long bad luck, so .ie .I can not bend through the Stźj ges will hold. On the.e Šck and on the bows woods are each Y No. of fivef and drey.. ig foot length laid, and because the fifth ring of four and forty pieces oon Fuj among which still .echsunddrej€ Woods ge.etze are .o the aver finished. The upper.te floor machejej a lot of We.ens, then there will be the eight small cheeks q: to look into the €.. er.t with their bow-wooden v€und with zweyStź§enp and befe.tiget. A Fj made of eight €n .tarck wood is slabd into the jaws, and still with bow-high crushed Lower Al.o we have in all foot. On .tarckem wood the large. e Spindle . We can count hšch.tens funfzig Rthal on Ei.enwerckzuden. Boards for the Be.chlagening gerź.tes I reckon in the means in the scrimp and .eng- Pieces, each five feet long, make drey hundred and aeth, and .o a hundred times over make the whole Summa 37ooo. Foot, to buy every foot and to aufzu.chlagen vorei nen Gr. thut 1 42. Rthal. " . Die.e Boards wolteich all inside by plankex.. e Made Winckel-Ei.en to the Bow woods annaglen la.. en, each board zweymŠhl, so that if the vault is greasy i.t maje bretterjmachen could belong to 298šo nails or 47 large. e hunder make 82; Rthal still goo. Winckel-Ei.en, 66, in front of a thal, thun 34. Thal. ko.tete therefore the whole Machin3 |2; Rthal, which after use on the spot again before yoo. Rthal to sell .tźnde, that therefore the whole rź.tung to the vault more rthal would not be counted as 2006, which everyone will realize that there would be a few co.ten against an .o important werck. V. We now come to handle from the Con.truction of the vault .elb.t, as it is know at be.ten i.t, if you can make it all from hewn stones. But because that.el ten .I agree, I want to make it here of wall stones, although also the between several layers of carved stone billias come .oj as I will show right away. The er.te question however i.t hiebey, whether one can be.ondere wall-stones as vaulted or keyl-stones the i.t, thicker and wider on one side than on the other. Since then, everyone wants to come to the gedancken that there is not jibŽi on an .o small stone .eyn could what he would want to thicker on one side than on the other. Because if I reckon the radium of the vault bite against the stone that. 7 feet and against the .er.tedes Steins, nearth ly 78. . o mź.te in the ratio die.er o of the stone back at thickness i.t, if he is half a foot wide in front, half a foot behind and on the other hand a .ieben and .iebenzig.ten The a half fu.. become thick, which .ieben and .iebenzig.te Theil not to .pźhren that even€Maurer could not take it into care, .ondern just.o easy.dgsbreitere than the .chmŠlere Theil would put a warts. On this, however, the Answer, that there is a .tarcken Me.. come thick, which the stone at one end becomes wider and thicker than at the other which Sub.cheid at the Forme accurat kan are observed, and certainly the stone does not become nothing. If then a clear word is made in the form, which is made on the stone .I with and in the fire the masons cannot errout, and what is inconverged on a stone is evenly appreciated in the quantity that al.o of the steelof the gejes thereby a merckliche wach.en kan. . From below bite to a height of twelvef Ellen, is angelegetased as a united vault .o thick as it suffers the wall from it, as in un.erm example toe feet, and no opening or caves in it made without too zwey or four Wjde stairs, which have little.tens zwey hšch.tens zwey and a half-foot in the Liechtenhaben.j that al.o der gan Durchme. .er the€ mit.amt of the spindle little.ten four footach .j hšch.tens .echs foot amounts When the steps of a .olchen stairs and bent are maligned, kaneinziemlich thicker Egypt beguem by .olche stairs. It mumjjs spjum of the stairs under O.. en danao will not be anchored rather well, .o the wall will not be ring.te by doing so ge.chwŠchet. If the inner pull of the vault is now connected to a radio of and .iebenty foot pulled i.t, and the radius to the Šu.. eren train of the Šu.. ern Gewšl it taken with a .ech.ten theil of inner radii propagei aj 8footang wordwel hes the € a garb even an acceptable prayer, .o i.t the thickness of the beyden vaults, over the twelve Ellenbey the end of the Spiral Staircase, zejejnd half a foot, of which five and a half to the facility of the innerjrejnd half a foot the installation of the Šu.. eren Gewšlbes, .o remains dazw h i.chen einjvjein and a half foot through which, because he is supper ever further, a M€.ch bejuem into the hohe com and on stuffs that earth on the inner vault, to the Lanterne can get up If the inner vault has been still€-€ €, (wobey to take care that each layer-stones er.t joiret before another again) must be emptied anŠ carved Quaj Seine around, €alleeit a few on gewi.. e Aean of the Mittenjjen that one is an egg. Aeginein.tecken and another at a winding Astones carved .eyn mź.. en) out of it jkšnne. In € In Ees as about five-year-old to five-foot edible egg.enjerich where the Rien anon Šu.. vaults come .ollen, drey FujMauren of the inner A vault out bi. to the inner movement of the Šu.. ernjtjch die.em Uwog accurat by Hźlffe expre.. e made bow Ljauch with small A SZFS (o) "ESZSZ" 19 and then a little thinner, little. mauret, so that this is. hee vaults afterwards probably could be connected with it. Zuober.t is die.es vault, where the lanterns arise .oll, with quite .tarcken and well-hewn Square stones, all with.arcken in Bley vergo.. enen brackets to.ammen befe.tiget into a .chšnen wreath ge.chlo.. En. According to the.em i.t € lightly from pre-melted built pillars an arched-gerź.te to the € Gewšl e, Contoren, which against the layers of the square stones that have been laid in the inner vault, the same Kind stones on the same Wei.e with Ei.en ver.ehen digested, .o can ae the against each other out.tehende Ancker with other a.eren rods, or also with oak-wood zu.ammenge become hanger. Finally i.t no that right after the Moors, like .ie with die.em Ge bulge in the heights, follow the Thurm-Decker, and it must be used with bley covers. En. Before I do the.e treatise .chlie.. e I have to go upgegeem Ver.prechen, with little words to show the possibility yet how to do such a big. e Vaulted whole €Bo gen-Gerź.te, and whether it is .chon niemahlenge.chehen i.t, without a stei which are quite accurat zu.ammen .chlie.. i think it is also possible that it is possible to bake stones when .ie be.onders have been made to do so, as I reminded above Have. Because if a shift is just whole ge.chlo.. en i.t, must .ie hold. That's big. .e.te Theilvom vault, however, one can still get through al.o, that the individual stones, if .ie be energised, remain lying. If now the er.te layer below quite accurat after the When it was emptied, one came through the trunks of crooked straightening sheath, which after the arc expre.. e set up .ind, the other layers always on top of each other on moors, if one gets .o up that the stones .chon .o far below .I .tehen that .ie do not lie down, if .ie are emptied with Kalch, .ondern fortrut.chen, now to the pieces the shape of the vault of light woods and boards must be broken down into .olche pieces. , and .o great that on it several layers can be bricked. If now an .olch piece is attached and with supports probably befe.tigeti. mustman it bite at the top of vollmaurenher after a zweytes piece on it .etzen, and .ofort bite the.e layers ge.chlo.. en .ind, which even behende ge.chiehet, if many masons .ind, thatzweyundzwey with their henchmen each a piece€ If the end made i.t, kanman the.e pieces of the bow etc.te take on the following pieces. the final wreath that the lanterns carry .oll enn one close to it, run also the etc., on it masonry works .chon .o jenjŠ§j on the other hand, with sledges and boards, cover them completely and End of the vault de.to can be made. It would be obvious that the mode de.. En .chobgemeldterma.. en Brunnele.chiandergro.. en dome, the aftercoming to andean-socking in Ri.. and exasperation would be over-the-handed. "I can't help but know how far my forehand.chlag oder.elbigen work" would be. But .o .ind by envy and aftermath. igkeit .chon much .chšne Kźn.te lost VI. From several of the um.t. of the vault i.t not much to report without it being possible to the inside in many places go through small round holes .oll, thereby you can ropes .teckenj on it la.. or steagovor €rbeiter, if something is present in the or pussing. On the Šu.. he vaults mź.. eŠgute Par they.erne hacks with enamoured, on which the Thurm-Decker attach their chairs, and at all times withoutŠwhole Dachumher at any time.ichtigen and €parrenmšgj .ter .ind also .ehr nšthig Diman in the room between chen beyden vaults probably .ehen can't be .tehet's au.. en at the top .ehr .chšn wenn .chšne of stone carved roof Fen.ter darangemachet, wo also in the.em pieces the dome St. Peter to Romas an Šu.terju.ehen i.t. But it must be wohiju.ehen that .ie against the Eawohlwah ret .eyn .onderlich if you don't want to list the ober.tanden domes in front, the with .ie with their roof not .o far out.pringen, .ondern as backwarts geneiget. You kan but .olche Fen.ter also because of ho§ round holes through the vault making and j Hol, which is covered with Bley, will be slider-like with the rest of the Bley-Da che wohj.jmenpa.. that one .ie of au.. when .ie to .ind, not at all becomes aware. But I couldn't help but be alittle of the earth, that the edhem of the aege-wšl sometimes only Zimmerwerck made with boards over. or Bley. How to do the same to .ehen to Paris at the domes of the Church Valde Grace and the Sorbonne .ogar the inner vault .o probably as the au.. ere, only al.o made by Schalwerck and gegib.et is made, as just da.elb.t at the churches of quatre N tions and de €.jšn to .ehen i.t, if one is right flei.. ige Auf.icht by clicking on .olchen places and also close to dabey no one has anything to do with a liquor, .o you have .i before Fire danger not easy dabey it mź.ie because the lightning is in it . Similar 7 II -O 'Soo (o) -Doo Unko.ten but er.paret one even a large. it's not just because of errands.' Vault .elb.t, jwjejda§man under a .o light building with jedź€a jkan. That's why I don't just have .odomes in THE u.A. VI, VlI. Aeachj€den.eiten clear Ri.. e of good connection vorge.ee.ondeo €hjšhowerhou.eyn, as here a decent anwei.ung€ jn also about the above mentioned Franzš.i.che Erempelrai.oniret. We € Teut.ch jhjerje.chehen would like that .olche as that built quite arched domes € €jedeer.te €rt, I have the connection of.elben to the dome valdjndjder Sorbonne in beyge.etzten Ri.. en vorge.tellet. OOO9O O -7O O OO IO so. Go But right Particularia I don't know about .agen, because I did not have the domes .elb.t to the.em Ge.pŠrre. have been. Because I . . . was made to come up, and I jejirgend at the French.i.chen always found something that compared to the Teut.chen, even less advanced I would not be a earner sinceido diners au.haltejdern rather after the Teut.che Foundation of the connection an example on a much larger.. ere dome before.tellen, darao € the whole sachthoroughly will learn be.heTab v€g alldaich the inner vault be the dome to St. Peter vorge.tellet and in the ground cracked 6 and the rupture go how.en, how after the French Arenhšlzern roof would have been over it, .tatt of the Šu.. and tweyten .teinern vault. But you don't need to .onderliche Kun.t to put out a .olches Ge.pŠrre if you only need to First of all, beware that the ordonance, Ee a jwo judge la.. E. € vornehm.te i.t, to "beehen" to the fact that one expresses the. bow woods as off. ....Ľ great, as possible i.t. Here I have .ie gFoot up. because oak blocks drey foot in the enesame thick Š€ € alltime drey .olche .tarcke bow woods or € .chwache .chneidejkjšenn I now the vault (as ABCLE has drawn, I have to draw a jaw over it and presently after the height of the arch wood and even more a few feet€blinde paral line draw which show how high the wall is performed over the diameter of the gewšj. On it Aman now lay the bŠckgenonlegen and put on it the anxious to lay around the out .olchen bows-woods zu.ammenge.etzet i.t as the obejchri planes, the al.o in counter-weigh from .echtoes pieces. The kej BŠckgenm n... but will. There under al.o outtheilet that at all times one to lie kšmmjey pieces of the ring too.ao men.to.. en€ nach noch .echs dazwi.chen in gej6jter every piece make all i2, bŠckgen, all also .o far cut out .eyn mź.. that the ring zwey bi. DPey -ESZSZ (o) SZSZ-2. drey Zolltieff indie.elbigen. According to the.em, it is necessary to place on those where the pieces of the ring to.ammen, the stands eP, the Balckenpq.above, and queer about from one .olchen chair to the other place the chair greases r.and connect. Through their Hźf ekanmandie.tarcken bows-woods onthe joints of the pieces of the ring. .ie .owohl as all the other .chwacht bow woods, of which still fivef each zwey Starcken ge.etzet, with nemother rings b. above, too.ammen connect. After in the middle on the vault a ring of .tŠrckem Hol§e s.t. u (.o large as far the Lan terne inside are laid .oll) and in the.elben the .echzehen balk go hoo ij.en and at the same time in the Šu.. ern Ringb: Several hold-ups are also the Stź zen ox. oy unterge.etzet, al.o that also .elbige with the chair-balcken p la la.. en and Who will be. Finally wo bey x. between each pagr balk a change € et, and of which stitch-balts overdie.chwacht bows woods overgeled, .o i.t the źnter.te floor the .es Ge.pŠrres finished. Next are on the inner ring stu, where the balkes are in there.. en .ind .echzehen Stand (as 1.2.3.4.) einge.ee and up again with a .olchen ring (24th) to.ammenge Fa.. et, likewise, a large one. erer with the other concentri.cher ring . 6. lay down on the balks, on it also ethe stand (.7.6 3.Sc.) eats, and at the top with a same. ring7. 3. verfa.. He. But it can be the.e beyde € only .echzehen angular .eyn, šder from .echtoes straight woods to.ammen ge.etzet .eyn, be.iehe Tab. V2 the eighth figure, since the Di.po.ition of the jaws € be.onders in the basic crack vorge.teller i.t. Furthermore, again a chair, be.tehend from the stands 9, 10. and 11 3. the balcks 10, 12. and the chair fats 3. Through their slack, after previously a ring c. made of loud bow Woods be.tehend on the beams have been combed and emptied, the .tarcke . Arc Hšizer c. d. and dazwi.chen all the time four .chwache erected, and with another ring-doper jnen gefa.. t, .o can be emptied after the backend &. In the.e baling will be likeinde under which Wech.el.ezet, and from the.em stitch-balcken over the underneath .tehende .chwache bows wooden laying out. Finally, in the stands that are have been around the center, aso 34. 6.8; 8. more confirmation according to good streer woods and clamping bars are inplaceds, .o i.t the tweyte floor also finished. On this the ringoeterinnen bey the middle of the ring 19. 21. and still a small nerer 5 17 and die.e €ndju.teiner Grš.. e and Formjit den untjerjenen .ie also ju.t. On the inner.ten are the high stands. 23. 7. 24. &c. jwhich the inner theil of the anerne formiren, whose further arrangement I nic€ .chreiben wants to rub, because it is known without all the room leuthen i.t. Around the.e. the other ring, the Stoo 2€2.2c. which continues above with a ring 20.2 Fa.. et and continue with nšth € and Spann-Riegel. End will be in the . er.ten ring ode-bow Hšlzeref einge.etet, and am be.ten obeninj €ng 52 zapffet .o Šuppe roof finished. Before the beginners of the O.t I have to die.es to the be.chlu§ die.er Materieer inside, that the arch-gerź.te under the inner vault is always to a .olchen roof each vault, and thus a large part of the vault. es er.pahren kj " Well i.t still that I am inside and out. .en, ge.chaleten wšlen noch the nšthige Anwei.ung thue, Da.tellet us now the erempel from the dome at the church de l'A. .omption to Paris the common fundas ment vor, after which after that all .olche arches built wor den do§ nemlich aufzw.ySŠulenab. and cd, a balk begelege, and there is the inner - - Arch as between Tangentenju.t einge.chlo.. en€ daman than the rest of the sheet Pen - 22, "ESZFSZ (o) -ESZFS oz the Stu-BŠndereghik and m noch.etzet. On top of the balk be, the Lanterne to € Sonderaufge.etze and with strut woods and spŠ€€Regej oi vorigen be.chrieben. In current Erejj.nojSj€ Strebe woods rs and t u. ver.etzet, because no lantern .ondern just a blo.. it Acroterium on the €ppe .tehet. The woods 23.4. . ind to lay the Bšgejjjer on it. Er.ch but i.t bey die.er Con.truction insgemeindej to de.ideriren that the chairs off. €h.am and dangerous judge .ind andher.ejej .ie Mt.. no further apart from each other, astheres of each other .tehen,which a lot of wood requires. Jn.onderheit, however, is lŠ.. t .i jecj€ bey gro.. En Spikes practicren, dennbey of a dome wochejder F§weit would be mź.ien the Eenuhl columns off and cd, .chon several fifty feet long .eyn, which .chon without a labor.a Enrichten .ei je€man .o € € € als diezu St. Peter, there would certainly be with die.er ššn.truijfej at the mountain .tehen. - Egypt, I have devised a more univeral way, which, although .o much, not .o .tarckes wood requires, according to which one performs the largest € ganz .icher Kan. To an erempe, the dome, .I TŠt Wijejkjš€ of a Ršmi.ch-Catholi.chen Church € €nnwendiger Diameter hundertjdzehen Foot € and have to do so on Tab. V. 3. a Ge.pŠ€Staj§jšr€ P0rge.tellet. -e It's going to be there. elbey after the foundation, like the€ihr stands, Werckins gongchen (in other circumstances, one threshold is truned under the whole building, on it the stand AeolierfŠ.. erwedjej Ą A-ed, and in noisy low floors only by toes, hšch.tens twelve-foot och eingetheilet. "Eraf of the wall around the wall-plates-and bund €Šgen geleget aufdie.e widerum zwey Rinjdie€zu der er.ten etage (nem me and 9yid also goo senn jejejjid F€.. ern ring a bow Hoot entered as a stand.ezet, but because it .I vorwaj neiget, through the tape dg. ge.tźzet opposite is the same o inside. a bow-wood ź'tellet, and because it means a bandes CX held down in the balks continue into the Band.dg.and finally into the stand†€ swallowtails, La.. en i.t, and the.en as a result of which, as a result, is added to The Egg, .o fe.tkeeps that if he still has that AE€€€€ŠŠŠŠzu .ammen hold when ei.erne tapes, as the twelfth figure shows, on it. Soh€ndecome four and three.. ig around, everyone is going to change before .I enug .tehen, because € oee die.esju.ammen.tehej € j Rings gelled on it, as a piece, from which the rings €tHammer gege over the fugues.chLie er.j€ on it woes. But for the arches .I to be quite fully koj formiren, come .owohl inside as € €wey€ebinde still zwey .chwache bow woods, and will also via the.e Balcken. Auf€ Wei.e werdj more .olche floors on top of each other €rj€ because every centrum gayitatis still falls far within .a Ba.is, although one falls to the eronona in the judging before .tarcken €ndenge.cherter jenj €hoo with €unternŠ.. ring of theaeallezeit by bolts zu.am €a€mag. But if all die.e Eigenij Krei§ around ge.cho.. en .ind, connect .I .tŠrcker zu.ammen as never more the .teinern G ewšlber. However, after "hhhgeommen as the inner arc of the Kuj other after the common artjj, the rest of the V. Now i.t left of the lanterns of the Ku a Domes, which are on top of the large. en insj a ppeln to speak the i.t, of the small C----. and certainly not give them little beauty. Since then er.tichjj j the dome ha ben.olen hernachjšnihre €€€che€ - OM of the ie, from which .ie made who to act i.t, of which all of them do not.j€€ The proportion now begging, I have no to be re-me.. en, how even .chwer jaj to come jelegenheit .olche building accurat if you use .chon in .olchen places i.t, since Come, and you also addhnŠufkoj kan. A.I.m. # Me.. and everywhereŠ abey-other buildings." € Kupffer.tźcken, .o of it €ŠŠŠŠ €auch nicht€€€€€€ŠŠŠŠŠ Aman the proportion according to the thickness of UllCI Ml E take the hull .oll. S dome at the top of the vault, barren - €€a no Ubereij€ i'm sure I'm going to make a comparison. "LŽsz (o) "ESZSZ 23 it also by the famous.ten€bev'v. find that the Lanterne at its largest. .e.ten Dametro of the great.. e.ten of the dome hold no more than a fourth, and no less than a .ech.ten theil .oll. When to trust the Maa.en the Kupffer i.t, which I probably keep in .o far from it, .o i.t the little.te Lanterne in Proportion on the dome St. Paul u London, which according to all Appare does not yet hold a .ech.ten theil of the diameter of the dome. € zu €šm I find all that .he less than a quadruple, and more than a fiveft heal, the to Paris, on the other hand, that .he hold less than a fiveft cure, and more than a six-year-old. Their own relationship of the Šu.. diameters against the height is at the Ršmi.chen fa.t Consistently like one against zwey found, which I also find at the sure-hearted crack of the Lanterne on St. Peter's Church, which Bonnani brought in in .a Hi.toriam Vaticani. At the A-grates, on the other hand, I find a large one throughout. ere Ver hŠltni. height against width and fa.t continuous as fivef against zwey. In my Defeinen €undV I have thegrš.. e.ten Diameter of the Lantern against the largest.. e.ten of the dome genomme, as one against four, and A its own height as one against zwey. And like the.e... e an .i the be.ten .ind .o will also be every one mź.. Close .ehen that .ie do not come out badly in the crack, / As far as the history of lanterns is concerned, i.t er.tlichrechtmŠ.. ig that .ie from au.. en an ornamental the domes .ei do not go after and de.because of the front with frey.tehenden sŠulenge zieret.eyn € ob.chon the dome au.. would only be ornamented with wall pillars. What the be.ten examples in Rome bey.timmen are. You mź.. en .I fine ge.chlanck gradually into a tip.ammen pull, although .ie also on other Wei.e can be recomputably fortmet if it is only .o thought out that it would be well and well in the Werck. Al.o I have in the zweyten De.. a lanterneoben with a ball ge.chlo.. en, which .I right.te and well moorish and with thin moors up arched. et However, one has probably been .ehen that€ge.chaffet, that one is without the concealment of the building .icher bite into the above.te theilabi§ in the button under the creuz or flag can come. Because it is billich to the button of the .echzig.te Theil of the whole height of the Ae.te rich of the church bit the button against wieau hšch.te also no more than the funfzig.te Theil has to be taken to do so. Al.o, since the height in the De.. en TŠ5.76 feet€ get under which Maa.o little domes become .eyn, would get the buttonffffbi§fźnff and half a foot to the diamor and .a foot becomes thin.en to little.ten the four-dtei Thei.. oam that he keeps al.o noch over a foot wide, and al.o a Men.ch still to the Nothdurchkommen kan: €haber a ei.erne rod with Spro.. en, where like a ladder on €n. Where now the thread. Šge .o narrow i.t, the rod must be not in the middle, .ondern go through on one side, .o can you come in for a fee. On the dome of St. Peter in Rome, the pole passes right in the middle, and i.t nevertheless Space enough to come up €n the diameter of the ball has eight feet, .ieben inches and the hole by allowing you to eat fa.t drey foot widths in the lim. jźna.. enjbeja§jeLanterne inside just Similar like the ball ganzfrey make your hole in the navel of the ball-vault by thereby from the bottom up to the near of the vault of the Lanterne .ehen, which even jerbare Belu.tigung de. Ge.icht prayer, .onderlich, if the country-eres help with the Colors and with gold wohl I.t, because Architectur and other .tarck sublime work .chicket .I do not dahi, €n, if either in the thickness of the wall, which LanternetrŠget, a gallery close to the navel of the ball vault makes which Fen.ter a jets has so you can look oben eel sides down.ehen also probably to can come when bees work or repariren incidents. Or male also came to make the hole at the dome vault a little narrower, as the Lanterne .e. in lechten i.t, and on the edge of which remains, an egg railing .ej j.her to deal with it There are the Lanternooy domes, which are completely vaulted by stone .ind, billich of Stone-making, because a too .chlechte M€g would be if you were anderanterjeanfan woe to .pahren according to €die Unko.ten has turned to the vault, where, however, a Above an abbe oderjgewšlbe, .ondern Šuter holzwerck at the Ceiling of the dome i.t with me the Lantejejch of wood made but everywhere where only The acreses arrive, with Fey or Kupffer be.chlagen. But Mj doesn't like Fen.ter €nterne to get too much out of the wind. and without .onderable diligencenot gejgwider the weather can be kepttwej But if you want to have Fen.ter, .o you either like horn.tatt of the Gla.es or right .arck Engli.ch don't take biges in Bley, .ondern in wood or even in kupf fer ver.etzen and with good kźtte probably ver.treich F 2 Vol 2, SZSZ" (o) so Szt From the compartment and Liquor the great. En Churches. SS require the church insgemein.onderlich but the Ršmi.ch-Catholi.chen if .ie before a large. e municipality and in volck-rich cities, Great.. e Roofs, it would be preferable to think that the rest of the construction of the Churches .pahrete, so that one leaves .o much left over, than to a kupffer-or little.tens Bley-Dache would be necessary, not to a high roof, as the old ones ver.chwenderi.cher Wei.e, and only recently at the new church in Schwerin, and at a Menni.ten-Church in Frie§landge.chehen i.t, because you can make Kupffer roofs completely flat and with Helffte Kupffer fa.t. The Bley roofs, however, are without any haffte.ten .ind, if .ie as Altanen no matter .ind, so the rain Wa.. he's on it . which does a lot to the Con.ervation of the Bleyes , which, on the other hand, the more the more likely it gets to be full of holes than when it's worms. En Štten. But it must mei.tens beygro.. en Catholi.chen Kirchen das€eigen be.onderDach and with .a Mooren .o high raised € with it in front of the roof over the Ab.eiten Could fall unhindered liecht on the sides, either still under the vault, as it tab. I. have been angelegeted, or through the vault, as it is in the zweyten. En.. en Tab. V. To € i.t. Since i.t now easy to think when the church is covered with Zieglen .oll, that there must be unashed roofs. e, or bš.e inputs and snow-wabcke. To the example Tab I. if the roof over the Ab.eiten had .ollen run towards the Mau he of the ship, it would have been sufficient to A., where would be possible to attach gewe.en Fen.ter to enlightenment of the ship. But if you formire the roof al.o, as it is here € i.t, .o the Winckel B must not only be .ehr wohl., so that the rain A.. it will probably be derived, .ondern one must also the snow with great. he trouble, and not .onderUnko.ten, if you do not want him to make the half summer by remain behind it. Again, if above the ship would have had an ordinary roof of Ordering bricks .ollen, the wall would have been run a bit. en, and the roof would have gone up and Št detwood kuppelver.chimpffet, or the.e would have gone far higher mź.. en angeleget. The French roof but the one I've been thinking about, i.t vorer.t the be.tŠndig.te not because there is no room to a right connection i.t, and the upper A .o .chwach dg's with Kupffer or Bleymź.te. I.t al.o hie with .att.am bewie.en that bey .olchen churches, if .ie in the rest formally and e.. .ollen ab.olute whole with Bley or Kupffer mź.. be covered. And with it I hope that I have all the time to do it. G…ttesdien.t will have been touched deservedly However, so that I may not be able to do anything with will to the fullness of die.er subwei.ung vorbey go la.. e, I want to teach those, .o the construction-kun.t, how .he the net to Q dinirung of the Architectur at .olchen buildings find .ollen jurch the fivefExempla, .o I here. Now I have to find the healing of the column width, then according to the length. In front of the.elbige must be on the all.ten€€€from the ship in the dome on the pastries of order, which inn the Sjfźmher, even the whole church agile from € .oll), or according to the usual type of arcades under € .e .oll. In the er.ten Ca.utheile I enter the whole height of order in drey Theil, .o Sheil of which, with a module, reproduces the mean half-a-die.er if .au.en at the facao to gro§ to .eyn bedźmcket, noc€Vjer Kupplirung nen I drey or if I au.. en low ordnungen braj€odul retraced men, to the erempel, if I wolte au.. en Joni.che Ordjrauchen, inside belongs .I without any time the Corinthi.che, which I now use with an EE. -€ module high without column chair use wolte, .o i.t the height for gModule, gichet half column width 9module. But because the.e.e. EŠŠŠŠthei en lŠ.. et, .o .ezeichieber the Unter.atz zwey module hšheja.. e even get away with it, .o bekom o i here nine of the toe module to the bensŠulen Weitejiceodaseziere beha o will, .o I do.tatt their au.. half mittje Sjen. Wide .ieben module, A kupplation of three modules. Wjchjen Dori.che order ge need , .o I made the.elben , module, .o large-scale interior drey module .ind. The .e .ieben and still darzudrey module can now give half the width of the ship, that I make Jand-Pillar the module out of €€ the Width of the ship from one wall to the other 19th module. Because "SoZSZ" (o) "SZ ?" 2 Willich die.es have further I came again a width of a kupplation of dreyMo dul .etzen, .o but I unterla.. en. , In the thick of the mooring sterminires, which make up the vault of the ship, I have to carry .ollen, which I came to give at least.tenzwey hšch.tens drey module. In that case, I get au.. en shows a .olche corner as a bey.tehende figure a. And inside a .olche abes pillars to celebrate the wall as out of the figure bzuer.ehen. Changing case I get au.. still a kupplirung, and inside, the wall or the side party between the wall pillars will not be as in which he .ten 2 .ondern3 module "se. According to the.em I must enclose the vastness of the Ab.e. .etzen, which in good proportion against her found pillars wide.chehen: Will to Erempel .etzen eight module which I either .elb.t the capelle can apply, or another column width of eight or .echs Module všr die.elbigen next to .etzen. Finally .etze the thickness of the Šu.. wall, which which is equated with the ship. How al.o the vastness comes to the means Lines of columns to make nets from it, according to width al.o: If the.e invoice obracht i.t, .I finds from .elb.t howlargethe width of the square .eyn mź.. e, which is the Domegret. Because if I don't want to make .ie wide, than the per church i.t .o remain źbgasthat I take .iebi§ to the capelles. Because bite on Abb.eiten would even be too small. I.t al.o the page de.. Elbe squares €g module. if one now wants to calculate the Logo, one must apart on the side of the Qua dratsjer dome, apart on the The of the Church, and apart on the theil of the.elben behind of the dome. However, adem einmahl adopted module and after the einmah selected proportion of column widths - The side of the quadcommittee of the pots must be etheletated in front of the center, al.okandawie the middle half columns Of Aesh .ieben module are taken, on it further a kups plierung, because e. € on eight module before Capellen beyder.eits next to the center, €ch€die Wall, which au.. en wiej.oche corner prayer, as above - igur a, Theil €9 Dasfšrderevor.tellCL:... . of the church oder the ship-out must. en er.lich dreyor four bo gen-boys are tobe in front of the capelle, for which the column-width again four-toes Module taken after then again zwey moovor the wall thickness. Wil.man dajorjalle, and to beyden pages. to order thźrme, .ocan be before those eight and before the Pre.prung of the Thźre €ich still ameal taken in front of the wall zwey module werdjnden.chrei Saws PŠjonviertoe Module in front of the towers The rear The €Chor kŠnnj.jeilen thatzwey bow positions of four-toed Modulge.etzer €d on it is pulled with toe module a half-crey§, € 12f Hodul another half-Krejvjdijauer. Al.o i.t the whole length of the getheilet. E-A=== Z jo TFT€TTF 8 37. #T€T Now you draw where the centum of the dome go .oll to straight Winckel lines confusing, make on it four Schachtej Fans module, which wong # Hm 26 SZFS-(c) EIZFS shaft, which be.chlie.. et .etzt nach zuober.t and zu unterbeyder.eits the Maa.. width, and on beyden sides from the middle-line of the dome auftheils the found Maa.. length, and draws the punces creuz-white to .ammen, au.. that one does not pass through the square of the dome, .o one has the mee whereupon the basic crack of the church is easily made out. How to extend the dome nen.ey, i.t above has already been shown. - If you .I have a good way to stay close to the net, and beyder shown Method, one came .I after easily help where you .I no longer bsoden quite exactly will, as I do in the De.. have a abthan. But always .icherer .I bind to it, because one .icher i.t thatonenot error, because one can hardly guard enough from mistakes . deviate from the net. In my De.. a tab. Ill.I have stayed very carefully bey the net that al.o out come. JŽe. width: &#TG-#TEFF Jo.e Šnge #: Why be.onders die.es i.t that the underst wall pillars inside the dome .elb.t the netcoming, because of theASŠźlen -widths taken by eiff Mšdul w0rDelM. The De.. tab. VI. i.t on the dome and the surrounding capelles according to the foundation, which I show above hey healing of the domes. The †ntertheil or the ship i.t apart drawn on the net, and the upper theilšder the choir also be.onders was carried on it. TŠb. Vll. I.t again in.owide after foundation, as the domes have been theilet, that the Crey§, which within the inner.th columns at the€pert in 6. Modulgerhas has been healed that the rafters to calculate the four medium size. e.te Pillar-Wei ten five feuds, the others eight large. e Columns Width each Šn Modulkšmmt and dazwi .chen still eight copyplis of drey module come. The rest big. e Columns .ind on the net with drey and nine modules the Crey§, which passes through the inner.ten small wall columns, i.t behind the middle-puneten of the great. en columns .o drawn that the small columns Weitenju.t wech.elweissdrey and .echs gro.. e, or .echs and twelvef small module-sized, which is calculated from the very foundation that bey shows the domes wor The. The pillars but in the capelles .ind all on their be.ondern shafts of eight toes small modules have been inlet that at all times in the Mijne width of twelvef small Modules and pages to beyden sides a kupplirung kšmmt, middle a W twelvef Das De.. en TabVI. i.t also calculated according to the foundation of the domes that the tend wall columns all toes, and the expanses of theŠ eiler funfze hen module. The Capellen .ind all again be.onderjejede on a square eight toe small or nine large. e module long, and twelve-year-old egro.. e M. widely healed. The big one. e Altar and the Lanterneon the dome jejdiren each other in the Grš. .e and healing accurat, and will hopefully be at the symmetry die.er tweylast 2e ne nothing out.etzen .eyn, which is still be.. he will bea good Effec .elbige if someone is bothered by the effort, and a.o. djon after a big. en and clearjhjhen Maa§-Staab in Aufrriss, Grund-Rij§ and Fj šglichen Accuratezze ofil with all sorts of Acc zeic) From churches before the servants of God.t of the Prote.tanten. BEy die.en mź.. we have very different maxims to the G their Anords and from it their wo? ung deduciren, because die.er of God's diet.t from the€ Gj PŠb.i .chen gar .ehr unter.chieden i.t, and billich unterjoyn .oll. Because the € k) / - "ESZSZ (o) "ESZFS-27 nehm.te, what in it Š i.t the preaching, beydemeallezeit€des Volcks zu.ammen kšmmt, who all like to hear the preacher clearly, .ondern also .ehen because neatly infused seats are nšthig .ind. The other piece of her God dien.t bej in the Amini.tration of the sacraments of baptism and the sacrament, dabey of the er.ten not much Leuthe, namely mei.tens au.. the time of the ordinary Ver.amm lung zu.ammen come, bey the other but a good theil more, and that usually .ten towards the end of the pre-day God.tes. The Lutheri.che still have be.onders the private confession. The third theil of Prote.tanti.chen GOttes-Dien.tes be.tehet in Singen, for this sometimes also artificial oon come, because a be.onder place is required, where an organ .tehen, and the scissors to the vor ingen .i ver.ammlen. In the most common places, be.onder's oyster chairs are also required in front of the Lord.chafft, But as the means .olche churches Abauenfa.t in the generally much less .ind, thanbey the Catholics, also the type of religion .elb.t requires more a purity than splendor, .o i.t first of all by the Architect to .ehen that he at Unko.ten .pahre, .o much without demolition of the Nothdurfft and Beziemenheit geehen. So that we can now make up for the right Wei.ung, I will abtheil the.e treatise in zwey Theile, and in which er.ten gewi.. E Regulators, and he.I from the choir of the Church, to the other, from the Sacri.tey, to the third, from the sermon chair, to the fourth, from the student choir to the fifth, from the men's stuh. to the .ech.ten, from other church chairs, to the .iebenden, from the Bell-Thurm, to the eighth of the figure of the churches: In the other theil I will .chiedene erempel of new inventions. eXamln1U. 1. From the reguls Prote.tanti.cher churches. I. WZon the Lhor. SIS the choir is used alone, theils, that da.elb.t the preachers of the common Ą the SonnŠgliche€nd the Epi.te vorle.en and bey the Lutherans Emi.. e Collecten or prayer tetheils that thejej evening mahempcatches and he to the Lutherans want to go to confession beforehand, jer gemeine abd.ondert before the Confessor, .tuhl and altar or Ti.ch .I can ver.ammen. Sometimes weddings are also weddings da.elb.t, which excludes all operations, which are of all Volckjš ien heard and ge.ehen .eyn, as wohl also not .chij., if the confessional chairs in front of each man's eyes, before hearing but i.t that every .icher enough, aswohbeydenLj theranern .elten something bitingŠniger is answered to the fact that not everyone should. In the old churches € which came from the Pab.tthum to the Lutherans and Re formirte .ind €reinsgemein al.o that the congregations neither quite .ehen still can hear what in uppered pieces da.elb.tvšgehet. Derowegen becomes unum.tš§e from ge.chlo.. that there is a bugoy wannjoyErjuveźng new Prote.tanti.cher €rj the.elbige old Di.po.ition imitiret as if it is manifold.chehen i.t That the Chor oder Šgen kirchen has a holiness, hopefully no one will believe by the Prote.tanten. Since the er.ten Chri.tejbe.ondern with grid ver.chlo.. J Places of the churches the sacrament held, each some€ will probably never be more can be erwie.en, but ate .ie the …€chumeno and Poenitentes have abtrettena. .ejwenn .ie salvation. Last supper hold jo.enwohlwohljch die.er use from the Fuj €lic€der er.ten Kirchr not too erjej Jung The choir al.o to .een oder preacher just against rise.ehet, if he .I of from the Všck, and against the altar€/ €Aberglauben, which not only brought over from the Pab.t thum, .ondern of denjerŠnernjch more€als da.elb.t. Because bite the.e hour .tehe € Regulnoch in Lutheri.cher Architect and Mathema icorum books gone Pab.ti.chen €€.chon Šng.t .I no longer have returned. As a Neu-Dedennoch the €rjodjgjerangelege the church was made to the old Stelleajdjundi.t so that completely .chij to come to .tehen, jt.pšttich An.ehen. As I asked the Ur.achwhy e. hie.. źndjajur Šntwort given because .ie .on.inj .tźnde according to O.ten like churches .ehen .olten .olte a rathgive, how to one wi.. e Church in the countryside, as the church, pulpit and altar aleo were wolped, new ma .o could suggest that more people could get in, because the common .I pretty much Chen ver 2. 28. "SZSZ (o) -3 .vergrš.. Ert. Show how you could win over a hundred seats if you were to win the altar and Pulpina's ship on one of the walls .eete as well as .on.iglesrechtregulierherauskom because it would have been a deen out of it, like the .o I here in the toe-like bele vorge.tellet.) But I don't .agen like hšni.ch those of Adel as Parono and the Pa.tor .oci about that I also learn in the.em Ca.u how deeply die.es listened pro jźdiz still in many hearts .tecke. On the other hand .tehet - Rome fa.t no church after .olchem Fun ladies, not excluded even the Aelte.ten. Al.o .tehet the St. Peter's Church of the Las teranoju.tcontrar. Near the Porta del Popolo .tehenzweyin accurater symmetry built small Churches, and one turns .I of tomorrow something midnight, the other some lunch warts. Another one on the same place turns .I after midnight. In Piazza Na vona, .tehen zwey churches with the faciate grad against each other, and not far from it .tehe Andrea del VŠlle against south we.twarts. In Paris i.t's eben.o be.chaffen, da to the example Val de Grace and S. Jacques, in a Ga.. e the faciates have contrair have each other, indefaratingly other Exempel.chweigen. The Rotonda of Rome, which was built by the Gentiles, .tehet on accurate.ten in the morning. It doesn't have the low foundation either. Because, .o man .I after the temple to Jeru.alemrichten wolte, which could still have the be.ten appearance, .o i.t da.elb.t the entrance towards the morning the choir on the other hand or the All Saints. Evening ge.tanden. Au.. but the.em one has the little.te Enot, as the he.ten Chri .ien in prayer .I would have turned against the rise, to .I of the rise from the height which in a Ju.tinedem martyr.chriebenen BuchefŠl.chlich before one of the Apo.teln einge.etzete Wei.e, since it is rather one of the Heydni.chen Per.ians which the Chronicles in their freyiness, probably in a good use, was use kunten it probably but never more would have been gethan if .ie had thought how it could be a superstition. In the choir.tehet he.t.t. the altar, which the Lutherans just.o, like the Romans.ten" an altar-blat by Architectur, Sculptorey and Mahlerey, though.em united the ornaments and alone on Chri.ium oder on the whole holy threshing, nevermeal but to care for some saints. I don't want to deal with that now, because it's a .chon-enough-treated thing, but it has to be a bit sublime to the Ti.ch.eyn that you over€drey Stuffen. In general, the altar leaves can be found from the wall. the altar Ti.ch attached to the altar-blat. .ecriren of the sacrament turns his back on the common, and if he depletes something, or the sea gene .prechen .oll, .I must turn around. Die.es the Ver.tŠndig.ten aneo also want to have ŠŠ in new churches the Ti.ch of the Blat be.. it. Churches servants dazwi.chen .ehen unda.oaleonones turned forward against the common hunkan Beyden Reformirten is usually Fi.ch.etet. Man kan .olcherge.talt also of the desk overbehave .eyn, which in some churches of a .owohl religion, the Epi.ilen and Evangelia, or the morning-sea gene and other Geberte zule.en, which must be in .olchen churches, where the choir in the altvŠtteri.che way .o far behind, however.ey. In some Lutheri.chen places you can still find.tatt .olcher Pulte small altars, which, however, would be a mistake to build on unbuilt churches, From the Lutheran confessional chairs i.t unnšthig to give a be.ondere anwei.ung, ma.. there was nothing different from others with Fen.tern or€Kirch€ probably one has also begun to decorate .eit image j€here abundantly. It's mź.. en her allezeit .owie .ey als Predigerj Kirche be.tellet .ind, one of the other .o far away.tehen as possible i.t and from the beyden sides of the altar in Symme e, or equal education and ge.a .tehen. But if the number of preachers is unequal, i.t, as one or drey, .o i.t no other means, but thatjoch overflows one. Igen which, for example, the church-vorhern, or. Church ChairDie dn.t someone to a - can, or you have to be able to get one under the altar-blat .o poor. if, according to shortly before, the Ti.ch€€€ € € Š against the Altar źber.etze only arrives in the old-father.chen front-of-the-table choirs. Finally, in the choir, a shrine is required to ateller, and to some Lutheri.places also the altar-lights and jer, although die.e, where .ie still .ind, also in the Sacri.teyp measuring garments onb / to be swept up. Son.t wo If only basins, plates and cups have to be lifted, Š € Stelle on the be.ten under the tar Ti.ch, which is with good locks. ern and others j arfźglich darzu kan an" A be. Where to place the place under the altar€€ € to A beicht Sohhat, kan man .ie even .chicklich to a Sjanturn. You make alsoego time no more be.ondere baptismal stones, .ondjuche basins, which can be neither an et be.agtem place came with pick up, or ujen .auber ge.chnitzten 9. SSZSZ" 29 gel, which is in the middle of the choir in the air .chwebet, and if a baptismact i.t exists, with .a baptismal pool, which he would wear in his hands, gela.. en. On the other hand, the Sacri.ey in the Catholi.chen, and in the ones from the.elbigen to the Prote .irende źberla.. The churches are an arched choir, in which the church servants come zu.am men and wait a little time, that .ie to relive before the common. The device belonging to the church is also removed from there.elb.t allerley, and also tend to come to the Kirchen Vor.teher da.elb.t with the preachers.ammen, if something is to be handled by the church. Hence also an opportunity to heat up da.elb.t to .eyn cares. If Bibliothe obey the churches .ind, Š man .ie also probably go there, or bring to another room above. It .oll billich the entrance to it al.o be .chaffen .eyn that one can either not pass through the church, or yet not Ange.ichts The Davina nenver.ammleren Leuthe. But at present dadie Zu.ammenkźnfte of the churches Vor.teher with the preachers more comfortable in the noble.ten preacher Behau.ung ge.chehen, the amount of the church-O€ no more .o big than before the.em to .eyn cares, and B blštheuen a non-ordinar thing bey the churches.ind, by the way .ehr common.thatthe co lay in a church in enemy.chaft live together with each otherjźnd al.o if .ie in .olchen Sacri.tey enbeyeinander .ind, only the building warm each other, .o keep it vor be.. he in newly created churches, if you make any preacher a be.onderes little church-stźbgen can be done in some places like me in the castle church of Wolffenbźttel, and even .chšn to the confessional-listener. They don't go under eight feet into the fight .eyn, a Fen.ter against the Kirchhoff and one to the church, too in addition to the thźre, which must be made in the church, there is also a so that one can get out and enter without being approached by the community. bey the Cantzel.eyn, and where possible to have stairs to come immediately. Die.es now also give us cause to speak: To the third, from the preaching chair, to deer. convenient use of the main werck arrived. In the Ršmi.ch-Eatholi.chen churches one does anjezodie very little.te Reflection on it, and nurture .ie like to have light-broken cantzels that you can get through little Per.oh nen came to carry on a place and take it away again. which, because the preaching beyih nen .o often do not keep before €met €n inconvenience i.t. €ereydjProje .irenden i.t but nšthig €nbe.tŠnin €ujin €njet will also be used as€he pieces €rnej Bjder Gšswercj also with Mahlereyreco which ornamental savers on the Holy Gei.t on the word G…ttes, on Ge.etz and Evangelium, and .o continue to deduct .ollen. In the old Churches that have kept the prooooo Pab.thum i.t .owohl der Grš.. E than the pillar because of not easy to get a good spot. They .tehen da .o all at one pillars on the side of the ship a little closer to the choir than to the entrance, where is unequally exploited by the hearing and the work of the preacher €. In the Mi jKirchen zu Hamburg .tehet .omitten an at the choir there can be the nearby bey den Hjźmgang of the Church .o .very little hear of the sermon when the preacher nij from ma.. en probably around the around with the voice ver.ehen i.t Djereicht everyj i.t that in new churches one has to "bequeath to that the Canzel of the €y§jer Fźhšrer equal to.ehe and die.e .a open-top chairs get on top of each other chairs mź.. En Dj. the preacher €eben źnd.šusually not a Kirch.uh.eyn from it one could not .itzing and .tehen € €ger .ehen. For it is certainly certain that there is much to be done A.jd much too inner-hearted, if one also .ehe Wie 1 we must start it. e that one gets .olches probably, shows us Tab. XI. Fi gurzwey. Er.tlich .ezeta. O.. er.ten Theil of the church beys from the ground aor man Hšhuf aso and also one on the sermon Stuhlind and pull a je line bj over the.e does not have to go down anything from thejajber to.etzenden choir or Empor-Church. If € 3ordnet i.t, .o .etze at the front bey e. a mannes-Hš jehe by .o €nde Leneder Cane a line.gwelc€t like the chairs on the chorhor mź.. en sublime .eyn, and from g draw back another line to the one about which afollowing choir does not have to go down €.o wźr the in die.em Erempel die Leuhe .ehend inten j Preacher not all quite bit about the Main.ehen can because the oberChor einjig over the €niej herujeher. Same Na.. is fifted through the line, as the steels on the following choir are sublime the mź.. en, the linieh, therefore .don't jweil any more third chorus about it It is built, how easily not drey choirs can be built on top of each other without mistakes, one wants to make the third only .chmal, that not much per.šhnen one after the other jen .ondern aufs hšch.te about drey Reyhen / H 30 "ESZSZ (0) -SZ: To The height of the Predig chair has also been amarriageed, because where it is emptied too high i.t it is not only be.chwerlich to go up before the preachers, among them many fat, .chwerdue, also matte and old Per.onen .ind, .ondern the voice does not fall .o€ because j€Štur more onwarts than downward .teiget that al.o from a low cantzel the Preach probably on the most recent choirs, but not from the high ones down on the - - The low height I pay attention to .eyn .echs foot from the groundOden The Church bite to the floor of the Cantzel, and the large.. ej foot. Finally i.t nšthig, .onderlichingarhohen and gro.. churches that over the Cantzel, .onie drig above the preacher Per.ohn, as it oozed him in front of the choir enduvets .eynkan, a great. he is hung lid, for he keeps the voice down perfectly, that the .tarck speeches the preacher does not become .o be.chwerlich, and all the words de.to be heard more clearly. To the fourth, to put on the student choir probably has not little difficulty, because he is quite big. en space does not require a space that can be Chairs probably came to the other center won't take a side .oll, in to whom the organ there .tehencares, which gives the church a good marriage, and does not probably have nothing on one side .tehen kanwei.mang to the other side, .o one could with it in symmetry .tellen. It also i.t also .very pleasant when he is the common, and .onderlich the Mr.chafft in the Ge.ichte. He couldn't do that. he than above the altar and above the Cantzel lie, but .o for ent.teht andernonveniens that the on it .ind the Pre diger can not .ehen, since the students lead above all .ind that .ie flei.. ig and with Ver.tand the€ hear, and hear but to do so, I would like them to be able to the preacher, and .he him in the ge.ichte .eyen je .t / and he can be off the side. Derowegen ie to little.ten close to him .tehen - g/ remains the be.te place of the Canege - But .o high emptied, that one can not bring any choirs with church chairs: Because the Inconveniens i.t the .chlechte.te. In the castle capelle i.t in the middle of the ceiling a deepness under the roof as a dome-machetallwo the Mu.ic cares which is even acceptable. But in the hunder.ten place finds .I .no A to that, źj magnificent organ would do little parade, ch Son.t i.t not much .onderliches dabey.chrub without the Mu.icrenden, where not all, but all singing voices neatly at€chnej€j F€, so that not only the sound clearly underthe Zuhšjdenfa.ej.ondern also the €šrder Mź.ic Šle can have in his eyes, which is whyjej i.t, when .I .elbe back into a bow warts giebet. Di g .te Figure i.t, the big. en Mu.icali.chen In ie Stairs mź.. en .o rŠumlicchh. To this end, - that one is PP .. En. to do so .trumenta can go where and again sluggish or where .ichs with the opportunity not .chicken woe € an An.talt€€ that one can comfortably raise .ie, and down la.. en could For the fifth, because in many places Fźr.tiche or other high Herr.chafft i.t, in front of which be.onders gro.. e magnificent and comfortable church chairs, as €€ € werden mź. .en, will where €g .eyn that we the.ehen ui.taherjanfźhjcher.I that denbeuoooo listen and to .ehen getjjr. be.ondereThźre and stairs have the Lord.chaft ohne through the coffin the Leuthezźgo: can get in. Thirdly, that the Service Darj Fourth, that .o.oraumlch.eyn, that one may be as in a room darijfjen. To Fifth, that in winter one can warm the marriages. Aej Sjej.enot too high still too low, and finally sevens there § no źber.eyen, thus the Lord.chafftt with walking and poltern inge be.chwere €So about it, To the Sech.ten, from the other Church chairs .ind mercken: Er.tlich the Š of chairs and width of places€€€€€ , asŠ's at the.elben Qrte gewohnet gewe.enj i.t jcht. before wider.eichkeit under the Vog .I find if€in€ other.t make al.o gewohnt .ind. On the other hand, the Stźj.o are made to .o easilyŠronzu.ammejerden. To the drit en more .oll afterwards do not bring as .echs Per.onenjammen, €ch, if the chair.indatalso an unquejwenn the .on .Ľ Emten .tehen vor .owie Leuthen vorbey mź.. en €jchofftmahls not .owie walks in the churches that one of beyd en Sejch - ne, and you even gave a lot of space over it. Daru in the.emChairs come only Case the ChairKšn make something spatial, .o i.t the źnbe In € man in the.em case the S quemlichkeitjen,the goose - between the chairs. en .o weit .eyn that an€€ j€n€ Stuh CEST" (o) EIZSZ-3. Chairs .eyn like, and dazwi.chen still room enough .ey, since zwey per.ohnen can go. A main gear, however, must always be .o wide gela.. that one is in .olennen Proce.. ignen spatially, which requires a little eight feet of width. To the five ten, au.. he the.em gear must also remain .on.t still room, since the common Volck onSchem meln or Hut.chen .itze and are counted four vierdte feet in front of a place. To the .echo when the stairs, thereby you can get to the chairs on the choirs au.. he the room of the church can be angelegetized, i.t es am be.ten, .on.t one must .olche places .uchen, the most uncomfortable.ten to church chairs .ind. For .eebenden, when pillars in a Church .ind, .ollen the corridors after the chairs, .o much .I thun lŠ.. et, be gelled against the pillars, where without however according to the preacher one has no frey.icht. To the eighth, where it is .I.chicken will, you can get the insitated of the Fen.ter also to church chairs employren in by be.ondere Thźrigen au.. go straight from the churchyard, which is most popular te.ten before Per.ohnen from Di.tinction to .eyn. To the .eebenden, a bell Thurm is considered bey .olchen churches nšthig to .eyn, dar on a clock .tehe, and the bells to hang for hours .chlagen and to sound. At some Places you also hold guards on it and set fire pans against all corners so that you can can give a sign when a fire Brun. in the Avs. whichsigns one also extends on top of each other by under.chiedliche €n, and thus whether the fire is in the.elben Kirch game or quarter or in another, or even in the Vor.tadt .ey. But because the.e building .ehr ko.tbar .ind, one does not want more than a Thurmbey a church which, according to nothing, is contrary to symmetry, that only one Thurm on one side .tehe and at the €ndjnjchs. Up front but a Thurman the Facia to .etzen think the mei.ten a .chlechte ornament to .eyn. That's why some people want to maybe be.. he likes when at all four corners of the building only small thuringians to Treps pen built, and hung on each one only one bell, The .chlimme.te i.t .on.t bey die.en buildings, which only the upper theil a benefit brin get, and the lower theil, which co.tet to build on mei.ten, without any other benefit da.tehet, as That you go upstairs €.because it .ehr well, jera.okan to .tehen come that€gehoe Haeder KirchjajŠrjen Pupil-Ehšrbe greiffen kan. You also want Ci.ierej Regen Wa.. he's in it .ammlen, which puts everything in fire danger .ehjajkje …der if he has a place the stźbgen in front of the preachers above a bibliotheque, above the organ jS€o jachtj € , above a bibliotheque, 9 To the eighth, from the figure that one give Prote.tanti.chen churches .oll, i.t yet another nš thige question, which I here after €gen€ Da i.t €known that in the community the trees on the CreoFor.aendŠrjen places the new Lutheri.chen and Fe.j€rchen in gro.. erMogea.jer€ care keeper that Griechi.che uno €i.chejejCreuzes, die.es, on the other hand, the lower ahalfty than jejdejside, which are .eyn mź.. and the obere theooch something cheer €je. €. has. Die.es i.t am convenient.ten to the big ones. pŠbfi.chen Kirchen, that abj i.ter before e be.te figure to the Prote.tirenden churches. keep the Baumei.ter in front of the be.te figure z Whether to Chri.tlichen Kirchen .I do not .chicket the Creuz-Forme.ou, because the prenehm.te sermon of the.elben is about the #€ al.obald clearly in front of the eyes but the jajcher importance that one in the.elben like €Šrckeuj€jmjejejssomething mi.. en, and Mercklich large.. ere Unkoeo.ote, ajojodejenn es gebettau.end other and more convenient opportunities under dj rbaj - pen der recht.chaffenen Chri.ten, the dear Chri.ten with several edits on d and under Hunderttau.end Chri.ten i.tobe Creu§ admit ie Creutz-Forme where to think, as the Creutz-Forme of the churches/ let to a good snim-twitching out of it hardly anyone who sat in a whole life - / . quite et, before the dishonest but, .onderlich the middle and enliven resident Judengieht die.elbeCrej € a zeugni§ € if .ie .ehen, Just don't ostracise a Leyden €enger Ejnšchwoh €€ er and just .ind. Since eren Similar lnen reason take ko Cell-Forms of the Ki ich al.o€Ohledem alleArchitectoni.che Reguln against .ind to rebut 1e of the churches, whose indequalities -The ----ijonia Ki isDa j€ch€er.tlich i.t certain that the figure caeteris p oche beyeinerey Hjerjerckj Rjmegrei.. Et I now have anŠ on it all wings .ety feet long and forty wide .eyn, and the Moors fivefoot thickness, .o i.t the length of the whole wall deuo 2, World Cup 32 "a #SĽ (o) -Doo and .six feet, but the inn of the room i.t on each wing2409.and at the middle square drat 16šo Summa 12šo Vierd foot... But if I had the church right shaft-shaped with even.o much wall-building would be one to the side of the wall a hundred and .echzig Fu hold that al.o the space .elb.t heldez 6oo.fourthed footthat more than double .o much space i.t than in that church. On the other hand, if I wolte build a Creuz church in proportion of the be.chriebenen, and which just.o contained a lot of space, as the.e square church, I must use the .iebendjren, because the Creutz lŠ.. et chin four whole and four half squares, such as ey.tehende figure, in addition to the .iebing Qua drat in the middle € From the .iebenden The I must have the Wurzeiajiehen, .o I have the width the fŽin one-and-a-half-mahlgooo the A the wing in the Liechtengiebet, nly .echzig Fu and something about that I jetzo drive la.. e, to which width and ninety to the length of a wing and al.o fourmeal zwey hundred five and forty, the i.t nine hundred and eighty feet of wall. If I now beyder.eits walls fifty feet high .etze and toi.ire, .o I find the ondie.er Creuz Church 1 34th that at the four and acretoils. The Toile of four and €Rthal. calculated the one wall would lead 27216 , the other 8336 Rthalko.ten that I al.o the blo.. e Creu§es Ge .talt of the church mź.ie pay before 3880 Rthal. So that I now the big. e and bš.e creeping in ge.chweige the a Creutz-gewšlbe verur.achet, and the winds that .I in the winks of the Creuzes .ehr .to.. and make a lot of impossibility, and the occasion that the.e figure prays to the people to carry their unat there, yes, since I even weweige as in the cro.ooo largest.. e.te Difficulty i.t to put on the preaching chair well and to create an impossibility becareful that not .honored many would be un.ichtbar, what bey the Etar ge.chiehet: .o i.t yes above mon.tration alone enough, the Ab.urditŠt , the bey all Baumei.tern .o .ehr popular Creuz Figure Prote.tanti.cher Kirjen in front of all men. Again the round figure has the prei§ in front of all others as far as the room is concerned. Because an .olche church, which as a pre-ge.chri-level square-church Šund .echzig wall would have, according to Archimedis, beg, zwey and €€ en, zwey hundert and five-foot dia meier in the lichten, and 3469. vierded footgo zonhalt andanoch agarmercker more than the square church that .ie but€ not prefer all other figures. a rather neb.t to keep the Creutz figure in front of the .chlimme.ie i.t, verur.achen mei.tens the Un and because also the deficiencies in good hand-skers …enn no Zweiffeli.t, if one the be.ten Handwercker has that the round buildings are not only ko.tbahrere material and bring more finish to ordinary materials, .ondern also have a lot of lang.amere and .chwerere work verur.achen. In order to make me al.oj the comfort of the nern Austheilung, which .ehr great i.t, nothing .age, .o gives what has been remembered before Bedencken jbej the use of thej 10 gives yet, z / If I now fourth the elongated right-corner, since in the middle of one of the long the altar the Beich chairs and the sermon Stuhge.jźrden among the figures of the Prote.tanti.chen Kirchen .before, as the mei.ten also .elb.t je Baumei.tern .o badly, than they probably have bi.her the Creu forms. "Ujallerdjauch a lot of denting dabey because of the space. Because if I have a church majetej foot-width and zwey €€ € .ie bey near .o much wall-to-wall, than above Uebell UNU(NDUMI-RIU rforDern, a Ultnercki Raum, nemlich o2 o. - square-foot contain, (which sub.chied but less space, h .chied yet bey do not wi .o big i.t, as bey the - Creuz Church has been found. But die.es i.t, on the other hand, jenc€ni. .o to inner comfortable healing, and to good roofing .o ge.chickt F as the.e figure € €€der Ri.. e€erholen will be there. not €€ earthaue ronable mutant if .ie the thing in the future die.er figure with me to give preference to all. probably superior in the future die.er Sig Die.er i.t fa.t immediately zu.chŠtzen the figure of the Winckel-iger iemahls - as € to Prote.tanti.chen Kirchen i.t betrac inckel-Hackens, which is even less emah htet wasj with .chlie.. i now also di-e regulations of the.elben, and enter michj ----(ll the submitted De.. one to the same time 9 h with possible.ter kźrze die.elbigen noch Declaration SZ -(o) "GZSZ SZ: ...: 32. SZFS-ES38 3-D-ESZSZ"SZESZ -ZFS -8ŠEZ RE Declaration of the .ieben Deeins of Frofe .tanti.chen churches, which are located in the Figu ren vorge.tellet. I. TAB. IX. Jer I have the above. en un.ers Goldmanns on the creation of a small €-Kirche as the Erem €er Fźr.tlichen Hof-Kirche. At the cleansing of the mammals I have not changed anything but that I make crumpled corners, which a pre- excellent bouncy bey all kinds of buildings, .owith orders to be ornamented .ollen that me Miracle takes why the flei.. ig nach.innenen Goldmannes has not observed. But Dasi.ts that no Men.ch of own krafft also in natural Wi.. en.chafften something to do kan, and no one i.t who would not have received anything .o he would not have received, which teach each one .ote others not too verao €.I do not imagine anything. The Ach of the wall pillars on side .tehet therefore a woolweit from the Ach.e of the front wall pillar and the inside wŠnd columns, .o the Moors become thick enough, the bey Goldmann too thin .ind.Č that .ie carry an ausge.chaheeZee. Sšten .ie but a .teinern vault źnter.tźtzen, .o the saxons of the wall pillars on the side are still being replaced by a module. if a pillar were to be put on the corners, the wall would even make it too thick. The inner healing of the abbey is taken away from Goldmann, that the ship has a en-width less, on the other hand, the choir gets one more. The Šu.. er.te column width of the ship becomes the Church of The Empor or sublime choirs before the Lord.chafft and their nehm.ten Operated davor€ rey.tehende columns with smallŠ.tehen that al.o the freye ship ju.t shaft-shaped come out. The choir with the two besides, that .o hoch as the pillars Stźhl die.e is raised by nine bite-toed feet her, .o can be under beyde €n of the page Confession-Stźbgen, and behind it SŠcri.iey €šder Stźbgen in front of the Poer, under the choir would be a burial Mr.chafftbŠuet. The student choir with a small village that does not go to the parade at all.tźj en could be on one side and the Mio choir with a large one. spinet or wings on the jdern side to come, as bey.tehende Li.te shows with several; A. The Vor.chopff of the church next to the beyder.eits stairs, B. The hall. C. Zwey Capellen or ab.onderte chairs in front of noble families, Uber BC.dreyere choirs in front of the court. Uber die.em all a hall to a bibliothec, D. The Ship E. Chairs in front of a hundred and eighty people: e. Still chairs in front of drey.. ig Per.ohnen, F. Do not have capelles or barred chairs in front of Per.ohnen of Di.tinction, in each chair four to .en ein ein from au.. en by be.ondere Thźrenkšmmet, G. Stairs after the choir. H. The choir, including the Prince.tliche Burial. ?. The altar. K.The Sermon Chair. L. Beicht-Stźbgen. M. Preacher Stźbgen: m, stairs after the confessional. N. Stairs to the student and Mu.ic choir. N. Confessions. O. Preacher Stźbgen. J Checking 34 . . . SZ: (o) -ZFS Let's check die.es De.. en, .o we find above regulations in the mei.tens perfect Observed. For there are the Lord.chafft all the functions of the church-servants.te in sight, yes also the mei.ten per.ohnen in the chairs E- and F-like by width from the punctirites Lines in the bottom crack and height according to the punctirite line in the profile according to the length to .ehen i.t. The preaching chair, however, is completely in everyone's right, and can the preacher is quite wary. which more back-warts from the side .ehen, the mistake did not alone be avoided that in the chairs. Every Reyhe nine pers come to .itzen which all of them must go out and enter through a thźre. as we are only .echs above in the regulations € have apply la.. En. Outlawed, the under.te Reyhe Chairsgan to la.. and shortening the other woe in the chairs F., .o would stay there.elb.t a corridor that you would also get on die.er side of The Enon the chairs, and .olchemnach also the regulators a sufficet.chŠhe. Uber preaching chair in a .o small church no lid. A small thomerate of "F of an hour and quarter bell .amt Clock can be connected into the Ge.pŠrre. "Because the Moors .ind .olches to carryba.ant A Enough. One could the.e church in a for.tlichen Castleauch a.obŠuen that .ie with de.. En buildings beyder.eits bey the stairs hung by galleries so that the Lord.chaft de.to more comfortable would come in: Finally .before it was enough.amen, yes over-the-hope Liecht nowhere not, .ondern it would be the.e church because of its helle be.onders acceptable .eyn. TAB. X. And XI Die.es now set up according to the figure which I explained above before the be.te, like .olches true to .eyn also at current De.. will illuminate. The Healing Is .I al.o: Bey A. . tehet the Altar-Ti.ch on drey Stuffen erho ben, dj€€ro. EjejŠr a Lutheran church .tehet, in which in the center bey B. the preaching chair, and above it a large. e Board to an emoho€ i.t on beyden pages but zwey pictures Blin denzź .ovie statues above Ta.. enz smaller emŠhden about Circu.to Sinn-Pictures, and oberober.t above it small tablets of the denck sayings about die.er pillars Order€ of the student choir, which is available via CD. F. . ieget, o.. er.tes railingouts out, what the Mu.icrende .tehen, and which can be built as in half moon hohausge so that Leuthe may still be there, and the preacher under it .ehen can be admitted.chweigen of the Vortheils, which the Mu.ic therefore ent.tehet, as shown above. The place in the Thurn i.t down through a horn wall right against the Etna of the Thźrg . in € same Theilegetheilet that the one Thuringian wing is a stźbgen D. pre-present.ten preacher. from it he go into .a confessional-stźhjš kan Dźrch the other wings of the Thźre e are taken to the stairs leading to the sermon chair and the further up to the student choir and finally up through the whole Thurm lead to the clock and the bells. Under die.er stairs, there is also a comfortable stźbgen in front of the other preachers, from which he also in .a confession. Chair go kan. Around the stuffing of the altar remains a large. he freyer Pla§ F., who is in front "echsze", on the sides four-toed foot width i.t, and withŠ€€, and before the wedding GŠ.te an be.ezet are Ejie.en Pajerade against the Sermon chair overarching twelve chairs in front of women's zimmjederjonehen Per.ohnen. And behind it, in a ri.alit of the building, are four eels in front of .o much noble families €€€Šjdjchehen Per.ohnen Offices debound j can and can pass through the three thźre and jonj. Ethests au.. en of € Kirchhoff even convenient, to be made. Change place źjen Tjkšmmt one over the . and Uber those can .ie Cavalierjjjjrch in the Lord through to K. and da.elb.jStairs to the tops .chafft chair H. and on Choirs € The other vornehmen hof. Bedientjey Ge.chlechts, which Mr.chaft do not accompany as well as the lower kšnj'reppe M. zu Kundwei ter € the choirs come, whose as from Tabj figure one to .ehen .o many each other .ind, on it bey hundred and funfzig Per.o g des-fee H - Sjkj -.without to Stan At the beyden sides, the chairs N. are now in front of the rest of the women's volck, whose four mahltoto .ind each to eight per.ohnen, to be done by€jwenn you can go in on beyden pages not only from oo, .ondern also jiin, € "ESZSZ (0) SS-3 chet al.o insge.amt from drey hundert and twenty you to those noch in the aisles eighty Kiapp chairs, and eighty hats, without water ingesum in the squares between P. tehen. About the.en .ind zwey sublime choirs, as most clearly.ten from Figure zwey, Ta Xi,on whose every one still twey hundred and eighty, all in all eleven hundred and twenty can be done without a calculated forty folding chairs, which can also be every choir can still find space, and the front chairs are noble Manns-Per .without, whose also four can be on each choir .itzen that al.o zwey and twentyhun dert Per.ohnen in all completelyThere is room in die.er small church and the all-wei te.ten do not come over .eebentig foot far from the Cantzel. enn the whole right Corner PPP. P, which makes up the inner main room of the church i.t only a hundred and twenty feet long, and five and fifty feet wide. But you could get the length on the high.te at a hundred and eighty ono width on five-foot and .iebentzig feet and take in it on fivetau.endfive hundred people, which .chon a very large.. e municipality i.t, which all could be with complete convenience .ehen and to hear .itzen, wel ches.verwerlich in a church built from a bit era, by also creating the new Lutheri.che Church in Am.terdam the Pott, which is nevertheless round largest.. he i.t, and my Wi.. ens all others the glory of the ComfortableLichke it .treitig machet, no longer prae.tiren kan. The choirs €in die.em Pe.ein, if .chon the church a hundred and eighty feet long, and five-foot and .eebenzig foot width is made, no supports or pillars, by .ie by hanging or sprengwerck whole .icher can be connected. It is nemlich be.tehe €bola X. the basic crack) at the front the beyden balk m s and x. z covered with zwey queer wood. zu.ammengefa.. et and into the.e an beyden sides Strebe-Wood Po and dazwi.chen ein € rr, ver.etzer, .o i.t openthat that the.e jaws through the € La.t can not be bent against F. € horizontaliter from warts, so that .ie also "do not give in, is on beyde Balcken .tatt of a railing a same.. connected, as made from figure one, Tab. XI.€ The four downwaitedons on the hanging-worm put balcken tu, which only drey and drey.. ig € lang .ind, can become something .tarck genome men and because .icher gg .eyn that .ie .I will not bend when the …ueer-Balcken, on which the chairs are set up, which are only eight Zoi.arck in the gej Ferdte, will be allied with the.elbigen probably by ei.erne Bš.en. But jdie church a hundred and eighty feet jdachjgbreit would, mź.te queer about in jjitte still one, or even still zwey HŠng-Werck come close bey of the center, orbe.. to speak, a wearing-werck undercut after the fo-hanging-werck, for above Afes to straighten .chicket .I not comfortable by the chairs and .onderlich the entrance into the chairs, thus too.ehr.h. Below, on the other hand, i.t good space for this, because the Backentu, .I am waiting to raise, because one came under enough undered without the ge.ichte of the djnter .itzenden in the gering.ten to prevent and juchouren. You will find more kun.t of it, if you can get him.t to build achoir, but the no more Anwei.ung.de nšthighŠbjer my book of hanging and blasting € recht gele.en and ver.o. Gives me GOD life and crows, .owil I the .oje hšch.t useful and yet her .ogar little in …šnfjejin matter taken in €Format, as die.es Arco Werckgenjamit it to the great. en Goldmanni.chen AJeremit can come, far full.tŠndigerjsand lead and show how ingar a lot of Ca.ibź's it makes it more perfect If you now have the.e€rKirche wohlver.tanden, without further ado, It's clear .eyn that the.ebige of oben-cited regulators are completely in line with.ey. Because in front of the altar i.t room enough all €des G…ttesdien.tes .onderlich bey the Beich Abendmahhaoj€ngehindert ge.chehen. The Preacher, .o the Function ten every body of the eand will turn his back, only the confessional chairs want to lie Bedencken habejarj each other. However, if doubts were given as to whether the bao dazwi.chen genźg.am could prevent the not, can hear the speech in d€, .o came the.e chairs C only as blo.. e Kirch Chairs in front of the preachers gooin against beje Heich chairs in the Einnte of Fen.ter € That the Poor. So here al.o could be made, and the that of the student choir above to be forged al.o, that not a soul in the church .eye, which could not clearlyj Ange.icht .ehen, € .choner and from the Ri.. en ar zuer.jen. If the Lord.chaft chair does not quem under .o much other choirs .chiene, which after all the mei.ten gentlemen, as it in the That nothing i.t, would not even pay attention, .o i.t the stairs bey K. roomy enough make that .ie comfortably come up even can be carried up DŠ§ Jz the 36 okŽs (o) k.?" the church bright enough .ey, and also among the choirs in all the chairs Liecht show Figure zwey, Tabula X. Whether even a few bell-Thurm bey of the church i.t noch he is not a mis-or-deal, but rather a more regulier and good approach. I have only presented here the main facata at the men's chair. Magnificent An.ehen could get a .olche church, the other Faciata bey the Thurn came die.er be maligned and get no less .chšnes marriages. Similar over the church can be quite flat oder still .chšner, on the sides as a mirror vault ab.chah oben but in € Roof, as Figure I. Tabula XI shows with an even light Hanging -Werck ver.ichert, you can a magnificent gegip.ten ceiling with .chšnen See dazwi.chen, who would give the church a glorious marriage. The Roof i.t on the fact that it can be covered with Kupffer, which is here. with .amt the Thurm roof would not come via 4co Rthaler, as die.er whole Church construction in places, since the Bauenteag ko.tbahr i.t, if good Hauge € / € more than 4oooo, Rthal would come to .tehen, which in front of a .olche church not much would be. T AB. XIl, night.t of the previous arrangement of a Prote.tanti.chen church fights me against as reported above, as .chon above, when the convenient.te before just .o comfortably hoh .eyn, if .ie .I reduce to length or width at the same time or beyde at the same time and coarser.. he lie.. e like those. Die.es i.t aimed at a square, .o hundred and .echsten Foot or eight and fusety module inside in liquors within the main wall begrei.. Et and yet the church does not have wider than eight and drey. ig foot in the liechtenangelege will be Can. Ge.etzt nun, I wolte .ie .ezig Footwide come al.obald zwey e. venientia, one that the roof gar .chwer would be good to put on or do which would finally be a big one. it would not be Inconvenie that one should not then could. The other Inconvenien would be the church pass if .I increase the width unavoidably multiplying. Length, therefore in€ Cau the listeners .o am Šu.. er .ien .Š.. over a hundred and dreygo von of the canze, which .chon inconveniently to hear preaching i.t. Because you can hear a men.chen .chon .chwer more than a hundred feet away € Dannenhero lŠ.. t .I, the.e church do not invest well.chmŠhler, as twenty-four and not wider than fifty. It i.t but the.e church inside ge.talt as a wink-hacking, as one for the reason Ri§er.ehet and i.t their arrangement al.o be.chaffen. #gehet dj a freyen Vor.chopf €. and through Hall B (from which you can enter the church through a Thuringian opposite another ThźrindieComer and Zfźhre) under the Thurm by the Thźre C de.. place above four gro.. round Fen.tern is illuminated, from which one further through the Thźren D and E into the church .elb.t kšj€n den Thurm i.t a vierfa stairs, which run around each other in .olcher Qrdnung, one steps down, and by t. c. b. u. d. on the lofted Choj and i.t, that each Stairs to the example st: four feet to the height bring, i.t al.o der er.te Choir, twelve-foot-foot high, bey &. one again steps down under the podes or resting place b u which .chon eight feet high lying and can overoy beyf g in the Š Chor, drit ens, bey y you enter below and can go through joaboy.i in the lowerchormm. From the erth staircase wgnvo goes through abit into the er.ten choir above the Lord Choir esou but da der Ruhe Pa? .chmŠh.er, on the other hand, more stuffing worden, al.o you can oder €ro from fg continue via oa to the top choir mm, and from the fourth stairs, as you start beya below, you can go over hirtcbu beyde in the obern Chor " as well as in the er.te Ge.cho§ about the room Yound Z. and.o. Now to the inner Eintheiljgjr. jhe to come, .o i.t now the € G, € des Chores H. zwey Beicht-€I, der€r€Predigt tuhl, K. K. but .ind zwey kleine Stźbgen before the preachers, whose every e.a. stairs to get to the Canel. The Sj can bey Mwang below Rephen even roomy comband and just.o as bey N. jer PŠdazu acht and .ie eng Foot long, each eye on ramog give vojehen€ .en al.o un chairs a hundred and .echs per.ohnen. AjfjerhŠbenen choir can .eyn € reihenSoho each EŠnchen Per.ohjen moto.omen. odert and twenty per.ohnen, without entering the aisles on the square G. . itcants can and in the insinu, .o in and above the Lord.chafft-Chor R that al.o completely .echstoes €"bote" 9 The it Doo" (o) 1:3-37 The Puncted line m n. zeigetan that all those within the .elben .zen, from the side M. not to N. and again from N. not to M. . that al.o the.e figure is a fun ladies git to build a church, because husband and woman-volck do not marry each other at all Can. The Puncted Lines, and nI, on the other hand, indicate how the Lord.chafft-Chorden beyden choirs mm, and nn. nothing in the mind .tehe, that not all could frey the preacher L)M. Rooms Y. and Z. in drey Ge.cho.. on top of each other can be used for the most benefit after the .eh place opportunity, even with scheid walls to be further removed. To Erempel, kšnten .ie an an.ehnliche Publique Bibliothec logiren. One of the be.ten Vortheile bey die.er Di.po.ition i.t that one is to the bell-thurn .owohl and a mercklichedabeyer.pahrenkan, not only because a large. er Theilupalle €rchitektoni.che Zierrathen will be er.pahret, .o further nenlich within the building .tehet, .ondern also because he will be a little kan thinner of mauerwerckangelee, than if he frey with drey pages. Die.en in the De.. i have .ogar .chwach on Mauerwerck, because I .upponire that the theil of the Thurm above the GŠ lerie only built by wood also the Architectoni.che ornamental sonons on it, and au.. en whole, inside but .oweit, as the rain and snow can come along, with Kupffer be.chlagen .ey. The column position i.t according to the .chšn.ten proportion is ethered by .I Columns widths with a kupplation, or with drey module dividiren la.. En. TAB. XIII. Die.er crack.tellet an inside and au.. en full-fourth church in front, with columns and wall pillars plentifully decorated, which also quite according to Goldmann's Meho on the net heals .ind. Then ob.chon the inner frey.ingden columns at the rounding not quite on the durch.chnitte of the ar-strokes are to be carried out by the pillars, as it bey of the healing on Netzge.chehen must, i.t die.es since taken care that the.elbige with the Šu.. Ern come to a line on the side, as the Punced lines indicate, au.. he the pillars one and zwey, which can come even noooo No, because .ie alone inside same expanse of each other .tehen .olten. When .I practice the learners at the.em €pe want to dry .ie just reuonien to straight winks pull through their paper and j all four sides beydere €stragenModul .echs drey eight eight-ones šrey drej one, and the lines Creuz-white mess jehen, which become through the middles of the pillars j pillars through and through €, on it easily a De.. a willE .eyn, the at present even similar and still be.. he comes out. Because the healing j jNetworks has the largest. en Vorthe an .Ich, that not only reason for j€. given the same conditions, .ondern also safety from great. errors, as I .chon above, and here again to remember, because I know that all j n' the dann will believe the Šr and .i the.e method of the Archite&źr djh flei.. ubung quite common € a.. en .ie infallible a .onder's lightness j Volkommenity of the changes have been for this reason still zwey reason Similar.. e on a not much large.. er Q€rat in fb Xii. 5. € to the beginners j Exercise Onri.. e and them. Your statement .oll below .ogej Ajder €źstheilung on Tab.X.A. I.t now the following stilljeken. It has the.e church .ieben eingŠng, drey spatial among the ri.aliten of the frey.tehenden Columns A, B. and C. and four € in the four thźrmgen D.E. F. and G. The drey gro.. En .ind with drey round hš€Schirmen, which not only serve €Lejejunfriendly €tterverhźźetkojen .I can make € right before .ie enter into the church, .ondern also to the fact that the crooks of the aisles jicht fall into the ge.icht. "The altar Ti.ch i.o€anel is designated by I., the beyde confessional and preacher Chairs with a cannofe lead to the Cantzel, under whose resting place still a comb i.t, since one is changing church devicehjufhebe. €und Nj Kirch Stźgen in front of the Herr.chaft and other Pyongyang, can quadruple above each other.eyn, and conveys the stairs Fjš€hren be.ondern entrance have -Diefrey.tehenden column €not only to underload the ceiling above the church.tźtzen with .ie none large. en Hanging Wochenšthget .ey, which also the walls fromjej .chwach .eyn would like to .ondern also that of choirs or Empor churches weigh. Ge 38 osŽ€S3 (0) 8 Ooo can be done. How to put on the church chairs below .eyen shows the GrundR since one can also .ehen, as the corridors between chairsju.t a room behind the juices because without it no one could marry the preacher on the Cantel. At the top of the Choirs, on the other hand, mź.. en .olche corridors behind the pillars one, zwey, drey and four come and the room between them are completely witty chairs are excluded, that on the upper choir the organ and the students would get the place between the pillars drey and four one. Uber's four spiral stairs can be in front of the bells, and in front of the clock four small thuringians on A, which did not co.p. much, than a few right-right thurn, but all would give the convenience and more ornament. Fig: 1. TAB. XIII. B. i.t now an imitation according to die.er Di.po.ition, the four thźrme but .ind weggela.. and a .olche healing made that the pillars are vast from the Mie aU§€ drey, nine, nine, nine and dvey module, but the inner pillars come right lines of the network, and .ind all twelve-f module of each other only the Reyhe one, zwey remain on the waiting lines, but over the Queer line that drops the pillars drey four too.ammenslopes, from which also .oge. a mistake. €" is, and because of other great. he Vortheile, the.e Healing- ent. Son.t i.t die.es De.. that .o a lot of chairs, as possible, attached and i.t to provide the aust healing al.o, A. i.t the altar, and above it the cane; bey a the communicators walk around behind the altar, and come beyb.back. B and C. . ind confessional chairs also show the preachers at whom the turn to preach not i.t, during church-dien.tes .itzen. D. i.t the hall, where mean leuthe on guard. .itzen. E. the zwey main gears, in which each still on both sides folding-stimint and dazwi.chen zwey € .tehen. The chairs djwi.chen mź.. en al.o prepared .eyn that one can easily take .ie apart, and bey G. and H. to the side .chlichten on .olenne Pšceon the church .oll. .ind Kirchen-Thź if, for example, an H. and dabey€ daman on the sublime choir skšmmt, where the chairs and corridors chairs can be more indented than below above D. kan in the above-octane choir Organ and the student choir €. If you have a Lord.chafft Stahnoog had, mź.. e he built in the under the choir under the Qrgel on the square above D. who The. But then mź.. e one at the Kirch-Thźr below another šrdonance of the ar chitectur and a vor.chopffmachen, and in it a staircase after the Lord's choir anle organ, however, well, that jdem Herum-Lauffendar the ground under the j the Gering.te Be.chwer would have. that ma H But because bey die.er-fourth figure of the churches the pillars, on top of them the sublime choirs and zuober.t the ceiling.tuses .ind, somewhat uncomfortable€the question i.t, whether one .ie can't get away with it. en .o I put on it to the Antjwar under the ceiling a Stźzenšhg has, .ondern, if only the wall-werkujStŠrcke has enough, the De EpŠŠcher append to the Ge.pŠrre-objš.. and with Bley or Kup n da fer covered €hźrmge.etzen. But to make the Empor-€rchje props, bey of a church that holds more than five and a half feet, does not like h: BecauseAsoero which could become .ieohneSjger € the low railing must be vereckett, .o fall the Šrgegen the large. length even to .chwach. But if I had only the four little ones of Ae, .o I would Have drawn €szwey dreypier in the other figure, the ever I mediat.t the slopes Throw double choirs on top of each other j put on that each man can be comfortable .oen .tehen. As in alltheŠrje quantity Leutheoo Church to.ammen go, and yet anyone with the Rš.e.ten convenience than him. E long would like to inhabit the Godsdien.t can be ----riPne. Di -allevie --. - Maincourses twelvef the small aislesfour fivef and a half of row chairs and B. find in every hundred and eight-eighth djn every hundred and A fifty, bey E. and o in every hundred and forty, €€ G.€every hundred and nine-toe per.no place that al.o eilffhundertj ninety per.without in the omrdentlichen, chairs on the earth .itzen, in addition drey hundred four wo funfzig €Stźhle €nd zwey and ninetyjjen Por-Kirchen will Ames only .echszehen hundert men.chen reckon, Aej who no longer €as €undert and twenty-eight feet with €e.ee and beo €nAtar on all sides .echsundzwanj€jon can also come no aes. Ehabe in my Eenothing of the€ Eundes, the new Lutheri.che church in Regenje.j§ to remember me that .ie .very big, and yet no pillar in itj€€wjRaum How four was that I therefore now .icher .chlie.. en kan, it .ey one of the be.ten Mei.ter pieces in the whole Teut.chland. Who has now die.es lie.et and married that church with Ver.tand be., or will be able to compare. I hope to be de.. a .oll nothing after him To give. TAB. XIV. Here I have felt. a Creuz Church, .o would be good as possible to expand, and half fa.iata neb.t half profile, .amt a whole basic crack of it. In the.em testify to the zwey punced lines, which Leuthe does not to the altar Arecht .ehen, and which can't go at all. In the profile .marriage, because no tweyter choir on the Page M. konte, the one is made over the whole place, and since the leuthe the Preachers .ehen could, as there to the symmetry with the above choirs bey N. and O. which can go all over the place, only a corridor a row a row of Per.ohnen P. and behind it still a choir Q has been angelegeed in front of four Reyhen corpses, which according to Anwei.ung of the Punctized Li under the chorus towards the preacher . That by B and C confession Chairs indicated by your small comb to preserve the church equipment each jetzo .chon will be able to be used by .elb.t. In which four small thźrmen .ind still fivef Ge.cho§ on top of each other, turning in the G. L. and before Herr.chafften and other di.tingurte Families can give church chairs, namely bey I. and L with the commodity thatbey H. and K. the chairs in front of the Lord.chafftenapa, and au.. en still room in front of their Dome.tiguen .eyn, which through the Fen.ter beyder.eits in the church .ehen, the fourth Thurm E. but could before the lords Gei.tliche just that the Ge.cho§ Rzur Canzel, which underneath to a Stźbgen in front of the Lords Preacher, the rest of Ge.cho.. e about it in front of small bibliothequents, as well as over the stairs da.elb.t the Pa.. age to the considerable student choir S., which All over the place, die.er a .chšne height of .echs and drey.. ig Footretains that the choirs are all made by hanging-werck al.o, that .ie no support, ver.tehe .i of .elb.ten, and do not need it a big one. e Kun.t. To Schwerin I have in the new church, (for which I oppose the splinter judges my Bedencken of the creation of small Prote.tanti.cher churches must give out. how I for always with apologists against veriumder have .euffzen mź.. that i don't care about any other Ur.ache with gro.. en Hau.. en .pinnen.eid .ind because I don't la.. en kan, Betriegereyenbey of all opportunity to discover) to the vastness of eight and drey.. ig foot .olche choirs with all .chwacht HŠng-Werckgebiet, which beyzweyhjder and € Per.ohnen .icher on and can record. .o j€hjeljijźten stalls, TA B. XV. I don't want much of that, because I don't think that a .olche figure ever to a church will be elected. €ch .ie only made to show that a .olche figure not unun.chickt .ey to set up a maniful and comfortable church, and to give the learners something to do, because it would even help you to get a rip-off of it. Against a corner too, item, a profile and a dachwerck draw .oll, for which their nwei.er .chon continue to be wi.. to go to the hand. Be.chlu§. "Nda I have ahat, who has skinned me from church with possible sincerity and hopefully nug with it if it is not .chon in previous fonts I would have liked to use the Pratiquen for the reason (because I ate the construction patiques probably ver.tehe and to shame on assets i.t many more well known than they love i.t. I dancke the dear GOD that I have been incapable of doing so that no one will easily entrust me with a building, because I want to take honour with me, and give me a little bit. He showed before that I paid all the honor die.er world before Koth and Dirt. Among all the buildings I would without the little.te Lu.t have magnificent Kir because in the commons, where .olche€am magnificent.ten .ehen the abomination of the desolation on mei.ten to .tehen, and the temples of the Holy Gei.tes on .elten.ten or wź.te.ten to .eyn care, E ND E.