The Ten Books on Architecture, 4.2.3

Vitruvius  translated by Morris Hicky Morgan

« Vitr. 4.2 | Vitr. 4.2 | Vitr. 4.3 | About This Work »

3Later, others in other buildings allowed the projecting principal rafters to run out till they were flush with the triglyphs, and then formed their projections into simae. From that practice, like the triglyphs from the arrangement of the tie-beams, the system of mutules under the coronae was devised from the projections of the principal rafters. Hence generally, in buildings of stone and marble, the mutules are carved with a downward slant, in imitation of the principal rafters. For these necessarily have a slanting and projecting position to let the water drip down. The scheme of triglyphs and mutules in Doric buildings was, therefore, the imitative device that I have described.

« Vitr. 4.2 | Vitr. 4.2 | Vitr. 4.3 | About This Work »