Page:Character of Renaissance Architecture.djvu/48

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ARCHITECTURE OF THE RENAISSANCE
chap.

and if it exists, it must be embedded in the masonry of the vault, like the chains at the base.

It will thus be seen that while Brunelleschi's scheme is essentially different from that of the Baptistery, its structural system is little more than an ingenious modification of it. The parts of the one answer to those of the other with singular completeness. The attic wall and pyramidal roof of San Giovanni are transformed into the external shell of the cathedral dome, the angle buttresses of the older monument become the great angle ribs of Brunelleschi's vault. The intermediate abutments of the Baptistery are changed into the intermediate ribs of the great dome, and the inclined barrel vaults of the Baptistery scheme are represented in the cathedral dome by the arches sprung between the great angle ribs.

It has been thought by some writers that the rib system of the dome of Florence gives the structure a somewhat Gothic character, and it is sometimes called a Gothic dome.[1] But there can be no such thing as a Gothic dome. It is impossible for a dome of any kind to have the character of a Gothic vault. The difference between the two is fundamental. A Gothic vault is a vault of concentrated thrusts, and it requires effective concentrated abutments. A dome is a vault of continuous thrust, and for sound construction it requires continuous abutments, as in the Pantheon. Whatever use the ribs of Brunelleschi's vault may have, they do not, and cannot, perform the function of the ribs in Gothic vaulting. Their use is to strengthen the angles of the dome, and to augment its power of resistance to the weight of the lantern which crowns it. They do not support the vault as the ribs of a Gothic vault do. Being composed of very deep voussoirs, they have more strength to withstand thrusts, as well as to bear crushing weight, than the enclosing shells have, and thus to some extent they may hold these shells in. But it appears plain that the architect did not feel confidence in their power to perform this function without reenforcement by a chain, or chains, which, in his own words, "bind the ribs and hold the vault in" (che leghino i detti sproni e cingano la volta dentro). However this

  1. This idea finds expression in the latest work that I have seen on the subject: Die Kuppel des Domes Santa Maria del Fiore zu Florence. Von Paul Wenz, Berlin, 1901, p. 52; also in Durm, Die Baukunst der Renaissance in Italien, p. 406.