Page:Vitruvius the Ten Books on Architecture.djvu/224

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186
VIRTUVIUS
[Book VI

not very wide, with stables on one side and doorkeepers' rooms on the other, and shut off by doors at the inner end. This place be­tween the two doors is termed in Greek θυρωρεῖον. From it one enters the peristyle. This peristyle has colonnades on three sides, and on the side facing the south it has two antae, a considerable distance apart, carrying an archi­trave, with a recess for a distance one third less than the space be­tween the antae. This space is called by some writers "prostas," by others "pastas."


PLAN OF VITRUVIUS' GREEK HOUSE ACCORDING TO BECKER

2. Hereabouts, towards the in­ner side, are the large rooms in which mistresses of houses sit with their wool-spinners. To the right and left of the prostas there are chambers, one of which is called the "thalamos," the other the "amphithalamos." All round the colonnades are dining rooms for everyday use, chambers, and rooms for the slaves. This part of the house is termed "gynae­conitis."

3. In connexion with these there are ampler sets of apartments with more sumptuous peristyles, surrounded by four colonnades of equal height, or else the one which faces the south has higher columns than the others. A peristyle that has one such higher colonnade is called a Rhodian peristyle. Such apartments have fine entrance courts with imposing front doors of their own; the colonnades of the peristyles are decorated with polished stucco in relief and plain, and with coffered ceilings of woodwork; off the colonnades that face the north they have Cyzicene dining rooms and picture galleries; to the east, libraries; exedrae to the