INDEX TO ARCHITECTURE, v 
Halicarnassus, description of the mausoleum at,48. | London, St. Paul’s church i in, 198, 199 ; 
Halle, the new prison at, 217. 
Halls, or stow, of the ancients, 32 ; description 
of various modern, 215-217. 
Heliogabalus, temple of, 92. 
Heliopolis or Baalbec, description of the ruins at, 
55, 56. 
Hercules, temple of, at Cori, 73, 74. 
Herme, or simple monuments, 30. 
Hermonthis, ruins at, 8. 
Hess, Henry, 197. 
Hindoo architecture, leading features of, 1 ; five 
periods of, 2; description of several temples, 
2-4. 
Horatii and Curiatii, tomb of the, at Rome, 67. 
Hiiltz, John, of Cologne, 162. 
Huts, structure of primitive, 22. 
Hypogea, at Thebes, 10. 
Inclosures, sacred, or cromlechs, 114. 
Indian style of architecture, the modern, 146. 
Indra Sabah, the temple of, 1, 2. 
Ingeram, a German architect, 169. 
Tonic column, the, 25, 28 ; doors, 29 ; architrave, 
frieze, and cornice, ib. 
Tonic order, the, first introduction of, 53 ; principal 
features of, 101. 
Isis, temple of, at Pompeii, 80. 
Ispahan, the Antler tower at, 146 ; the Almeidan, 
217; the bridge of Barbaruk at, 220. 
Italy, introduction of Grecian architecture into, 
50, 58; ruins at Pestum, 50, 51; in the island 
of Sicily, 51, 52; few traces left of the oldest 
edifices of Central Italy, 58; ruins in upper, 
74; buildings of the Renaissance in, 174-178 ; 
description of several modern churches and 
chapels in, 182-191 ; castles and palaces, 201-— 
204 ; bridges in, 217, 218. 
Ivara, Filippo, 190. 
Janus, temple of, at Rome, 61; a small one 
erected by Domitian, 82. 
Jerusalem, various churches in the Byzantine style 
at, 133. 
John of Cologne, 172. 
Juno, temple of, at Agrigentum, 51. 
Rome. 
Jupiter, temple of, at Athens, 39.40; at Aégina, 
45; in Argolis and Olympia, 46 ; at Selinuntie, 
52; of Jupiter or Baal at Baalbec, 55, 56. 
And see Rome and Temples. 
And see 
Kailasa, the temple of, 2, 3. 
Karvati, the ancient Mycene, 33. 
Klenze, Leo v., 196, 198, 215. 
Kosen, the bridge of, 219. 
Laeken, the pleasure palace of, near Brussels, 
207. 
Lantern, the, of Demosthenes, at Athens, 40, 41. 
Laodicea, ruins of the theatre at, 26. 
Latin, the, or Romanesque style, 124. 
Latopolis, temples at, 8. 
Lazzari, Bramante, 184. 
Lemercier, a French architect, 192, 205. 
Lescot, Francis, 204. 
Liége, the Casino at, 212. 
Ligorio, Pirro, 186. 
Lippi, Alessandro, 202. 
Loemariaquer, dolmen at, 109. 
Log houses, origin of, 22. 
Lombardic style of architecture, the, 142. 
the Ex- 
change, 211; Newgate prison, 917; Waterloo 
bridge, 219. 
Lorsch, the abbey of, 140. 
Luxor, the palace of, 11. 
Madonna degli Angeli alle Certosa, the church 
of, formed from the great circular hall of the 
Baths of Diocletian, 94, 95. 
Maestricht, the city hall at, 209. 
Magdeburg, the cathedral of, 165, 166. 
Magnesia, temple of Diana at, 49. 
Maison Quarrée, the, at Nismes, 74. 
Manchester, the collegiate church at, 173. 
Mansard, Hardouin, 192. 
Mantua, the church of San Andrea, in 183. 
Marcellus, the theatre of, at Rome, 69. 
Marchiano, architect of the church of St. Cyria- 
cus in Ancona, 171. 
Maria della Minerva, the church of, at Assisi, 
formerly the temple of Minerva, 74. 
Marius, the arch of, at Arausio, 83; the fountain 
of, at Rome, 204. 
Markets, the, at Rome, 63 ; various modern, 215- 
ALT: 
Mars, temple of, erected by Augustus at Rome, 
70. 
Marseilles, the Fish hall at, 216. 
Martino Lombardo, a Venetian architect, 175. 
Masonry, various kinds of, among the ancients, 
24. 
Masuniah, the rock-cut tombs of, 7, 8. 
Mausoleum, the, of Osiris, 5; of Osymandias, 9, 
10; of Cyrus at Pasargada, 21; ancient mau- 
soleums in general, 32; erected by Artemisia at 
Halicarnassus, 48; of Augustus, 69; of Ha- 
drian, 86, 87 ; of Theodorie at Ravenna, 141 ; 
of Ibrahim Adil Shah at Bedjapur, 146. 
Mavalipuram, the temples at, 3. 
Media, the architecture of, 19. 
Melrose Abbey, 174. 
Memnonium, the, 9. 
Memphis, description of the large pyramid of, 17, 
18. 
Men-hir or men-sash, the simplest form of Celtic 
monument, 107, 108. 
Menai Straits, tubular bridge over the, 219. 
Merchant’s table, the, a Celtic monument, 108, 
109. 
Mercury, sanctuaries of, a name given to certain 
Celtic monuments, 109. 
Mexico, condition of, at the time of the conquest 
by the Spaniards, 119 ; remains at Teotihuacan 
and Papantla, 119, 120; pyramid of Cholula, 
120; temple at Xochicalee, ib.; ruins at 
Tlaseala, 120, 121. 
Michael Angelo Buonarotti, 185. 
Michelozzi, an Italian architect, 178. 
Milan, the cathedral of, 169, 170. 
Miletus, description of the temple of Apollo near, 
48. 
Minerva, temples dedicated to, at Athens, 43: 
temple of, at Priene, 48; at Syracuse, 51; at 
Assisi, 74; at Rome, by Domitian, 82. 
Minster, the, of Freyburg in Baden, 160, 161; of 
Strasburg, 161, 162; of York, 172, 173. 
Module, the, or modulus of an order, method of 
finding, 98, 99. 
Merris, the first builder of pyramids, 17. 
Mont St. Michel, 113. 
Monuments, the simplest kind of, 30 ; honorary, 
32; sepulchral at Rome, 67; Celtic, aceount 
749 
