[6]. ‘Denkmäler der Kunst des Mittelalters in Unter Italien,’ by H. W. Schulz. Dresden, 1860. Quarto. Atlas, folio.

[7]. ‘Syrie Centrale,’ by Count M. De Vogüé. Paris.

[8]. ‘Byzantine Architecture,’ by Chev. Texier. London, 1864.

[9]. ‘Mission to the Court of Ava in 1855,’ by Colonel Yule. 4to. London, 1858.

[10]. ‘Travels in Siam and Cambodia,’ by Henri Mouhot. London: John Murray. 1864.

[11]. The number of illustrations in the chapters of the Handbook comprised in this first volume of the History was 441. They now stand at 536 (1874); and in the second volume the ratio of increase will probably be even greater.

[12]. It may be suggested that the glory of a French clerestory filled with stained glass made up for all these defects, and it may be true that it did so; but in that case the architecture was sacrificed to the sister art of painting, and is not the less bad in itself because it enabled that art to display its charms with so much brilliancy.

[13]. The numbers in the table must be taken only as approximative, except 2, 4, 6, and 7, which are borrowed from Gwilt’s ‘Public Buildings of London.’

[14]. The Isis-headed or Typhonian capitals cannot be quoted as an exception to this rule: they are affixes, and never appear to be doing the work of the pillar.

[15]. See woodcuts further on.