Vitruvian module

A module (Latin modulus, a measure) is a term that was in use among Roman architects, corresponding to the semidiameter of the column at its base. The term was first set forth by Vitruvius (book iv.3), and was employed by architects in the Italian Renaissance to determine the relative proportions of the various parts of the Classical orders. The module was divided by the 16th century theorists into thirty parts, called minutes, allowing for much greater precision than was thought necessary by Vitruvius, whose subdivision was usually six parts.

Doric order illustration in Isaac Ware, The Four Books of Andrea Palladio's Architecture, London 1738

When illustrating Palladio, the British architect Isaac Ware (The Four Books of Andrea Palladio's Architecture, London 1738; illustration, right) laid out the Doric order as an exercise in modular construction. The module he selected was a full column diameter taken at the base. He set his columns, 15 modules tall, at an intercolumniation of 5½ modules. His architrave and frieze, without the cornice, is equal to one module.

The tendency in Beaux-Arts architectural training was similarly to adopt the whole columnar diameter as the module when determining the height of the column or entablature or any of their subdivisions.

Thus module can be extended to mean more generally a unitary part that gives the measuring unit for the whole. In education, for example, lessons may be divided into modules.

Notes

    gollark: So, *in theory*, if you edit the string metatable correctly, you can trick path resolution into redirecting your FS access to actually be outside the `/potatOS/` folder.
    gollark: Yes.
    gollark: Those can be edited via the string metatable.
    gollark: The sandbox's path resolution relies on a few string operations.
    gollark: Anyway. The string metatable is global, and can be set inside the sandbox, yes?

    References

    • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Module" . Encyclopædia Britannica. 18 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 643.
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