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Rh HERODOTUS. INDEX. JERUSALEM. 607 erected by him, i, 230. His tomb, 356. See ii, 433, 494. Herodotus on the tmnulus of Alyattes, i, 221. Hierapolis, Byzantine churches at, ii, 430,431. Hildesheini, basilicau cliurcli at, plan and interior, ii, 16. Description, 17. Hinchis. proverbial objection to the arch by the, i, 22, 207. Hitterdal, Norway, wooden cliurch at, plan, ii, 116. View, 117. Hopjarth's pictures, i, 4. Hohenstaut'ens. architectural period of the, ii, 28. Kemains of their palaces, » castles, etc., 45. 107, 388. Holland, race indiijjenous to, and archi- tecture of, i, 607-6uy. Holyrood chapel, its date, ii, 218. Ar- cades, 212. See 225. Holy Sepidchre, Jerusalem, Church of the, i, 304, ii, 408-411, 432. Homer's architectural descriptions, i, 239. Religion of his poem, 239. Honeyman, Mr. John, drawings by, ii, 218, note. Honeysuckle ornament, i, 247, 254. Hope, Mr. Beresford, point asserted by, i, 558 note. Horseshoe arches at Gollingen, ii, 29. Horse tent, Nimroud, i, 184, 185. Hoskins, Mr., pyramids figured by, i, 141. His Ethiopian researches, 205. Huelgas, ii, 280. Cloister of the, 283. Hugh, y., of Lincoln, architectural debt due to, ii, 142. Hugo, Victor, an axiom of, i, 543. Humanejos, chapel at, ii, 279, 280. Husein, Shah, Madrissa of, ii, 557. Par- ticulars, 558. Huy, Notre Dame de, i, .595. Ibn Touloun, mosque of, ii, .509. -View, 510. Window, 511. Minarets, 513. Ibrim in Nubia, basilicau church at, i, 404. Igel, near Treves, Roman monument at, i, 3.50. Ilescas, tower at, ii, 280. Description, 281. Ilissus, Ionic temple on the, i, 245, 265. India, portico suitable for the climate of, ii, 259, yiote. Ingelheim, Charlemagne's palace at, ii, 45. Inkerman, cave at, ii, 479. Inner Temple Hall, ii, 198. Innisfallen. Celtic church or oratory at, ii, 229. View, 230. lona, ii, 202, 223. Window, 223. Ionian colonies, i, 220. Ionic order, origin of the, i, 147, 228, 229. Result of recent discoveries : oldest and finest examples, 245. Temples of Juno, Diana, and Apollo, 246. Compared with the Doric order, 253. Columns and cornices, 254. Carving, color, masonry, etc., 254. Use of the order by the Romans, 299. Ipsambou!, rock-cut temple at, i, 125. Ireland, scroll work at New Grange in, i, 236 note. Character of its early architecture : source of the anti-.Saxon feeling, ii, 226. Examples of its archi- tecture, 227-241. Iron as a building material, i, 21. Irrigation, proficiency of the Turanian races in, i, 63. Isaac's, ISt., at St. Petersburg, redeeming feature in the design of, i, 20. Isis-headed or Typhonian capitals, i, 35, 123, 141. Ispahan, works of Shah Abbas at, the Maiden Sliah and its accompanying buildings, ii, 556, 557. Sultan Husein's Madrissa, -557. Char Bagh, 559. View of palace, 560. Issoire, chevet church at: Plan, 491. Elevation and section, 492. Italy, ethnographic history of art in, i, 279. Adaptation of circular buildings left by the Romans, 476. Introductory notice; Divisions and classification of styles, ii, 293. Lombard and round- arched Gothic, 297. Examples, 298— 320. Pointed Gothic : effect of the dis- putes of factions, 321. Sources of dif- ference between Italian Gothic and that of other peoples, 322. Examples, 324-349. Circular buildings, 350. Towers, 351. Porches, 355. Civic buildings, 357. Moulded bricks, 360. Windows, 361, 366. Byzantine Roman- esque and other phases of the Byzan- tine style, 368, 370, 389. Palestine, why treated as (architecturally) a part of Italy, 407. See Amalfi, Asti, Bari, Bittonto, Bologna, Brindisi, Byzan- tine, Ferrara, Florence. Priuli, Lucca, Mantua, Milan, Naples, Novara, Orvieto, Padua, Palestine, Pavia, Pi- acenza, Pisa, Prato, Rome, Sicily, Siena, Toscanella, Venice, Vercelli, Verona, Vicenza. Ivan III., and Ivan the Terrible, churches built l)y, ii, 489. •laina, i, 358. Parallel to its style in; Ireland, ii, 239. James, S., sepulchre of, i, 356, 358. Jedburgh Abbey, mixed style at, ii, 202. Pier arclies, 204. Their peculiarity, 205. Jerpoint Abbey, tower and battlements of. ii, 239. Jerusalem, chief feature of admiration in the temple of, i, 19. Earliest Temple, or Tabernacle, 212, 213. Solomon's Temple, 65, 68, 192. Source of its splendor, 213. Its dimensions and plan, 214, 215. Ornaments and acces- sories of metal, 214. Subsequent rebuildings: Herod's Temple, 21.5. Author's drawing of the same, 216.