BOOKS ON ARCHITECTURE
We know very little about the life of Georg Andreas Böckler, an engineer and architect probably born in Strasbourg, active in Frankfurt and Nuremberg as well as in Franconia and at Ansbach where he died in 1687, in service to the Margrave Johann Friedrich von Brandenburg-Ansbach (1654-1686). The Compendium architecturæ civilis was his first publication, a compilation of several Italian authors: Vitruvius, Vignola, Palladio, Serlio and Scamozzi. It begins with a lexicon giving the German equivalent of Latin and Italian terms, and like Vitruvius, continues with general considerations of the qualities necessary to the architect, on placing buildings, on materials, etc. Most of the book deals with the orders. Here Böckler shows models of the Italian masters in a sort of comparison, endeavoring to reproduce the details in plates which compare the authors, without, however, putting into place a regular system of couples as did Fréart de Chambray in his Parallèle in 1650. Böckler’s intention was in fact not to compare them in order to establish a value system, but more simply, to summarize the various sources to offer them to German readers. Yves Pauwels (Centre d’études supérieures de la Renaissance, Tours) – 2014 Critical bibliographyW. Bürger, “Georg Andreas Böckler – Architekt, Ingenieur und hochfürstlicher Baumeister”, Ansbach, gestern und heute, 13/14, 1978, pp. 314-321, 328-333. C. Graf von Klinckowstroem, “Böckler, Georg Andreas”, Neue Deutsche Biographie, vol. 2, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin, 1955. B. Vollmar, Die deutsche Palladio-Ausgabe des Georg Andreas Böckler, Nürnberg 1698. Ein Beitrag zur Architekturtheorie des 17. Jahrhunderts, Ansbach, Historischer Verein für Mittelfranken, 1983.
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