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Vitruvius, the architect, says in his work on architecture that the
measurements of the human body are distributed by Nature as follows that
is that 4 fingers make 1 palm, and 4 palms make 1 foot, 6 palms make
1 cubit; 4 cubits make a man's height. And 4 cubits make one pace and
24 palms make a man; and these measures he used in his buildings. If
you open your legs so much as to decrease your height 1/14 and spread
and raise your arms till your middle fingers touch the level of the top
of your head you must know that the centre of the outspread limbs will
be in the navel and the space between the legs will be an equilateral
triangle.
The length of a man's outspread arms is equal to his height.
From the roots of the hair to the bottom of the chin is the tenth of a man's
height; from the bottom of the chin to the top of his head is one eighth of
his height; from the top of the breast to the top of his head will be one sixth
of a man. From the top of the breast to the roots of the hair will be the seventh
part of the whole man. From the nipples to the top of the head will be the
fourth part of a man. The greatest width of the shoulders contains in itself
the fourth part of the man. From the elbow to the tip of the hand will be the
fifth part of a man; and from the elbow to the angle of the armpit will be
the eighth part of the man. The whole hand will be the tenth part of the man;
the beginning of the genitals marks the middle of the man. The foot is the
seventh part of the man. From the sole of the foot to below the knee will be
the fourth part of the man. From below the knee to the beginning of the genitals
will be the fourth part of the man. The distance from the bottom of the chin
to the nose and from the roots of the hair to the eyebrows is, in each case
the same, and like the ear, a third of the face.
The preceding is the complete translation of the text accompanying
Leonardo DaVinci's Vitruvian Man. It is actually a translation of Vitruvius,
as Leonardo's drawing was originally an illustration for a book on the works
of Vitruvius.
The Notebooks of Leonardo DaVinci
Vol. 1 (of a 2 vol. set in paperback) pp. 182-3
Dover, ISBN 0-486-22572-0
.
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