Online Encyclopedia

TERRACE (Fr. terrace, terrasse, from ...

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V26, Page 653 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TERRACE (Fr. terrace, terrasse, from It. terraccia, terrazzo,
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Lat. terra, earth)
  , a raised platform of earth; in geology the
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term is used of level
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horizontal ridges on the side of a slope, formed by volcanic
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action, or more usually by the action of
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water; they are thus frequent along the shores of lakes or by rivers; on the sea-
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shore they are generally known as " raised beaches . " The term is used in architecture of an artificial platform in front of a
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building, which is utilized as a pror_ienade; sometimes, when the building is erected on an
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elevation, there may be a series of terraces rising one above the other, with flights of steps leading from one to the other, as in the
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Villa D'Este at Tivoli; or there may be a single terrace raised high above the ground and supported on arches, as the terrace to the Adelphi buildings in the Strand, or the
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river front at Somerset House, or in France at the castles at Amboise and St Germain-en-laye, or again a low terrace like that in front of th, Houses of Parliament at Westminster overlooking the
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Thames, which is 67o ft. long and 35 ft. wide . The terraces of the gardens at Isola Bella on the Lago Maggiore are known as
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hanging gardens (Hortus pensilis), and were similar to those which were built by the
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Assyrian king at Babylon . Though properly applied to a row of buildings on a raised level, the word is often used of any row of houses .

End of Article: TERRACE (Fr. terrace, terrasse, from It. terraccia, terrazzo, Lat. terra, earth)
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