Entăsis
(
ἔντασις), called by Vitruvius
adiectio. An architectural term applied to the swelling in a column from the lower end
to a certain point, after which a diminution takes place to the
hypotrachelium, which forms part of the capital. In some ancient columns, as at Assos,
the entasis is much exaggerated; in others, as at Corinth, it is entirely absent.
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Entasis. (From Doric Columns at Paestum.)
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Examples of the absence and presence of entasis are represented in the illustration: from
the great temple at Paestum (to left), from a later building in the same city (to right).