Abstract
Marie-Therese Zenner presents a brief overview of the survival of Latin Euclid within the practical geometry tradition of builders, taking examples from an eleventh-century French Romanesque church, Saint-Etienne in Nevers, and a thirteenth-century Picard manuscript of drawings (Paris, Bibliotheque nationale, MS fr. 19093), known as the portfolio of Villard de Honnecourt.
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