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Gardner’s Art Through the Ages, 12e Chapter 10 From Seven Hills to Three Continents: The Art of Ancient Rome 1 The Roman World 2 THE ORIGINS OF ROME • • • • • • In Neolithic times, groups of people who spoke a common language-Latinsettled in permanent villages here-and particularly on one of the seven hills that would become Rome. By 500BCE-this was a major trade hub even though they are not fully defined as the Roman Empire yet. Early Rome forms a Senate-we have the patricians and the plebeians. Ultimately –in 509BCE –the patricians overthrow the last kings and the Republic begins…. By 275BCE –they have incorporated enough territory to call the entire Italian peninsula “Rome” By 100BCE –they have taken Macedonia and Greece and most of the western Mediterranean including coastal Africa. They were extraordinary administrators and engineers-we owe much of our contemporary engineering principles to their beginnings and are influenced as well by their system of law. Roads and aqueducts are only part of the extraordinary systematic establishment of a truly functioning widespread civilization. 3 Figure 10-1 Model of the city of Rome during the early fourth century CE. Rome, Museo della Civiltà Romana. 1) Temple of Fortuna Virilis, 2) Circus Maximus. 3) Palatine Hill, 4) Temple of Jupiter Capitolinus, 5) Pantheon, 6) Column of Trajan, 7) Forum of Trajan, 8) Market of Trajan, 9) Forum of Julius Ceasar, 10) Forum of Augustus, 11) Forum Romanum, 12) Basilica Nova, 13) Arch of Titus, 14) Temple of Venus and Roma, 15) Arch of Constantine, 16) Colossus of Nero, 17) 4 Colosseum. Concrete Lime mortar Volcanic sand Water Small stones This cement went Into wooden frames And was often covered With Marble Revetment (facing): another word here is veneer Figure 10-4 Reconstruction drawing of the Sanctuary of Fortuna Primigenia, Palestrina, Italy, late second century BCE . 5 Sanctuaryof Fortuna Primigenia,Palestrina Italy, late second century BCE. Here the Romans Are building to Form the mountain To their will-adding To it and renovating It to become a Roman Monument itself 6 Etruscan and Greek architectural influences here in barrel Vaults and Doric order columns…. 7 Typical of Roman Temples: •Prostyle •Pseudo-Peripteral Because of engaged columns Figure 10-2 Temple of “Fortuna Virilis” (Temple of Portunus), Rome, Italy, ca. 75 BCE. 8 Figure 10-3 Temple of Vesta (?), Tivoli, Italy, early first century BCE. 9 Figure 10-10 Aerial view of the forum (1), with Temple of Jupiter (Capitolium, 2) and Basilica (3), Pompeii, Italy, second century BCE and later. The temple in the Forum here was Distinctly Roman: •Only meant to be Viewed from the Front: here they are Controlling the viewer’s viewpoint •A shrine to multiple gods 10 First amphitheater here…the word means: double theater And this one could hold the entire population of 20,000…. They created a concrete mountain to hold the people…using Barrel vaults to lead the people into the arena (Latin for sand That absorbed the blood from the bloodsport…there was a Cloth awning that unrolled in inclement or hot weather… Figure 10-11 Aerial view of the amphitheater, Pompeii, Italy, ca. 70 BCE. 11 Figure 10-11 Alternate View © 2005 Saskia Cultural Documentation, Ltd. 12