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Encyclopedia Britannica



TEMPLES AND

This article appears in Volume V23, Page 603 of the Encyclopedia Britannica.

Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TAV-THE
TEMPLES AND BUILDINGS]
preserved. It may date from the 2nd century B.c. The neighbour-
ing Ionic temple, popularly called of Fortuna Virilis, is of special
interest
  from its early date, probably the end of the 3rd century B.C.
The complete absence of marble and the very sparing use of traver-
tine, combined with the simple purity of its design, indicate an
early date.' It has a prostyle tetrastyle portico of travertine, and
a short cella of tufa with engaged columns; the bases of these and
of the angle columns are of travertine. The
frieze
  has reliefs of
ox skulls and garlands. The whole was originally stuccoed and
painted so that the different stones used would not show. Fig. 12
gives the plan, showing the hard travertine used at the points of
greatest pressure, while the main walls with the half columns are
of the weaker and
softer tufa. The
dedication of this
temple is doubtful;
but it is probably
either that of For-
tuna or of Mater
Matuta, both of
which were de-
stroyed by fire in
213 B.C. and re-
The black shows tufa; the shading travertine. lowing oyefSar. The
chu. Maria
in Cosmedin contains some remains of a temple (Plan, No. 4)
which has been identified with that of Hercules built by Pompey
ad Circum Maximum (Vitr. iii. 2, 5; Plin. H.N. xxxiv. 57).
The temple stands close to the carceres of the
Circus
  Maxi-
mus, in the Forum Boarium. The columns built up in the
church did not, however, belong to a temple, but to a porticus.
Within the walls of S. Niccolo in Caftere in the Forum Holitorium
(Plan, No. 18) are preserved remains of three small hexastyle
peripteral temples, two Ionic and one Tuscan, set close side
by side.' A fragment of the marble plan includes part of this
group. The Tuscan temple is built of travertine, the others
of tufa and peperino, with travertine at the points of greatest
pressure. They are probably those of Janus ad Theatrum Marcelli,
dedicated by C. Duilius in the First Punic War (Tac. Ann. ii. 49) ;
of Spes, built by A. Atilius Calatinus, of about the same date (Tac.
Ann. ii. 49); and of Juno Sospita, dedicated by C. Cornelius
Cethegiis in 197 B.C. (Liv. xxxiv. 53). Near the Forum .Holitorium
are extensive remains of the large group of buildings included in the
Porticus Octaviae (Plan, No. 16), two of which, dedicated to Juno
Regina and Jupiter Stator, with part of the enclosing porticus and
the adjoining temple of Hercules Musarum, are shown on a fragment
Porticos of the marble plan. The Porticus Octaviae, a large
()cuisine.
rectangular space enclosed by a double line of columns,
was built in honour of Octavia by her brother
Augustus
  on the site of the Porticus Metelli, founded in 146 B.C. This must not be confounded with the neighbouring Porticus Octavia founded by Cn. Octavius, the conqueror of Perseus (Liv. xlv. 6, 42), in 168 B.C., and rebuilt under the same name by
Augustus
 , as is re-corded in the Ancyran inscription. The whole group was one of the most magnificent in Rome, and contained a large number of works of art by Pheidias and other Greek sculptors. The existing portico, which was the main entrance into the porticus, is a restoration of the time of Severus in 203. The church of S. Angelo in Pescheria and the houses behind it conceal extensive remains of the porticus and its temples (see Ann. Inst., 1861, p. 241, 1868, p. 108; and Contigliozzi, I. Portici di Ottavia, 1861).'
Remains of a large peripteral Corinthian temple are built into the side of the Borsa (formerly the Custom House). Eleven Temple of marble columns and their rich entablature are still in Neptune. situ, with the corresponding part of the cella
wall
  of
peperino; in 1878 a piece of the end
wall
  of the cella was discovered, and, under the houses near, part of a large peribolus wall, also of peperino, forming an enclosure with columns all round the temple nearly 330 ft. square (see Bull. Comm. Arch. Rom. vi. pl. iv., 1878). This temple has commonly been identified with that of Neptune (Dio Cass. lxvi. 24), built by Agrippa, and surrounded by the Porticus Argonautarum (Dio Cass. liii. 27; Mart. iii. 2o, II); but it clearly dates, at least in its present form, from the 2nd century A.D., and is not improbably the temple of Hadrian, mentioned in the Notitia as being near this spot.
The temp le of Venus and Rome on the Velia (see fig. 8) was the
Te Venus
mpleot th
arest in Rome; was dol, with ten Corin-
ian columns of 1G eekpma ble a tthe ends, and prob-Rome.and ably twenty at the sides; it had an outer colonnade
round the peribolus of about x8o columns of polished granite. Of these only a few fragments now exist ; for several centuries
' Fiechter (Ram. Mitch., 1906, pp. 220 ff.) has endeavoured to show that the temple in its present form dates from the 1st century B.c.
2 For drawings of them, see the
list
  given by Huelsen in Jordan, Topographie, i. 3, 511, note I1.
' The remains of the Porticus Octaviae have been more completely exposed by the demolition of the Ghetto.6o3
the whole area of this building was used as a quarry, while the residue of the marble was burnt into lime on the spot in kilns built of broken fragments of the
porphyry
  columns. A considerable part of the two cellae with their apses, set back to back, still exists; in each
apse
  was a colossal seated figure of the deity, and along the side walls of the cellae were rows of
porphyry
  columns and statues in niches. The vault is deeply coffered with stucco enrichments once painted and gilt. The roof was covered with tiles of gilt bronze, which were taken by Pope Honorius I. (62538) to cover the basilica of St Peter's. These were stolen by the Saracens during their sack of the Leonine city in 846. The emperor Hadrian himself designed this magnificent temple, which was partially completed in 135; the design was criticized severely by the architect Apollodorus (Dio Cass. lxix. 4; Vita Hadr. 19). The temple was probably finished by Antoninus Pius; it was partly burned in the reign of Maxentius, who began its restoration, which was carried on by Constantine. The existing remains of the two cellae are mainly of Hadrian's time, but contain patches of the later restorations. Between the south angle of this temple and the arch of Constantine stand the remains of a fountain, usually known as the Meta Sudans. This was a tall conical structure in a large circular basin, all lined with marble. From its brick facing it appears to be a work of the Flavian period.
That part of the Caelian hill which is near the Colosseum is covered with very extensive remainsa great peribolus of brick-faced concrete, apparently of Flavian date, and part of a Bulldinga massive travertine arcade in two storeys, similar to that en the
of the Colosseum; most of the latter has been removed Caetian, for the sake of the stone, but a portion still exists under aquiline the monastery and campanile of SS. Giovanni e Paolo. and There can be no reasonable doubt that these substructures carried the temple of. Claudius, built by Vespasian (Suet. Vesp. 9).
The so-called temple of Minerva Medica (" Nympheum " on Plan) on the eastern slope of the Esquiline (so named from a statue found in it), a curiously planned building, with central decagonal domed
hall
 , probably belonged to the palace of Gallienus (26368). Some-what similar ruins beside the neighbouring basilica of S. Croce formed part of the Sessorium, a palace on the Esquiline. The remains on the Quirinal, in the Colonna gardens, of massive marble entablatures richly sculptured were formerly thought to belong to Aurelian's great temple of the Sun, but it now appears certain that they belong to the very extensive thermae of Constantine, part of the site of which is now occupied by the Quirinal palace and neighbouring buildings.'
The excavations of recent years have brought to light, and in many cases destroyed, a large number of domestic buildings;
these discoveries are recorded in the Notizie degli Scavi private
and the Bull. Comm. Arch. Rom. The extensive cutting houses.
away of the Tiber bank for the new embankment exposed
some very ornate houses near the Villa Farnesina, richly decorated with marble, fine wall-paintings, and stucco reliefs, equal in beauty to any works of the kind that have ever been found. These are now exhibited in the Museo delle Terme, but the houses themselves have been destroyed. The laying out of the new Quirinal and Esquiline quarters has also exposed many fine buildings. Some remains on the Esquiline have been supposed (without much probability) to belong to the villa of Maecenas. A very remarkable vaulted room, decorated with paintings of plants and landscapes, has been shown to be a greenhouse;' at one end is an
apse
  with a series of step-like stages for
flowers
 . This one room has been preserved, though the rest of the villa has been destroyed; it is on the road leading from S. Maria Maggiore to the Lateran. The walls are a very fine speci-' men of tufa opus reticulatum, unmixed with brick, evidently of the early imperial period. Among the numerous buildings discovered in the Horti Sallustiani near the Quirinal was a very fine house of the 1st century A.D., in concrete faced with brick and opus reticulatum. It had a central circular domed
hall
 , with many rooms and staircases round it, rising four storeys high. This house was set in the valley against a cliff of the Quirinal, so that the third floor is level with the upper part of the hill. It is nearly on the line of the Servian wall, which stood here at a higher level on the edge of the cliff. This park was laid out by the historian Sallust, and remained in the possession of his family until the reign of Tiberius, when it became imperial property; it was used as a residence by Nero (Tac. Ann. xiii. 47) and other emperors till the 4th century.' In 1884, near the Porta S. Lorenzo, a long line of houses was discovered during the making of a new road. Some of these were of opus reticulatum of the 1st century B.C.; others had the finest kind of
' See Palladio (Terme dei Romani, London, 1732), who gives the plan of this enormous building, now wholly hidden or destroyed.
' Bull. Inst. (1875), 8996; see also Bull. Comm. Arch. (1874), 137 if., pls. xi.xviii.
' During excavations made here in 1876, lead pipes were found inscribed with the name of the estate, the imperial owner (Severus Alexander), and the plumber who made them-ORTORVM


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