Slide IDs Flashcards

1
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Lapis Niger - Black Rock

570-550 BCE

  • Located in front of the Senate house
  • Contains an early Latin Inscription,
  • possibly associated with the tomb of Romulus or teh Grandfather of one of the early kings
  • 164 knucklebones (used for divination) and 11 bronze Kouroi/lituus (jewelry and sacred priestly objects)
  • Used for divination practices -
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2
Q
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Lapis Niger - Black Rock

570-550 BCE

  • Located in front of the Senate house
  • Contains an early Latin Inscription,
  • possibly associated with the tomb of Romulus or teh Grandfather of one of the early kings
  • 164 knucklebones (used for divination) and 11 bronze Kouroi/lituus (jewelry and sacred priestly objects)
  • Used for divination practices -
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3
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Temple of Mater Matuta

Early 6th c. BCE

Located Near San Omobono

  • Close to the Harbor, on the Capitoline Hill
  • Next to the Cattle Market, now under Saint Omobono
  • Animals sacrificed in the area
  • 2 felines on either side of Medusa - Apotropaic function
  • Area would later become populated with more temples - early sacred area
  • Temple to Fortune added next to this complex, early 5th c. BC - beginnings of clustered temple complexes
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4
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Temple of Mater Matuta

Early 6th c. BCE

Located Near San Omobono

  • Close to the Harbor, on the Capitoline Hill
  • Next to the Cattle Market, now under Saint Omobono
  • Animals sacrificed in the area
  • 2 felines on either side of Medusa - Apotropaic function
  • Area would later become populated with more temples - early sacred area
  • Capitoline area would later host numerous other temples, including Jupiter Optimus Maximus Temple (ca. 550 BCE)
  • Built in the earliest settled areas of the city -
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5
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Round Temple - Tempio Rotondo -

130-120 BCE

Near the Forum Boarium

  • Temple dedicated to Hercules Victor
  • Likely built by L. Mummius who defeated Greek city of Corinth
  • First Corinthian temple in Rome, similar to temples in Greece of the 4th and 3rd c. cf. Sanctuary of the Great Gods
  • Near the mouth of Truth
  • Features Drafted Margin Masonry
  • Made almost entirely of Pentelic Marble and situated on a low Krepis, built as a Greek Tholos - round style is not seen in Rome until 3rd quarter of 2nd c. BC
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6
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Round Temple - Tempio Rotondo -

130-120 BCE

Near the Forum Boarium

  • Temple dedicated to Hercules Victor
  • Likely built by L. Mummius who defeated Greek city of Corinth
  • First Corinthian temple in Rome, similar to temples in Greece of the 4th and 3rd c. cf. Sanctuary of the Great Gods
  • Near the mouth of Truth
  • Features Drafted Margin Masonry
  • Made almost entirely of Pentelic Marble and situated on a low Krepis, built as a Greek Tholos - round style is not seen in Rome until 3rd quarter of 2nd c. BC
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7
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Sarcophagus of Scipio Barbartus

298 BC

  • Features inscription with family lineage, lists of political offices, and military conquests
    • Consul in 298, censor in 290 - sarcophagus ca. 280 BCE
    • Tomb of the Scipios
  • Part of a long line of burials - shown with the Caere Sarcophagus (c. 550 BC)
  • Part of the Tomb of the Scipios - 2nd c. BCE (tomb for Scipio Africanus the Elder)
  • Inscription similar to the Elogia read out during the aristocratic funeral
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8
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Caere Sarcophagus

ca. 550 BCE

  • One of two burial practices active in Rome (the other being cremation)
  • Draws on line of Etruscan burial practices, imported from Greece during time of increased interaction and cultural movement
  • Alters the typical symposium scene seen in Greece by the introduction of women
    *
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9
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Monument to Sulla

ca. 104 BCE

Capitoline Hill

  • Erected to honor Sulla by the king of Bocchos
  • In honor of victories in the Jugurtha campaign
  • Engages a relatively recent phenomenon in Rome established by Marius in his defeat of the Gauls (121 BC)
  • Similar to Numidian victory monuments, features trophies, shield on the front with image of Sulla
  • Victories and Eagle in the Center
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10
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Monument to Sulla

ca. 104 BCE

Capitoline Hill

  • Erected to honor Sulla by the king of Bocchos
  • In honor of victories in the Jugurtha campaign
  • Engages a relatively recent phenomenon in Rome established by Marius in his defeat of the Gauls (121 BC)
  • Similar to Numidian victory monuments, features trophies, shield on the front with image of Sulla
  • Victories and Eagle in the Center
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11
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Theater of Pompey

55 BC

Campus Martius - Southern Side

  • Built by Pompey following his successful campaigns in Asia Minor and Syria
  • Theater is a public works donation, part of the larger construction competitions funded by wealth generated from conquest (cf. Caesar and his constuctions)
  • Theater complex is legitimized by the small Temple to Venus Victrix at the top of the complex’
  • Included on the Forma Urbis Romae
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12
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Victory Monument at Actium

ca. 30 BCE

  • Set up by Octavian following his defeat of M. Antony
  • Features the rams from 37 ships used in the battle - marks the Naval Victory in a manner also seen prior
    • theme established in the rostral column of Maenius following Samnite wars of the 4th c. BCE
  • One of several victory monuments set up by Octavian/Augustus - Cf. victory altar at Nikopolis, also Ara Pacis
  • Part of a multifaceted legitimation campaign by Octavian following his victory - see also the Temple to Venus Genatrix, Basilica Aemelia rebuild with Parthian statues
  • Triple triumph of Octavian, following the quadruple triumph of Caesar
    *
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13
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Parthian Arch of Augustus

ca. 20 BCE

Roman Forum

  • Set up by Augustus following his ‘victory’ over the Parthians
    • Negotiated return of the battle standards lost by Crassus to the Parthians
  • One of several Augustan claims to victory over the Parthians and Roman domination of the known world
    • See also the Augustus of Prima Porta
    • Augustan Denarius
  • Augustus claimed the Fasti Triumphales and the Fasti Consulares
  • Rebuild of the Basilica Aemelia with pavonazzetto Parthian statues - after 14 BC
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14
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Horologium of Augustus

10 BC

Campus Martius

  • Part of the building program of Augustus - features an obelisk captured from Egypt and brought back to Rome
  • Red Granite shaft still preserves Augustus’ inscription - Augustus was Pontifex Maximus in 12 BC (follows suit with Caesar)
  • Solar Meridian - would tell time of day and year -
  • Gilded bronze lettering survives - odd that what has been unearthed contains Greek letters
  • Part of the Egyptomania in Rome following the defeat of Egypt/Antony
    *
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15
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Mausoleum of Augustus

28-23 BC

Campus Martius

  • Artificial Hill, covered by evergreen trees
  • Entrance flanked by 2 large obelisks - part of the booty from Egypt
  • Exterior contains a plan for the construction of the Pantheon, found by Haselberger - was out of the way so it served as a staging area for materials
  • Large outer ring and grove, inner columned circular chamber - circumambulation possibly related to veneration of military trophies
    *
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