User:CassiusTheNicaeaKid/sandbox

Columbaria of Vigna Codini edit

Three extensive underground collective burial columbaria (singular, columbarium) at Vigna Codini were discovered in the mid-nineteenth century, near the Aurelian Walls between the via Appia and via Latina.[1][2] Although this area on the outskirts of Rome was traditionally used for elite burials, these columbaria that emerged in the Augustan era seem to have been reserved for non-aristocratic individuals, including former slaves. Not to be confused with the later phenomenon of catacomb inhumations, these subterranean chambers contained niches for cremation urns. The columbaria at Vigna Codini are among some of the largest in Rome.

Origins and social context of columbaria in Rome edit

The term columbarium, meaning “dovecote,” reflects the nesting of a pair of urns in a burial niche, and it is by the presence of these subterranean cremation urns that columbaria are most commonly identified.[3][4] Columbaria are unique for a variety of reasons, including their location, collective nature, and relatively short lifespan.

The columbaria at Vigna Codini are located along the Via Appia, which was the traditional placement of the monumental tombs of elite Republican families.[5] Whereas these aristocratic burials were prominently displayed along the street, the nearby non-elite columbaria that arose in the Augustan period were almost entirely subterranean and therefore hidden from public view as people exited Rome.[3]

This Augustan context (late 1st c. BCE - early 1st c. CE) is critical to understanding the columbaria because the first Emperor transformed the urban and social fabric of Rome. This period encouraged experimentation with new and foreign architectural forms, and it has been suggested that the “dovecote” model resembles Hellenistic examples, just as the Mausoleum of Augustus may have looked to Hellenistic tumulus precedents. The prolific incorporation of inscriptions in the columbaria have also been suggested to emulate Augustan epigraphic culture, such as in the Res Gestae Divi Augusti.[3]

Numerous imperial family members were also buried in the Mausoleum following Augustus, which may have influenced the inclusive organization of the columbaria as well.[5] The burials and epitaphs of slaves, freedmen, and other occupational group members in these columbaria are especially important, since we have so few written records about non-elite Romans. Furthermore, the equally-spaced rows and niches of the columbaria indicate an emphasis on egalitarian social status among the interred individuals.[3] For the most part, columbaria in Rome were only in use until the early - mid-2nd century CE, when inhumations became the standard over cremation.[4]

Columbarium 1 edit

Discovery and dimensions edit

G.P. Campana uncovered the first columbarium in 1840, and it is the largest of the Vigna Codini columbaria.[4] Filippo Coarelli estimates the columbarium to be 5.08 x 7.06-7.42 meters,[1] while Dorian Borbonus records its dimensions as 5.65 x 7.50 meters based on Campana’s 1840 notes.[3] Dating for this columbarium is not exact, but it appears to be Late Augustan to Late Tiberian (early - mid-1st century CE), based on inscriptions and painted decoration.[3][1] One of the funerary epitaphs has yielded a terminus ante quem of 10 CE, which is in line with the date for Columbarium 2 at Vigna Codini.[3]

This rectangular burial chamber is constructed of brick, with an opus reticulatum podium on three sides.[1][2][3] The podium does not cross the eastern wall, where instead a small staircase resting on two arches is located. The niches along this wall would have been the first ones visitors would see upon entrance to the columbarium.[3] The floor measures approximately 6 meters below the surface, and ceiling would have been supported by a large central pilaster.[1][2] This pier would likely have served to support four barrel vaults, in order to give access to the upper rows of niches. The central structure itself would have also provided additional niche space.[3] The narrow edges of this pilaster contain four frieze panels decorated with Dionysian imagery.[1][3]

Design and inscriptions edit

In addition to the pilaster niches, arched niches line all of the walls, with space for an estimated total of nearly 500 burials.[1][2] With approximately two urns per niche, the columbarium could hold about 900 cremated individuals in total. For the most part, these niches and urns were similar in shape, size, and decoration, and their arrangement into evenly spaced rows creates a relatively egalitarian burial model.[3] The columbarium also contains anywhere from 200-300 painted, incised, or marble inscriptions intended to name the deceased.[2][1] Inscriptions demarcate approximately two out of every three niches along the lower rows of the north, south, and west walls, but those numbers decrease significantly among the upper rows.[3]

Borbonus states that the correlation between row to number of inscriptions is likely not attributed to the preservation quality of the higher rows, and that the inscribed niches are primarily confined to the lower sections where they would have been easily viewed among visitors. Although there may have been some correlation with accessibility and columbarium social hierarchy at play, the primary evidence for social distinction in Columbarium 1 takes the form of modified niches. In a context where architectural design only allowed for uniform semicircular niches, modifications to these niches enabled space for object depositions and adornments.[3] The epigraphic evidence refers to individuals from numerous families, including some slaves and freedmen, although no particular family seems to dominate the record. Rather, anyone who could pay, could be buried in Columbarium 1.[1][3]

Columbarium 2 edit

 
Photograph of Columbarium 2 at Vigna Codini by Lodovico Tuminello (1824-1907)

Discovery and dimensions edit

In 1847, the second columbarium was found. Coarelli attributes the discovery to Campana[1]; Borbonus attributes it to Pietro Codini.[3] This columbarium is similar in plan and construction to the first, with a floor about 7 meters below the surface and nearly square in shape at 5.90 x 5.20 meters. The mosaic floor includes an inscription that indicates a terminus ante quem of 10 CE, just as with Columbarium 1.[1][3]

The opus reticulatum walls each contain nine rows of semicircular niches meant to hold two cinerary urns each.[2][1][3] The ninth row is only preserved on one wall, with an additional wall having been restored to that level. Coarelli speculates that Columbarium 2 could have held over 300 burials,[1] whereas Borbonus raises that number to 690.[3] Here, too, a podium wraps around the walls, stopping at the west wall where the entry stairs are located.[3]

Design and inscriptions edit

Two walls contain extensive paint work, including colored stucco and pediments for niches, floral imagery, and depictions of musical instruments.[1][3] Some sculptural busts bearing Augustan-era stylistic features have been uncovered.[2] There are also remnants of later Neronian and possibly Flavian portraits that were added well after the columbarium’s Augustan construction.[1]

Historically, this columbarium has been attributed as the Monumentum Familiae Marcellae, and while Borbonus maintains this identification,[3] Coarelli dismisses it.[1] The burials appear to be a mixed variety including slaves, freedmen, and musicians connected to the imperial family.[2][1][3] There is greater emphasis on work occupation in Columbarium 2 than in 1, and individuals are distinguished by marble plaques that either appear to be original and inscribed as needed, or later restorations.[1]

Columbarium 3 edit

Discovery and dimensions edit

Pietro Codini uncovered the complex’s third columbarium on his property in 1852.[1][3] Unlike the previous two columbaria, this one is comprised of three linked corridors around a small garden, forming a U-shape. Despite its unique plan and remarkable wealth, Columbarium 3 is the least well-known of the three at Vigna Codini.[1][2] Borbonus describes the dimensions with respect to the “step” length of the three corridors: 16, 23, and 18, respectively.[3] This columbarium dates to the post-Augustan period; Borbonus lists it as Julio-Claudian, though probably Augustan-Tiberian,[3] and Coarelli dates it to the second century CE on the basis of Claudian, Flavian, and Antonine freedmen.[1]

Like the other columbaria, this one employs opus reticulatum.[3] Visitors would have entered via two flights of stairs.[1][3] Pilasters support vaults presumably for access to higher niches.[2][3] The walls were lined with seven rows of rectangular niches, and each niche could hold four urns. This organization makes Columbarium 3 the largest of the Vigna Codini structures, with a capacity of about 950 individuals.[3]

Design and inscriptions edit

Columbarium 3 is notable for its size as well as its immense wealth and decoration. Both the vaults and walls are painted with first century CE stylistic floral and faunal motifs, including birds, dolphins, and lions, although these paintings are later than the original construction.[2][1][3] The walls were also adorned with marble.[1] Many fine-quality marble urns, as well as a later sarcophagus, have been recovered from the chamber.[2][1]

However, given the amount of niches and urns, the amount of epigraphic evidence lacks in comparison. Of the ca. 150 name plates that exist, many belong to freedmen and slaves connected to the imperial family, as well as traders, tax collectors, and tent makers.[2][1][3] According to Carmelo Calci, the inscriptions also reveal this columbarium remained in use until the Hadrianic period (early to mid-2nd c. CE) but initially belonged to the former slaves of the Julio-Claudians.[2] Although there is some evidence for embellishment of niches, such as that of Iulius Chrysantus, unlike a four-sided columbarium, where visitors can see most of the niches at any given time, the U-shape of Columbarium 3 disables modified burials from standing out as prominently overall.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Coarelli, Filippo (2014). Rome and Environs: An Archaeological Guide (2nd ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 374–6.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Calci, Carmelo (2005). Roma archaeologica: le scoperte più recenti della città antica e della sua area suburbana (2nd ed.). Roma: Adnkronos Libri Srl. pp. 335–337.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag Borbonus, Dorian (2014). Columbarium Tombs and Collective Identity in Augustan Rome. New York: Cambridge University Press.
  4. ^ a b c Bodel, John (2008). "From Columbaria to Catacombs: Collective Burial in Pagan and Christian Rome". In Brink, O.P, Laurie; Green, Deborah (eds.). Commemorating the Dead: Texts and Artifacts in Context. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. pp. 177–242.
  5. ^ a b Patterson, John (2000). "Living and Dying in the city of Rome: houses and tombs". In Coulston, Jon; Dodge, Hazel (eds.). Ancient Rome: The Archaeology of the Eternal City. Oxford: Oxford University School of Archaeology. pp. 259–289.

External links edit

Five-Columns Monument edit

 
Remains of the Five-Columns Monument in the Roman Forum

The Five-Columns monument is a dedicatory addition to the Rostra in the Roman Forum dating to the early fourth century CE. This monument was part of the Tetrarchy’s expansion of the Forum and is connected to the tenth anniversary of the Caesares within the four-ruler system. It is also referred to as the Fünfsäulendenkmal [1] as well as the four-column monument, depending on Jupiter’s inclusion.

History edit

Rebuilding the Roman Forum following the fire of 284 CE became an important task for the early reign of Diocletian and Maximian. They repaired the Basilica Iulia, the Curia, and the Augustan Rostra. Among these projects was an northern extension of Augustus’ Rostra, located at the western side of the Roman Forum. This rebuilding also included additional support for five large columns topped with porphyry statues of the the two Augusti, the two Caesares, and Jupiter. On the eastern side of the Forum, the Tetrarchs constructed a second Rostra that likely consisted of five column monuments as well.[2] According to Gregor Kalas, the main proponent of mirrored Five-Columns monuments, the two speaker’s platforms framed a visual link at opposite ends of the Forum that may have served to legitimize the Tetrarchic transformation of the principate created by Augustus.[2]

This monument was dedicated during Diocletian’s first visit to Rome in 303 CE during his twentieth year as emperor, in celebration of the tenth anniversary of the younger Caesares of the Tetrarchy who would ultimately succeed him.[3][4][5] The rescheduling of Caesares Constantius and Galerius’ celebration from 302, the end of their ninth year as was customary, to 303 reiterates the importance of synchronicity for the Tetrarchic anniversaries. Epigraphic evidence does not identify senatorial sponsorship of the monument, instead reinforcing the message of the imperial anniversary.[2]

Location and architecture edit

After Pietro Rosa’s excavations in the Forum between 1872 and 1874, only some brickwork from the southeast corner of the eastern Rostra survives, bearing remnants of fittings for ship’s prows.[2] Although dual Five-Columns Monuments could have existed on both the western and eastern Rostra, the evidence that remains is located at the Augustan western Rostra. At present, the sole surviving column base has been placed on a repurposed brick plinth not far from its original location, near the Arch of Septimius Severus to the left of the Via Sacra.[3][4][5] The monument’s specific location on the Rostra has been debated. Some speculate that the columns were placed behind the speaker’s platform,[3] while others maintain that the columns were located on the Rostra.[2][4]

The columns would have had white marble bases with carved relief on all four sides.[1] Fragments of columns that are presumed to have belonged to this monument suggest undecorated monoliths of pink Aswan granite topped with porphyry statues.[2][1][4] All of the statues would have been more than life-sized, at 2.5 to 2.8 meters each,[1] with the four rulers atop columns 36 Roman Feet-tall, and Jupiter’s column at the center would have been 40 RF high.[4] Approximate measurements have been calculated based on the surviving marble plinth, with the tops of the columns reaching 13 meters above the Rostra floor, excluding the statue heights. Although insufficient evidence remains to make similar conjectures about the columns at the eastern Rostra, it is reasonable to suppose that the eastern monument would have been of similar proportions.[2]

Decennalia base edit

The Five-Columns monument is most widely recognized for its only preserved marble plinth, called the decennalia base. With relief carvings of ceremonial and ritual scenes on all four sides,[3][1] this column base was uncovered in 1547 and now stands close to the findspot.[4] The side with the decennalia inscription, from which the base name derives, is agreed to have been the most prominent side of the plinth. As for the other three sides, scholars vary in the order of their descriptions. Together, these reliefs represent the rites involved with taking vows for another decade of Tetrarchic reign.[2][4] Some scholars have observed a sequence among the panel reliefs in which the animals are being led toward the sacrificial altar, with the imperial procession also heading for the altar scene.[2]

The inscribed side edit

 
Decennalia inscription

This northern side faces the via Sacra,[5] and in its center, two winged Victories hold a shield with the inscription “Caesarum decennalia feliciter,” celebrating the tenth anniversary of the Caesares.[3][2][4][5] However, neither emperor is identified specifically, a fact which Kalas believes “anticipated the continuity of joint rulership beyond the first Tetrarchy”.[2]

Imperial sacrifice side edit

 
Imperial sacrifice relief

This southern side shows a small Victory crowning emperor, though unclear which one, making a libation at the altar of Mars. The god himself watches over the event from the left. The flamen Martialis priest, as identified by his pointed cap, stands between Mars and Victory. Positioned in front of the flamen is one child bearing the incense box and another playing flutes or pipes. To the emperor’s right is a toga-clad personification of the Senate, genius senatus, with another senator on the far left of the scene. On the far right of the sacrifice are a headless seated Roma and a radiant Sol Invictus, who as a pair symbolize eternal Rome.[3][2][4][5] Together with Mars and Victory, the emperor’s offering unites military victory with the eternal glory of Rome.[2]

Suovetaurilia side edit

 
Suovetaurilia relief

This western side depicts a scene of preparations of a bull, sheep, and pig for sacrificial offering, in a ritual called the suovetaurilia.[3][4] With the animals are attendants and a priest[5] to perform the sacrifice, as part of the Tetrarchic decennial vows.[2][4]

Senatorial procession side edit

 
Senatorial procession relief

This eastern side, facing the rest of the Forum, shows a procession of Roman senators.[3][4][5] Four of them are carrying banners, which may be representative of honors for all four Tetrarchs.[2]

Other fragments edit

A few inscribed marble bases believed to come from this monument were uncovered in the area during the Renaissance.[3][2][1] Although they have since been lost, one of them is recorded to have said, “Augustorum vicennalia feliciter” celebrating the twentieth jubilee of the Augusti, and another stated, “vicennalia Imperatorum” likewise for the twentieth anniversary of the emperors.[3][2] These additional inscriptions would seem to indicate unity in the commemoration of the four Tetrarchs.[2]

Reconstruction of the Monument edit

The events carved on the decennalia base represent ceremonies that the emperor would have performed in commemoration of the tenth jubilee.[1] Although we have epigraphic evidence for other bases from this monument, it is difficult to determine what any of the other four column plinths would have depicted or how the decennalia base would have fit specifically within its monumental context. A symmetrical organization has been proposed, with the columnar statues of the Augusti immediately flanking that of Jupiter, and metaphorically introducing the exterior Caesares, in what Kalas believes could represent a peaceful transition of power from senior to junior successors.[2]

 
Arch of Constantine relief, featuring Constantine in front of the Five-Columns Monument

The Arch of Constantine aids in our understanding of how the Five-Columns monument functioned in the Forum. The relief from the north facade depicts Constantine speaking at the Rostra, with five columns behind him. The emperor himself stands in front of the column of Jupiter, flanked by columns topped with statues of the Augusti Diocletian and Maximian and column statues of Caesares Galerius and Constantius Chlorus to their sides.[2][1] Kalas does not view the portraits of the four rulers to be individualized, nor would they likely have been individualized in the real monument, in keeping with the Tetrarchic tenet of shared power. In this way, the Five-Columns Monument exhibited the Tetrarchs as a uniform divinized body, under Jupiter’s sanction.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Arslan, PY (2016). "Towards a New Honorific Column: The Column of Constantine in Early Byzantine Urban Landscape". METU Journal of the Faculty of Architecture. 33 (1): 121–145. doi:10.4305/METU.JFA.2016.1.5.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Kalas, Gregor (2015). The Restoration of the Roman Forum in Late Antiquity: Transforming Public Space. Austin: University of Texas Press.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Coarelli, Filippo (2014). Rome and Environs: An Archaeological Guide (2nd ed.). Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 59–60.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Claridge, Amanda (2010). Rome: An Oxford Archaeological Guide (2nd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 86–87.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Guidobaldi, Paola (2004). The Roman Forum (2nd ed.). Milano: Mondadori Electa. p. 24.

External links edit