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The charm of Pompeii & Ancient Rome

@ancientcharm / ancientcharm.tumblr.com

This is a secondary blog so I can't follow you. As you can see, my interest is Pompeii, history, art and archaeology related to the ancient Rome.

Dome of St. Peter's Basilica. Photo courtesy Andrea Gugni  (©)

Photo: Lamberto Zannotti via Wikimedia Commons

In 64 AD, during the reign of Nero, many Christians were blamed for the Great Fire of Rome. The Apostle Peter, the first Bishop of Rome, was martyred along with several faithful near the Egyptian obelisk that stood in the Circus of Nero. The obelisk had been brought from Heliopolis by order of Caligula in 37 AD and is the one that stands today in St. Peter's Square. Apostle Peter was buried on Vatican Hill, along the Via Cornelia, which branched off from the Circus. Peter's tomb was marked with a rock that Christians used to identify it; soon after, Christians built a "cella memoriae" (a small memorial shrine) on that spot being for 3 centuries one of many places of clandestine worship.

The construction of St. Peter's Basilica was ordered by Emperor Constantine the Great, who wanted it to be built in a more central and "prestigious" location rather than on Vatican hill, which is located on the opposite side of Rome's seven hills and was considered a marginal location. However, Sylvester I, Bishop of Rome, earnestly asked the Emperor to build the Basilica on the site of St. Peter's tomb and the cella memoriae.

Construction began in 326 and lasted 30 years until its completion. The Basilica was expanded in the following centuries, reaching the ancient site of the Circus of Nero.

Photo: Diego Delso via Wikimedia Commons

The dome of St. Peter's was built by Michelangelo Buonarroti, who immersed in the Renaissance atmosphere, in which the art and architecture of Ancient Rome had been reborn, was inspired by the Pantheon, as well as by the sculptures, frescoes and decorations typical of the late Republica and the first two centuries of the imperial era.

Source: ancientcharm
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The Ides of March

We owe Julius Caesar the famous phrase “the die is cast” (Alea iacta est). He said this in January 49 BC when he led his army across the Rubicon River in northern Italy, after his conquest of Gaul. A positive aspect of him is that he did not seek revenge. He spared the lives of his enemies defeated in the civil war with the intention of turning them into friends and together improving what he called “the new Republic." Among his murderers on that Ides of March were those whose lives he had spared.

In 59 BC, the year he became Consul, he founded Florentia which later changed its name in Italian to Firenze (Florence). In 55 BC, Caesar and his legionaries were the first Romans to arrive in Britain and come into contact with the peoples of that land.

He had a daughter named Julia, whom Caesar married to Pompey Magnus, who would later be his greatest rival and whom he defeated during the civil war at the Battle of Pharsalia on September, 48 BC. Julia and the baby from her marriage to Pompey had died in childbirth a few years earlier.

Following Pompey death, in 48, Julius Caesar had a passionate relationship during four years with the Ptolemaic Egyptian queen Cleopatra VII. They had a son, named Caesarion. 

In the year 46 BC, he modified the Roman calendar, creating the novelty of the leap year  and changed the number of days in each month, remaining that way to this day. Caesar planned this reform of the Roman calendar during his stay in Alexandria, assisted  by the astronomer Sosigenes.

In the summer of 46 BC, he returned triumphant from the civil war and the Senate, many of them against their will, proclaimed him dictator for 10 years. That same year, Cleopatra moved with her son to Rome.

Being a dictator for 10 years was something completely unusual. The office of dictator was an occasion when a man was elected by the Senate for a period of 6 months in times of war or serious crisis. In February of 44 BC Caesar managed to get the people to proclaim him Dictator for life. 

He and his contemporaries did not know it, but that day the meaning of being a dictator took on the meaning it has in our modern world, and the Dictator as it had been conceived by the ancient Romans disappeared forever.

He was populist; he did things to please the people to the point that they idolized him. Although it must be recognized that he did very favorable things for his people. From his proclamation as dictator in 46 BC until the eve of his death, he did not stop carrying out colossal works for the city and all kinds of measures in favor of the poor.

Senators from the Optimates party to meet secretly planning the assassination. The conspiracy was carried out in the house of Servilia ,mother of Brutus and lover of Julius Caesar for years. But incredibly among the Optimates conspirators there were also Populares, who always claimed to support Caesar. Among those who stabbed him was Lucius Tillius Cimber, who had always been his ally and whom Caesar considered one of his best friends.

Caesar was stabbed in the Theatre of Pompey where the Senate was temporarily meeting.  Brutus and Cassius were the ringleaders of the conspiracy. According to all classical sources, the "best friend” Lucius Tillius Cimber, was the one who took him by surprise, grabbing him tightly by the toga and shouting the order to kill him, and Casca was the first to draw his dagger and wound him with a cut, thus initiating the brutal attack of the others.

Historians agree that, with a few exceptions, such as Cato, Cicero, Brutus or Cassius, the majority of Caesar’s adversaries were motivated only by envy;  Even many in his own party, such as Lucius Tillius Cimber, began to feel envious of Caesar’s success and popularity.

Unlike Caesar, his  nephew and adoptive son Octavian was vengeful; four years later, all of Caesar’s adversaries and assassins were dead and his property confiscated.  After years of civil wars, and the conquest of Egypt, Octavian ​​ordered the execution of 17-year-old Caesarion, days after Cleopatra and Mark Antony committed suicide, and in 27 BC ​​became Caesar Augustus, the first emperor of Rome.

At the place where Caesar’s body was cremated, every March 15th people leave flowers and signs that read: Ave Caesar.

Source: ancientcharm

Arch of Constantine the Great. Piazza del Colosseo, Rome.

Located between the Palatine Hill and the Caelian Hill, on the Via Triumphalis, the route taken by Roman emperors after a military victory, it was built in 315 to commemorate the victory of Constantine I the Great at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge. It's the largest triumphal arch in Rome.

Source: ancientcharm
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The Clivus Argentarius, Roma, 2nd century BC

(English / Español / Italiano)

Rome, The Clivus Argentarius is an ancient Roman road built in the 2nd century BC between the Capitol and the Roman Forum, partial remains of which are still visible today.

The name 'argentarius' derives from the proximity of the clivo to the area where the bankers and money changers (argentarii) carried out their activities near the Forum.

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Roma, El Clivus Argentarius es una antigua calzada romana construida en el siglo II a.C. entre el Capitolio y el Foro Romano, de la que aún hoy pueden verse restos parciales.

El nombre "argentarius" deriva de la proximidad del clivo a la zona donde los banqueros y cambistas (argentarii) desarrollaban sus actividades cerca del Foro.

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Roma, Il Clivus Argentarius è un’antica strada romana costruita nel II secolo a.C. situata tra il Campidoglio e il Foro Romano e i cui resti parziali sono ancora oggi visibili .

Il nome “argentarius” deriva dalla vicinanza del clivo alla zona dove operavano i banchieri e cambiavalute (argentarii), che svolgevano le loro attività nei pressi del Foro.

Source: Roma Ieri E Oggi by Elio Minerva

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