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NOTES FROM ROME 2023–24

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 December 2024

Abstract

This gazette presents to the reader outside Rome news of recent archaeological activity (July 2023–July 2024) gleaned from public lectures, conferences, exhibitions and newspaper reports.

Questa gazzetta ha lo scopo di presentare ad un lettore fuori Roma notizie della recente attività archeologica (luglio 2023 – Iuglio 2024) tratte da conferenze, convegni, mostre e relazioni su giornali.

Type
Research Reports
Copyright
Copyright © British School at Rome 2024

Excavations

In preparation for the wave of pilgrims anticipated to flood Rome for the Papal Jubilee Year 2025, public spaces across the city are receiving much-needed attention, and with it the opportunity for excavation. This includes a makeover for Piazza Cinquecento and the streets bordering the Baths of Diocletian, hopefully giving the areas around the Servian walls at Termini station and the exterior of the third-century thermae a more salubrious vibe.Footnote 1 A similar undertaking to improve the neglected piazza in front of San Giovanni in Laterano has uncovered a series of ancient and medieval structures. A terracing wall in opus reticulatum is dated to between the first century BC to the first century AD; Severan-era foundations perhaps relate to the barracks of the equites singulares underneath the basilica; also present is an early medieval (fourth–seventh-century) wall in opus vittatum, and another of large, recycled tufo blocks, built in the ninth century, with alterations into the thirteenth century.Footnote 2 The excavators suggest the latter wall had a defensive purpose, linking the approximate date of its construction to the Saracen raids of the 840s (although the immediate protection afforded by the Aurelianic circuit surely rendered an extra wall superfluous). The new discoveries complement the findings of the multi-year Rome Transformed project, which since 2019 has been studying the area of the Eastern Caelian, presenting its results at a three-day conference held at the British School at Rome, in March 2024.Footnote 3

The most ambitious Giubileo 2025 scheme is reconfiguring the spaces between the Castel Sant'Angelo and the beginning of Via della Conciliazione, with the diversion of traffic through an underpass below Piazza Pia. In June 2024, the works here exposed an archaeological area of some 500 m2.Footnote 4 The main feature is a first-century AD building, comprising a series of rectangular rooms with simple mosaic paving (limestone tesserae surrounded by black borders), arranged along a central corridor. In the second or third century AD, the building was converted into a large open-air fullonica, with a series of vats and at least thirteen dolia sunk into the floor for the processing of fabrics. Terracotta campana plaques with mythological scenes were reused as drain covers. A wall of unidentified purpose, built of tufo and travertine ashlars, predating the imperial phases, was also found. The excavators suggest that the residential building, which had a view over the Tiber, might originally have served as accommodation for guests to, or workers at, the neighbouring horti Agrippinae or horti Domitiae (or perhaps falling somewhere in between). Because of a tight schedule for completing the underpass, the ancient structures were hurriedly removed, with the intention of their being installed as a permanent display in the gardens of Castel Sant'Angelo.Footnote 5

Shortly after this announcement, the same works, but closer to the Tiber, exposed a retaining wall of opus quadratum travertine blocks, behind which are the brick foundations of a monumental porticus, fronting an open court (garden?).Footnote 6 Three phases of building works between the reigns of Augustus and Nero have been identified and, most importantly, a lead pipe stamped C[AI] CAESARIS AUG[USTI] GERMANICI, a.k.a the Emperor Caligula. The excavators were quick to make a link to Philo of Alexandria's account of an embassy to Gaius, where the emperor received the ambassadors on the banks of the Tiber, on his mother's property.Footnote 7 The find helps reconstruct the inheritance of imperial property in this area and probably places the aforementioned fullonica within the horti Agrippinae. The precise relationship between these various structures remains unclear from publicly accessible information, but further details will hopefully emerge soon.

Coincidentally, the site is only 300 metres from another major (and related) archaeological discovery of the last year. In July 2023, the Soprintendenza reported that an excavation (begun in 2020) in the courtyard of Palazzo della Rovere, on Via della Conciliazione, had found part of a small theatre.Footnote 8 The announcement received considerable media coverage, due to the theatre having been constructed during the reign of Nero, in the imperially owned gardens of Agrippina the Elder, and is almost certainly that mentioned by Pliny the Elder:

[Nero placed myrrhine ware in his] private theatre in his gardens across the Tiber, a theatre which was large enough to satisfy even Nero's desire to sing before a full house at the time when he was rehearsing for his appearance in Pompey's theatre. It was at this time that I saw the pieces of a single broken cup included in the exhibition.Footnote 9

Bricks stamped PRISCUS DOMITIUS AFRI place its construction in the mid/late AD 50s. Other bricks bearing C SATRINI CELERIS/EX FIGLINIS MARCA indicate alterations in the Flavian period, with a further intervention at the beginning of the second century AD. The building was deliberately taken down in the late-second/early-third century, when its materials were stripped out, and holes for basins broken through the opus spicatum floor.Footnote 10 The change of use is perhaps not unrelated to what was occurring at the nearby fullonica site.

Only a small part of the structure has been excavated, with most of it lying underneath Borgo San Spirito. Nevertheless, the gilded stucco, decorative gemstones and coloured marbles, including an alabaster ionic capital and pilaster in portasanta (similar examples are on display in the Drugstore Museum), give an idea of its architectural richness. Column shafts of cipollino and Africano marble (probably from the scaenae frons) are neatly laid out in the vomitorium, indicating that the spoliation of the theatre in the late-second/early-third century was organized and only partially completed. The excavation also uncovered ceramics and glassware (including particularly fine columned chalices) from the tenth century, and evidence of production, perhaps linked to the nearby Schola Saxonum. There are traces of a road leading to a landing place below Ponte Sant'Angelo, and numerous other small finds from the late Middle Ages can be connected to pilgrimage. It seems likely that the excavation will be covered over when the fifteenth-century Palazzo is converted into a hotel, although an agreement has apparently been reached to display the finds.Footnote 11

Further upstream, after decades of abandonment, the riverbank north of Ponte Milvio is being cleared and restored (beginning May 2024), as part of a project to create a series of parks along the Tiber.Footnote 12 Out of the detritus and foliage emerged a long-obscured Tiber cippus of P. Servilius Isauricus and M. Valerius Messalla (censors in 54 BC). Several courses of tufo ashlars of the ancient river wall, a stretch of the via Flaminia, as well as various opus reticulatum walls have also been exposed, and there are plans to turn it into a small archaeological area.Footnote 13

Back on the east bank, work on Piazza Augusto Imperatore continues.Footnote 14 In July 2023, a marble (possibly Parian) head of Aphrodite was found reused as fill in the foundations of a late-antique building at the east edge of the site.Footnote 15 Social media posts from July 2024 by Rome's mayor Roberto Gualtieri also show a wall of ashlar stone with elegant moulding at the base. The claim that this rectilinear structure is possibly Augustus’ ustinum is difficult to reconcile with Strabo's description of it being circular, and it is generally thought to have been further to the south.Footnote 16 The wall also appears to be a little too far west to be connected to where six inscribed paving stones or cippi (CIL VI 888–93) were found in 1777, and which is identified as the place of cremation for later Julio-Claudians.Footnote 17 No doubt more details will be forthcoming as the piazza reopens – a partial opening is promised for December this year, and its completion scheduled for late 2025. The Mausoleum itself remains closed, although a bird's-eye view of the structure can now be had for the price of a cocktail from the terrace of the new hotel, installed in the former INPS palace to the north side.

Heading towards the southern Campus Martius, Piazza Colonna is once again open to the public, having been sealed off since 2013, following the shooting of two carabinieri. Along Via delle Botteghe Oscure, another fascist-era building has also been transformed into a luxury hotel, to the advantage of those interested in archaeology. Beyond the lobby of number 46, a staircase leads down to the exercise room, where it is possible to see part of what is probably the Porticus Minucia, the west side of which is also now accessible within the antiquarium of the Largo Argentina archaeological area.Footnote 18 Excavated by the Soprintendenza in May–July 2020, the modest remains confirm the eastern limit of the porticus, and correspond to a fragment of the Severan Forma Urbis.Footnote 19 Visible are two large peperino blocks of the perimeter wall, faced on the interior with white and coloured marble. Fragments of plaster in the collapse suggest the upper parts were painted. Although the porticus Minucia was built in the late-second century BC, the present structure dates from the imperial period (pavements at two levels were found) and presumably belongs to a rebuilding after the fire of AD 80 (when the temple also visible on Via delle Botteghe Oscure was restored). The excavators report layers of abandonment from the third century AD, although it is hard to imagine such a prominent structure in this central location being left completely vacant or derelict at this time. Abutting the exterior of the porticus are the traces of a first-century AD structure with a black and white mosaic floor and of a later building paved in opus spicatum (the plexiglass occasionally obscured by exercise equipment and gym-goers). An accompanying video shown in the hotel provides a useful reconstruction of the porticus.

December 2024 brought to light a spectacular nymphaeum with a multicoloured mosaic, discovered in the maze of structures (part of a two-storey domus) behind the Horrea Agrippiana, against the north-west face of the Palatine Hill. The lower part depicts piles of arms, armour, oars and a trident framed by a porticus (although the presence of a peacock and garden scene suggests that it was not entirely triumphal in nature). The upper register shows a walled city, ships (possibly a naval battle) and a bucolic image of goats, all in coloured glass, pebble and shell. Side rooms (one of which was later converted into a cistern) are decorated with high-quality stucco work depicting architectural and pastoral scenes. The nymphaeum dates to between the late-second to early-first century BC, and was put out of use by renovations to the domus in the mid-first century BC, which was in turn demolished by the construction of the warehouse.

Moving to the south side of the Palatine, mounds of earth and awnings indicate activity at the bottom of the hill. Information panels refer to ‘The PNRR 46 Project for the schola praeconum’, a sort of headquarters of the various attendants in the Circus Maximus, dated to the Severan period. It is due to finish in October 2024, but details about the intended outcomes are vague – ‘enhance the understanding of the monument through archaeological surveys, interventions of the protection, conservation and accessibility’. Hopefully this includes opening the site to the public.

On the Palatine itself, the ‘House of Livia’ is now open to the public and a multimedia ‘experience’ installed;Footnote 20 new paths are being laid around the Temple of Magna Mater on the south-west corner; the Palatine Museum is partially closed for renovation; and the delightful Ninfeo della Pioggia, part of the Farnese Gardens, is accessible after a three-year restoration. The most significant development is the reopening of part of the Domus Tiberiana, following a 50-year closure, due to severe structural issues. Despite its name, the earliest visible structures are from the reign of Nero, with substantial Domitianic, Hadrianic and Severan alterations and additions. Ascending the Domitianic ramp next to the church of Santa Maria Antiqua, visitors can now continue through the immense brick arches (Hadrianic) supporting the belvedere terrace above, emerging onto the ancient street below Giacomo Boni's garden. Behind the rooms to the right of the covered path, it is possible to see the pre-Hadrianic phase, differently aligned and mistakenly identified by Pietro Rosa in the nineteenth century as the ‘Bridge of Caligula’. In reality it is a Domitianic gallery, and traces of fine, decorative stucco can be seen on the underneath of the arches. A selection of finds (primarily architectural and sculptural) from the Palatine Hill have been installed in seven of the rooms to the left of the street. Rather grandly named ‘The Museum of the Domus Tiberiana’, these exhibits are only accessible if visitors have purchased the SUPER pass, continuing the absurd situation of different tickets within the park providing different levels of access and diminishing what is otherwise a superb new addition.Footnote 21

Excavations continue at the Colosseum in the area of the collapsed external corridors, between the Valadier and Stern brick buttresses (arches 60 to 18).Footnote 22 Between arches 67 and 68 a large, late-medieval fill contained a Pentelic marble torso (54 cm in height) of Jupiter Hegiacus, recognizable because of the scaled aegis, with the head of Medusa, over the left shoulder.Footnote 23 The excavations indicate that the stripping of the travertine paving in the collapsed ambulatories occurred between the tenth and twelfth centuries, when the spaces were given over to production and to the sheltering animals. Radiocarbon analysis on the skeleton of a mule (discovered the previous season) dates its death to the mid-eleventh century, and so it was not an unfortunate victim of the 1349 earthquake, as previously hypothesized by the excavators and optimistically parroted in last year's ‘Notes From Rome’.Footnote 24

On Via dei Fori Imperiali, digging over the northern corner of the Temple of Peace, in Largo Corrado Ricci, appears to have ceased (for now?).Footnote 25 Excavators came down onto the remains of the nineteenth-century Palazzo Nicolini, demolished in 1934, as well as the oven of the bakery that once fronted the portico of the Forum Transitorum (famous from paintings and early photographs). The body of an individual carrying a sheathed dagger and coin purse was apparently dumped here in the sixteenth century, its contorted skeleton indicating that it was moved after death (no doubt to be the subject of a cold case, true-crime podcast). Two limekilns from the fourteenth century testify as to what probably happened to much of the marble that once faced the precinct wall of the Temple of Peace, but the excavation has concluded some 2.5–3 metres above the level of the ancient paving.Footnote 26 Whether work continues in the future is unclear; for now, the site adds yet another unsightly hole in the ground above the Imperial Fora.Footnote 27

On the opposite side of the road, work is ongoing around the seven columns of the porticus of the Temple of Peace, that were re-erected in 2015.Footnote 28 Rather than any further vertical anastylosis (only the shafts were put up, but the original scheme was to add capitals, entablature and part of the roofing),Footnote 29 attention appears to be focused on the steps and paving, perhaps indicating plans to make this area accessible to the public. At the Forum of Trajan, the reconstruction of a section of the Basilica Ulpia was unveiled in December 2023. At the cost of 1.5 million euros (donated in 2015 by Alistair Usmanov), three cipollino marble columns of the upper order of the Basilica have been raised atop four of the lower granite ones (themselves put back up in the previous century).Footnote 30 Between them, an almost entirely new (the integration of original fragments is minimal) series of capitals and entablature has been created from concrete covered with plaster moulding.Footnote 31 The stark white of the new intervention is visually jarring, but will presumably soften with time; the decision to repair the broken cipollino marble shafts with brick is in keeping with the practice previously used for the lower order, but is ugly. Aesthetics aside, the reconstruction is helpful in gaining a better understanding of the impressive height of the basilica. As at the Temple of Peace, work continues on the steps and pavement, and a future percorso around them might be planned.

Urban Plans

At the top of Via dei Fori Imperiali, Piazza Venezia is in total chaos, for traffic and pedestrians alike. The cause is the creation of a 700-million-euro station for Metro C.Footnote 32 The new Metro line and the works for the Jubilee are the two main urban development projects currently affecting the historic centre. But on the horizon is a new scheme to revamp the arteries around and between the archaeological areas of the Imperial fora, Colosseum, western Caelian, Circus Maximus, Baths of Caracalla, Palatine and Capitoline Hills. Overseen by Walter Tocci (deputy mayor under Francesco Rutelli, 1993–2001), the Centro Archeologico Monumentale (CArMe) intends to improve accessibility through and across the various sites, with new routes and pedestrianized areas (ironically, bridging certain roads – namely Strada Bonella over the Forum of Caesar – that were destroyed by archaeologists only a few decades ago). Intended to be complete within three years (2025–7), it is currently budgeted at a whopping 282 million euros (from PNRR, Jubilee, state and municipal funds).Footnote 33 The biggest announcement so far is the complete reworking of the pedestrian areas either side of Via dei Fori Imperiali by Labics architects (winners of the 2021 Colosseum floor competition).Footnote 34 Given the sensitivity of the areas affected, no doubt many opinions will be forthcoming when work gets underway. Architectural plans and models can appear both misleadingly attractive, but also unfairly soulless, and it is best for readers to decide for themselves about the potential of the scheme.Footnote 35 But for such a sum to be spent, then the decisions had better be the right ones, and in contemplating this nuova passeggiata (as it is titled), it is worth recalling a letter to The Times by Richard Norton, Director of the School of Classical Studies in Rome, in 1899:

It was only some half-dozen years ago that Minister Baccelli sanctioned the spending of 200,000 lire on the levelling and broadening of the roads all round the Colosseum! For all necessary work a quarter of this sum could have sufficed. Danger of a similar waste exists in a plan of the Commission which has been recently appointed to draw up schemes for the organization of a kind of park management of all the ancient monuments of Rome. The plan proposed is to construct a road or passeggiata archeologica one hundred metres broad running from the Palatine to the Baths of Caracalla! This will cost some 200,000 lire. The service such a road would render to the modern city and the addition which it would make to our knowledge of the past have yet to be demonstrated.Footnote 36

Museums and Exhibitions

The most important museum event this year was the opening of the Parco Archeologico del Celio and the Museo della Forma Urbis.Footnote 37 The museum occupies the former Palestra della Gioventù Italiana del Littorio at the southern end of the site. The Severan marble plan is laid out in the main room, the original fragments sunk into a floor, onto which Giovanni Battista Nolli's eighteenth-century map of the city is printed. It is an effective device, and the decision to lay the plan flat (as opposed to mounting it on a wall, which might be deemed more ‘accurate’), allows visitors to walk over and closely inspect fragments. Given that the last major display of this monumental document was a century ago (with only the odd piece being brought out occasionally for exhibitions), its permanent installation is beyond welcome. Along the walls of the museum, pieces of the plan not placed in the floor are used to explain issues such as ancient errors and modern interpretations. The contribution of scholars to understanding the Forum Urbis, in particular Lucos Cozza, is also acknowledged.

The museum gardens (no ticket required) are also a splendid new addition to Rome's archaeological parks. Numerous architectural pieces and inscriptions from the old Caelian Antiquarium have been conserved and rearranged. They include large marble fragments of tombs that were used to construct the Aurelianic Porta Flaminia,Footnote 38 discovered when it was dismantled in the late nineteenth century; part of the temple of Fortuna Muliebris from the fourth mile of the Via Latina; and the tomb of Servius Sulpicius Galba (possibly the consul of 108 BC) from Testaccio. Across the road, the other part of the abandoned antiquarium building continues to crumble, with many ancient architectural pieces lying still in the overgrown grounds.Footnote 39

In November 2023, the ancient necropolis of the via Triumphalis was reopened to the public, by means of a new, direct entrance off Piazza Risorgimento.Footnote 40 The remarkable site, with burials and cremations from the first to the fourth centuries AD, will be accessible on Fridays and Saturdays (booking required).

Among the best (certainly the most innovative) exhibitions of the last year was ‘Nuova Luce da Pompei a Roma’ at the Capitoline Museums.Footnote 41 From the Vesuvian sites, approximately 150 bronze items relating to artificial lighting (lamps, candelabras, decorative stands) were arranged around nine rooms of the Villa Caffarelli. The theme explored how interior domestic spaces in antiquity were lit. In particular, it created an appreciation of how decorative forms were deliberately crafted to cast varied shadows, demonstrating the Roman delight in playing with illumination. The exhibition was the result of a research project at the Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, and should be a model of how to bring new academic work to the attention of the wider public.Footnote 42 First exhibited in Munich,Footnote 43 at Rome the Vesuvian objects were joined by a selection from the Capitoline's permanent collection, including a tall, bronze lamp shaped like a torch, from the Excubitorium of VII cohort of the vigiles in Trastevere.

In November 2023, ‘Fidia’ opened at the Capitoline Museums.Footnote 44 Dedicated to the life of the renowned classical sculptor, none of the works actually touched by the hand of the master were on display, as none are known to still exist. Nevertheless, the curators were able to recreate Phidias’ oeuvre through a selection of Roman-era ‘copies’, as well as exploring the broader context within which he operated, and his later reception in antiquity through to the nineteenth century.Footnote 45 Among the pieces on loan were the exceptional bust of Lemnian Athena from Bologna, the marble extremities of a fifth-century BC acrolithic statue of Apollo from Cirò Marina and the famous ceramic jug with ‘I belong to Phidias’ scratched into the base, excavated in his workshop at Olympia. This promises to be the first of five exhibitions at the Capitoline Museums on the subject of I Grandi Maestri della Grecia Antica.

On the top floor of the Museums, in Sala degli Arazzi, there was also the opportunity to see the exquisite fourth-century AD glass fragment depicting Roma, found during work on the Metro C station at Porta Metronia.Footnote 46 Probably the bottom of a cup, it features the goddess, helmeted and carrying her spear, picked out in gold leaf. Outside, a full-sized replica of the colossal statue of Constantine (found in the Basilica Nuova on the via Sacra) now sits in the garden of the Villa Cafarelli.Footnote 47 Created from resin and plaster by Factum Foundation, who scanned the actual marble fragments in Palazzo dei Conservatori, the statue first appeared in the 2022 Fondazione Prada exhibition ‘Recycling Beauty’ (Milan).Footnote 48 Questions over the colour and index finger of the right hand aside, the thirteen-metre-high, seated figure makes quite an impression, and will remain in Rome until December 2025.

At the Museum of the Ara Pacis, LEX. Giustizia e diritto dall'Etruria a Roma’ occupied the ground-floor museum space in the second half of 2023.Footnote 49 Presenting the theme of law and justice, from Rome's archaic kings to the high imperial period, the exhibition split into three parts: the first section centred on the concept of justice in the Roman world, the relevance of heroes and gods and maintaining the pax deorum; the second part revolved around politics and justice in Republican and Imperial Rome; and the third considered the role of law in daily life, how it worked for citizens, women, slaves and soldiers. On display were some notable pieces from private collections, including a first-century BC marble relief of magistrates ploughing a sacred boundary, from Siena, and a folding curule chair (sella curulis), possibly from Rome. The Carabinieri Command for the Protection of Cultural Heritage (TPC) had a small section near the end, displaying objects recovered from various, often dubious, contexts. Among these was a fragment (the Frammento Fallani) of the sixth-century BC Montecitorio obelisk, brought to Rome by Augustus, that had been donated by an antiques dealer to the Ministry of Culture, having only re-emerged in 2021.Footnote 50

Next, in May 2024, ‘TEATRO. Autori, attori e pubblico nell'antico Roma’ opened at the Ara Pacis.Footnote 51 Through more than 240 pieces, the exhibition expertly traced the development of theatre in Rome, from its third-century BC origins in Magna Grecia, onward. Separate sections examined the influence of Greek drama, comedy and tragedy in the Roman capital, the organization of putting on performances (including the manufacture of masks) and theatre architecture. Regarding the latter, four masks from the keystones of the arches of the Theatre of Marcellus were present, as well as the exceptional first-century AD frescoes from the theatre at Nemi.

Finally on display in the Museum of the Imperial Fora is the head of Dionysus, discovered to so much fanfare in 2019 during works to remove the sixteenth-century Via Alessandrina, the statue having been reused as building material in a thirteenth-century foundation wall.Footnote 52 The combined height of the head and neck is 43cm, further analysis has identified the marble as Pentelic and it is dated on stylistic grounds to the ‘early imperial age’. The other significant sculptural find from the demolition of the Via Alessandrina was a bust of the emperor Augustus. From 29 June to 26 November 2023, this was also put on display in the Market of Trajan, alongside another marble head of Augustus, found in 2021 at Isernia (ancient Aesernia) in Molise.Footnote 53 The former is carved from Thasian marble, the latter from Luna. Damage at the base of the necks makes it difficult to ascertain if either head was part of a full body statue. The Isernia portrait is of a mature Augustus, while that from Rome is Octavian, of the ‘Actium’ or ‘Alcudia’ type, dated 40–38 BC. The Via Alessandrina bust (like the head of Dionysus) was found in a medieval (eleventh-century) layer.

At the National Etruscan Museum of the Villa Giulia, an exhibition about the Etruscan city of Spina was installed, as part of the centenary celebration (1922) of the discovery of the remarkable settlement on the Adratic coast.Footnote 54 Having previously been shown at Ferrara, it was arranged in Rome in combination with objects from the museum's permanent collection, emphasizing Spina's place within the wider Etruscan world.Footnote 55

The entrance to the Curia Julia from the Roman Forum remains inaccessible, due to the seemingly never-ending works around the comitium. Nevertheless, the building itself is often open and used to hold events. ‘Copernico e la rivoluzione del mondo’ celebrated the 550th anniversary of the birth of the Polish astronomer, focusing on the influence of his time in Rome and Italy in the development of the heliocentric theory.Footnote 56 Copernicus’ debt to antiquity (acknowledged in De revolutionibus) was represented, among other objects, by a marble bust identified as Pythagoras, from the Capitoline Museums, a fifth-century BC ‘Pythagorean’ pitcher from Ripacandida, a mosaic emblema of Plato's academy, on loan from the National Archaeological Museum of Naples, and a ceiling fresco from the villa at Stabia depicting an armillary sphere. For part of May and June, eight of the Parian marble heads belonging to the Augustan-era statues of barbarians that once adorned the Basilica Aemilia were also exhibited in the Curia.Footnote 57 These important, but rarely displayed, sculptures have been subject to a recent programme of restoration and research, presented at a ‘Study Day’ in the Curia on 7 June.Footnote 58

The Parco archeologico del Colosseo also put on two larger exhibitions in 2023/24. ‘L'Amato di Iside. Nerone, la Domus Aurea e l'Egitto’ was set up within the spaces of the Golden House, again populating its halls with statuary.Footnote 59 The first part of the exhibition examined Nero's relationship with Egypt; the second, the presence of Egypt in Rome, specifically the development of the cult of Isis. Over 150 works were displayed, with many coming from museums across Italy.Footnote 60 On loan from the Munich Museum of Egyptian Art were the fragmentary statues of Isis, Horus and Harpocrates, that were found in the Tiber and have been associated with Tiberius’ destruction of the Iseum in the Campus Martius.Footnote 61

‘La Colonna Traiana. Il racconto di un simbolo’ was held in the ambulatory of the first level of the Colosseum.Footnote 62 Organized in conjunction with the Museo Galileo at Florence, it followed the Uffizi's 2019 exhibition ‘The Art of Building a Masterpiece: Trajan's Column’.Footnote 63 Part was dedicated to illustrating the complexities of constructing the column, from quarry to building site. The crane reliefs from the tomb of the Haterii and Terracina – the usual suspects for illustrating Roman construction methods – were both present, as well as a series of charming models of ancient machines for lifting stone, made by the sculptor Claudio Capotondi.Footnote 64 The piers of the Colosseum were wrapped with drums onto which the column's frieze was projected at 1:1 scale. It is a continuing shame that the Museo della Civiltà Romana remains closed (with no indication of when it might reopen), where a full set of plaster casts of the reliefs are kept.

The decision to hold both exhibitions in these spaces was limiting. While the Domus Aurea was a thematically sound location for the former, and the site was open every day of the week (as opposed to just weekends), it potentially capped the number of people who might see it on account of the ticket cost and the need to book. Moreover, visits around Nero's palace are guided and time-restricted. The first level of the Colosseum has long been used for temporary exhibitions, but the difficulty in reserving a ticket, coupled with the sheer number of visitors in Leviathan-like groups, makes spending time within the amphitheatre increasingly unpleasant. Moreover, most tourists in the Colosseum are understandably there to see that monument, lessening the impression of a temporary exhibition about a completely different structure. Such shows would surely be better placed in the Parco's other, quieter spaces in the forum or on the Palatine Hill.

It was a good year for Dacians in Rome. Alongside ‘La Colonna Traiana’ at the Colosseum, the Museo Nazionale Romano put on ‘Dacia. L'ultima frontiera della Romanità’ at the Baths of Diocletian (having already shown it in Madrid and Bucharest).Footnote 65 This exceptionally full exhibition comprised over 1,000 objects, primarily from Romanian and Moldovan museums (although the show opened with the plaster cast of the column of Trajan coloured by Bianchi Bandinelli in the 1970s). The richness of Roman (and pre-Roman) material culture in the territories was amply illustrated in the first rooms, which focused on Dacia as a province. Bronze pieces were in abundance, including legionary weaponry and a bust of the emperor Decius. The second-century AD marble sculpture of the unusual serpent god Glycon, from Tomis (Constanta), was a particular highlight. Billed as ‘the largest and most prestigious exhibition of archaeological finds organised by Romania abroad in recent decades’, its full scope told a story from the eighth century BC to the eighth century AD. Other parts of the exhibition go back into Iron-Age Dacia, and the relationship with Thracian, Scythian and Greek peoples. The final section focuses on Christianity, the impact of the Huns and the end of the Roman Empire.

References

7 Philo Leg. 38 (181).

9 Plin. HN 37.20; cf. Tac. Ann. 15.33.

10 The results of the excavation were presented by Daniela Porro, Alessio De Cristofaro and Renato Sebastiani at the Finnish Institute in Rome (27 October 2023). For the video recording, https://irfrome.org/en/27-10-conferenza-sul-teatro-di-nerone-in-vaticano-novita-dallo-scavo-di-palazzo-de-penitenzieri/

14 Reported previously in Coates-Stephens, R.Notes from RomePBSR 89 (2021) 335–6Google Scholar; Siwicki, C., ‘Notes from Rome 2022–23’, PBSR 90 (2022) 333Google Scholar.

16 Strabo 5.3.8.

17 Lanciani, R., The Ruins and Excavations of Ancient Rome. New York, 1897: 462–4Google Scholar.

18 Reported previously in Siwicki, C., ‘Notes from Rome 2022–23’, PBSR 91 (2023) 307Google Scholar.

22 Previously reported in Siwicki, C., ‘Notes from Rome 2022–23’, PBSR 91 (2023) 313Google Scholar.

23 The excavators compare it to a statue of Jupiter in the small cloister of the Baths of Diocletian and another from Utica, now in Leiden (Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, inv. H II BB 8).

24 Information gleaned from signboards at the site.

25 Previously reported in Siwicki, C., ‘Notes from Rome 2022–23’, PBSR 91 (2023) 312Google Scholar.

27 On the ‘holes’, Claridge, A. and Siwicki, C., ‘Notes from Rome 2018–19’, PBSR 87 (2019) 309Google Scholar.

30 Previously reported in Siwicki, C., ‘Notes from Rome 2022–23’, PBSR 90 (2022) 334Google Scholar.

32 Previously reported in Siwicki, C., ‘Notes from Rome 2022–23’, PBSR 91 (2023) 312–13Google Scholar.

34 C. Siwicki ‘A new floor for Rome's Colosseum’, Art and Object (12 July 2021) https://www.artandobject.com/news/new-floor-romes-colosseum-what-you-need-know

36 R. Norton, ‘The condition of historical buildings in Italy’, The Times, 9 January 1899. The letter is A. Cubberley, Notes from Rome by Rodolfo Lanciani, 1988: 241–7.

38 As recorded by Rodolfo Lanciani in the original ‘Notes from Rome’, Athenaeum 2555 (14 October 1876), 504–5; 2611 (10 November 1877), 604–5.

39 A short guide to the site Parco Archeologico del Celio. Museo della Forma Urbis was published by De Luca Editori d'Arte (2023).

41 ‘Nuova Luce da Pompei a Roma’ (5 July–8 October 2023) was curated by Ruth Bielfeldt and Johannes Eber.

43 ‘New Light from Pompeii’ (Bavarian State Collection of Antiques, Munich, 9 November 2022–2 April 2023). The exhibition was accompanied by a catalogue in German, R. Bielfeldt et al. (eds), Neues Licht aus Pompeji (Munich) 2022. For a more detailed review, see J. Clarke ‘New light from Pompeii’, BMCR (10 February 2023) https://bmcr.brynmawr.edu/2023/2023.10.02/ and a video of the Munich exhibition can be found at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cei_70MFDIA

44 ‘Fidia’ (24 November 2023–9 June 2024) was curated by Claudio Parisi Presicce. An accompanying catalogue of the same title (edited by N. Agnoli, A. Avagliano C. Parisi Presicce and F. de Tomasi) was published by L'Erma di Bretschneider.

45 For further comment, see C. Siwicki, ‘Fidia’ London Review of Books 46.8 (April 2024). https://www.lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v46/n08/christopher-siwicki/at-the-capitoline-museums

46 VRBS ROMA (21 April 2023–5 May 2024). On the discovery, C. Siwicki, ‘Notes from Rome 2022–23’, PBSR 91 (2023) 313.

49 Lex. Giustizia e diritto dall'Etruria a Roma (27 May – 1 October 2024) was curated by Vincenzo Lemmo. A catalogue of the same title was published by Gangemi.

51 ‘TEATRO. Autori, attori e pubblico nell'antico Roma’ (21 May–3 November 2023) was curated by Salvatore Monda, Orietta Rossini and Lucia Spagnuolo. A catalogue with the same title was published by L'Erma di Bretschneider.

52 On the context of the discovery, see A. Claridge and C. Siwicki, ‘Notes from Rome 2018–19’, PBSR 87 (2019) 309; C. Siwicki, ‘Finding wonderful things: What the media missed while covering the discovery of two statues in Rome’, History Today 70.4 (2020, April).

53 ‘Imago Augusti. Due nuovi ritratti di Augusto da Roma e Isernia’ (29 June 2023–3 September 2024) was curated by Beatrice Pinna Caboni, Dora Catalano, Maria Diletta Colombo and Claudio Parisi Presicce. An accompanying catalogue with the same title was published by Campisano.

54 ‘Spina etrusca a Villa Giulia. Un grande porto del Mediterraneo’ (10 November 2023–7 April 2024) was curated by Valentino Nizzo. A catalogue with the same title was published by ARA edizioni.

56 ‘Copernico e la rivoluzione del mondo’ (21 October 2023–19 January 2024) was curated by Jurek Miziolek and Francesca Ceci.

57 ‘Statue di Barbari in Marmi Colorati. Novità dal Foro Romano e Terracina’ (officially, 7–17 June 2023).

59 ‘L'Amato di Iside. Nerone, la Domus Aurea e l'Egitto’ (22 June 2023–14 January 2024) was curated by Alfonsina Russo, Francesca Guarneri, Stefano Borghini and Massimilliana Pozzi. A catalogue with the same title was published by Artem.

61 Joseph. AJ 18.3.4.

62 ‘La Colonna Traiana. Il racconto di un simbolo’ (22 December 2023–30 April 2024) was curated by Alfonsina Russo, Federica Rinaldi, Angelica Pujia and Giovanni Di Pasquale.

63 ‘Building a Masterpiece: Trajan's Column’ (20 June–5 October 2019) was curated by Giovanni Di Pasquale and Fabrizio Paolucci. An accompanying catalogue – Giovanni Di Paquale (ed) The Art of Building a Masterpiece: Trajan's Column – was published by Giunti.

65 ‘La Colonna Traiana’ at the Colosseum, the Museo Nazionale Romano put on ‘Dacia. L'ultima frontiera della Romanità’ (21 November 2023–21 April 2024), which was curated by Ernest Oberlander and Stéphane Verger.