Roman architecture
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Transcript of Roman architecture
Roman Architecture
Introduction
Roman culture is the result of different influences: Primitive cultures of the area Rome was founded in
(they were peasants and warriors) Etrurian civilization: urban, offering cult to the
ancestors Greek and Hellenistic: this was the model the aimed
at imitating.
Introduction
Results: From the Italian origins:
Practical sense (functionalism) Military expansion (imperialism)
From the Etrurian Realistic sense Cult to the ancestors
From Greece Philosophy Literature Art
Introduction
General characteristics of Roman Art It is practical and utilitarian Interest in public works and engeneering Monumentality Great technical advances Colossal to show Roman power It is commemorative and propagandistic
General Characteristics
Special importance for the internal spaceIntegral view of the art combining:
Beauty and sumptuosity with Utility and practical sense
Buildings are integrated in the urban space
General Characteristicsbuilding system
Building systems: Lintelled:
Copied from the Greeks Spaces are closed by straight lines
Vaulted Taken from the Etrurian Use of arches Barrel vaults
Use of domes Strong walls so that they do not use external
supports
General CharacteristicsMaterials:
Limestone Concrete Mortar
Arches: They used half point or semicircular arches They could use lintels above these arches Pediments were combined with them
General Characteristics: Building techniques
Opus incertum Opus testaceum Opus reticulatum
Opus spicatum Mortar in the foundations Barrel Vault
General Characteristics
Walls were made in one of these ways:
Ashlar Masonry Brick
General Characteristics
Material combinations in walls:
General Characteristics
Greek shapes assimilation: Architectonical orders were used more in a decorative than in a practical way Order superposition The use of orders linked to the wall created a decorative element They used the classical orders and two more:
Composite Tuscan
Roman Town Planning
Cities were the centre of Roman life Need for infrastructures
Water and sewer system Transport and defence Public spaces and markets
Psychological effect: power and controlThere was a need of linking them throug
paved roads
Roman Town Planning
The plan of the city was based on the camp
It had two main axes Cardus E-W Decumanus N-S
Where the two converged was the forum
The rest of the space was divided into squares in which insulae or blocks of flats were built
Roman Town Planning
The most important part of the city was the forum, where political, economic, administrative, social and religious activity were centred.
Main buildings were in this forumIn big cities there were theatres,
circuses, stadiums, odeons.
Caesar Augustae (Zaragoza) plan
Paved Roads
Paved roads were needed to reach to any point of the empire
They facilitated both communication and political control
Paved Roads
The roads were made with strong foundationsDifferent materials were put into different layersTo meassure the distance they created the Milliarium or stones located in the sides
Section of a Roman paved road
Paved Roads
The roads were not completely flatThey consisted of several parts
The central and highest was the most important, it was convex to conduct the water to the
Ditches that were built in the sides
Bridges
Roman engineers were true masters building them, since constructions were essential elements for reaching places and cities often situated at the bank of rivers.
This location was due to defensive and infrastructural reasons -supply and drainage.
They are characterised by: Not pointed arches. Constructions of ashlars masonry often with pad shape. Route of more than 5 m. wide. Route of horizontal or slightly combed surface "few curved". Rectangular pillars from their basis with lateral triangular or
circular cutwaters that end before the railings.
Aqueducts
Aqueducts were built in order to avoid geographic irregularities between fountains or rivers and towns.
Not only valleys were crossed by superposed cannels, but also mountains were excavated by long tunnels, pits and levels of maintenance.
They were used to bring water to cities.
Ports and Lighthouses
Roman ships and those for commercial trade should travel from port to port with the speed and security adequate to the life of a great Empire.
In these ports every necessity for the execution of the usual works in a port ensemble should be found: gateways with stores and
bureaux, shipyards for stationing ships, roads for taking ships to earthly
ground, drinkable water fountains and machinery for loading and
downloading merchandises. Indeed, a system of indication
was necessary in order to mark the right access and exit to the port.
Walls
Defence of cities has been one of the capital problems that civilizations had to solve in order to project the future of their citizens, goods, culture and ways of life.
Romans were the first in the technique of improving different kinds of defence, using walls.
Forums
Forums were cultural centres in cities. They were often placed at the crossroads of important urban ways: cardo maximus and decumanus. A great porticated square was the centre of a group of buildings around it. They were communicated through it. Temples for Imperial worship, schools, basilicae, markets or even termae had a direct access through forum. In many cases even buildings for spectacles -circus, theatres and amphitheatres- were communicated so. Forums were a way in for important persons to tribunals.
Architectonic Typology
Roman Architecture has a rich typology that includes:
Religious building: templeCivil buildings:
Public: basilicas, baths Spectacles: theatre, amphitheatre, circus Commemorative: Triumph arch, column Domestic: house, village, palace Funerary: tombs
Engineering works: Bridges Aqueducts
Religious: Temple
It copied the Greek model
It has only one portico and a main façade
It tends to be pseudoperiptero
The cella is totally closed
It is built on a podiumInstead of having stairs
all around, it only has them in the main façade
Religious: Temple
There were other kind of temples:
Circular: similar to the Greek tholos
Pantheon: combined squared and circular structures and was in honour of all gods.
Civil Buildings: Basilica
It was the residence of the tribunal
It is rectangular and has different naves
The central nave is higher and receives light from the sides
The building ends in an apse
It is covered with vaults Barrel over the central nave Edged over the lateral
naves
Civil Buildings: Baths
There were spaces for public life
They consisted of different rooms:
Changing rooms Different temperature
rooms: Frigidarium (cold) Tepidarium (warm) Caldarium (hot)
Swimming pool Gymnasium Library
Caracalla´s Bath House
Spectacles: Theatre
It is similar to the Greek but it is not located in a mountain but it is completely built
It has a semicircular scenery
The doors to facilitate peoples’ movement are called vomitoria
It does not have the orchestra because in Roman plays was not a chorus
The rest of the parts are similar to those of the Greek theatre
Merida’s Roman Theatre
Spectacles: Amphitheatre
It comes from the fusion of two theatres
It was the place for spectacles with animals and fights (gladiators)
There could be filled with water for naval battles.
Spectacles: Circus
It was a building for horse races and cuadriga competitions.
It has the cavea, the area and a central element to turn around, the spina.
Commemorative monuments: Triumphal Arches
They were usually placed at the main entrance of cities in order to remember travellers and inhabitants the Greatness and strength of Roman world. At the beginning they were wooden arches where trophies and richness from wars were shown. This habitude changed: Romans built commemorative arches with inscriptions. They were a Roman creation and they succeeded: many of them have been constructed until the present days. Arches were used not only for commemorating Roman victories or military generals: they also marked limits between provincial borders.
Commemorative monuments: Columns
They were columns decorated with relieves
In them some important facts were related
They were built in the honour of a person.
The best instance of these works is the famous Traian Column at Rome. It is decorated with a spiral of relieves dealing with scenes of his campaigns in Danube and with inscriptions.
Houses: Insulae
There are urban houses In order to take advantage
from the room in cities, buildings up to four floors were constructed.
The ground floor was for shops -tabernae- and the others for apartments of different sizes.
Every room was communicated through a central communitarian patio decorated with flowers or gardens.
Houses: Domus It was the usual housing for important people in
each city. It was endowed with a structure based on
distribution through porticated patios: the entry -fauces- gives access to a small corridor -vestibulum-. It leads to a porticated patio -atrium-. Its center, the impluvium, is a bank for the
water falling from the compluvium. At both sides -alae- there are many chambers
used as rooms for service slaves, kitchens and latrines.
At the bottom, the tablinum or living-room can be found, and close to it, the triclinium or dining-room.
This atrium gave also light enough to next rooms.
At both sides of the tablinum, little corridors led to the noble part of the domus.
Second porticated patio peristylium, was bigger and endowed with a central garden.
It was surrounded by rooms -cubiculum- and marked by an exedra used as a chamber for banquets or social meetings.
Houses: Villa
Houses far from cities, were thought for realizing agricultural exploitations -villae rustica-, or else as places for the rest of important persons -villae urbana-.
Entertaining villa was endowed with every comfortable element in its age as well as gardens and splendid views.
Country villae got stables, cellars, stores and orchards apart from the noble rooms.
Palaces
There were the residence of the emperor
They consisted of a numerous series of rooms
Their plan tended to be regular
Diocleciano’s Palace at Splitz