WHAT BINDS US TOGETHER
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Transcript of WHAT BINDS US TOGETHER
From Roman origins to contemporary times
from: Bartolomeo Capasso, Napoli Greco-romana, Società napoletana di storia patria, 1905
In 470 B.C. the Greek Cumaeans decided to found a city and
chose the eastest part of ancient Partenope, which is
nowadays the historical centre. They decided to call it
"Neapolis" (new city) to be distinguished from "Palepolis" (old
city). At that time the city was probably an aristocratic
republic governed by two arcons and a council of nobles.
From the point of view of the urban structure, Neapolis was
characterized by cards and decumans, according to Greek
tradition. The city was rich in religious and public buildings
such as temples, curia, theatres and hippodrome. It became
an important Magna Grecia colony, together with Taranto and
Cuma. In the years to come, the Romans would be inspired by
the culture, art and traditions which enriched Neapolis in that
period.
From: Ferdinando Ferrajoli , Napoli monumentale , Napoli: A. Gallina,1981
The greek “Agorà”, after “Foro”, during roman age
The ancient Agora or Forum
After the arrival of several Greek colonies, the population increased and soon arose, over the Acropolis, the “Agorà” or the “Forum”, wich was the main square, the center of the gouvernement and public life,of the town, located in corrispondence of P.zza San Gaetano, as has been pointed out by excavaions under the church of San Lorenzo Maggiore. In these place there was the “ Archeion”, a building equivalent to the roman basilica, where was exercised the Judiciary and the documents were guarded and the treasure State.-
The church rises in the place where once was a paleo Christian church, the Neapolitan bishop Giovanni II (535-555) made it build, it was named as the martyr Lorenzo. The rudimental church whit a nave and two aisles, is still visible on the floor, it is traced with brazen bands that indicate the perimeter walls and the position retaining columns.
In the area underneath the Church of San Lorenzo Maggiore there are the remains of some public buildings dated back to the Greek and Roman era, when the center of the town was in the actual piazza San Gaetano. Apart from the early Christian church of the 6th century A.D., there are traces of previous building of the 4th century B.C. and of the food market of the time.
Many other buildings side by side on along street, among which the treasury, show the complex stratification of the urban soil during the centuries.
Excavations Archeological area, 8 mt. underground there is a roman paved
street, 3 mt. large and 54 mt. long. This street is expanding from north to south. Here there are some very recognizable ruins, some kind of Roman shops, all part of the Macellum (the Roman market structure from the I century A.D.) and underneath them is still visible the ancient Greek part (the perimeter wall and the Agora terrace from the V century B.C.). The specific use of some of the shops has been identified, while the one of others hasn’t. There are some reconstruction and remaking marks done after the violent earthquake in 62 A.D. and the destructive eruption in 79 A.D. At the end of the “Cardine”(street) there is a Cryptoporticus (the covered market), this is divided in little communicating rooms, each having some masonry counters for the merchandise’s exposition. In the last and new part of the archaeological area, there is a monumental hydraulic work dated back from the late Hellenistic period and a “Schola”, a vast structure with mosaic flooring, a fountain-bassin (Impluvium) and rests of typical Pompeian’s frescoes.
The “criptoporticuS”
The Roman “Cardo”A narrow street that crossed perpendicularly the “decumani” ( i.e. the main streets)
The group of buildings consisting of the church of Saint Patrizia and the monastery was built on the remains of the Temples of Cerere. According to various sources, the church may have been built by Saint Elena, according to others by the Bishop Nostriano, (X Century). After the "Concilio di Trento”(1545-1563), and the new rulings regarding cloistered orders, the old chapel was completely rebuilt. We can find evidence of these cloistered orders in the iron bars of the building's façade, in the grilles that imprison the choir, and in the splendid lighting of the "Polito" through which the Sisters used to communicate. The inside is aisles but has side chapels. It is worth noting the splendid box ceiling and two gold organs. Beyond the vestibule there is the wonderful cloister of Della Monica, which has arches and pillars supporting terraces and belvederes, and a baroque fountain which provides the base for two marble statues of the Christ and the Samaritan. In the centre there is the Byzantine Chapel of the Madonna dell'Idria.
The name "Nile“ curiously, no
doubt occurs in Neapolitan
toponymy. There is a small Nile
Square where you find the
Church of Sant’Angelo a Nilo, as
well as a statue of a Nile river
god. The church is the only one
in Naples with a name that gives
such obvious testimony to the
bonds that the Greek founders
of the original city had with their
own cultural forerunners, the
Egyptians; the word ‘Nilo’ does,
in fact, mean Nile. Here was the
‘Alexandrian (Egyptian) Quarter’
of the original Greek city.
la fontana delle “zizze”( The Tits Fountain)
It is all too clear why it is commonly referred to as Fontana delle Mammelle (mammelle being the Italian for breasts): on the top of the fountain is the sculpture of a Mermaid (symbol of Naples), who is trying to extinguish the fire of Mount Vesuvius with water that is spurting from her breasts.Historical documents state that a public fountain already stood in this place as far back as the 12th century, but it was not until the 16th century that Don Pedro de Toledo commissioned its transformation by Giovanni da Nola.The work consists of a rectangular white marble basin and stands against the wall of the church of Santa Caterina di Spinacorona (from which it gets its name).
Vesuvius shape before the eruption
The activity between 79 AD and 1631
The most famous and destructive eruption of
Mt. Vesuvius occurred in AD 79. Greek and
roman scholars (Strabo, Diodorus Siculus,
Vitruvius, Vergil) already knew the volcanic
nature of the mountain before this eruption. It
destroyed many towns around Vesuvius. A
detailed description was made by Pliny the
Younger who observed the eruption from Cape
Misenum at a distance of about 20 km from the
volcano. During the eruption the uncle of Pliny
the Younger (Pliny the Elder), admiral of the
roman fleet based in Misenum, went to the
rescue of the people endangered by the
eruption and lost his life. We have no
information on the state of Vesuvius
immediately after the eruption of 79. The first
account of continuing activity is from Galenus
(c.172 AD) who testifies that "the matter in it
(Vesuvius) is still burning".
HERCULANEUM EXCAVATIONSAt the moment of the eruption of the Vesuvius in 79 b.C , Herculaneum wasswept away by mud and Volcanic detritus , which , once solidified , made akind of hard tufa bank of about 8-10 metres which preserved the tops of thebuildings and also all the organic materials , so this site offers a unique visionof the domestic life of the time.
The Excavations of Herculaneum According to the legend, Herculaneum was founded by Hercules, even though the history tells about various dominations (Osci, Etruscan and Samnite). In the III century the city became part of the Nocerina Confederation, and took part into the so-called "social war" of Italic populations against the Roman Empire. Herculaneum was conquered by Titus Didius (Silla's legate) in 89 BC, when it lost its autonomy and became a Roman "municipium", governed by two duumviris (consuls).The extraordinary beauty and fertility attracted many Roman patricians, that built their sumptuous villas and residences, like the suburban Villa of Papiri, dating back to the Republican Age. During the Augustan Age, were built or deeply restored many public buildings, like the walls and the aqueduct, the central thermal baths, the theatre, the basilica and even the gym.On the 24th of August 79AC, the restoration works after the terrible earthquake of 62AC were still in progress, when the tragic eruption of Mont Vesuvius swept away everything. The city was covered by burning clouds, hot ash and pumice-stone dust that caused thermal shocks, killing the citizens of Herculaneum, and buring the houses under a thick cover of ash, 30 metres high.In 1709, during the excavation of a well, at some point the workers bumped into the wall belonging to the ancient theatre. From that point started the first explorations (as well as the first sackings) making underground passages. Only in 1738 Charles of Bourbon set the works going properly, under the supervision of Rocco Gioacchino d’Alcubierre, then Carlo Weber and, later on, Francesco La Vega.First were found the ancient theatre and basilica and, in 1752, the suburban Villa of Papiri, so called for the conspicuous library of Greek books, nowadays preserved into the homonym "Officina della Biblioteca Nazionale of Naples". The villa probably belonged to Lucio Calpurnio Pisone Cesonino, Emperor Caesar's father in law.