Basilica Aemilia
![]() Computer generated reconstruction of the basilica as it appeared under Augustus | |
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Location | Regio IV Templum Pacis |
---|---|
Coordinates | 41°53′33″N 12°29′10″E / 41.892554°N 12.48623°E |
Type | Basilica |
History | |
Builder | Marcus Fulvius Nobilior |
Founded | 179 BC |
The Basilica Aemilia (Italian: Basilica Emilia) or the Basilica Paulli, was a civil basilica in the Roman Forum. It was initially constructed by Lucius Aemilius Paullus, and was completed by his son Paullus Aemilius Lepidus in 33 BCE. In 22 CE, it was reconstructed under Augustus and was described by Pliny the Elder to be among the most beautiful buildings in the Roman world.[1] Today on the site, only fragments of the floorplan and colonnade remain, but a continuous sculptural frieze from the lower entablature was reconstructed and is preserved in the nearby Curia Julia.
History
[edit]Pre-existing building
[edit]The new basilica was built on a site of the 5th-century BC tabernae lanienae ("butcher shops") and later (4th century BC) the tabernae argentariae. The latter housed the city's bankers, and after a fire was renamed tabernae novae ("new shops"). The square had two facing rows of shops. A first basilica had been built behind the tabernae argentariae between 210 BC and 195-191 BC, the date in which it is mentioned by Plautus. Archaeological studies have shown that this building comprised three naves paved with tuff from Monteverde, the back façade having a portico which opened to the Forum Piscatorium and the Macellum (the area later occupied by the Forum of Nerva).
The Basilica Fulvia-Aemilia
[edit]It was erected in 179 BC[2] by censor Marcus Fulvius Nobilior with the name of Basilica Fulvia. After the latter's death, his colleague Marcus Aemilius Lepidus completed it, and it was frequently restored and redecorated by the members of the Aemilian gens, giving the basilica its current name.[3]
The 78 BC consul, also called Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, embellished it with the clipei ("shields"). This intervention is recalled in a coin from 61 BC by his son, the triumvir Marcus Aemilius Lepidus.
According to other scholars, however, the Basilica Aemilia formed a different edifice from the Basilica Fulvia.
In the year 50BCE, Julius Caesar "...gave the consul Paulus fifteen hundred talents with which he added to the beauty of the forum by building the famous Basilica which was erected in the place of the one called "the Fulvia".[4]
The Basilica Paulli
[edit]
A new edifice in substitution of the Basilica Fulvia was begun in 55 BC by Lucius Aemilius Lepidus Paullus, and inaugurated by his son in 34 BC. This edifice had similar lines to the preceding one; however with a reduced length and a second nave in lieu of the back portico.
The columns in the central nave, in African marble, had Corinthian capitals and friezes with deeds from the history of Republican Rome. The columns in the second row were in cipolline marble and, finally, the external ones had Ionic capitals.
After a fire, Augustus in 14 BC heavily restored the edifice.[2] In this occasion the tabernae which preceded it towards the Forum square and the portico were totally rebuilt. The latter was dedicated to the emperor's two grandsons (Porticus Gai et Luci): it had two orders of arcades with pilasters and Doric semi-columns. The two upper floors of the basilica were totally rebuilt. Over the upper order an attic was built, decorated with vegetable elements and statues of barbarians.
The basilica was restored again in 22 AD. On its two-hundredth anniversary, the Basilica Aemilia was considered by Pliny to be one of the most beautiful buildings in Rome. It was a place for business and, in the porticus of Gaius and Lucius (the grandsons of Augustus) fronting the Roman Forum, there were the Tabernae Novae (New Shops). The main hall or court (100 m long and 29.9 m deep) was located behind the shops.
The wooden roof, the Tabernae as well as the facade of the basilica were completely destroyed by fire when Rome was sacked by Alaric the Visigoth in 410 AD. On the colored marble floor one still can see the green stains of bronze coins from the early fifth century that melted in the fire.[2] The basilica was rebuilt after the fire by adding a new floor while the central part of the front porch was replaced by a portico in c.420 with columns of pink granite on bases, much more dense than the pillars of the porch above (three of these columns were rebuilt after the excavations and are still on the east side toward the temple of Antoninus and Faustina). An earthquake in 847 caused the final collapse of the remaining structure. The remains were used as building material. Conspicuous remains of the basilica could still be seen in the Renaissance, they were however used for the Palazzo Giraud Torlonia.
Gallery
[edit]-
Drawing of the remains of the Basilica Aemilia, at the Roman Forum, by Giuliano da Sangallo, 1480.
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Image of the façade of the Basilica Aemilia, on a Roman coin minted by Marcus Aemilius Lepidus in 61 BC
References
[edit]- ^ Pliny the Elder. Natural History. Book XXXVI. 24.
- ^ a b c Mozzati, Luca (2001). Rome: Computerized Reconstruction of Sites and Monuments. Milano, Italy: Mondadori Electa. ISBN 88-435-7790-5.
- ^ "Basilica Aemilia". Penelope, University of Chicago. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
- ^ Plutarch. Life of Caesar. 29.2.
Bibliography
[edit]In English
- Hülsen, Christian. The Roman forvm: its history and its monuments. Translated by Jesse Benedict Carter. Rome: Loescher, 1909.
- Planeter, Samuel Bell. A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome. Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1911.
- Van Deman, Esther Boise. "The Porticus of Gaius and Lucius." American Journal of Archaeology 17 (Jan.-Mar. 1913): 14-28.
- Furuhagen, Hans. "Some remarks on the sculpted frieze of the Basilica Aemilia in Rome." Opuscula Romana 3 (1961): 139-155.
- Dudley, Donald R. Urbs Roma: A source book of classical texts on the city & its monuments. London: Phiadon Press, 1967. [pp. 97-99]
- Richardson, Lawrence. A new topographical dictionary of ancient Rome. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992. [pp. 54-56]
- Cancik, Hubert and Helmuth Schneider (eds.) Brill's New Pauly Encyclopedia of the Ancient World: Vol. 2, Ark-Cas. Leiden: Brill, 2003. [pp. 532-535]
- Claridge, Amanda (ed.) Rome: An Oxford Archaeological Guide. Oxford University Press, 2010. [pp. 69-71]
- Tomei, Maria Antonietta (ed.). Memories of Rome: The Aemilii and the Basilica at the Forum. Milan: Electa, 2010.
- Gorski, Gilbert J. and James E. Packer. The Roman Forum: A Reconstruction and Architectural Guide. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2015. [pp. 91-115]
- Kalas, Gregor. The Restoration of the Roman Forum in Late Antiquity: Transforming Public Space. University of Texas Press, 2015. [pp. 105-124]
- Schneider, Rolf Michael. “Context Matters: Pliny’s Phryges and the Basilica Paulli in Rome.” In The Archaeology of Greece and Rome: Studies in Honour of Anthony Snodgrass, edited by John Bintliff and Keith Rutter, pp. 402-433. Edinburgh University Press, 2016.
In Italian
- Carettoni, Gianfilippo. "Esplorazioni nella Basilica Emilia." Notizie degli Scavi di Antichità (1948): 111-128.
- Bartoli, Alfonso. "Il fregio figurato della Basilica Emilia." Bulletino d'Arte (1950): 289-294.
- Carettoni, Gianfilippo. "Il fregio figurato della Basilica Emilia." Rivista dell'istituto nazionale di archeologia e storia dell'arte 24 (1961): 5-78.
- Gaggiotti, Marcello. “Atrium Regium - Basilica, Aemilia: una insospettata continuità storica e una chiave ideologica per la soluzione del problema dell'origine della basilica.” Analecta romana instituti Danici 14 (1985): 53-80.
- Steinby, Eva Margareta. "ll lato orientale del Foro Romano: Proposte di lettura." Arctos: Acta Philologica Fennica 21 (1987): 139-184.
- Arya, D. A. "Il fregio della Basilica Paulli (Aemilia)." In Roma: Romolo, Remo e la fondazione della città. Edited by Andrea Carandini and Rosanna Cappelli, pp. 303-319. Milan: Electa, 2000.
- Tomei, Maria Antonietta and Paolo Liverani (eds.). Lexicon topographicum urbis Romae. Supplementum. I, Carta archeologica di Roma. Primo quadrante. Rome: Edizioni Quasar, 2005. [pp. 167-168 ("Basilica Aemilia"), 173-175 ("Basilica Fulvia"), 183-187 ("Basilica Paulli")]
- Appetecchia, Agostina. "I pavimenti marmorei praticamente inediti della Basilica Iulia e della Basilica Aemilia al Foro Romano." In Atti del XII colloquio dell'Associazione Italiana per lo Studio e la Conservazione del Mosaico. Edited by Claudia Angelelli and A. Paribeni, pp. 221-230. Tivoli, 2007.
- Ertel, Christine and Klaus S. Freyberger. "Nuove indagini sulla Basilica Emilia nel Foro Romano." Archeologia Classica 58 (2007): 109-142.
- Zampa, Paola. Una bella descrizione da essere considerata: l'angolo della basilica Emilia. Rome: Campisano editore, 2019.
In German
- Wegner, Max. "Bauschmuck der Basilica Aemilia am Forum Romanum." Römanische Mitteilungen 94 (1987): 325-329.
- Bauer, Heinrich. "Basilica Aemilia." In Kaiser Augustus und die verlorene Republik. Edited by Mathias René Hofter, pp. 200-212. Mainz: Verlag P. von Zabern, 1988.
- Kraenzle, P. "Der Fries der Basilica Aemilia." Antike Plastik 23 (1994): 93-127.
- Ertel, Christine et al. "Neue Forschungen zur Basilica Aemilia auf dem Forum Romanum." Römanische Mitteilungen 133 (2007): 493-552.
- Lipps, Johannes. Die Basilica Aemilia am Forum Romanum: der kaiserzeitliche Bau und seine Ornamentik. Wiesbaden: Reichert Verlag, 2011.
- Freyberger, Klaus S. and Christine Ertel (eds.) Die Basilica Aemilia auf dem Forum Romanum in Rom: Bauphasen, Rekonstruktion, Funktion und Bedeutung. Wiesbaden: Reichert Verlag, 2016.
External links
[edit]- "Basilica Aemilia." Pheides. Accessed 9 April 2025.
- "The Basilica Aemilia." iDAI.objects arachne. German Archaeological Institute. Accessed 9 April 2025.
- "Basilica Paulli." Digital Augustan Rome, directed by Dr. David Gilman Romano. Accessed 9 April 2025.
- "Basilica Aemilia (Rome)." ToposText. Aikaterini Laskaridis Foundation. Accessed 9 April 2025.