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Ancient Mediterranean + Europe
Course: Ancient Mediterranean + Europe > Unit 9
Lesson 8: Middle empire- The Pantheon
- The Pantheon
- Pantheon
- Bronze head from a statue of the Emperor Hadrian
- Hadrian's Villa, Tivoli: A virtual tour
- Hadrian, The imperial palace, Tivoli
- Maritime Theatre at Hadrian's Villa, Tivoli
- Rome's layered history: the Castel Sant'Angelo
- Pair of Centaurs Fighting Cats of Prey from Hadrian's Villa, Tivoli
- Hadrian, Building the wall
- Hadrian’s Wall
- Empire: Medea Sarcophagus
- Equestrian Sculpture of Marcus Aurelius
- Equestrian Sculpture of Marcus Aurelius
- Equestrian Sculpture of Marcus Aurelius
- The importance of the archaeological findspot: The Lullingstone Busts
- Julia Domna’s Portraits
- The Arch of Septimius Severus, portal to ancient Rome
- The Severan Tondo: Damnatio Memoriae in ancient Rome
- Damnatio memoriae—Roman sanctions against memory
- Baths of Caracalla
- Severan marble plan (Forma Urbis Romae)
- Ludovisi Battle Sarcophagus
- Ludovisi Battle Sarcophagus
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Rome's layered history: the Castel Sant'Angelo
A conversation with Dr. Steven Zucker and Dr. Beth Harris at the Castel Sant'Angelo (Mausoleum of Hadrian), 139 C.E., Rome. Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
Video transcript
(jazzy tune) - [Dr. Zucker] We're high up
on the Castel Sant'Angelo, in the middle of Rome. Built as a mausoleum
for the emperor Hadrian, looking out over the rooftops of the city, from here we can see modern buildings, Baroque buildings, Renaissance buildings. For instance, we can see the dome designed by Michelangelo
for Saint Peter's Basilica. And if we look closely, you can even make out that great dome belonging to the ancient
temple, the Pantheon, also probably built by
the emperor Hadrian. And that's the story of Rome. It's a city of layers. And it's also the story of this building. - [Dr. Harris] This
building looks like a ruin, and yet it's not. It's nearly 2,000 years old. New uses were continually found, and because of that,
we still have it today. Not only has it served as a mausoleum, but it served as a fortress, a prison, a refuge for popes, papal apartments, and it was even the site of a miracle. - [Dr. Zucker] When we
look at the building now, it looks very different from
what it looked like originally. Now, we believe that it
originally had a square base, and then a round barrel
that rose up from that. There may have been a colonnade, and there may have been a
circle of cypress trees. And then above that, there would have originally been a temple. And then at the very top, perhaps a large gilded sculpture
of the emperor Hadrian. - [Dr. Harris] And the
closer to the top we get, the more unsure we are of what the original
mausoleum looked like. That Hadrian built his mausoleum to intentionally recall the great funerary monument of Augustus, which is just across the river. But Hadrian's was even
more beautifully decorated with marble, with
travertine, with sculptures. Like so many ancient buildings in Rome, the Castle Sant'Angelo was
robbed of its decorative marble, its sculpture, fragments. Spolia from this building
were used elsewhere across the city. Hadrian dies in 138, a year later is deified by the senate, and we have to imagine his
remains being processed through this monument. - [Dr. Zucker] And the emperor's ashes would've been placed in an urn in the very center of the structure. Reached by a spiral ramp and was illuminated by two shafts that allowed light in through
enormously thick walls. - [Dr. Harris] With Hadrian, we're in the early second century. Christianity is a fledgling
religion at this point. But by the early 300s, the emperor Constantine
decriminalizes Christianity, and by the end of that century, Christianity will become
the official religion of the Roman empire. But we begin to see a
dissolution in the early 400s of the Roman empire itself. And then this building begins to serve a very different role. - [Dr. Zucker] Over centuries, it becomes more and more fortified. It becomes a defensive position. Rome is in fact, attacked. First by the Visigoths in 410, then by the Ostrogoths in the
middle of the sixth century. During the winter of
589-590, the Tiber river, which flows just in front of the mausoleum of Hadrian, flooded. This was followed by plague. Pope Gregory ordered
three days of procession. The icon of the Virgin and
Child from Santa Maria Maggiore was paraded through the city. - [Dr. Harris] And when
they got to the bridge, Pope Gregory looked up to the top of the mausoleum and saw a
vision of Saint Michael, wiping his sword and sheathing it. Pope Gregory understood this as a sign of the end of the plague, and in fact, that's exactly, according to these
accounts, what happened. Soon after the miracle occurred, a church was built on top of the mausoleum on the site where Saint
Michael had been seen, and since then, the mausoleum has been known
as the Castel Sant'Angelo. - [Dr. Zucker] And so a pagan
building became Christian. - [Dr. Harris] The
Castle of the Holy Angel. It's important to see this building in relationship to the
Basilica of Saint Peter's. - [Dr. Zucker] While the location is ideal to protect the Vatican. And in fact, walls were
built to enclose both. - [Dr. Harris] But what
I find most fascinating, is the covered protected passageway that was built between the
Basilica of Saint Peter's and the Castel Sant'Angelo. - [Dr. Zucker] On at least two occasions, a pope in the Vatican had to flee and was able to make his
way along this passage to the safety of Castel Sant'Angelo. - [Dr. Harris] This most
famously happened in 1527 when the city of Rome was sacked by the Holy Roman Emperor Charles V. But just before the sack of Rome, Renaissance artists made the discovery of the remains of the
Golden House of Nero. Which by the time of the Renaissance, was located way underground. - [Dr. Zucker] And when these underground chambers were discovered, artists including Raphael
began to explore them. And wheat they found were
spectacular ancient frescoes. What we've come to know as grotesques. - [Dr. Harris] And we see
these forms decorating rooms in the Castel Sant'Angelo. - [Dr. Zucker] And so if the grotesques are a wonderful expression of
the impact of the Renaissance on the Castel Sant'Angelo, then the Baroque is best exemplified by the sculptures on the bridge that lead to the monument. - [Dr. Harris] More than
100 years after Raphael, Bernini was commissioned to sculpt angels carrying the instruments of passion. And so the bridge became known
as the Ponte Sant'Angelo, the Bridge of Angels. Because this is today,
a beautiful approach to the Castel Sant'Angelo where we look up and at the very top, see a later 18th century sculpture of Saint Michael sheathing his sword. - [Dr. Zucker] Fast forward
to the 19th century, the nation of Italy is created, and the monument becomes the property of the state of Italy. In the early 20th century,
it becomes a museum and modern conservation efforts are begun. This is such a complicated building. It's a synthesis, like the city itself. - [Dr. Harris] And today, you can come and visit and walk its circumference and come up to the rooftop and have this amazing view of the city, and enjoy a cup of espresso. (jazzy tune)