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Spatial Dominion in Early Roman Architecture. I. City plan of Pompeii: an admixture of Italic, Greek Hippodamian , and Roman urbanism. Pompeii, Italy, city plan, esp. the forum and the basilica, 1 st cen. BC to 1 st cen. AD. I. . Pompeii, Italy. Mt. Vesuvius. Naples. Pompeii.
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I. City plan of Pompeii: an admixture of Italic, Greek Hippodamian, and Roman urbanism Pompeii, Italy, city plan, esp. the forum and the basilica, 1st cen. BC to 1st cen. AD
I. Pompeii, Italy Mt. Vesuvius Naples Pompeii
I. A. What street patterns indicate the early Oscan and the Greek settlements? 6. Pompeii Greek Oscan
I. B. What neighborhood and large public spaces were added by the Romans in 80 bc when they decided to make Pompeii a retirement city for their military veterans? Pompeii
I. B. 3. Pompeii’s Theater Pompeii’s Amphitheater Theater and Odeon
II. The Forum: A consensus-building space in the Roman Republic A. What public buildings would one find on a Roman forum? 1. a basilica The Basilica on the Forum at Pompeii
II. A. 1. a. What are the components of the Roman basilica architecturally? 9. The Basilica on the Forum at Pompeii
II. A. 1. a. Greek stoas The Basilica on the Forum at Pompeii Hypostyle market hall, 210 bcat Delos, Turkey
II. A. 1. c. What Greek building is a basilica most similar to in terms of function? Stoa of Attalos at Athens The Basilica on the Forum at Pompeii
II. A. 2. Council halls, courts, treasury (and the Senate in the city of Rome) Council buildings on the Forum at Pompeii
II. A. 3. Commercial and civic buildings (some donated by prominent citizens: the Eumachia) Commercial buildings on the Forum at Pompeii
II. A. 4. Urban temples Forum of Pompeii – Two Temples
II. B. In what two ways did Romans circumscribe space and forge consensus in a Roman forum? 8. Forum at Pompeii
II. B. colonnaded Forum at Pompeii (Shaping space to foster consensus)
II. B. 2. How did the position of the main temple in a forum contribute to spatial hierarchy and clarity? Forum at Pompeii – Temple of Jupiter
III. Roman pseudo-peripteraltemple: Republican forging of concensus in building design Roman temples of the Republic period Etruscan style Temple of Capitoline Jupiter, Rome, 509 bc Temple of Jupiter on the forum of Pompeii, 150 bc Temple of Hercules Victor, Rome late 2nd cen. bc Temple of Hercules at Cori, Italy late 2nd cen. bc Temple of Vesta, Tivoli, Italy early 1st cen. bc Temple of Portunus, Rome, 75 bc
III. Maison Carrée (“Square House”), Nimes, France, 1st century B.C.
III. MaisonCarrée and the Carréd‘Art museum by Norman Foster (1984-93)
III. A. Did Roman spatial control transform the Greek temple, or did the Greek temple Hellenize the early Etrusco-Roman temple? Greek temple (Parthenon, 5th cen. bc) Etruscan temple (Veii, Italy, 5th cen. bc) Roman MaisonCarrée, 1st cen. bc
III. A. 1. Roman temple plan and elevation a. podium and d. approach (Shaping space to foster consensus) Maison Carrée
III. A. 1. a. Maison Carrée side front
III. A. 1. b. cella Maison Carrée
III. A. 1. c. pseudo-peripteral Maison Carrée
III. B. Ritual preferences in Roman temples 1. Where was the Roman altar compared to the Greek? Maison Carrée sometimes altar
III B. 2. Aside from worship, what other functions did the Roman temple serve? Maison Carrée
III. C. Where might the imperial patronage be seen in this otherwise traditionally republican-era temple? Maison Carrée