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ARC 110
History of Architecture I


       Module 7
    Roman Architecture
Module Outline
•   Lecture 22
    – Historical Background
        • Location and period
        • Social characteristics and beliefs
•   Lecture 23
    – Architecture of the Civilization
        • Early Influences- The Etruscans
        • Engineering Innovation and achievements
        • Roman Buildings
•   Lecture 24
        • Roman Buildings
•   Lecture 25
        • Other architectural elements
        • Roman city Planning and Design
    – Architectural Characteristics
        • Buildings and other architectural elements
        • Building materials, construction and technologies
        • Architectural Organizing principles
Learning Outcomes
• We should expect to learn the following about the
  civilization
   – Structural revolution and invention of new
     materials
   – Innovative use of structural solutions in
     engineering and buildings structures
   – The invention of new building types for different
     purposes
   – The invention of functional space in architecture
   – The use of the orders as decorative elements in
     design
Module 7 Lecture 22
 Roman Architecture
Outline of Lecture
• Lecture 22
  – Historical Background
    • Location and period
    • Social characteristics and beliefs
Historical Background
Historical Background
                              Location
•   Roman architecture refers to the
    architecture of Rome and of the
    Roman Empire
•   The Roman Empire was one of the
    largest early empires in history,
    stretching from England in Northern
    Europe to the Ancient Near East and
    Africa
•   The pink area of the Map shows the
    greatest extent of the Roman Empire
•   Rome, located on the Italian peninsula
    was the capital of the empire
•   From the capital, an infrastructure of
    roads and communication systems
    was established to connect the whole
    empire
•   Rome is today the capital of Italy
Historical Background
                   Period
• The city of Rome was founded in 753 BC.
• Roman civilization with Rome as capital
  lasted for more than a thousand years.
• The history of the civilization can be
  divided into three periods;
  – 753- 510 BC      Etruscan Period
  – 510 – 44 BC      Republican Period
  – 44 BC – 476 A.D. Imperial Period
Historical Background
        Period- Etruscan Period
• Romans fix the date of the founding Rome at
  753 B. C.
• Prior to this date, the Etruscans established
  an urban culture in the Italian peninsula,
  which reached the height of its development
  around 600 B.C.
• They had conquered and established their
  authority over a loose federation of cities
• Rome at its foundation was a minor city and
  became a colony of the Etruscans
Historical Background
        Period- Etruscan Period
• Rome was ruled by Etruscan Kings aided by
  a popular assembly
• Towards the end of the 6th century B.C.,
  Etruscan power began to decline
• In 509 B.C. Rome revolted against their king
  and established an independent city state
• Further decline in the power of the Etruscans
  was accompanied by the rising influence and
  increasing significance of Rome
Historical Background
      Period – Republican Period
• After the expulsion of its Etruscan Kings, Rome
  gradually assumed leadership of a number of
  settlements for mutual defense
• This gradually led to the expanding influence
  and dominance of Rome
• By 273 B. C. Rome became the established
  dominant force in the region
• It conquered its rivals, defeating Cathage in
  146 B.C., Macedonia in 168 B. C., Greece in
  146 B.C., and Syria in 64 B. C.
• With time Rome also developed a system of
  Representative government
Historical Background
        Period – Republican Period
• Rome was government by a body of elected male
  representatives of the population known as the
  Senate
• This is why the period is referred to as republican
  or in other word democratic
• Towards the end of the last millennium B.C.
  Rome entered into a series of civil wars which
  brought about the rise of some military dictators,
  of which Julius Caesar was the most successful.
• This brought about the end of the republican
  period
Historical Background
         Period – Imperial Period
• Following a series of civil wars that ended in 27
  B.C. Caius Ocatavius, who later took the name
  Caesar Augustus assumed the title of emperor
• This ushered in the Imperial period of Roman
  history
• Emperor Augustus undertook a significant
  reorganization of the Roman Empire
• The golden age of architectural development
  was witnessed during this period
• He revitalized national life and created new
  building works
Historical Background
        Period – Imperial Period
• Augustus was credited with saying that he
  met Rome a city of brick and left it a city of
  marble
• Later it was to transform to a city of concrete
• The 3rd century A.D. was a period of political
  confusion in the Roman Empire
• The Barbarian people living in the north of
  Europe started attacking the Empire
• In 286 A.D. Roman Empire was split into
  two; a western empire and an Eastern
  empire
Historical Background
         Period – Imperial Period
• Emperor Constantine was able to reunite the
  Empire again in 324 A.D. and established a new
  capital for the empire at the city of Byzantium,
  which he renamed Constantinople
• After his death, the Empire was split again and
  each had a different destiny
• In 476 A.D. the western empire with its capital at
  Rome fell after century of attacks by Vandals
  and Visigoths ending the history of that part
• The Eastern Empire with its capital at
  Constantinople survived and became the focus
  of a civilization that lasted until 1453 A.D. when
  it was sacked by the Ottoman Turks
Historical Background
       Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• Introduction
  – The Roman Empire consisted of Rome and all its
    conquered provinces
  – Rome was the capital and focus of the Roman
    Civilization
  – Roman society was made of the Latinized people
    living on the Italian peninsula and other foreign
    people belonging to the conquered provinces
  – The society was not homogenous as its puts together
    people of different origins
  – Latin was the widely spoken language, particularly in
    Rome and its environment
  – The Roman people were classified into citizens and
    non citizens; citizenship can be conferred on non
    citizens
Historical Background
      Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• Introduction
  – Citizenship confers the right to vote, make
    contracts and have a legal marriage
  – Citizens are divided into two classes;
    members of the Roman Senate belonging to
    the highest social class and other citizens
  – The Roman people were essentially farmers
    and traders
  – Many also aspired to became solders and
    warriors; being a warrior provided one of the
    best means of advancing in the society
Historical Background
       Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• Social Life
  – Roman society had an active social life
  – The forum was the center of social life; it is
    very similar to the Greek Agora
  – The forum was the place for social, political,
    recreational and religious activities
  – Romans participated in a lot of entertainment
    activities
Historical Background
      Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• Social Life
  – These activities include spectator sports such
    as drama, chariot racing, and gladiatorial
    contest
  – They also had new unique social activities
    such as recreational bathing
  – The practice saw Romans going to a public
    bath at luxurious bathing through chambers of
    different temperature
  – In the process they engaged in both
    intellectual and physical interaction
Historical Background
       Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• Religious Beliefs
  – Roman people were not deeply religious, particularly
    during the early part of their development
  – They did not have religious beliefs and mythologies
    of their own, but borrowed from societies they come
    into contact with.
  – Contact with other people always resulted in changes
    to their culture, art and way of life
  – Most of their religious beliefs were borrowed from the
    Greeks, and like the Greeks, they also believed in a
    number of Gods
Historical Background
      Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• Religious Beliefs
  – The Romans believed that the faith of their
    empire lies in the hands of their various Gods
  – The state spent money to built temples to the
    various gods
  – Public assemblies, such as senate meetings,
    war victories and most state functions were
    always started with sacrifices to a particular
    god in his temple
  – The religious well being of the individual
    Roman was his own concern
Historical Background
       Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• System of Government
  – The System of government in ancient Rome was
    democratic
  – During the Republican period, Government consisted
    of two elected consuls, a senate and judiciary
  – The consuls acted as the executive arm of
    government overseeing the activities of the senate,
    army and other executive institutions such as tax
    collectors and police
  – The senate was an assembly of selected land owners,
    the upper class of Roman society, who approve
    budgets and suggest laws
Historical Background
      Social Characteristics & Beliefs

• System of Government
  – Members of the senate are elected from a
    series of lower assemblies who are
    responsible for enacting the laws suggesting
    by the senate and also implementing them;
  – The judicial branch consist of 6 judges who
    were elected every two years, who decide
    punishment for criminals
  – During the imperial period, the Consuls were
    replaced by Emperors who wielded a lot of
    power
Historical Background
       Social Characteristics & Beliefs

• Roman Architecture
  – The Environment around Rome was not as rich as
    the Greek mainland in construction material
    especially marble
  – Romans construction material consists of Stone,
    principally local travertine and timber
  – Roman also invented a system of firing brick and
    used brick widely in construction
  – Romans were also the first people to discover
    concrete; Roman concrete is different from our
    present day concrete
  – Romans made significant improvements to the arch
    to address its shortcoming
Historical Background
       Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• Roman Architecture
  – They also developed new construction systems
    based on the arch and dome
  – The combination of arch and vault construction with
    brick as formwork and concrete as bonding material
    enabled the Romans to construct great buildings with
    very large interior spaces
  – Roman construction also developed the system of
    wooden truss construction
  – The architecture of Rome has its origin in Hellenistic
    Greek Architecture and the architecture of the
    Etruscans
  – Most Roman architects were either of Greek origin or
    Greek trained
Historical Background
     Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• Roman Architecture
  – The Romans adopted the external language of
    classical Greek architecture
  – In Roman architecture, the orders survived simply as
    ornaments applied to great concrete buildings.
  – But the Romans also made unique additions to the
    orders that are very important.
  – New orders evolved and were added to the Greek
    orders to form the classical language of architecture
  – Romans also made additions in the entablature of
    temples, in the scale of buildings and the proportion of
    the entire design.
  – While the Greeks are said to be the inventors of form,
    Roman architecture concentrated on the creation of
    space
Historical Background
     Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• Roman Architecture
  – The Greek and Roman architecture are referred to as
    classical architecture
  – The first book on architecture was produced by
    Marcus Vitruvius Pollio in 100 A.D.
  – The ten books of architecture written sets down rules
    and procedures for creating architecture of value
  – The genius of Roman architecture was expressed not
    in the design of a particular building, but in the
    production of a vast number of various building types
  – Roman buildings include bathhouses for bathing,
    circuses for racing, amphitheatres for gladiatorial
    contest, temples for religion, domus for family life and
    the forum as the center of public life and national
    commerce
Historical Background
        Social Characteristics & Beliefs
• Other Achievements
  – Other contributions of the Romans include the Roman
    alphabets which is widely used in Western and Central
    European languages and the Roman numerals
  – The Roman also introduced the calendar which even
    thought it has changed several times before assuming
    its current form has endured to the present day
  – The influence of the Roman Empire's is visible in the
    government, law, and monumental architecture, as well
    as many other aspects of Western life
  – The various contributions of the Roman civilization to
    modern life has resulted in its classification along with
    the Greek civilization as Classical civilizations
End of Module 7 Lecture 22
Module 7 Lecture 23
 Roman Architecture
Outline of Lecture
• Lecture 23
  – Architecture of the Civilization
    • Early Influences- The Etruscans
    • Engineering Innovation and
      achievements
    • Roman Buildings
       – Theaters
       – Amphitheater- Coliseum
Architecture of the Civilization
Roman Architecture
      Early Influences- The Etruscans
• The Earliest civilization in the region around Rome were
  the Etruscans
• The Etruscan civilization existed in the northern part of
  what is now Italy, prior to the formation of the Roman
  Republic.
• During the 700s BC, the Etruscans developed into a
  series of autonomous city-states: Rome was a part of
  these city states
• Knowledge about the Etruscans is fragmentary, and
  usually filtered through Roman eyes;
• The Etruscans created the first visible civilization in Italy.
• They brought sophisticated Eastern and Greek culture to
  the region.
Roman Architecture
     Early Influences- The Etruscans
• Not much has survived of
  Etruscan buildings to the
  present however.
• The temple shown in the
  image is a reconstruction of
  a typical Etruscan temple
• The Etruscans introduced
  another order of architecture
• This order, known as the
  Tuscan order became
  popular with the Romans
Roman Architecture
    Early Influences- The Etruscans
• The Tuscan order had a
  simpler base and the shaft
  was without flutes
• The capital and entablature
  were also without decoration
• In proportion it is similar to
  the Doric order with a column
  that is seven diameters high
• Compared with the other
  orders, the Tuscan order
  looks the most solid
Engineering Achievement
                     Introduction
• Romans created what can be referred to as a structural
  revolution
• This revolution centers on their understanding and use of
  the arch and vault
• They also discovered the groin vault
• Because of this structural revolution, they were able to
  span large openings in buildings and other structures
  with economy and strength
• They were also able to design and construct buildings
  with large interior spaces
• The revolution also allowed the Romans to construct
  large engineering structures such as bridges to connect
  all parts of their empire, and aqueduct to supply water to
  their cities
Engineering Achievement
        Structural Innovation- Arches
• The arch was not a new
  building form, as it had been
  known by other civilizations
  including the Egyptians and
  the Greeks
• But the Romans used it to its
  fullest potential
• The arch is an organic
  structure with the elements of
  the arch resting on each other
  and transferring load to the
  column
• It was particularly useful over
  doors and openings
Engineering Achievement
        Structural Innovation- Arches
• With an arch, there are no
  tensile stresses as all the
  forces are in compression and
  building stone has enormous
  compressive strength
• Up to a certain point also, the
  more an arch is loaded the
  stronger it becomes
• Arches were used over doors
  and openings and sometimes,
  they are built over a lintel to
  deflect the load to the
  surrounding walls.
Engineering Achievement
                                Vaults
•   Vaults are used to cover an area as a
    roof
•   The simplest of the vaults is the Barrel
    vault, which is just made up of an arch
    extended over a certain distance
•   It can be adapted to suit different
    types of plans by making simple
    modifications to it
•   The disadvantage of the vault is that it
    exerts a continuous load and therefore
    needs some form of continuous
    support
•   It is also difficult to light the space
    under a vault except from the ends
•   The Romans invented unique ways of
    overcoming these difficulties
Engineering Achievement
                         Vaults
• The cross vault was created
  from the barrel vault to
  overcome some of the
  problems of the ordinary vault
• This is formed by intersecting
  two barrel-vaults at right angle
  and is called a “groin vault”
• The weight of the groin vault is
  concentrated at the corners
  eliminating the need for
  continuous support
• The opening of the space in 4
  directions means that ample
  light can be provided to the
  area below it
Engineering Achievement
                         Vaults
• The image shows an example
  of the use of arches, vaults and
  groin vaults in a Roman building
• The major limitation of the groin
  vault is that it is limited to a
  square plan
• The dome was another
  structure that was used in
  roman architecture.
• The Romans used the true
  dome with its fully rounded
  perfection
Engineering Achievement
                    Concrete
• The Romans were the first to develop concrete
• The concrete developed by the Romans is
  different from modern concrete and is made up of
  lime, sand and water
• Around the 2nd century BC, Pozzolana or
  volcanic ash was also added
• Concrete did away with the need for stone
  quarries
• It also did away with the need for the shaping and
  transportation of stone and for high skilled labor
  for stonemasonry
Engineering Achievement
                   Concrete
• Concrete has the advantage that it can be cast
  in any shape and in far larger sizes than the
  megalithic blocks of stone used in buildings
• With concrete, it was possible to construct
  monolithic vaults and arches
• Concrete buildings were normally faced with
  other materials to hide the ugly look of the
  concrete.
• Fired brick used as formwork was the most
  popular covering material
Engineering Structures
                 Introduction
• The structural revolution introduced by the
  Romans enabled them to introduce a variety of
  new civil structures and building programs
  never seen before their time
• The ability of the Romans to create large
  structures enabled them to build significant civil
  structures including aqueducts, bridges and
  sewers
• The Romans lived principally in cities and
  generally cities need a steady supply of fresh
  water
• Rome itself was projected to have a population
  of more than a million at the peak of its power
Engineering Structures
                 Introduction
• Arcuated structures or Structures built with
  arches played a major role in bringing this
  water to the city
• The technique of arcuated construction was
  also applied to the construction of bridges
• Rome also had a sanitary system to take away
  waste water from the city and large warehouses
  to service the needs of its port
Engineering Structures
                     Road and Bridges
•   The Trojan’s Bridge Alexandria is an
    example of ancient Roman structural
    achievement
•   It is also amongst the most
    impressive of the surviving Roman
    bridges
•   The bridge consist of tall piers and
    wide spanning arches
•   The central arches are slightly above
    27 meters in length
•   The roadway is carried 48 meters
    above the River
•   A commemorative arch stands at the
    center of the Bridge; the
    commemorative arch bears the
    name of the architect of the bridge
Engineering Structures
                    Aqueducts
• Aqueducts were used to
  supply water to Roman cities
• The Pont Du Gard is probably
  the most magnificent of the
  Roman aqueducts
• It was constructed around 50
  A.D. to supply water to the
  city of Nimes
• The Aqueduct in some places
  is almost 50 meters above
  the deep valley of the River
  Gard
Engineering Structures
                  Aqueducts
• It was constructed of 3
  tiers of arches
Engineering Structures
                 Aqueducts
• The Aqua Claudia is
  also another example of
  Roman aqueduct
• The Aqua Claudia was
  one of the eleven
  aqueducts that supplied
  Rome with water
• The aqueduct supplies
  water to Rome over a
  distance of 66
  kilometers
Roman Buildings
                    Introduction
• The focus of Roman building design was on functional
  spaces
• The Roman people demanded buildings of various
  functions from the Roman architect
• The architects were able to respond, creating buildings
  that answer to their functional requirement by providing
  appropriate interior spaces
• The buildings types include theaters, amphitheaters,
  basilicas, circuses, basilicas, temples and baths
• All of these buildings were erected within the dense
  fabric of the city
• We will examine each of these building types
Roman Buildings
                       Theaters
• The Romans adopted the Greek
  theater transforming it into
  something Roman
• There was an expansion of the
  stage and the whole theater was
  contained within a high-unbroken
  wall
• The Greek Theater was blended
  into the landscape
• In contrast, the Roman Theater
  was an urban form located in a
  flat city
• The structure of the theater
  consists of massive structural
  arcades on piers
Roman Buildings
                      Theaters
• A purely cosmetic layer of
  trabeation was added to the
  front
• The trabeation was of the
  Greek orders and gave scale to
  the building
• It also creates a rhythm of
  solids and voids on the
  elevation
• The three orders of Greek
  architecture were used on the
  theater elevation
• Theaters were built in every
  Roman City
Roman Buildings
                      Theaters
• The Theater was used for acting
  and drama
• The Theater Marcellus
  constructed between 23 to 13
  B.C. was the first theater
  constructed in the capital Rome
• It is a good example of a Roman
  theater
• Access to its banked seat is
  from the rear, providing access
  circumferentially
• A stage runs from end to end in
  front
• The stage is enclosed by a tall
  wall
Roman Buildings
         Amphitheater-Introduction
• The amphitheater is a roman
  structure with no Greek
  equivalent
• Amphitheatre is a public
  building used for spectator
  sports, games and displays
• Apart from function, the
  important outward distinction
  between an amphitheatre and
  a theatre is that amphitheatre is
  round or oval in shape
• An amphitheater was first built
  in Pompeii in 80 BC, but the
  best example of the Roman
  amphitheater is the colosseum
Amphitheater
                     Coliseum, Rome
•   The Colosseum is an amphitheater
    in Rome
•   Its construction began under the
    Emperor Vespasian in 72 A.D. and
    was completed in A. D. 80
•   It was used for spectator sports
    including gladiatorial combat
•   It is said that 9,000 wild animals
    were killed in the one hundred
    inaugural days celebrating its
    opening
•   The Colosseum hosted large-scale
    spectacular games that included;
    fights between animals, the killing of
    prisoners by animals and other
    executions, naval battles via flooding
    the arena, and combats between
    gladiators
Amphitheater
               Coliseum, Rome
• It has been estimated that
  about 500,000 people died in
  the Colosseum games
• The colosseum is elliptical in
  shape
• It measured 48 metres high,
  188 metres long, and 156
  metres wide
• The wooden arena floor was
  86 metres by 54 metres, and
  covered by sand
• The colosseum had a seating
  capacity for 50,000 spectators
Amphitheater
               Coliseum, Rome
• The Colosseum was
  ingeniously designed; most
  spectacle venues have been
  influenced by the Colosseum's
  structure into modern times
• The seating formed a uniform
  elliptical ring capable of
  supporting the 50,000 spectator
  capacity of the facility
• The substructure of the
  amphitheater is very much like
  that of the theater
• Vaulting was used both radially
  and concentrically to support
  the structure
Amphitheater
                           Coliseum, Rome
•   The Colosseum also had a passageway
    that opens into a tier of seats from below or
    behind
•   Each entrance and exit was numbered, as
    was each staircase
•   The passages quickly dispersed people
    into their seats and upon conclusion of the
    event disgorged them with abruptness into
    the surrounding streets
•   Seating was divided into different sections
•   Above the podium was the maenianum
    primum, for the other Roman aristocrats
    who were not in the senate
•   The third level, the maenianum secundum,
    was divided into three sections
•   The lower part, the was for wealthy
    citizens, while the upper part was for poor
    citizens
•   A third, wooden section was a wooden
    structure at the very top of the building,
    added by Domitian
Amphitheater
               Coliseum, Rome
• The most ingenious part of
  the Colosseum was its
  cooling system
• It was roofed using a canvas
  covered net-like structure
  made of ropes, with a hole in
  the center
• The Arena where the action
  takes place is located at the
  center of the ellipse
• Underneath the arena was
  the "underground", a network
  of tunnels and cages where
  gladiators and animals were
  held before contests began
Amphitheater
                   Coliseum, Rome
• The arena floor no longer exists,
  and the hypogeum walls and
  corridors are clearly visible in
  the ruins of the building
• The orders were used in the
  elevation in the same manner as
  on the theater
• The Colosseum was in
  continuous use until 217, when it
  was damaged by fire from
  lightning
• It was restored in 238 and
  gladiatorial games continued
  until Christianity gradually put an
  end to some sports
End of Module 7 Lecture 23
Module 7 Lecture 24
  Roman Architecture
Outline of Lecture
• Lecture 24
    • Roman Buildings
      –Circuses
      –Bath
      –Temples
      –Basilica
      –Residential Buildings
    • Other Elements
      –Triumphal Arches
Roman Buildings
                    Circuses
• The Romans developed circuses or stadium for
  horse and chariot racing
• Every city usually had one located close to the
  forum
• The circuses had stalls at one end where the
  chariots emerge at the beginning of the race and
  a track which they race around
• The structure of the circus is very similar to that
  of theaters and amphitheaters
• Circus Maxima is an example of a Roman Circus
Circuses
                 Circuse Maxentius
• It is located in Rome and is one
  of the oldest
• It went through a series of
  transformation over the period of
  its existence
• The image shown is its final
  form around 400 A.D.
• Its is 600 meters in length by
  200 meters in width
• The circus had 3 tiers of seat,
  and there are stalls for 12 race
  houses or chariots
• Each race was of 7 laps
  covering a distance of about 3.6
  kilometers
Roman Buildings
                    Bath
• The Romans had a unique need for
  exercise, bathing and relaxation and they
  devised a unique architectural element, the
  Bath to address that need
• The roman bath was more that just merely
  swimming or washing
• This practice became so popular that at
  some point, they took it more serious than
  their gods
• It was a daily practice of almost all Romans
  to go to a Bath once a day to relieve stress
Roman Buildings
                         Bath
• The bathing procedure involves a pattern of exposing the
  body to various levels of heater air and water
• The core program of the bath consist of a disrobing
  room, the apodyterium, a series of at least two heated
  rooms, the tepidarium, and a hot room or cauldarium
• Besides the heated rooms, the bath may also have a
  swimming pool, or natatio for cold plunges on hot
  summer days or a cool unheated room called the
  frigidarium
• Bathing also dries the skin so baths also provided rooms
  with special attendants to oil and towel bathers dry
• Wealthy people and Emperors had private both, but the
  greatest baths were the public ones built for the
  populace
Roman Bath
              Bath of Caracalla
• The bath of caracalla is a
  good example of a
  Roman bath and among
  the best preserved
• The bath is set free
  standing within a square
  precinct enclosed by
  walls
• The precinct has a water
  reservoir to the south,
  supplied by an aqueduct
  to service its water need
Roman Bath
                 Bath of Caracalla
• The reservoir is located
  beneath a stadium used for
  athletic contest
• The east and west walls
  have a curved exedra that
  defines space for cultural
  activities such as library,
  music performance,
  philosophical lectures, etc
• The front wall has a series of
  shops with the entrance at
  the center
Roman Bath
               Bath of Caracalla
• The main bath building
  is rectangular, 225
  meters by 115 meters
  and is situated within
  the walled precinct
• It has a perfect bilateral
  symmetry along its
  north-south axis
• The bath has a large
  dressing hall,
  apodyterium at the
  center of the building
Roman Bath
                      Bath of Caracalla
•   A swimming pool or Notato is located
    to the north of it, while a tepidarium
    and a domed circular cauldarium is
    located to the south of it, where it is
    more sunny
•   A series of supplementary rooms,
    including Gymnasium and bathroom
    suits are arranged symmetrically on
    two sides of the building
•   The structure of the bath of carracalla
    is made up of vaults, arches, groin
    vaults and domes
•   The interior also shows how the
    Romans have been able to adapt the
    Greek orders and treatment to arch
    and vault construction
Roman Buildings
                        Temples
• Temples were a significant part of roman architecture
• Scores of temple were built during every period
• Most of the roman temples were combination of Etruscan
  and Greek prototypes
• The typical temple had an axial plan, an entrance porch
  with widely space columns in front
• The temple also had a cella or sanctuary
• The whole temple is raised on a high podium with frontal
  steps providing access
• A good example of the early form of the temple is seen in
  Maison Carree in Nimes
• The best preserved of the temples and the one showing
  the highest achievement in temple architecture is the
  Pantheon
Roman Temples
             Maison Caree, Nimes
• Maison Carree is located in
  Nimes France
• It was built by the Emperor
  Agrippa
• The temple shows Greek
  influence on early roman
  temples
• The temple is 26.5 meters
  long, 15.5 meters wide and
  raised on a podium 3.3
  meters high
• It is a temple with 6
  Corinthian columns in front,
  10 diameters high
Roman Temples
         Maison Caree, Nimes
• Its podium is three
  and half times the
  height of the
  entablature with 15
  access steps in front
• It has an entrance
  porch that is 3
  columns deep
• The temple has a cella
  that is one and half
  times long as its wide
Roman Temples
         Maison Caree, Nimes
• The walls of the
  cella have attached
  half Corinthian
  columns on its
  visible three sides
Roman Temples
                     Pantheon
• The Pantheon is the best
  surviving of all classical
  buildings
• It is also represents the
  highest achievement of
  Roman architecture
• It was built between AD 118
  and 128 by the Emperor
  Handrian on the site of an
  earlier temple by Agrippa
• It was built as a temple
  dedicated to all the Roman
  Gods, hence the name
  Pantheon
Roman Temples
                     Pantheon
• The Pantheon essentially
  consist of two parts; the an
  entrance portico and a
  circular part or rotunda
• The portico is 8 columns
  wide and 3 columns deep
  and leads to the entrance of
  the temple
• The columns are of unfluted
  Corinthian order
• The wall of the rotunda is 3
  storeys high on the outside;
  they are made up of brick
  faced concrete and support
  the dome roof of the temple
Roman Temples
                   Pantheon
• The interior has eight
  large niches with one
  serving as the entrance
  and the remaining seven
  used dedicated to the
  seven major Roman
  Gods
• The Dome roof forms a
  perfect sphere with a
  diameter of 142 feet in
  the interior
Roman Temples
                    Pantheon
• At the head of the dome is a
  30ft wide occulus, that opens
  up the great dome to the
  outside and illuminates the
  space with light
• The interior was built of
  Egyptian granites, African
  colored marbles and pure
  white marbles from the
  Aegean
• The Pantheon combines
  scale, boldness and mastery
  of every architectural art.
Roman Buildings
                     Basilica
• Basilicas are among the most important
  categories of roman architecture
• There were no basilicas before the Roman era
• The basilica are rectangular and usually
  contained interior colonnades that divided the
  space into aisles at one or both sides, with an
  apse at one end
• The central aisle tended to be wide and was
  higher than the flanking aisles, so that light could
  penetrate through the clerestory windows
• The function of the basilica is close to that of the
  Greek stoa
Roman Buildings
                     Basilica
• It is also the place where magistrates to hold
  court to dispose of legal matters
• The oldest known basilica, the Basilica Porcia,
  was built in Rome in 184 BC
• The most splendid Roman basilica is the one
  constructed for traditional purposes during the
  reign of the pagan emperor Maxentius and
  finished by Constantine after 313
• In the early Imperial period, a basilica for large
  audiences also became a feature of the palaces
• We will examine the Basilica Ulpia and the
  Basilica Maxentius
Roman Buildings
                   Basilica Ulpia
• The Basilica Ulpia was built
  by Emperor Trajan in the
  period A.D 98-117 for his
  imperial forum
• Basilica Ulpia stretches for
  120 meters in length over the
  width of the Trajan forum
• The Basilica consists of a
  central hall, 25 meters wide
  surrounded on all sides by
  double colonnades
• The Basilica had two semi-
  circular apses at it’s two
  ends
Roman Buildings
                      Basilica Ulpia
• The walls of the Basilica
  were finished with multi-
  colored marble; also
  referred to as
  polychromatic marble
• The whole structure was
  covered with a truss roof
• Basilica Ulpia represent
  the generic form of the
  Roman Basilica,
• It is this form that will later
  be adopted by the
  Christians for their church
Roman Buildings
                 Basilica Maxentius
• The Basilica Maxentius was
  started by the Emperor
  Maxentius in A.D. 308 but was
  completed by the Emperor
  Constantine in A.D. 312
• It is also sometimes referred to
  as Basilica of Constantine
• It is one of the impressive
  buildings of the Forum
  Romanum
• The Basilica Maxentius is
  different from other tradition
  basilicas, because its design
  was derived from the central
  halls of imperial Roman Baths
Roman Buildings
                   Basilica Maxentius
• It is however larger in scale than
  any of the baths that was built
• The ground plan covers 100
  meters by 65 meters
• The building is divided into a
  central nave and side isles
• The central nave was 80 by 25
  meters and was covered by 3
  groin vaults with a maximum
  height of 35 meters
• The side isles were 16 meters
  wide, divided into three sections
• There is very little that is left of
  the Basilica now
Roman Buildings
               Residential Buildings
• Roman cities had a range of
  various types of private
  dwellings
• The private dwellings reflected
  the rank and wealth of the
  inhabitants
• At the lowest level are the multi-
  story tenements where a large
  proportion of the population
  stayed
• They consisted of shops on the
  ground floor and apartments on
  the upper floors
• The apartments were built
  around a courtyard for light and
  air
Roman Buildings
           Residential Buildings
• The common roman house
  was the domus
• These were reserved for the
  more well off members of the
  Roman society
• The domus was essentially a
  courtyard house, with a
  peristyle colonnaded
  courtyard
• It had few or no windows to
  the outside
Residential Buildings
              Domus Augustana
• At the high end are
  elaborate palaces and
  villas for the very rich
• The Domus Augustana,
  also called flavian’s
  palace, is an example of
  the high-end residential
  palaces
• Domus Augustana was
  both a house for the
  emperor as well as his
  palace for official
  functions
Residential Buildings
                Domus Augustana
• It was laid out around two
  peristyle atriums
• The atrium to the left is for
  state function
• Entry is from an inconspicuous
  door from the top
• The residential part of the
  palace is arranged around the
  courtyard located to the right
• To the right of the residential
  part is a sunken garden in the
  form of a stadium
• This is the private garden of the
  emperor, where he can interact
  with nature
Residential Buildings
                  Handrians Villa
• Romans also built country
  villas or houses, where they
  could go to be close to nature
• A very good example of the
  country villas, is the
  Handrian’s villa built for the
  Emperor Handrian
• The Handrian villa displays an
  example of the level of wealth
  displayed in buildings
• This was a large country
  estate spread on a vast terrain
Residential Buildings
                   Handrians Villa
• The structure was made of a
  loose arrangement of peristyle
  halls, fountains, dining halls,
  dormitories, baths, libraries
  and other facilities
• The most characteristics
  feature of the villa is the play
  of curves and curved form
• This is most evident in the
  Canopus
• This is an elongated pool
  surrounded by a colonnade
• The colonnade is topped by
  alternating straight entablature
  and segmental arch sections
  framing statuary
Other Architectural Elements
              Triumphal Arches
• Other Than buildings, ancient Romans also
  contributed to the development of several
  architectural elements
• The most prominent of the elements is the
  triumphal arch
• A triumphal arch is a structure in the shape of a
  monumental gate, usually built to celebrate a
  victory in war
• They are almost always built in the Form,
  framing the paths that people follow
• Romans started it as a way to celebrate their
  victories in battles
Other Architectural Elements
              Triumphal Arches
• Some triumphal arches are made of stone and
  intended to be permanent.
• A number of arches from the city's imperial era
  can still be seen in modern Rome.
• Temporary triumphal arches were also
  constructed for use for celebratory parades or
  ceremony and later dismantled
• A Roman Triumph was a civil ceremony and
  religious rite held to publicly honour the military
  commander of a notably successful foreign war
• Only men of senatorial or consular rank could
  perform a triumph celebration and be a
  triumphator as the victorious generals are known
Other Architectural Elements
                Triumphal Arches
• The ceremony consisted of a spectacular parade,
  opened by the chiefs of conquered peoples who are
  afterward executed
• The triumphator rode on a biga, a chariot pulled by two
  white horses
• The parade followed a precise route in the streets of
  Rome
• It traveled along the Forum until it reached the Temple of
  Jupiter Optimus Maximus, where the laurels of victory
  were offered to the god.
• Monuments may then be erected to celebrate the
  triumph
• Two examples of such monuments in the republican
  forum are the Arch of Titus and the Arch of Constantine
Triumphal Arches
                Arch of Constantine
• The arch was built in A.D.
  81 and dedicated to the
  emperor Titus
• It was built to commemorate
  the military victory over
  Jerusalem in A.D. 70
• The arch has a height of
  15.4 meters, a width of 13.5
  meters and was constructed
  of stone
• The marvel of its stone
  construction is evident in the
  keystone, which ensures the
  stability of the arch
Triumphal Arches
               Arch of Constantine
• It has a single opening
  flanked on each side by
  attached columns of the
  Composite order
• The composite order has a
  capital that joins the
  acanthus leaves of the
  Corinthian order with the
  volutes of the ionic order
• The face of the arch is
  decorated with sculptural
  relief depicting the
  destruction of the temple in
  Jerusalem
Triumphal Arches
               Arch of Constantine
• The arch of Constantine
  was built much later that
  than of Titus
• It was built to
  commemorate the victory
  of Emperor Constantine
  over Maxentius in A.D.
  312
• Its form shows an attempt
  to create an arch more
  majestic than that of Titus
Triumphal Arches
               Arch of Constantine
• It has three arched
  openings, a larger one in
  the center flanked by two
  smaller ones
• There are four free
  standing columns in front
  framing the arched
  openings
• It is also abundantly
  decorated, depicting the
  victory in relief sculpture
End of Module 7 Lecture 24
Module 7 Lecture 25
  Roman Architecture
Outline of Lecture
• Lecture 25
  – Roman City Planning and Design
  – Architectural Characteristics
    • Buildings and other architectural elements
    • Building materials, construction and
      technologies
    • Architectural Organizing principles
Roman City Planning & Design
                 Principles
• Roman cities fall into
  two broad categories
• Majority grew in an
  unplanned manner over
  the centuries forming
  complex organic
  entities, to which
  sometimes order was
  introduced
• Rome is a good
  example
Roman City Planning & Design
                      Principles
• The other category consist of
  Castrum type cities, a type of
  military camp developed with
  an inflexible regularity of
  shape-
• A well preserved example is
  the city of Timgad in North
  Africa
• This was a city laid out by
  Trajan in A.D. 100 as a colony
  for military veterans
• The town was laid in a grid of
  12 blocks within a square
  1,200 feet wide
Roman City Planning & Design
                       Principles
• The planning of most cities fall in between the two
  extremes of organic growth and rigid grid planning
• All cities had a forum, theater, bath, market etc.
• Many of the cities contained buildings that were copies or
  local versions of key monuments in Rome
• Focus in city design is on integrating civic buildings with
  public spaces and residential neighborhoods
• Each public building had interior spaces that responded
  to functional requirement with the spaces also linked and
  connected with the public spaces of the city
• The Forum was the center of the Roman city
Roman City Planning & Design
                         Forum
• The forum was the descendant of the Greek agora for
  the Romans
• It began as a market place
• It rapidly became the commercial, political and
  ceremonial center of the civilization
• In the process it developed into an elaborate
  architectural space that became a part of all roman cities
• Unlike the Greek agora which is informal in plan, and
  whose buildings are subordinate to the space, in the
  roman forum, the organization is more formal
• The buildings surrounding it are normally large and
  dominate the space
• Buildings commonly found in the forum include temples,
  basilicas, and bath
Roman City Planning & Design
                         Forum
• Each individual major building in the forum was given a
  central inside space
• Governmental function were usually arranged on the
  West End; religious ceremonies were celebrated at the
  east end
• The inside space of buildings was connected to one or
  more exterior space of the city
• Columns, statues and triumphal arches were erected as
  a memorial to the conquering rulers and to the glories of
  the empire
• No two roman forums are really alike, as there are
  always differences between the forums in different cities
• In Rome with its two forums, we find a good example of
  the Roman forums
Roman City Planning & Design
              Republiclan Forum
• The Republican Forum is
  also called the Forum
  Romanum
• It was the oldest and most
  important forum in the city
• Soon it became an
  important market place
• By the 5th Century B.C.
  the various functions
  associated with the forum
  began to assume their
  architectural shape
Roman City Planning & Design
                Republican Forum
• Additions, modification and
  growth by successive republicans
  and emperors led to its
  development
• By 400 A.D. the forum had
  accumulated not less than 10
  temples, 4 basilicas, 4 triumphal
  arches and many other
  monuments and shrines
• All of these were arranged with
  no preordained order
• The buildings therefore loosely
  define the space of the forum
Roman City Planning & Design
                      Imperial Forum
• During the reign of Julius
  Ceasar, he attempted to
  reorganize the Republican
  forum but realized that it had
  become too congested for
  rational order
• He therefore decided to build a
  new forum adjacent to but
  outside the republican forum
• This idea was picked by
  successive emperors, who
  added to it to create the
  imperial forum
Roman City Planning & Design
                       Imperial Forum
• The imperial forum is not one
  forum, but five forums with
  each supporting the other
• There was variety in their form,
  but they displayed rational
  order in their organization
• Each of the forum consisted of
  colonnaded atrium with a
  temple at its head
• Of the five temples that of
  Trojan was most majestic, with
  the basilica Ulpia sitting across
  it and two libraries on either
  side of the central court
Roman City Planning & Design
      Architecture and Urban Design in Rome
• In Rome we find the best
  example of both Roman
  architecture and city design
• The image shows a
  reconstruction module of a part
  of Rome at the height of its
  development
• From the image, the organic
  growth of the city is evident and
  is reflected in the fabric of the
  city
• Buildings are densely packed
  together, separated by a
  network of narrow pathways
Roman City Planning & Design
      Architecture and Urban Design in Rome
• Within the fabric, all the Roman
  building types can be identified
• These include The circus
  Maxentius, The Domus
  Augustana, Roman Theater,
  An Aqueduct, A Roman
  Temple, The Basilica
  Maxentius, and The
  Republican and Imperial
  Forums
• From the image, the clustering
  of important buildings close to
  the forum is highly evident
Architectural Characteristics
Buildings & Other Arch
       Elements
Buildings & Other Arch. Elements
                 Building Types
• The genius of the roman architect was not in the design
  of a particular building
• Rather, it is in the way they were able to meet the
  needs of a complex society for different building types
  for a thousand years
• They produced a wide range of buildings that had never
  been built before
• Roman buildings included bathhouses for bathing,
  circuses for races, amphitheaters for gladiatorial
  contest, temples for religion, domus for family life and
  the forum as the center of public life
• Roman architects design the buildings with interior
  spaces configured for specialized activities
• The Greek order was reduced to a decorative element
  rather than as a form generator in Greek Architecture
Buildings & Other Arch. Elements
         Engineering Structures
• Romans also contributed several engineering
  and architectural objects to human civilization
• The most prominent engineering contributions
  are in road and bridge structures and in the
  construction of aqueducts
• Road and bridge construction allowed the
  Romans to connect the various parts of their
  empire
• Aqueducts allowed them to supply their cities
  with water
Buildings & Other Arch. Elements
                   The Orders
• Romans also contributed to the development of the
  orders
• They made the Tuscan order developed by the Etruscan
  very popular in use
• They developed the composite order, which combines
  Corinthian and Ionic capitals
• They developed the giant order which spans up to two
  storey and the miniature order used to decorate
  windows
• The Romans also contributed in the development of the
  Triumphal arches
• Triumphal arches were constructed in Roman cities to
  celebrate victories in battles
Materials, Const. & Tech.
Materials, Construction & Tech.
                         Materials
• The choice of building materials contributed to the
  success of Roman architecture.
• Roman building materials were very diverse and rich
• Materials that were not available locally could usually be
  imported from other Roman colonies
• Roman building materials included stone, marble, brick,
  and timber
• The art of producing fired brick was a Roman invention
• Romans also invented concrete
• The combination of concrete and brick formwork enabled
  Roman architects to design and vast buildings for
  different uses
Materials, Construction & Tech.
                   Construction
• The Roman Civilization had the most innovative
  construction system of the civilizations so far
  studied
• Roman architects understood the underlying
  principles of arch and vault construction and were
  able to innovate to address their shortcomings
• The combination of arch and vault construction
  with concrete and fire brick formwork provided
  the Romans with the technology to achieve their
  architectural dreams
• No previous civilization had an architecture that
  involved the manipulation of space like that of the
  Romans
Materials, Construction & Tech.
                  Construction
• In fact, roman architecture was essentially space
  shaped by vaults, and walls for the purpose of
  ordered activities
• In terms of building technology, the contribution
  of the Romans includes the development of the
  arch and barrel vault on freestanding piers.
• Romans also introduced the use of timber trusses
  in roofing
• In the Pantheon, we find Roman construction
  technology at the height of its application
Materials, Construction & Tech.
                   Technology
• The greatest contribution of the Romans in
  Building services and technology is in the aspect
  of water
• The development of the aqueduct enabled
  ancient Romans to supply water to their cities
• Rome at the height of its development had to
  supply water to meet the needs of its one million
  inhabitants
• Along with water supply, the Romans developed
  a system of waste water collection and disposal
• Sanitary sewers were used to collect waste
  water that is channeled outside the city for
  disposal
Principles of Arch.
   Organization
Principles of Arch. Organization
                Principles

• Three forces appear to shape the
  direction and form of Roman architecture
  – Function
  – Construction Technology
  – Adaptation to new ideas and knowledge
Principles of Arch. Organization
                   Function
• The principal organizing principle of Roman
  buildings is function
• Function is evident in the emphasis on spaces
• Almost all Roman buildings provided spaces for
  functional use
• Roman architecture also de-emphasized the
  rigidness in the use of the Greek orders
• They transformed the orders from a determinant
  of building form to decoration on gigantic
  buildings
Principles of Arch. Organization
           Construction Technology
• Understanding Roman buildings also requires
  understanding their construction technology
• Development in construction technology freed the
  Romans from any creative limitations
• They were therefore able to experiment, in the
  process creating new building types and form and
  also pushing the limits of structural possibilities
• Construction technology also allowed Roman
  architects to produce buildings with vast interior
  spaces
• Construction technology enabled Romans to
  transform the orders from structural elements to
  mere decorative ones
Principles of Arch. Organization
    Adaptation to New Ideas and Knowledge
•   Roman architecture can also only be
    understood by understanding the Roman
    attitude to innovation
•   Romans were constantly in contact with
    different people and places
•   As they come into contact the different
    people and places, they are also exposed
    to different ideas and ways of doing things
•   Roman people were always willing to lean
    new ideas and knowledge and adapt these
    for their use
Principles of Arch. Organization
  Adaptation to New Ideas and Knowledge
• Such adaptation allowed them to
  assimilate ideas from different places,
  including the Greeks, the Egyptians and
  the Carthaginians
• But when Roman people learn new ideas
  and knowledge, they were also able to
  adapt them and create ideas that were
  uniquely Roman
• It is this will to learn and adapt that led to
  their innovative social life and to the
  evolution of Roman architecture
End of Module 7 Lecture 25

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Lecture slides module_7_roman

  • 1. ARC 110 History of Architecture I Module 7 Roman Architecture
  • 2. Module Outline • Lecture 22 – Historical Background • Location and period • Social characteristics and beliefs • Lecture 23 – Architecture of the Civilization • Early Influences- The Etruscans • Engineering Innovation and achievements • Roman Buildings • Lecture 24 • Roman Buildings • Lecture 25 • Other architectural elements • Roman city Planning and Design – Architectural Characteristics • Buildings and other architectural elements • Building materials, construction and technologies • Architectural Organizing principles
  • 3. Learning Outcomes • We should expect to learn the following about the civilization – Structural revolution and invention of new materials – Innovative use of structural solutions in engineering and buildings structures – The invention of new building types for different purposes – The invention of functional space in architecture – The use of the orders as decorative elements in design
  • 4. Module 7 Lecture 22 Roman Architecture
  • 5. Outline of Lecture • Lecture 22 – Historical Background • Location and period • Social characteristics and beliefs
  • 7. Historical Background Location • Roman architecture refers to the architecture of Rome and of the Roman Empire • The Roman Empire was one of the largest early empires in history, stretching from England in Northern Europe to the Ancient Near East and Africa • The pink area of the Map shows the greatest extent of the Roman Empire • Rome, located on the Italian peninsula was the capital of the empire • From the capital, an infrastructure of roads and communication systems was established to connect the whole empire • Rome is today the capital of Italy
  • 8. Historical Background Period • The city of Rome was founded in 753 BC. • Roman civilization with Rome as capital lasted for more than a thousand years. • The history of the civilization can be divided into three periods; – 753- 510 BC Etruscan Period – 510 – 44 BC Republican Period – 44 BC – 476 A.D. Imperial Period
  • 9. Historical Background Period- Etruscan Period • Romans fix the date of the founding Rome at 753 B. C. • Prior to this date, the Etruscans established an urban culture in the Italian peninsula, which reached the height of its development around 600 B.C. • They had conquered and established their authority over a loose federation of cities • Rome at its foundation was a minor city and became a colony of the Etruscans
  • 10. Historical Background Period- Etruscan Period • Rome was ruled by Etruscan Kings aided by a popular assembly • Towards the end of the 6th century B.C., Etruscan power began to decline • In 509 B.C. Rome revolted against their king and established an independent city state • Further decline in the power of the Etruscans was accompanied by the rising influence and increasing significance of Rome
  • 11. Historical Background Period – Republican Period • After the expulsion of its Etruscan Kings, Rome gradually assumed leadership of a number of settlements for mutual defense • This gradually led to the expanding influence and dominance of Rome • By 273 B. C. Rome became the established dominant force in the region • It conquered its rivals, defeating Cathage in 146 B.C., Macedonia in 168 B. C., Greece in 146 B.C., and Syria in 64 B. C. • With time Rome also developed a system of Representative government
  • 12. Historical Background Period – Republican Period • Rome was government by a body of elected male representatives of the population known as the Senate • This is why the period is referred to as republican or in other word democratic • Towards the end of the last millennium B.C. Rome entered into a series of civil wars which brought about the rise of some military dictators, of which Julius Caesar was the most successful. • This brought about the end of the republican period
  • 13. Historical Background Period – Imperial Period • Following a series of civil wars that ended in 27 B.C. Caius Ocatavius, who later took the name Caesar Augustus assumed the title of emperor • This ushered in the Imperial period of Roman history • Emperor Augustus undertook a significant reorganization of the Roman Empire • The golden age of architectural development was witnessed during this period • He revitalized national life and created new building works
  • 14. Historical Background Period – Imperial Period • Augustus was credited with saying that he met Rome a city of brick and left it a city of marble • Later it was to transform to a city of concrete • The 3rd century A.D. was a period of political confusion in the Roman Empire • The Barbarian people living in the north of Europe started attacking the Empire • In 286 A.D. Roman Empire was split into two; a western empire and an Eastern empire
  • 15. Historical Background Period – Imperial Period • Emperor Constantine was able to reunite the Empire again in 324 A.D. and established a new capital for the empire at the city of Byzantium, which he renamed Constantinople • After his death, the Empire was split again and each had a different destiny • In 476 A.D. the western empire with its capital at Rome fell after century of attacks by Vandals and Visigoths ending the history of that part • The Eastern Empire with its capital at Constantinople survived and became the focus of a civilization that lasted until 1453 A.D. when it was sacked by the Ottoman Turks
  • 16. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Introduction – The Roman Empire consisted of Rome and all its conquered provinces – Rome was the capital and focus of the Roman Civilization – Roman society was made of the Latinized people living on the Italian peninsula and other foreign people belonging to the conquered provinces – The society was not homogenous as its puts together people of different origins – Latin was the widely spoken language, particularly in Rome and its environment – The Roman people were classified into citizens and non citizens; citizenship can be conferred on non citizens
  • 17. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Introduction – Citizenship confers the right to vote, make contracts and have a legal marriage – Citizens are divided into two classes; members of the Roman Senate belonging to the highest social class and other citizens – The Roman people were essentially farmers and traders – Many also aspired to became solders and warriors; being a warrior provided one of the best means of advancing in the society
  • 18. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Social Life – Roman society had an active social life – The forum was the center of social life; it is very similar to the Greek Agora – The forum was the place for social, political, recreational and religious activities – Romans participated in a lot of entertainment activities
  • 19. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Social Life – These activities include spectator sports such as drama, chariot racing, and gladiatorial contest – They also had new unique social activities such as recreational bathing – The practice saw Romans going to a public bath at luxurious bathing through chambers of different temperature – In the process they engaged in both intellectual and physical interaction
  • 20. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Religious Beliefs – Roman people were not deeply religious, particularly during the early part of their development – They did not have religious beliefs and mythologies of their own, but borrowed from societies they come into contact with. – Contact with other people always resulted in changes to their culture, art and way of life – Most of their religious beliefs were borrowed from the Greeks, and like the Greeks, they also believed in a number of Gods
  • 21. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Religious Beliefs – The Romans believed that the faith of their empire lies in the hands of their various Gods – The state spent money to built temples to the various gods – Public assemblies, such as senate meetings, war victories and most state functions were always started with sacrifices to a particular god in his temple – The religious well being of the individual Roman was his own concern
  • 22. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • System of Government – The System of government in ancient Rome was democratic – During the Republican period, Government consisted of two elected consuls, a senate and judiciary – The consuls acted as the executive arm of government overseeing the activities of the senate, army and other executive institutions such as tax collectors and police – The senate was an assembly of selected land owners, the upper class of Roman society, who approve budgets and suggest laws
  • 23. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • System of Government – Members of the senate are elected from a series of lower assemblies who are responsible for enacting the laws suggesting by the senate and also implementing them; – The judicial branch consist of 6 judges who were elected every two years, who decide punishment for criminals – During the imperial period, the Consuls were replaced by Emperors who wielded a lot of power
  • 24. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Roman Architecture – The Environment around Rome was not as rich as the Greek mainland in construction material especially marble – Romans construction material consists of Stone, principally local travertine and timber – Roman also invented a system of firing brick and used brick widely in construction – Romans were also the first people to discover concrete; Roman concrete is different from our present day concrete – Romans made significant improvements to the arch to address its shortcoming
  • 25. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Roman Architecture – They also developed new construction systems based on the arch and dome – The combination of arch and vault construction with brick as formwork and concrete as bonding material enabled the Romans to construct great buildings with very large interior spaces – Roman construction also developed the system of wooden truss construction – The architecture of Rome has its origin in Hellenistic Greek Architecture and the architecture of the Etruscans – Most Roman architects were either of Greek origin or Greek trained
  • 26. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Roman Architecture – The Romans adopted the external language of classical Greek architecture – In Roman architecture, the orders survived simply as ornaments applied to great concrete buildings. – But the Romans also made unique additions to the orders that are very important. – New orders evolved and were added to the Greek orders to form the classical language of architecture – Romans also made additions in the entablature of temples, in the scale of buildings and the proportion of the entire design. – While the Greeks are said to be the inventors of form, Roman architecture concentrated on the creation of space
  • 27. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Roman Architecture – The Greek and Roman architecture are referred to as classical architecture – The first book on architecture was produced by Marcus Vitruvius Pollio in 100 A.D. – The ten books of architecture written sets down rules and procedures for creating architecture of value – The genius of Roman architecture was expressed not in the design of a particular building, but in the production of a vast number of various building types – Roman buildings include bathhouses for bathing, circuses for racing, amphitheatres for gladiatorial contest, temples for religion, domus for family life and the forum as the center of public life and national commerce
  • 28. Historical Background Social Characteristics & Beliefs • Other Achievements – Other contributions of the Romans include the Roman alphabets which is widely used in Western and Central European languages and the Roman numerals – The Roman also introduced the calendar which even thought it has changed several times before assuming its current form has endured to the present day – The influence of the Roman Empire's is visible in the government, law, and monumental architecture, as well as many other aspects of Western life – The various contributions of the Roman civilization to modern life has resulted in its classification along with the Greek civilization as Classical civilizations
  • 29. End of Module 7 Lecture 22
  • 30. Module 7 Lecture 23 Roman Architecture
  • 31. Outline of Lecture • Lecture 23 – Architecture of the Civilization • Early Influences- The Etruscans • Engineering Innovation and achievements • Roman Buildings – Theaters – Amphitheater- Coliseum
  • 32. Architecture of the Civilization
  • 33. Roman Architecture Early Influences- The Etruscans • The Earliest civilization in the region around Rome were the Etruscans • The Etruscan civilization existed in the northern part of what is now Italy, prior to the formation of the Roman Republic. • During the 700s BC, the Etruscans developed into a series of autonomous city-states: Rome was a part of these city states • Knowledge about the Etruscans is fragmentary, and usually filtered through Roman eyes; • The Etruscans created the first visible civilization in Italy. • They brought sophisticated Eastern and Greek culture to the region.
  • 34. Roman Architecture Early Influences- The Etruscans • Not much has survived of Etruscan buildings to the present however. • The temple shown in the image is a reconstruction of a typical Etruscan temple • The Etruscans introduced another order of architecture • This order, known as the Tuscan order became popular with the Romans
  • 35. Roman Architecture Early Influences- The Etruscans • The Tuscan order had a simpler base and the shaft was without flutes • The capital and entablature were also without decoration • In proportion it is similar to the Doric order with a column that is seven diameters high • Compared with the other orders, the Tuscan order looks the most solid
  • 36. Engineering Achievement Introduction • Romans created what can be referred to as a structural revolution • This revolution centers on their understanding and use of the arch and vault • They also discovered the groin vault • Because of this structural revolution, they were able to span large openings in buildings and other structures with economy and strength • They were also able to design and construct buildings with large interior spaces • The revolution also allowed the Romans to construct large engineering structures such as bridges to connect all parts of their empire, and aqueduct to supply water to their cities
  • 37. Engineering Achievement Structural Innovation- Arches • The arch was not a new building form, as it had been known by other civilizations including the Egyptians and the Greeks • But the Romans used it to its fullest potential • The arch is an organic structure with the elements of the arch resting on each other and transferring load to the column • It was particularly useful over doors and openings
  • 38. Engineering Achievement Structural Innovation- Arches • With an arch, there are no tensile stresses as all the forces are in compression and building stone has enormous compressive strength • Up to a certain point also, the more an arch is loaded the stronger it becomes • Arches were used over doors and openings and sometimes, they are built over a lintel to deflect the load to the surrounding walls.
  • 39. Engineering Achievement Vaults • Vaults are used to cover an area as a roof • The simplest of the vaults is the Barrel vault, which is just made up of an arch extended over a certain distance • It can be adapted to suit different types of plans by making simple modifications to it • The disadvantage of the vault is that it exerts a continuous load and therefore needs some form of continuous support • It is also difficult to light the space under a vault except from the ends • The Romans invented unique ways of overcoming these difficulties
  • 40. Engineering Achievement Vaults • The cross vault was created from the barrel vault to overcome some of the problems of the ordinary vault • This is formed by intersecting two barrel-vaults at right angle and is called a “groin vault” • The weight of the groin vault is concentrated at the corners eliminating the need for continuous support • The opening of the space in 4 directions means that ample light can be provided to the area below it
  • 41. Engineering Achievement Vaults • The image shows an example of the use of arches, vaults and groin vaults in a Roman building • The major limitation of the groin vault is that it is limited to a square plan • The dome was another structure that was used in roman architecture. • The Romans used the true dome with its fully rounded perfection
  • 42. Engineering Achievement Concrete • The Romans were the first to develop concrete • The concrete developed by the Romans is different from modern concrete and is made up of lime, sand and water • Around the 2nd century BC, Pozzolana or volcanic ash was also added • Concrete did away with the need for stone quarries • It also did away with the need for the shaping and transportation of stone and for high skilled labor for stonemasonry
  • 43. Engineering Achievement Concrete • Concrete has the advantage that it can be cast in any shape and in far larger sizes than the megalithic blocks of stone used in buildings • With concrete, it was possible to construct monolithic vaults and arches • Concrete buildings were normally faced with other materials to hide the ugly look of the concrete. • Fired brick used as formwork was the most popular covering material
  • 44. Engineering Structures Introduction • The structural revolution introduced by the Romans enabled them to introduce a variety of new civil structures and building programs never seen before their time • The ability of the Romans to create large structures enabled them to build significant civil structures including aqueducts, bridges and sewers • The Romans lived principally in cities and generally cities need a steady supply of fresh water • Rome itself was projected to have a population of more than a million at the peak of its power
  • 45. Engineering Structures Introduction • Arcuated structures or Structures built with arches played a major role in bringing this water to the city • The technique of arcuated construction was also applied to the construction of bridges • Rome also had a sanitary system to take away waste water from the city and large warehouses to service the needs of its port
  • 46. Engineering Structures Road and Bridges • The Trojan’s Bridge Alexandria is an example of ancient Roman structural achievement • It is also amongst the most impressive of the surviving Roman bridges • The bridge consist of tall piers and wide spanning arches • The central arches are slightly above 27 meters in length • The roadway is carried 48 meters above the River • A commemorative arch stands at the center of the Bridge; the commemorative arch bears the name of the architect of the bridge
  • 47. Engineering Structures Aqueducts • Aqueducts were used to supply water to Roman cities • The Pont Du Gard is probably the most magnificent of the Roman aqueducts • It was constructed around 50 A.D. to supply water to the city of Nimes • The Aqueduct in some places is almost 50 meters above the deep valley of the River Gard
  • 48. Engineering Structures Aqueducts • It was constructed of 3 tiers of arches
  • 49. Engineering Structures Aqueducts • The Aqua Claudia is also another example of Roman aqueduct • The Aqua Claudia was one of the eleven aqueducts that supplied Rome with water • The aqueduct supplies water to Rome over a distance of 66 kilometers
  • 50. Roman Buildings Introduction • The focus of Roman building design was on functional spaces • The Roman people demanded buildings of various functions from the Roman architect • The architects were able to respond, creating buildings that answer to their functional requirement by providing appropriate interior spaces • The buildings types include theaters, amphitheaters, basilicas, circuses, basilicas, temples and baths • All of these buildings were erected within the dense fabric of the city • We will examine each of these building types
  • 51. Roman Buildings Theaters • The Romans adopted the Greek theater transforming it into something Roman • There was an expansion of the stage and the whole theater was contained within a high-unbroken wall • The Greek Theater was blended into the landscape • In contrast, the Roman Theater was an urban form located in a flat city • The structure of the theater consists of massive structural arcades on piers
  • 52. Roman Buildings Theaters • A purely cosmetic layer of trabeation was added to the front • The trabeation was of the Greek orders and gave scale to the building • It also creates a rhythm of solids and voids on the elevation • The three orders of Greek architecture were used on the theater elevation • Theaters were built in every Roman City
  • 53. Roman Buildings Theaters • The Theater was used for acting and drama • The Theater Marcellus constructed between 23 to 13 B.C. was the first theater constructed in the capital Rome • It is a good example of a Roman theater • Access to its banked seat is from the rear, providing access circumferentially • A stage runs from end to end in front • The stage is enclosed by a tall wall
  • 54. Roman Buildings Amphitheater-Introduction • The amphitheater is a roman structure with no Greek equivalent • Amphitheatre is a public building used for spectator sports, games and displays • Apart from function, the important outward distinction between an amphitheatre and a theatre is that amphitheatre is round or oval in shape • An amphitheater was first built in Pompeii in 80 BC, but the best example of the Roman amphitheater is the colosseum
  • 55. Amphitheater Coliseum, Rome • The Colosseum is an amphitheater in Rome • Its construction began under the Emperor Vespasian in 72 A.D. and was completed in A. D. 80 • It was used for spectator sports including gladiatorial combat • It is said that 9,000 wild animals were killed in the one hundred inaugural days celebrating its opening • The Colosseum hosted large-scale spectacular games that included; fights between animals, the killing of prisoners by animals and other executions, naval battles via flooding the arena, and combats between gladiators
  • 56. Amphitheater Coliseum, Rome • It has been estimated that about 500,000 people died in the Colosseum games • The colosseum is elliptical in shape • It measured 48 metres high, 188 metres long, and 156 metres wide • The wooden arena floor was 86 metres by 54 metres, and covered by sand • The colosseum had a seating capacity for 50,000 spectators
  • 57. Amphitheater Coliseum, Rome • The Colosseum was ingeniously designed; most spectacle venues have been influenced by the Colosseum's structure into modern times • The seating formed a uniform elliptical ring capable of supporting the 50,000 spectator capacity of the facility • The substructure of the amphitheater is very much like that of the theater • Vaulting was used both radially and concentrically to support the structure
  • 58. Amphitheater Coliseum, Rome • The Colosseum also had a passageway that opens into a tier of seats from below or behind • Each entrance and exit was numbered, as was each staircase • The passages quickly dispersed people into their seats and upon conclusion of the event disgorged them with abruptness into the surrounding streets • Seating was divided into different sections • Above the podium was the maenianum primum, for the other Roman aristocrats who were not in the senate • The third level, the maenianum secundum, was divided into three sections • The lower part, the was for wealthy citizens, while the upper part was for poor citizens • A third, wooden section was a wooden structure at the very top of the building, added by Domitian
  • 59. Amphitheater Coliseum, Rome • The most ingenious part of the Colosseum was its cooling system • It was roofed using a canvas covered net-like structure made of ropes, with a hole in the center • The Arena where the action takes place is located at the center of the ellipse • Underneath the arena was the "underground", a network of tunnels and cages where gladiators and animals were held before contests began
  • 60. Amphitheater Coliseum, Rome • The arena floor no longer exists, and the hypogeum walls and corridors are clearly visible in the ruins of the building • The orders were used in the elevation in the same manner as on the theater • The Colosseum was in continuous use until 217, when it was damaged by fire from lightning • It was restored in 238 and gladiatorial games continued until Christianity gradually put an end to some sports
  • 61. End of Module 7 Lecture 23
  • 62. Module 7 Lecture 24 Roman Architecture
  • 63. Outline of Lecture • Lecture 24 • Roman Buildings –Circuses –Bath –Temples –Basilica –Residential Buildings • Other Elements –Triumphal Arches
  • 64. Roman Buildings Circuses • The Romans developed circuses or stadium for horse and chariot racing • Every city usually had one located close to the forum • The circuses had stalls at one end where the chariots emerge at the beginning of the race and a track which they race around • The structure of the circus is very similar to that of theaters and amphitheaters • Circus Maxima is an example of a Roman Circus
  • 65. Circuses Circuse Maxentius • It is located in Rome and is one of the oldest • It went through a series of transformation over the period of its existence • The image shown is its final form around 400 A.D. • Its is 600 meters in length by 200 meters in width • The circus had 3 tiers of seat, and there are stalls for 12 race houses or chariots • Each race was of 7 laps covering a distance of about 3.6 kilometers
  • 66. Roman Buildings Bath • The Romans had a unique need for exercise, bathing and relaxation and they devised a unique architectural element, the Bath to address that need • The roman bath was more that just merely swimming or washing • This practice became so popular that at some point, they took it more serious than their gods • It was a daily practice of almost all Romans to go to a Bath once a day to relieve stress
  • 67. Roman Buildings Bath • The bathing procedure involves a pattern of exposing the body to various levels of heater air and water • The core program of the bath consist of a disrobing room, the apodyterium, a series of at least two heated rooms, the tepidarium, and a hot room or cauldarium • Besides the heated rooms, the bath may also have a swimming pool, or natatio for cold plunges on hot summer days or a cool unheated room called the frigidarium • Bathing also dries the skin so baths also provided rooms with special attendants to oil and towel bathers dry • Wealthy people and Emperors had private both, but the greatest baths were the public ones built for the populace
  • 68. Roman Bath Bath of Caracalla • The bath of caracalla is a good example of a Roman bath and among the best preserved • The bath is set free standing within a square precinct enclosed by walls • The precinct has a water reservoir to the south, supplied by an aqueduct to service its water need
  • 69. Roman Bath Bath of Caracalla • The reservoir is located beneath a stadium used for athletic contest • The east and west walls have a curved exedra that defines space for cultural activities such as library, music performance, philosophical lectures, etc • The front wall has a series of shops with the entrance at the center
  • 70. Roman Bath Bath of Caracalla • The main bath building is rectangular, 225 meters by 115 meters and is situated within the walled precinct • It has a perfect bilateral symmetry along its north-south axis • The bath has a large dressing hall, apodyterium at the center of the building
  • 71. Roman Bath Bath of Caracalla • A swimming pool or Notato is located to the north of it, while a tepidarium and a domed circular cauldarium is located to the south of it, where it is more sunny • A series of supplementary rooms, including Gymnasium and bathroom suits are arranged symmetrically on two sides of the building • The structure of the bath of carracalla is made up of vaults, arches, groin vaults and domes • The interior also shows how the Romans have been able to adapt the Greek orders and treatment to arch and vault construction
  • 72. Roman Buildings Temples • Temples were a significant part of roman architecture • Scores of temple were built during every period • Most of the roman temples were combination of Etruscan and Greek prototypes • The typical temple had an axial plan, an entrance porch with widely space columns in front • The temple also had a cella or sanctuary • The whole temple is raised on a high podium with frontal steps providing access • A good example of the early form of the temple is seen in Maison Carree in Nimes • The best preserved of the temples and the one showing the highest achievement in temple architecture is the Pantheon
  • 73. Roman Temples Maison Caree, Nimes • Maison Carree is located in Nimes France • It was built by the Emperor Agrippa • The temple shows Greek influence on early roman temples • The temple is 26.5 meters long, 15.5 meters wide and raised on a podium 3.3 meters high • It is a temple with 6 Corinthian columns in front, 10 diameters high
  • 74. Roman Temples Maison Caree, Nimes • Its podium is three and half times the height of the entablature with 15 access steps in front • It has an entrance porch that is 3 columns deep • The temple has a cella that is one and half times long as its wide
  • 75. Roman Temples Maison Caree, Nimes • The walls of the cella have attached half Corinthian columns on its visible three sides
  • 76. Roman Temples Pantheon • The Pantheon is the best surviving of all classical buildings • It is also represents the highest achievement of Roman architecture • It was built between AD 118 and 128 by the Emperor Handrian on the site of an earlier temple by Agrippa • It was built as a temple dedicated to all the Roman Gods, hence the name Pantheon
  • 77. Roman Temples Pantheon • The Pantheon essentially consist of two parts; the an entrance portico and a circular part or rotunda • The portico is 8 columns wide and 3 columns deep and leads to the entrance of the temple • The columns are of unfluted Corinthian order • The wall of the rotunda is 3 storeys high on the outside; they are made up of brick faced concrete and support the dome roof of the temple
  • 78. Roman Temples Pantheon • The interior has eight large niches with one serving as the entrance and the remaining seven used dedicated to the seven major Roman Gods • The Dome roof forms a perfect sphere with a diameter of 142 feet in the interior
  • 79. Roman Temples Pantheon • At the head of the dome is a 30ft wide occulus, that opens up the great dome to the outside and illuminates the space with light • The interior was built of Egyptian granites, African colored marbles and pure white marbles from the Aegean • The Pantheon combines scale, boldness and mastery of every architectural art.
  • 80. Roman Buildings Basilica • Basilicas are among the most important categories of roman architecture • There were no basilicas before the Roman era • The basilica are rectangular and usually contained interior colonnades that divided the space into aisles at one or both sides, with an apse at one end • The central aisle tended to be wide and was higher than the flanking aisles, so that light could penetrate through the clerestory windows • The function of the basilica is close to that of the Greek stoa
  • 81. Roman Buildings Basilica • It is also the place where magistrates to hold court to dispose of legal matters • The oldest known basilica, the Basilica Porcia, was built in Rome in 184 BC • The most splendid Roman basilica is the one constructed for traditional purposes during the reign of the pagan emperor Maxentius and finished by Constantine after 313 • In the early Imperial period, a basilica for large audiences also became a feature of the palaces • We will examine the Basilica Ulpia and the Basilica Maxentius
  • 82. Roman Buildings Basilica Ulpia • The Basilica Ulpia was built by Emperor Trajan in the period A.D 98-117 for his imperial forum • Basilica Ulpia stretches for 120 meters in length over the width of the Trajan forum • The Basilica consists of a central hall, 25 meters wide surrounded on all sides by double colonnades • The Basilica had two semi- circular apses at it’s two ends
  • 83. Roman Buildings Basilica Ulpia • The walls of the Basilica were finished with multi- colored marble; also referred to as polychromatic marble • The whole structure was covered with a truss roof • Basilica Ulpia represent the generic form of the Roman Basilica, • It is this form that will later be adopted by the Christians for their church
  • 84. Roman Buildings Basilica Maxentius • The Basilica Maxentius was started by the Emperor Maxentius in A.D. 308 but was completed by the Emperor Constantine in A.D. 312 • It is also sometimes referred to as Basilica of Constantine • It is one of the impressive buildings of the Forum Romanum • The Basilica Maxentius is different from other tradition basilicas, because its design was derived from the central halls of imperial Roman Baths
  • 85. Roman Buildings Basilica Maxentius • It is however larger in scale than any of the baths that was built • The ground plan covers 100 meters by 65 meters • The building is divided into a central nave and side isles • The central nave was 80 by 25 meters and was covered by 3 groin vaults with a maximum height of 35 meters • The side isles were 16 meters wide, divided into three sections • There is very little that is left of the Basilica now
  • 86. Roman Buildings Residential Buildings • Roman cities had a range of various types of private dwellings • The private dwellings reflected the rank and wealth of the inhabitants • At the lowest level are the multi- story tenements where a large proportion of the population stayed • They consisted of shops on the ground floor and apartments on the upper floors • The apartments were built around a courtyard for light and air
  • 87. Roman Buildings Residential Buildings • The common roman house was the domus • These were reserved for the more well off members of the Roman society • The domus was essentially a courtyard house, with a peristyle colonnaded courtyard • It had few or no windows to the outside
  • 88. Residential Buildings Domus Augustana • At the high end are elaborate palaces and villas for the very rich • The Domus Augustana, also called flavian’s palace, is an example of the high-end residential palaces • Domus Augustana was both a house for the emperor as well as his palace for official functions
  • 89. Residential Buildings Domus Augustana • It was laid out around two peristyle atriums • The atrium to the left is for state function • Entry is from an inconspicuous door from the top • The residential part of the palace is arranged around the courtyard located to the right • To the right of the residential part is a sunken garden in the form of a stadium • This is the private garden of the emperor, where he can interact with nature
  • 90. Residential Buildings Handrians Villa • Romans also built country villas or houses, where they could go to be close to nature • A very good example of the country villas, is the Handrian’s villa built for the Emperor Handrian • The Handrian villa displays an example of the level of wealth displayed in buildings • This was a large country estate spread on a vast terrain
  • 91. Residential Buildings Handrians Villa • The structure was made of a loose arrangement of peristyle halls, fountains, dining halls, dormitories, baths, libraries and other facilities • The most characteristics feature of the villa is the play of curves and curved form • This is most evident in the Canopus • This is an elongated pool surrounded by a colonnade • The colonnade is topped by alternating straight entablature and segmental arch sections framing statuary
  • 92. Other Architectural Elements Triumphal Arches • Other Than buildings, ancient Romans also contributed to the development of several architectural elements • The most prominent of the elements is the triumphal arch • A triumphal arch is a structure in the shape of a monumental gate, usually built to celebrate a victory in war • They are almost always built in the Form, framing the paths that people follow • Romans started it as a way to celebrate their victories in battles
  • 93. Other Architectural Elements Triumphal Arches • Some triumphal arches are made of stone and intended to be permanent. • A number of arches from the city's imperial era can still be seen in modern Rome. • Temporary triumphal arches were also constructed for use for celebratory parades or ceremony and later dismantled • A Roman Triumph was a civil ceremony and religious rite held to publicly honour the military commander of a notably successful foreign war • Only men of senatorial or consular rank could perform a triumph celebration and be a triumphator as the victorious generals are known
  • 94. Other Architectural Elements Triumphal Arches • The ceremony consisted of a spectacular parade, opened by the chiefs of conquered peoples who are afterward executed • The triumphator rode on a biga, a chariot pulled by two white horses • The parade followed a precise route in the streets of Rome • It traveled along the Forum until it reached the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus, where the laurels of victory were offered to the god. • Monuments may then be erected to celebrate the triumph • Two examples of such monuments in the republican forum are the Arch of Titus and the Arch of Constantine
  • 95. Triumphal Arches Arch of Constantine • The arch was built in A.D. 81 and dedicated to the emperor Titus • It was built to commemorate the military victory over Jerusalem in A.D. 70 • The arch has a height of 15.4 meters, a width of 13.5 meters and was constructed of stone • The marvel of its stone construction is evident in the keystone, which ensures the stability of the arch
  • 96. Triumphal Arches Arch of Constantine • It has a single opening flanked on each side by attached columns of the Composite order • The composite order has a capital that joins the acanthus leaves of the Corinthian order with the volutes of the ionic order • The face of the arch is decorated with sculptural relief depicting the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem
  • 97. Triumphal Arches Arch of Constantine • The arch of Constantine was built much later that than of Titus • It was built to commemorate the victory of Emperor Constantine over Maxentius in A.D. 312 • Its form shows an attempt to create an arch more majestic than that of Titus
  • 98. Triumphal Arches Arch of Constantine • It has three arched openings, a larger one in the center flanked by two smaller ones • There are four free standing columns in front framing the arched openings • It is also abundantly decorated, depicting the victory in relief sculpture
  • 99. End of Module 7 Lecture 24
  • 100. Module 7 Lecture 25 Roman Architecture
  • 101. Outline of Lecture • Lecture 25 – Roman City Planning and Design – Architectural Characteristics • Buildings and other architectural elements • Building materials, construction and technologies • Architectural Organizing principles
  • 102. Roman City Planning & Design Principles • Roman cities fall into two broad categories • Majority grew in an unplanned manner over the centuries forming complex organic entities, to which sometimes order was introduced • Rome is a good example
  • 103. Roman City Planning & Design Principles • The other category consist of Castrum type cities, a type of military camp developed with an inflexible regularity of shape- • A well preserved example is the city of Timgad in North Africa • This was a city laid out by Trajan in A.D. 100 as a colony for military veterans • The town was laid in a grid of 12 blocks within a square 1,200 feet wide
  • 104. Roman City Planning & Design Principles • The planning of most cities fall in between the two extremes of organic growth and rigid grid planning • All cities had a forum, theater, bath, market etc. • Many of the cities contained buildings that were copies or local versions of key monuments in Rome • Focus in city design is on integrating civic buildings with public spaces and residential neighborhoods • Each public building had interior spaces that responded to functional requirement with the spaces also linked and connected with the public spaces of the city • The Forum was the center of the Roman city
  • 105. Roman City Planning & Design Forum • The forum was the descendant of the Greek agora for the Romans • It began as a market place • It rapidly became the commercial, political and ceremonial center of the civilization • In the process it developed into an elaborate architectural space that became a part of all roman cities • Unlike the Greek agora which is informal in plan, and whose buildings are subordinate to the space, in the roman forum, the organization is more formal • The buildings surrounding it are normally large and dominate the space • Buildings commonly found in the forum include temples, basilicas, and bath
  • 106. Roman City Planning & Design Forum • Each individual major building in the forum was given a central inside space • Governmental function were usually arranged on the West End; religious ceremonies were celebrated at the east end • The inside space of buildings was connected to one or more exterior space of the city • Columns, statues and triumphal arches were erected as a memorial to the conquering rulers and to the glories of the empire • No two roman forums are really alike, as there are always differences between the forums in different cities • In Rome with its two forums, we find a good example of the Roman forums
  • 107. Roman City Planning & Design Republiclan Forum • The Republican Forum is also called the Forum Romanum • It was the oldest and most important forum in the city • Soon it became an important market place • By the 5th Century B.C. the various functions associated with the forum began to assume their architectural shape
  • 108. Roman City Planning & Design Republican Forum • Additions, modification and growth by successive republicans and emperors led to its development • By 400 A.D. the forum had accumulated not less than 10 temples, 4 basilicas, 4 triumphal arches and many other monuments and shrines • All of these were arranged with no preordained order • The buildings therefore loosely define the space of the forum
  • 109. Roman City Planning & Design Imperial Forum • During the reign of Julius Ceasar, he attempted to reorganize the Republican forum but realized that it had become too congested for rational order • He therefore decided to build a new forum adjacent to but outside the republican forum • This idea was picked by successive emperors, who added to it to create the imperial forum
  • 110. Roman City Planning & Design Imperial Forum • The imperial forum is not one forum, but five forums with each supporting the other • There was variety in their form, but they displayed rational order in their organization • Each of the forum consisted of colonnaded atrium with a temple at its head • Of the five temples that of Trojan was most majestic, with the basilica Ulpia sitting across it and two libraries on either side of the central court
  • 111. Roman City Planning & Design Architecture and Urban Design in Rome • In Rome we find the best example of both Roman architecture and city design • The image shows a reconstruction module of a part of Rome at the height of its development • From the image, the organic growth of the city is evident and is reflected in the fabric of the city • Buildings are densely packed together, separated by a network of narrow pathways
  • 112. Roman City Planning & Design Architecture and Urban Design in Rome • Within the fabric, all the Roman building types can be identified • These include The circus Maxentius, The Domus Augustana, Roman Theater, An Aqueduct, A Roman Temple, The Basilica Maxentius, and The Republican and Imperial Forums • From the image, the clustering of important buildings close to the forum is highly evident
  • 114. Buildings & Other Arch Elements
  • 115. Buildings & Other Arch. Elements Building Types • The genius of the roman architect was not in the design of a particular building • Rather, it is in the way they were able to meet the needs of a complex society for different building types for a thousand years • They produced a wide range of buildings that had never been built before • Roman buildings included bathhouses for bathing, circuses for races, amphitheaters for gladiatorial contest, temples for religion, domus for family life and the forum as the center of public life • Roman architects design the buildings with interior spaces configured for specialized activities • The Greek order was reduced to a decorative element rather than as a form generator in Greek Architecture
  • 116. Buildings & Other Arch. Elements Engineering Structures • Romans also contributed several engineering and architectural objects to human civilization • The most prominent engineering contributions are in road and bridge structures and in the construction of aqueducts • Road and bridge construction allowed the Romans to connect the various parts of their empire • Aqueducts allowed them to supply their cities with water
  • 117. Buildings & Other Arch. Elements The Orders • Romans also contributed to the development of the orders • They made the Tuscan order developed by the Etruscan very popular in use • They developed the composite order, which combines Corinthian and Ionic capitals • They developed the giant order which spans up to two storey and the miniature order used to decorate windows • The Romans also contributed in the development of the Triumphal arches • Triumphal arches were constructed in Roman cities to celebrate victories in battles
  • 119. Materials, Construction & Tech. Materials • The choice of building materials contributed to the success of Roman architecture. • Roman building materials were very diverse and rich • Materials that were not available locally could usually be imported from other Roman colonies • Roman building materials included stone, marble, brick, and timber • The art of producing fired brick was a Roman invention • Romans also invented concrete • The combination of concrete and brick formwork enabled Roman architects to design and vast buildings for different uses
  • 120. Materials, Construction & Tech. Construction • The Roman Civilization had the most innovative construction system of the civilizations so far studied • Roman architects understood the underlying principles of arch and vault construction and were able to innovate to address their shortcomings • The combination of arch and vault construction with concrete and fire brick formwork provided the Romans with the technology to achieve their architectural dreams • No previous civilization had an architecture that involved the manipulation of space like that of the Romans
  • 121. Materials, Construction & Tech. Construction • In fact, roman architecture was essentially space shaped by vaults, and walls for the purpose of ordered activities • In terms of building technology, the contribution of the Romans includes the development of the arch and barrel vault on freestanding piers. • Romans also introduced the use of timber trusses in roofing • In the Pantheon, we find Roman construction technology at the height of its application
  • 122. Materials, Construction & Tech. Technology • The greatest contribution of the Romans in Building services and technology is in the aspect of water • The development of the aqueduct enabled ancient Romans to supply water to their cities • Rome at the height of its development had to supply water to meet the needs of its one million inhabitants • Along with water supply, the Romans developed a system of waste water collection and disposal • Sanitary sewers were used to collect waste water that is channeled outside the city for disposal
  • 123. Principles of Arch. Organization
  • 124. Principles of Arch. Organization Principles • Three forces appear to shape the direction and form of Roman architecture – Function – Construction Technology – Adaptation to new ideas and knowledge
  • 125. Principles of Arch. Organization Function • The principal organizing principle of Roman buildings is function • Function is evident in the emphasis on spaces • Almost all Roman buildings provided spaces for functional use • Roman architecture also de-emphasized the rigidness in the use of the Greek orders • They transformed the orders from a determinant of building form to decoration on gigantic buildings
  • 126. Principles of Arch. Organization Construction Technology • Understanding Roman buildings also requires understanding their construction technology • Development in construction technology freed the Romans from any creative limitations • They were therefore able to experiment, in the process creating new building types and form and also pushing the limits of structural possibilities • Construction technology also allowed Roman architects to produce buildings with vast interior spaces • Construction technology enabled Romans to transform the orders from structural elements to mere decorative ones
  • 127. Principles of Arch. Organization Adaptation to New Ideas and Knowledge • Roman architecture can also only be understood by understanding the Roman attitude to innovation • Romans were constantly in contact with different people and places • As they come into contact the different people and places, they are also exposed to different ideas and ways of doing things • Roman people were always willing to lean new ideas and knowledge and adapt these for their use
  • 128. Principles of Arch. Organization Adaptation to New Ideas and Knowledge • Such adaptation allowed them to assimilate ideas from different places, including the Greeks, the Egyptians and the Carthaginians • But when Roman people learn new ideas and knowledge, they were also able to adapt them and create ideas that were uniquely Roman • It is this will to learn and adapt that led to their innovative social life and to the evolution of Roman architecture
  • 129. End of Module 7 Lecture 25