COLLECTION NAME:
Splendore Dell' Antica Roma
Record
Title:
Leaf 101 - Vestigia Amphitheatari Sta Tilli Tauri
Creator:
Lauro, Giacomo
Description:
The Amphitheater of Statilius Taurus. An amphitheater can be distinguished from a circus or a hippodrome by the shape. Roman amphitheaters were theaters that were round. The word means "theater all around." Usually they were multi-storied and arcaded.
Description:
The verso of this leaf is blank.
Description:
This amphitheater was built in 29 BC by Titus Statilius Taurus, a wealthy general and politician in the time of Emperor Augustus. The amphitheater was built of stone and wood on the Campus Martius in Rome, but it was not a large one. In 57 AD, Nero built a new bigger wooden amphitheater, either on this site or a new one, the Amphitheatrum Neronis. After the Great Fire of Rome in 64 AD, both amphitheaters were lost. This view of the amphitheater is how it would have appeared at the time of Lauro's publication.
Subject:
Rome (Italy) -- Antiquities.
Subject:
Amphitheaters -- Rome.
Subject:
Titus Statilius Taurus I
Subject:
Rome (Italy) -- Buildings, structures, etc.
Subject:
Amphitheater of Statilius Taurus
Publisher:
Andrea Fei, Roma, 1625
Date:
1625
Coverage:
Rome (Italy)
Coverage:
Italy
Type:
Still Image
Extent:
28.5 x 21 cm
Format/Medium:
Engravings
Source:
Splendore dell'antica Roma, in Jen Library Archives and Special Collections, Savannah College of Art and Design.
Rights:
Though this item is believed to be in the Public Domain, copyright may have been retained by the authors or creators of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law.