The Roman Forum, is a rectangular forum (plaza)
surrounded by the ruins of several important ancient government buildings at
the center of the city of Rome. Citizens of the ancient city referred to this
space, originally a marketplace, as the Forum Magnum, or simply the Forum.
What a ruin! I need a better understanding of these ruin, I just love civilization --it put a line between human and monkey, haha... enough with the sarcasm. So I managed to purchase this book, a past and present "Ancient Rome"
I hope you guys enjoy it too ;)
Many of the oldest and most important structures of the
ancient city were located on or near the Forum. The Roman kingdom's earliest
shrines and temples were located on the southeastern edge. These included the
ancient former royal residence, the Regia (8th century BC), and the Temple of
Vesta (7th century BC), as well as the surrounding complex of the Vestal
Virgins, all of which were rebuilt after the rise of imperial Rome.
Other archaic shrines to the northwest, such as the
Umbilicus Urbis and the Vulcanal (Shrine of Vulcan), developed into the
Republic's formal Comitium (assembly area). This is where the Senate—as well as
Republican government itself—began. The Senate House, government offices,
tribunals, temples, memorials and statues gradually cluttered the area.
Over time the archaic Comitium was replaced by the larger
adjacent Forum and the focus of judicial activity moved to the new Basilica
Aemilia (179 BC). Some 130 years later, Julius Caesar built the Basilica Julia,
along with the new Curia Julia, refocusing both the judicial offices and the
Senate itself. This new Forum, in what proved to be its final form, then served
as a revitalized city square where the people of Rome could gather for
commercial, political, judicial and religious pursuits in ever greater numbers.
Eventually much economic and judicial business would
transfer away from the Forum Romanum to the larger and more extravagant
structures (Trajan's Forum and the Basilica Ulpia) to the north. The reign of
Constantine the Great, during which the Empire was divided into its Eastern and
Western halves, saw the construction of the last major expansion of the Forum
complex—the Basilica of Maxentius (312 AD). This returned the political center
to the Forum until the fall of the Western Roman Empire almost two centuries
later.
The Colosseum:
The Pantheon:
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