WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The archæology of Rome, Part 7 cover

The archæology of Rome, Part 7

Chapter 88: Description of Plate XXXV.
Open in WeRead

Explore more books like this:

About This Book

The author reports on late 19th-century excavations that revealed extensive substructures beneath the arena, showing earlier origins than commonly supposed and multiple construction phases from Scaurus and Nero to the Flavian emperors. The work describes underground features such as a movable boarded arena with corbels, animal cages with vertical lifts and trapdoors, canals and reservoirs for staged naval displays, and wide passages for scenery, and examines reused timber and stone, masonry of tufa, brick, and concrete, plus coins and graffiti as documentary evidence. It also traces repairs from earthquakes and argues the amphitheatre evolved over more than a century rather than being completed in ten years.

THE COLOSSEUM.
PLATE XXXV.

AMPHITHEATRE AT POZZUOLI.

AMPHITHEATRE AT POZZUOLI—DETAILS

Description of Plate XXXV.

AMPHITHEATRE AT POZZUOLI.

E. View in the principal corridor, with the receptacles to collect the water, m m m.

F. View in a subterranean corridor under the arena, shewing remains of the decorations thrown down by the hand of men, through the aperture, n.

It is here impossible that they could have fallen down in an earthquake, as was the case in the Colosseum. A garden was made here upon the arena, and these decorations were removed from the surface, as interfering with the cultivation of the garden, and thrown down into the substructures, and then arranged under the vault as we see them.