Luogo - Archaeological Area

Domus Aurea

Where Viale della Domus Aurea (Parco del Colle Oppio), 1, Roma

The Domus Aurea (Latin, "Golden House") was a large landscaped portico villa built by the Emperor Nero in the heart of ancient Rome, after the great fire in A.D. 64 had cleared away the aristocratic dwellings on the slopes of the Palatine Hill.

Built of brick and concrete in the few years between the fire and Nero's suicide in 68, the extensive gold leaf that gave the villa its name was not the only extravagant element of its decor: stuccoed ceilings were faced with semi-precious stones and ivory veneers, while the walls were frescoed, coordinating the decoration into different themes in each major group of rooms.[2] Pliny the Elder watched it being built and mentions it in his Naturalis Historia.

Suetonius claims this of Nero and the Domus Aurea:

When the edifice was finished in this style and he dedicated it, he deigned to say nothing more in the way of approval than that he was at last beginning to be housed like a human being.

Though the Domus Aurea complex covered parts of the slopes of the Palatine, Esquiline and Caelian hills, with a man-made lake in the marshy bottomlands, the estimated size of the Domus Aurea is an approximation, as much of it has not been excavated. Some scholars place it at over 300 acres (1.2 km2),[5] while others estimate its size to have been under 100 acres (0.40 km2).[6] Suetonius describes the complex as "ruinously prodigal" as it included groves of trees, pastures with flocks, vineyards and an artificial lake—rus in urbe, "countryside in the city".

 

Nero also commissioned from the Greek Zénodore (sculpteur) (fr) a colossal 35.5 m (120 RF) high bronze statue of himself, the Colossus Neronis.[4] Pliny the Elder, however, puts its height at only 30.3 m (106.5 RF).[7] The statue was placed just outside the main palace entrance at the terminus of the Via Appia[4] in a large atrium of porticoes that divided the city from the private villa.[8] This statue may have represented Nero as the sun god Sol, as Pliny saw some resemblance.[9] This idea is widely accepted among scholars[10] but some are convinced that Nero was not identified with Sol while he was alive.[11] The face of the statue was modified shortly after Nero’s death during Vespasian’s reign to make it truly a statue of Sol.[11] Hadrian moved it, with the help of the architect Decrianus and 24 elephants,[12] to a position next to the Flavian Amphitheater. This building took the name "Colosseum" in the Middle Ages, after the statue nearby, or, as some historians believe, because of the sheer size of the building.

The Golden House was designed as a place of entertainment, as shown by the presence of 300 rooms without any sleeping quarter. Nero's own palace remained on the Quirinal Hill. No kitchens or latrines have been discovered.

Rooms sheathed in dazzling polished white marble were given richly varied floor plans, shaped with niches and exedras that concentrated or dispersed the daylight. There were pools in the floors and fountains splashing in the corridors. Nero took great interest in every detail of the project, according to Tacitus' Annals, and oversaw the engineer-architects, Celer and Severus, who were also responsible for the attempted navigable canal with which Nero hoped to link Misenum with Lake Avernus.

Fonte: Wikipedia

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