Baths of Trajan Information & Baths of Trajan Links at HealthHaven.com
advertise
add site
services
publishers
database
health videos
Bookmark and Share

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 
about
toolbar
stats
live show
health store
more stuff
JOIN/LOGIN
Featured Results:
Cold rubbings, Douches, Steam Baths , Immersion baths , Hip bath,...
Cold rubbings, Douches, Steam Baths, Immersion baths, Hip bath,...
holisticonline.com
 Cold rubbings, Douches, Steam Baths , Immersion baths , Hip bath,...
Cold rubbings, Douches, Steam Baths, Immersion baths, Hip bath,...
holistic-online.com
 Bath Lift UK, Inflatable Bath Lifts, Mains Powered Bath Lift, Battery...
Bath Lift UK, Inflatable Bath Lifts, Mains Powered Bath Lift, Battery...
handyhealthcare.co.uk
 aromatherapy baths ,lavender,aromatherapy mineral bath,organic dead sea...
aromatherapy baths,lavender,aromatherapy mineral bath,organic dead sea...
sweetmedicineessentials.c...
 
The southwestern exedra of the Baths of Trajan once housed one of the two libraries (Greek and Latin)

The Baths of Trajan were a massive thermae, a bathing and leisure complex, built in ancient Rome starting from 104 AD and dedicated during the Kalends of July in 109. Commissioned by Emperor Trajan, the complex of baths occupied space on the southern side of the Oppian Hill on the outskirts of what was then the main developed area of the city, although still inside the boundary of the Servian Wall. The architect of the complex is said to be Apollodorus of Damascus. After being utilized mainly as a recreational and social center by Roman citizens, both men and women, for many years, the baths, in use as late as the early fifth century[1] seem to have been deserted at the time of the siege of Rome by the Goths in 537; with the destruction of the Roman aqueducts the thermae were abandoned, and the whole of the now-waterless Mons Oppius.

Contents

[edit] Location

Prior to the construction of the Baths, their location on the Oppian Hill was occupied by the ornate Palace of Nero (Domus Aurea). After Nero's suicide, subsequent emperors Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian chose to build over his palace with other forms of architecture. Emperor Trajan covered up the last of the palace with a platform upon which the Baths were built. Because they served as a model for bath complexes built throughout the Roman world during the Imperial period, these Baths would come to be recognized as a highly notable example of early Imperial Roman architecture.

Plan of the Baths of Trajan. Notice the northeast-southwest orientation.

The baths were erected on the Oppius Hill, a southern extension of the Esquiline Hill. Built on a platform which had itself been built over Nero's Palace, the bath complex was immense by ancient Roman standards, covering an area of approximately 330 by 215 meters. The complex rested on a northeast-southwest axis, with the main building attached to the northeast wall. This was contrary to the more widely used north-south axis of many buildings in the vicinity. It is suggested that this unorthodox orientation was chosen by the architects to reduce the bathers' exposure to the wind, while also maximizing exposure to the sun.

Within the complex, the building was surrounded by a large grassy area. The baths themselves consisted of pools, including a tepidarium (warm area and presumably first room visited in the baths), a caldarium (hot pool and dry, sauna-like area), frigidarium (cool pools used after those previously mentioned), and also gymnasia and apodyteria (changing rooms). In addition to the facilities of the bath complex used by the public, there was a system of subterranean passageways and structures used by slaves and workers to service and maintain the facilities. Also underground, the massive cistern, surviving today as the Sette sale, the "seven rooms", stored much of the water used in the baths. It was capable of storing no less than 8 million liters. There were also several exedrae on the eastern and western sides of the building. After archaeological analysis performed after excavation in 1997, it is thought that at least one of these exedra served as a sort of library and a holding place for scrolls and manuscripts.

[edit] The "City fresco"

The archaeological excavations of 1997 also led to the discovery of a large (about 10 square meters) frescoed bird's-eye view of a walled port city, a unique survivor of such a subject, in a buried gallery or cryptoporticus beneath the baths, which predated their construction, but postdated Nero's Domus Aurea. Whether it represents the reorganization of an actual port or an idealized one remains an open question.[2]

[edit] See also

General overview

Other baths

Engineers

Other

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ When Felix Campanianus, the city praefect, had statues erected in them (CIL, VI, 1670, noted by La Rocca, Eugenio (2001). "The Newly Discovered City Fresco from Trajan's Baths, Rome". Imago Mundi (Imago Mundi): 121-124. 
  2. ^ La Rocca 2001.

[edit] References

  • Anderson, James C. Jr. (1985). "The Date of the Thermae Traiani and the Topography of the Oppius Mons". American Journal of Archaeology (Archaeological Institute of America): 499-509. 
  • Platner, S.B. (1911). The Topography and Monuments of Ancient Rome (2nd ed.). p. 454. 
  • Gates, Charles (2003). Ancient Cities: The Archaeology of Urban Life in the Ancient Near East and Egypt, Greece, and Rome. Routledge. p. 378. 

[edit] External links

Coordinates: 41°53′30.72″N 12°29′46.61″E / 41.8918667°N 12.4962806°E / 41.8918667; 12.4962806




Product Results (view all...)

search wiki for    ?
web dir firms image gallery news pdf wiki shop video 



↑ top of page ↑about thumbshots