Notes for Ataulf of the Visgoths


Son of Athanaric II, king of the Visigoths
Husband of N.N. and Aelia Galla Placidia Augusta
Father of Eurica of the Visigoths; Theodora of the Visigoths; Alaric II and
Theodosius
Brother of Alaric the Goth, King of the Visigoths
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Notes for Caecilia Metella


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coordinates: 41°51′7.8″N 12°31′15.26″E

Tomb of Caecilia Metella
Mausoleo di Cecilia Metella
Cecilia metella e castrum.JPG
Tomb of Caecilia Metella
Coordinates	41°51′7.8″N 12°31′15.26″E
Location	Via Appia, Rome
Type	Roman Mausoleum
Material	Concrete, Travertine
Completion date	1st Century BC
Rome environs 2 tombe caecilia metella
The Tomb of Caecilia Metella (Italian: Mausoleo di Cecilia Metella) is a
mausoleum located just outside Rome at the three mile marker of the Via Appia.
It was built during the 1st century BC to honor Caecilia Metella who was the
daughter of Quintus Caecilius Metellus Creticus, a consul in 69 BC, and wife
of Marcus Licinius Crassus who served under Julius Caesar and was the son of
the famous triumvir Marcus Crassus.[1]

The Tomb of Caecilia is one of the most well known and well preserved
monuments along the Via Appia and a popular tourist site. In 2013, the museum
circuit of the Baths of Caracalla, Villa of the Quintilii, and the Tomb of
Caecilia Metella was the twenty-second most visited site in Italy, with
245,613 visitors and a total gross income of €883,344.[2]

Contents
1	Description
2	Mausoleum
2.1	Structure
2.2	Interior
2.3	Exterior
2.4	Sarcophagus
3	Castrum
4	Gallery
5	See also
6	References
7	Bibliography
Description
Located on top of a hill along the Via Appia, the Tomb of Caecilia Metella
consists of a cylindrical drum, or rotunda, atop a square podium with the
Caetani Castle (Castrum) attached at the rear. The square podium stands at 8.3
meters tall with the cylindrical drum standing at 12 m. The monument in
totality stands at a height of 21.7 meters tall. The diameter of the circular
drum is 29.5 m, equivalent to 100 Roman feet.

On the outside of the monument, an inscription can be seen reading "CAECILIAE
|Q·CRETICI·F | METELLAE·CRASSI[3]" indicating to whom this tomb was
dedicated. Further up the monument, decorations can be seen depicting festoons
and bucrania, heads of bulls, which were the inspiration for the area being
named Capo Di Bove, meaning head of the bovine. At the top of the monument,
medieval battlements can be seen from the time when the tomb was used as a
fortress.

At the rear, the Caetani Castle is attached to the tomb. The castle originally
was three levels: ground level, first level, and second level. It is unknown
what the second level was used for but the first floor was used for the elite
gentlemen as evidenced by fireplaces and refined goods.[4] The castle is now
used to display various decorations from the monument.

Mausoleum
Structure
The foundation of the Tomb of Caecilia Metella rests partially on tuff rock
and partially on lava rock. The lava rock is part of ancient lava flow from
the Alban Hills that covered the area 260,000 years ago.[5]

The core of the podium was cast in several layers of concrete, ranging from .7
to .85 m thick. The thickness of each layer corresponds with the height of the
travertine facing blocks that surrounded the podium as the travertine was used
as a frame in order to help the concrete layers form.[6]

The rotunda was built in this same fashion, travertine blocks on the outermost
section with cement poured in the middle to give the concrete some structure
and then covered in Travertine revetment, most of which has been stripped
away. While the walls of the tower are 24 ft thick, comparatively the
adjoining castle of the Gaetani was made of a thin wall of tufa.

Originally the top of the monument would have been a cone shaped earthen mound
as conical shapes were common with Roman rotundas but the earthen mound has
long been replaced by medieval battlements.

The Roman concrete was made up of semi-liquid mortar and aggregate, which
consisted of broken pieces of stone or bricks. The aggregate was made up of
rather large pieces of stone (about the size of a fist) compared to modern
cement which is finely ground to create a smooth, flat surface. Mortar and
concrete were alternated in the construction as the semi-liquid mortar would
bind the stone pieces together. The mortar used at this tomb utilized the lava
rock beneath the monument as a substitute for sand in the concrete. The lava
rock worked as well as sand and was more abundant versus the difficult to find
sand.

Interior
The interior of the Tomb of Caecilia Metella can be separated into 4 sections:
the cella, the upper and lower corridors, and the west compartment. The most
important being the cella which was used for funerary purposes and for
"housing" the dead.

The cella is a tall, circular shaft rising all the way through the center of
both the podium and the rotunda. The cella is about 6.6 m in diameter at the
bottom but tapers as it rises to a 5.6 m diameter at the top. The top features
an oculus allowing for light. Throughout the cella, there are over 143 cut
outs, divided into 12 rows of 10-14, in the walls of the cella that were used
as putlog holes in the creation of the monument.

The upper corridors is believed to be the main entrance to the cella.

Exterior
The upper section of the rotunda is decorated quite minimally with a marble
frieze of bucrania, oxen heads, and garlands. Beneath the frieze is the famous
inscription "CAECILIAE |Q·CRETICI·F | METELLAE·CRASSI" meaning "To Caecilia
Metella, daughter of Quintus Creticus, [and wife] of Crassus".

Decorations were very popular on funerary altars and votive offerings and the
most famous example are identified in the frieze of carved ox skulls and
festoons on the inside of the fence.[7] Three types of bull heads can be
distinguished: complete bovine head, skull of bull but still covered with
skin, and a full skeletal skull. The inclusion of the naked skull is
indicative of the termination of use of the complete bull skull and the skull
with skin occurred around 30 BC and the inclusion of the use of particular
bull heads allows for an approximate date to be made, as bull heads seen on
dated monuments can be compared.

The bull heads and garlands indicate and verify the timing of the creation of
the monument. During the time period, the Roman decoration of bull heads was
shifting and thus the representation of particular bull heads approximate the
date.

Sarcophagus
Today, there is a marble sarcophagus located in Palazzo Farnese that is
purportedly from the Tomb of Caecilia Metella. According to literary sources,
it was found in the cella and had been there since before the construction of
the Caetani Castle. However, there is no definitive evidence to verify the
sarcophagus as the sarcophagus of Caecilia Metella and many historians believe
the sarcophagus does not belong to the monument and had been found in the
surrounding area of the mausoleum rather than inside it.

Recently, the sarcophagus was the object of a detailed study and the author of
this study dates sarcophagus between AD 180 and 190. Further evidence
suggesting this to not be the sarcophagus of Caecilia Metella is at the time
of Caecilia Metella's death, cremation was the typical burial custom and a
funerary urn is expected rather than a sarcophagus.[6] In addition, records
from 1697 of the Farnese Collection state the sarcophagus was registered
without a specified provenience indicating even at the time, historians were
unsure of the relationship between the sarcophagus and the tomb.

Castrum
Between 1302 and 1303, the Caetani, or Gaetani, family aided by Pope Boniface
VIII bought the estate of Capo di Bove, which was all the land surrounding and
including the Tomb of Caecilia Metella, and built a fortified camp, or
castrum, next to the tomb replacing a preceding 11th century building. [8]

The castrum's construction included the building of stables, houses,
warehouses, the church of St. Nicholas, and the palace of the Caetani as well
as adding the medieval battlements to the top of the tomb thus transforming
the tomb into a defensive tower. Sadly, the remnants of the Caetani only
include the Church of St. Nicholas, parts of the Caetani Palace, and the
medieval battlements.

The Caetani used this fort to control the traffic on the road and to collect
exorbitant tolls. In the fourteenth century the castle was passed to the
Savelli, and to the Orsini who held it until 1435, after which it became the
property of the Roman Senate.[9] According to Gerding, the monument was
abandoned in 1485.[6]

Over the centuries, the two monuments endured numerous attempts of destruction
in order to repurpose their materials. However, the two monuments protected
one another from destruction. During the Renaissance, the monuments were saved
as they were valued for the castrum while during Romanticism, the tomb, with
its charm, allowed the survival of the castrum.[4]
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