Temple of Hercules Victor

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The Temple of Hercules Victor (Template:Langx) or Hercules Olivarius (Latin for "Hercules the Olive-Bearer")[1] is a Roman temple in Piazza Bocca della Verità, the former Forum Boarium, in Rome, Italy. It is a tholos, a round temple of Greek 'peripteral' design completely surrounded by a colonnade. This layout caused it to be mistaken for a temple of Vesta until it was correctly identified by Napoleon's Prefect of Rome, Camille de Tournon.[2]

Despite (or perhaps due to) the Forum Boarium's role as the cattle market for ancient Rome, the Temple of Hercules is the subject of a folk belief claiming that neither flies nor dogs will enter the holy place.[3] The temple is the earliest surviving mostly intact marble building in Rome and the only surviving one made of Greek marble.[4]

Description

File:Reconstruction drawings of the Temple of Hercules Victor, by J. A. Coussin, 1802 (01).webp
Reconstruction drawing of how the temple most probably looked like in its glory days, drawn by Jean Antoine Coussin, 1802. The temple would have also been polychrome (coloured in multiple bright colours), as all ancient sculptures, buildings and objects were initially

It is dated to the later 2nd century BC and was built either by L. Mummius Achaicus, conqueror of the Achaeans and destroyer of Corinth,[5] or by the trader Marcus Octavius Herrenus in gratitude for success in business.[6] The temple is 14.8 m in diameter and consists of a circular cella within a concentric ring of twenty Corinthian columns 10.66 m tall, resting on a tuff foundation. These elements supported an architrave and roof, which have disappeared.[7]

The original wall of the cella, built of travertine and marble blocks, and nineteen of the originally twenty columns remain but the current tile roof was added later. Palladio's published reconstruction suggested a dome, though this was apparently erroneous. The temple is the earliest surviving marble building in Rome. The temple's original dedication is dated back to circa 143-132 BC, a time when intense construction was taking place in Portus Tiberinus.[8]

Identification

File:Età imperiale, chiusino a forma di mascherone di divinità fluviale, detta bocca della verità, collocata qui nel 1632.jpg
The Mouth of Truth, believed to have originated in the temple and been moved later to the nearby Basilica of Santa Maria in Cosmedin.

Its major literary sources are two almost identical passages, one in Servius' commentary on the Aeneid (viii.363)[9] and the other in Macrobius' Saturnalia.[10] Though Servius mentions that aedes duae sunt, "there are two sacred temples", the earliest Roman calendars mention but one festival, on 13 August, to Hercules Victor and Hercules Invictus interchangeably.[11]

File:C. W. Eckersberg, Vesta Temple in Rome, 1814-1816,0204NMK, Nivaagaards Malerisamling.jpg
C.W. Eckersberg, Vesta Temple in Rome, 1814–1816, Nivaagaards Malerisamling.

Post-Classical history

File:Temple Hercule Olivarius - plan.svg
Map of the temple.

In the 1st century AD, the temple was hit with some sort of disaster as 10 columns were replaced with Luna marble, which is similar to the original but not an exact replica.[12] By 1132, the temple had been converted to a church, known as Santo Stefano alle Carozze (St. Stephen 'of the carriages'). In 1140, Innocent II converted the temple into a Christian church dedicating it to Santo Stefano.[13]

Additional restorations (and a fresco over the altar) were made in 1475. A plaque in the floor was dedicated by Sixtus IV. In the 12th century, the cella wall was replaced with brick faced concrete and windows were added as well.[14]

In the 17th century, the church was rededicated to Santa Maria del Sole ("St. Mary of the Sun"). The temple and the Temple of Vesta in Tivoli were an inspiration for Bramante's Tempietto and other High Renaissance churches of centralized plan.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Between 1809 and 1810, the surrounding ground level was lowered and the temple was restored once again.[15] The temple was recognized officially as an ancient monument in 1935 and restored in 1996.[16]

See also

References

Citations

Template:Reflist

Sources

  • Alberti, Leone Battista. Architecture, 1755, tr. Leoni, James.
  • Claridge, Amanda. Oxford Archaeological Guides - Rome. Oxford University Press, 1998
  • Coarelli, Filippo. Guida Archeologica di Roma. Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, Milano, 1989.
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  • Woodward, Christopher. The Buildings of Europe - Rome. page 30, Manchester University Press, 1995. Template:ISBN
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  • Loar, Matthew Hercules, Mummius, and the Roman Triumph in Aeneid 8.” Classical Philology, www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/10.1086/689726.

External links

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Preceded by
Temple of Hadrian
Landmarks of Rome
Temple of Hercules Victor
Succeeded by
Temple of Janus

Template:Rome landmarks Template:Authority control

  1. Barton Sholod, "Charlemagne in Spain. The Cultural Legacy of Roncesvalles", p. 144
  2. "...houses built into the round Temple of 'Vesta', which de Tournon correctly identified as of Hercules Victor, were removed" in 1811 (Salmon 1995, 150).
  3. Leone Battista Alberti, Architecture Template:Webarchive, trans. James Leoni (1755), p. 117.
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  5. For its dating, see Ziolkowski 1988, 314ff; Ziolkowski's argument for its dedicator and criticisms of other scholars' candidates: 316ff.
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  9. sed Romae victoris Herculis aedes duae sunt, unam ad Portam Geminam, alia ad Forum Boarium.
  10. Noted by Ziolkowski 1988:309 and notes; the other temple was that of Hercules Invictus ad Circum Maximum.
  11. Adam Ziolkowski 1988:311 and note 6 demonstrates the interchangeability that developed for the two originally separate epithets.
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  16. See Alessandro Pergoli Campanelli, Restauro del cosiddetto Tempio di Vesta, in "AR", XXXV, 32, novembre-dicembre 2000, pp. 26-30.