By Diana E E Kleiner | Roman Architecture Lecture 12 of 24
Lecture Description
Professor Kleiner features the tumultuous year of 68-69 when Rome had four competing emperors. Vespasian emerged the victor, founded the Flavian dynasty, and was succeeded by his sons, Titus and Domitian. The Flavians were especially adept at using architecture to shape public policy. Professor Kleiner demonstrates that Vespasian linked himself with the divine Claudius by completing the Claudianum and distanced himself from Nero by razing the Domus Aurea to the ground and filling in the palace’s artificial lake. In that location, Vespasian built the Flavian Amphitheater, nicknamed the Colosseum, thereby returning to the people land earlier stolen by Nero. Professor Kleiner discusses the technical and aesthetic features of the Colosseum at length, and surveys Vespasian’s Forum Pacis and Titus’ Temple to Divine Vespasian. The lecture concludes with the Baths of Titus, Rome’s first preserved example of the so-called "imperial bath type" because of its grand scale, axiality, and symmetry.
Course Description
This course is an introduction to the great buildings and engineering marvels of Rome and its empire, with an emphasis on urban planning and individual monuments and their decoration, including mural painting. While architectural developments in Rome, Pompeii, and Central Italy are highlighted, the course also provides a survey of sites and structures in what are now North Italy, Sicily, France, Spain, Germany, Greece, Turkey, Croatia, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, and North Africa. The lectures are illustrated with over 1,500 images, many from Professor Kleiner’s personal collection.
- Introduction to Roman Architecture
- The Founding of Rome and the Beginnings of Urbanism in Italy
- Technology and Revolution in Roman Architecture
- Civic, Commercial and Religious Buildings of Pompeii
- Houses and Villas of Pompeii
- Habitats at Herculaneum and Early Roman Interior Decoration
- Painting Palaces and Villas in the First Century A.D.
- Exploring Special Subjects on Pompeian Walls
- Augustus Assembles Rome
- Roman Tombs
- Nero and His Architectural Legacy
- The Colosseum and Contemporary Architecture in Rome
- Imperial Palace on the Palatine Hill
- Civic Architecture in Rome under Trajan
- Hadrian’s Pantheon and Tivoli Retreat
- Roman Life in Ostia, the Port of Rome
- The Baths of Caracalla
- Roman North Africa: Timgad and Leptis Magna
- Baroque Phenomenon in Roman Architecture
- The Rebirth of Athens
- Architecture of the Western Roman Empire
- The Tetrarchic Renaissance
- Rome of Constantine and a New Rome
- Discovering the Roman Provinces and Designing a Roman City
Course Index
- Filmed: Spring 2009
- License:
- Source: Yale Open Courses