Roman
Architecture
One of the
things the Romans are most
famous for is their architecture. The Romans brought a lot of new ideas
to architecture,
of which the three most important are the arch,
the baked
brick, and the use of cement
and concrete. Around 700 BC the Etruscans
learned West
Asian ideas about architecture, and they taught these ideas to the
Romans. We don't have much Etruscan
architecture left, but a lot of their underground tombs do survive,
and some traces of their temples. In the Republican
period, the Romans built temples
and basilicas,
but also they made a lot of improvements to their city: aqueducts
and roads and sewers.
The Forum
began to take shape. Outside of Rome, people began to build stone amphitheaters
for gladiatorial
games. The first Roman emperor, Augustus,
made more changes: he built a lot of brick
and marble buildings, including a big Altar of Peace and a big tomb
for his family, and a big stone theater for plays. Augustus' stepson
Tiberius rebuilt the Temple
of Castor and Pollux in the Roman
forum. Augustus' great-great-grandson Nero
also did a lot of building in Rome, including his Golden
House. Then in
69 AD Vespasian
tore down some of the Golden House to build the Colosseum.
Vespasian's son Titus built a great triumphal
arch, and his other son Domitian
built a great palace
for himself on the Palatine hill. Even though Domitian
was assassinated in 96 AD, later
architects continued to use the techniques that had been developed for
his palace, just as later emperors continued to live in Domitian’s
palace. Trajan’s architect used brick and concrete arches to build a new
forum and an elaborate market building that is the source of modern
shopping malls. Trajan also built the first major public
bath building in Rome. It may have been the same architect who later
designed Hadrian’s Pantheon,
a temple to all the gods, which used brick and concrete to build a huge
dome. Nobody would build a bigger dome for more than a thousand
years.
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