Lecture 15 - Rome and a Villa: Hadrian's Pantheon and Tivoli Retreat

author: Diana E. E. Kleiner, Classics Department, Yale University
recorded by: Yale University
published: Aug. 16, 2010,   recorded: March 2009,   views: 3571
released under terms of: Creative Commons Attribution No Derivatives (CC-BY-ND)
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Description

Professor Kleiner features the architecture built in and around Rome during the reign of Hadrian. The lecture begins with the Temple of Venus and Roma, a Greek-style temple constructed near the Colosseum in Rome, which may have been designed by Hadrian himself. Professor Kleiner then turns to the Pantheon, a temple dedicated to all the gods that combines the marble porch and pediment of a traditional Greco-Roman temple with a vast concrete cylindrical drum, hemispherical dome, and central oculus. The porch serves to conceal the circular shape from view, but upon entering the structure the visitor is impressed by the massive interior space and theatrical play of light. The Pantheon represents the culmination of the Roman quest towards an architecture that shapes and dramatizes interior space. Professor Kleiner next discusses the Villa of Hadrian at Tivoli, a sprawling complex in which the emperor re-created buildings and works of art he observed during his empire-wide travels. The lecture concludes with a brief overview of the Mausoleum of Hadrian (the Castel Sant'Angelo), a round tomb that refers back to the Mausoleum of Augustus and served as the last resting place for Hadrian and the succeeding Antonine dynasty.

Reading assignment:

Claridge, Amanda. Rome, pp. 18-19 (historical background), 113-115 (Temple of Venus and Roma), 201-206 (Pantheon), 369-373 (Mausoleum of Hadrian)

Credits:

The lectures in HSAR 252 are illustrated with over 1,500 images, many from Professor Kleiner's personal collection, along with others from a variety of sources, especially Wikimedia Commons, Google Earth, and Yale University Press. Some plans and views have been redrawn for this project. For specific acknowledgments, see: Lecture 15 - List of Monuments and Credits [PDF]

Ward-Perkins, John B. Roman Imperial Architecture, pp. 107-124, 204-206

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