PDA

View Full Version : Nero Palace Collapse: Domus Aurea Suffers Reported Damage



The Lawspeaker
03-30-2010, 11:35 PM
Nero Palace Collapse: Domus Aurea Suffers Reported Damage (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/03/30/nero-palace-collapse-domus-aurea_n_518151.html)

http://images.huffingtonpost.com/gen/153091/thumbs/s-NERO-PALACE-COLLAPSE-DOMUS-AUREA-large.jpg
Parts of Nero's Palace have reportedly collapsed

ROME — A huge chunk of a 2,000-year-old gallery in the complex including Emperor Nero's fabled Golden Palace collapsed on Tuesday, Rome's art officials said.

Firefighters searched the area, but found no victims, leading officials to say they believed nobody was inside when the structure collapsed around 10 a.m. Nero's nearby Palace had been closed as workers were doing repairs.
The sumptuous palace – built by the infamous Roman emperor Nero in the 1st century A.D. – is known to many by its Latin name Domus Aurea. With its frescoed halls and gold-encrusted ceilings, it was meant as a fabled residence for one of Rome's most depraved emperors.

About 60-80 square meters (645-860 square feet) of vault ceiling in one of the galleries crumpled beneath a garden frequented by tourists and passers-by.

Though heavy rains in recent months may have contributed to the collapse, they would not have been the main cause, said Umberto Broccoli of Rome's artistic superintendence.

"There are 1,900 years of history," Broccoli said. "Two months of rain are not responsible for this. It would have happened anyway."
Officials suggested tree roots may also have contributed, having grown through the earth above the gallery.

Broccoli said the main part of the palace was unscathed, but there was damage also to another gallery built after Nero by Emperor Hadrian.
It was one of the area's biggest collapses in 50 years, art official Antonello Vodret said, according to the Apcom news agency.

The Lawspeaker
03-30-2010, 11:42 PM
Nero's Domus Aurea (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domus_Aurea)

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/4c/Statue_Domus_Aurea.jpg

http://www.roma-tours.com/g/domus-aurea.jpg

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cd/Domusaurea.jpg

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d2/Domus_fresco.jpg

http://s4.hubimg.com/u/339215_f520.jpg
(The Baths of Trajan on top of the Golden House)


The collapse (however apparently minor) is a catastrophe.. an absolute disaster...

Óttar
03-31-2010, 12:48 AM
Italy had better restore it! I am sick of archaeologists saying that to restore old monuments isn't authentic. They restore churches, don't they?

Ave Nero!

BTW, Domus Aurea is also one of the titles of the Virgin Mary. :D

From the Litany of Loreto:


Rosa mystica, ora pro nobis.
Turris Davidica, ora pro nobis.
Turris eburnea, ora pro nobis.
Domus aurea, ora pro nobis.
Foederis arca, ora pro nobis.
Janua caeli, ora pro nobis.

John in Denver
04-01-2010, 03:11 AM
Italy had better restore it! I am sick of archaeologists saying that to restore old monuments isn't authentic. They restore churches, don't they?

Ave Nero!

BTW, Domus Aurea is also one of the titles of the Virgin Mary. :D

From the Litany of Loreto:

True, it would be nice to see the Domus Aurea restored to its original state, but i doubt the archaeologists are in a position to make political decisions since they are dependent on funds, they are probably persuaded to engage in public deception which must cause resentment and animosity among them. I can only assume many are frustrated since they understand what they are unearthing.

During one of my earliest awakenings I was troubled as to why the Roman Temples were left in ruins when they should have been rebuilt, at the time i figured the church didn't want the competition.

Don Brick
09-14-2010, 11:35 AM
Too bad it didn´t collapse when he was still alive. ;)

Wulfhere
09-14-2010, 11:47 AM
Too bad it didn´t collapse when he was still alive. ;)

Why? Nero was a great leader who patronised the arts, provided games for the people and was loved by them in return. He also, very early on, saw the dangers of Christianity and tried to stamp it out while it was still possible to do so - and in highly entertaining ways, too. The only other people who suffered in his reign were the wealthy and corrupt senatorial class, who eventually got rid of him.

Even the Golden House, cited by his later detractors as a sign of extravagance, not only provided years of employment for millions of workers and craftsmen, but also contained huge public leasure areas and large administrative suites. It wasn't just his own personal residence, but was a functioning governmental complex.

San Galgano
09-14-2010, 01:12 PM
True, it would be nice to see the Domus Aurea restored to its original state, but i doubt the archaeologists are in a position to make political decisions since they are dependent on funds, they are probably persuaded to engage in public deception which must cause resentment and animosity among them. I can only assume many are frustrated since they understand what they are unearthing.

During one of my earliest awakenings I was troubled as to why the Roman Temples were left in ruins when they should have been rebuilt, at the time i figured the church didn't want the competition.

Roman temples rebuilt?

I hope you are joking.

Tyrrhenoi
09-14-2010, 01:36 PM
Italy can hardly bear the cost of all the renovations and repairs.
I beleive I've read that 70% of all the worlds momuments and historic-buildings are in Italy. The Italian gouvernement had the idea to privatize allmost all the monuments on the highest bidder, a few months back....

In the 90ies (I don't know if it still exists), Italians were asked to contribute on renovations and repairs of historic buildings, on their tax-checks. It was a sort of voluntary tax on historic buildings :D