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Trajan's Market

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Trajan's Market
Trajan's Market, 2022
Trajan's Market is located in Rome
Trajan's Market
Trajan's Market
Shown within Rome
Map
Click on the map for a fullscreen view
LocationTrajan's Forum
Coordinates41°53′44″N 12°29′10″E / 41.89561°N 12.48619°E / 41.89561; 12.48619
History
BuilderApollodorus of Damascus
FoundedAD 100~110

Trajan's Market (Latin: Mercatus Traiani; Italian: Mercati di Traiano) is a large complex of ruins in the city of Rome, Italy, located on the Via dei Fori Imperiali, at the opposite end to the Colosseum. The surviving buildings and structures, built as an integral part of Trajan's Forum and nestled against the excavated flank of the Quirinal Hill, present a living model of life in the Roman capital and a glimpse at the restoration in the city, which reveals new treasures and insights about ancient Roman architecture.[1][2][3][4]

Thought to be the world's oldest shopping mall, the arcades in Trajan's Market are now believed by many to be administrative offices for Emperor Trajan. The shops and apartments were built in a multi-level structure and it is still possible to visit several of the levels. Highlights include delicate marble floors and the remains of a library.[5]

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • Markets of Trajan
  • A Tour and History of Trajan's Forum & Markets
  • The first shopping mall ever built in the world: the Trajan’s market!
  • Evening view on the Trajan’s market. Rome

Transcription

(bouncy piano music) - [Voiceover] Perhaps the most powerful emperor in the history of Rome. - [Voiceover] Well, certainly one of the most popular. - [Voiceover] And one of the most successful in a military sense, was the Emperor Trajan. And he built, not only the largest Imperial Forum in Rome's history. - [Voiceover] That is the biggest, most magnificent public space in addition to temples and libraries, he also built a vast public bathhouse. - [Voiceover] But he also built the markets. This was, what is in essence, what we would recognize in the modern world, a huge shopping complex, a kinda mall with more than 150 offices and storefronts. - [Voiceover] As emperor, you could choose to build public buildings, you could build private dwellings, palaces for yourself. You can build a combination of both. Not long before Trajan, the Emperor Nero had appropriated vast amounts of land, that belonged to the Roman people, to build his palace, The Domus Aurea. So, the emperors that came immediately after him, for the most part, decided to build, instead, projects for the Roman public. The Flavians, for example, built the amphitheater, that we call the Colosseum. And Trajan continues that tradition by building this massive public project, both the Forum and the adjacent market. The market is so interesting to me, because for so long, when I thought of Ancient Rome and architecture, I thought of temples, I thought of Fora, I thought of these large civic spaces. And what I didn't realize, was that the Romans were extremely adept at building dense, multistory structures. That is, basically, apartment buildings, office blocks and that's what we have here. - [Voiceover] They had concrete, which allowed them to really shape space, in a way that you can't do, with spaces that are constructed with post and lintel architecture, essentially, columns and roofs. For example, here in the markets of Trajan when we enter the central hallway, we look up and we see this very high, wide space, constructed with the use of groin vault, made with brick-faced concrete. - [Voiceover] So a groin vault is simply a barrel vault, that has been intercepted by a second barrel vault that is perpendicular to it. So, in this case, we have the main barrel vault of the hallway, which is quite long, intersected by addition barrel vaults at right angles. And, so, you get this kinda X-shaped archway. - [Voiceover] This was done by Trajan's chief architect, Apollodorus of Damascus an amazing engineer and architect, who also built bridges and other military structures for Trajan. Apollodorus of Damascus also built, on either side of this groin vaulted hallway, offices that are supported by barrel vaults and linked to the main hallway by buttresses. - [Voiceover] What I find so phenomenal about this space, is the amount of light that is let in. And this is because the Romans had become so adept at using concrete. The ability to give up weight-bearing wall, for apertures, for windows, to let light in, both in the vaulting and in the walls, speaks to the extraordinary level of confidence of the ancient Romans under Trajan. - [Voiceover] And soon after this, under the Emperor Hadrian, the Romans will build one of the most beautiful, surviving monuments today, and that is the pantheon. An enormous, uninterrupted domed space, created with use of concrete. - [Voiceover] So, here in the Center of Rome we have, intact, one of the most complex urban spaces dating from ancient Rome. It is a spectacular display of Roman engineering and gives us a real window, into what Roman life must have been like. - [Voiceover] The Romans had a nickname for Trajan and that was Optimus Princeps. And that means, best leader. And standing here, overlooking Trajan's Forum, and standing in the market that he commissioned, we can understand why they would call him that. (bouncy piano music)

Construction

Trajan's Market was probably built between 100–110 AD by Apollodorus of Damascus,[1] an architect who always followed Trajan in his adventures and to whom Trajan entrusted the planning of his Forum.[2][6] It was inaugurated in 113 AD.[7] During the Middle Ages the complex was transformed by adding floor levels, still visible today, and defensive elements such as the Torre delle Milizie, the "militia tower" built in 1300. A convent, which was built in this area in the 16th century was acquired by the state in 1885 and became the Goffredo Mameli barracks.[8] This was demolished at the beginning of the twentieth century to restore Trajan's Markets.

Museo dei Fori Imperiali

The Museum of the Imperial Fora (Italian: Museo dei Fori Imperiali), which opened in 2007, houses a wealth of artifacts from all of ancient Rome's forums. The modern entrances to Trajan's Market are at Via Quattro Novembre, 94,[9] and Piazza Madonna di Loreto.[7] Immediately, the visitor enters into a shopping area, disposed on two different sides, where free wheat was once distributed to the people of Rome.[5]

At the end of this hall, a large balcony offers a view of the markets, Trajan's Forum, and the Vittoriano. This is actually a part of the Via Biberatica (from the Latin bibo, bibere meaning "to drink"; the street was the location for several of the Roman taverns and grocers' shops in the area). The road cuts through Trajan's Market.[5]

On the lower part there are also two large halls, probably used for auditions or concerts. A shop housed in the Market is known as a taberna. The giant exedra formed by the market structure was originally mirrored by a matching exedral boundary space on the south flank of Trajan's Forum.

The grand hall of the market is roofed by a concrete vault raised on piers, both covering and allowing air and light into the central space. The market itself is constructed primarily out of brick and concrete.[6]

Gallery

Trajan's Market
Panoramic view of Trajan's Market in 2000
Trajan's Market and Via Biberatica (2006)

See also

References and sources

External videos
video icon Markets of Trajan, Smarthistory at Khan Academy, (3:54), December 4, 2014

References

  1. ^ a b Bunson 2002.
  2. ^ a b Honour-Fleming 2009.
  3. ^ Richard 2010.
  4. ^ Vreeland 2005.
  5. ^ a b c Vreeland 2005, p. 33.
  6. ^ a b Richard 2010, p. 70.
  7. ^ a b Vreeland 2005, p. 31.
  8. ^ "The Markets of Trajan during its use as a convent | Mercati di Traiano Museo dei Fori Imperiali".
  9. ^ BVMC.

Sources

External links

Media related to Trajan's Market at Wikimedia Commons

Preceded by
Porticus Aemilia
Landmarks of Rome
Trajan's Market
Succeeded by
Casal Rotondo
This page was last edited on 17 March 2024, at 16:16
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