|
Information
About Ostia Antica
|
|
Travel Guide
Information of Ancient Ostia
Italia Roma Ostia main
attractions
Travel guide of ancient Ostia - Tours in Ancient Ostia
www.tourinrome.info
|
Ostia Antica is a large
archeological site, the harbour city of ancient
Rome. Here you will find information about the
harbour city of ancient Rome,
The
beautifully preserved ruins of Ostia lie twenty
miles from Rome, in the meadows between the
Tiber
River and the Tyrrhenian Sea. It w as founded,
probably in the 4th century BC, as a military colony
to guard the river mouth against seaborne invasions.
Later, during the centuries when virtually all
imports reached the Capital via the Tiber, Ostia
gained prominence as the domestic landing for cargo
boats. By the 2nd century AD, it had become a
flourishing commercial center inhabited by upwards
of 100,000 people, whose apartment buildings,
taverns, and grocery shops are still intact.
Although Ostia now sprawls over 10,000 acres, around
a main street that runs for more than a mile, it is
still easy to imagine the local shepherds who for
centuries sheltered their animals amongst its ruins,
for they are an integral part of the tranquil Roman
countryside. No modern houses, roads or telephone
wires are visible on the horizon. The streets are so
quiet one hears only the crickets in the trees and
perhaps the echoes of ancient children playing
stickball. As you walk along Ostia's main street,
the Decumanus Maximus, your feet settle into deep
ruts left by carrucas, the four-wheeled carts used
to ferry merchandise and baggage between Rome and
Ostia.
Once
inside the Roman Gate, you visit the Baths of
Neptune. Here, in a beautifully preserved mosaic
measuring 55 feet by 36 feet, the sea god is seen
riding a chariot drawn by four pawing horses. From
here, you would be wise to go directly to the modern
outdoor cafe, where you can buy a guide book that
will greatly enrich your tour.
Ostia's amphitheater is next door to the bar.
Erected in 12 BC, it is a quiet, wonderfully
preserved series of steep semicircular stone
bleachers that hold 3500 spectators. The tiny stage
is still intact, and although the permanent scenery
that rose three stories behind it is no longer
standing, you can easily imagine what it must have
looked like during the premiere of Ovid's Medea, a
play that has since been lost.
Behind the theater is the Forum of the C orporations,
so called because its great rectangular portico
housed the offices of sixty-four maritime companies.
This was where you would come if you needed to ship
something to Rome, be it wheat from Spain, sugar
from India, or African beasts for the Colosseum
games. To find the most suitable shipper, you would
examine the mosaic names and pictures still visible
on the ground in front of each office. If you were
pleased with the deal, you would then offer a
sacrifice at the Temple of Ceres, which rises over
the middle of the Forum.
A few
yards away, you can climb the high podium of the
Collegiate Temple. Despite its name, this was
actually a social club for men of the poorer
classes, who used it to hold the kind of sumptuous
banquet the rich could afford to have every day.
These dinners usually began at 3 p.m. and often
lasted until dawn. No wonder the guests ate lying
down! At another collegiate seat you'll find a triclinium, the semicircular couch upon which three
men would have stretched, resting on their left
elbows while they used their right hands to eat. The
meals began with hors d'oeuvres, followed by seven
courses. Then they started all over again, this time
with entertainment and much more wine. Banquets were
dedicated to the club's patron god or to newly
deceased members, who needed food to sustain them on
their journey to the afterlife.
Women
were not invited. They would more likely have been
next door, carrying their linens to the laundry-dye
shop. Washing was done in the small terracotta tubs
you'll see sunken into the brick counters. This work
was performed by slaves, whose shaved heads
distinguished them.
Logically enough, the laundry shop is n ext to the
public baths. Walk through the main gate, where Ostians would have been met by a servant ready to
help them change their clothes. In the meeting room,
they would spend an hour or so chatting with friends
or reading the newspaper. Then they would choose a
combination of hot, cold, warm or steam baths. You
can follow a winding underground passage, where
servants lit boilers and emptied tubs without
disturbing the clients. Above this you'll see the
laconium, whose steam was provided by lead pipes
still visible in the walls. Most Ostian buildings
were heated this way, by hot air piped up from
underground boilers.
Outside was the gymnastics field, where bath ers
practiced sports or calisthenics, or walked beneath
covered porticoes.
After a meal that might have
included truffles, oysters, paté de fois, roast
meats, "false fish" made of vegetables, or even a
primitive kind of pasta, bathers could have a
relaxing nap, use the library, attend a lecture,
concert, play or circus performance. Little wonder
that these ancient health clubs came to be the
Ostians' favorite meeting place. At the height of
the Roman Empire's glory, in the late 2nd century
AD, men and women spent a good part of the day at
these public establishments, mixing freely in the
huge communal tubs that could accommodate up to 300
bathers at once.
Beyond the baths is a cluster of three and
four-story apartment buildings. Many of them still
have the groundfloor shops and dark, stuffy
mezzanines where merchants and the lower classes
lived. Climb the marble stairs to see the
comfortable multi-room apartments that were
inhabited by middle-class families. These dwellings
would have had kitchens, with hot running water
channeled through lead pipes in the wall.
Like
this one, most Ostian apartment buildings had inner
courtyards where second-floor balconies overlooked a
communal cistern and swimming pool. Some properties
were rented out by landlords, but the better ones
were actually like ancient condos, with all the
tenants sharing facilities and expenses. One
important facility shared by all was the communal
forica, or latrine. Each building had at least one
for its tenants. The most astonishing example is a
large airy room, where a marble bench with twenty
holes runs the length of all four walls. Sit on the
holes and suddenly it will be graphically clear just
how much time the ancient Romans spent in public.
Ostia
has a wonderful and blessedly small Forum. Sit on
the marble fountain and picture what it would have
looked like. Senators
would be striding up and down
the Capital stairs. At the Temple of Rome and
Augustus, soldiers would be offering sacrifices to
the gods. In the porticoes, which allowed citizens
to congregate in good or bad weather, designers
would be staging fashion shows and artists would be
displaying their work.
Beneath the arches of another spacious portico,
you'll encounter an ancient counterpart to the
modern cafe. Near the door is a marble counter where
customers could stop for a quick drink or a cold
lunch, exactly as they do in modern Rome. On the
wall, a fresco of salami, wine and vegetables
depicts what might have been displayed on the marble
shelves beneath. A large clay jar sunk into the
floor held oil for frying, which would have been
done in the tiny oven room next door. In warm
weather, patrons sat around a small pool on a sunny
patio. Only in public places like this would they
have sat at a table to eat.
After about four hours of strolling through butcher
shops, patrician homes, fish markets, inns, the
Christian basilica, schools, and more, you'll come
to the Marine Gate, which once stood by the harbor
and is now more than a mile from the sea. Although
you might be exhausted, muster the strength to see
the Synagogue. Built by Jews who worked the barges
plying the Tiber, it lay outside the city's
protective walls, even beyond the cemetery.
we recommend the
Monumento, across the Via del Mare in the town of
Ostia Antica. If it's too late to actually order a
meal, select a colorful assortment of vegetables
from the antipasto table. You can linger a while
over this meal, a light snack by ancient Ostian
standards, then walk next door to the fairy-tale
castle, built in 1483 by Giuliano della Rovere, who
later became Pope Julius II. As so often happened in
papal Rome, Julius built his fortress using bricks
pilfered from Ostia Antica, and lime obtained by
burning the ancient city's marble. A kiln for this
purpose still exists in the Baths of Neptune, near
the triumphal arches on the Decumanus Maxima, where
Ostia's Christians were martyred. One of them was
St. Aurea, to whom the castle's simple chapel is
dedicated.
Built in 132 AD, the Firemen's Barracks served as
headquarters for the Ostia division of the Roman
Fire Department. It had sleeping and eating
quarters, latrines, service rooms and a small
tabernacle for worshipping the emperor's cult.
This fine apartment building still shows the second
floor balconies where ancient Ostians loved to
linger on sultry summer evenings. The arched
doorways on the ground floor led to shops and a
wonderfully preserved snack bar.
|