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Antium

Antium was an ancient coastal town in Latium, south of Rome. An oppidum was founded by people of Latial culture (11th century BC or the beginning of the 1st millennium BC),[1] then it was the main stronghold of the Volsci people until it was conquered by the Romans.

Antium
Plan of Antium
Shown within Italy
Click on the map to see marker.
LocationAnzio and Nettuno, Rome, Italy
RegionLazio
Coordinates41°26′52.61″N 12°37′44.59″E / 41.4479472°N 12.6290528°E / 41.4479472; 12.6290528
TypeSettlement
History
Founded11th century BC - beginning 1st millennium BC
AbandonedMiddle Ages
CulturesLatial culture, Volsci, Ancient Rome
Site notes
ConditionRuined
OwnershipPublic
Public accessYes

In some versions of Rome's foundation myth, Antium was founded by Anteias, son of Odysseus.

The territory of Roman Antium almost entirely corresponded to modern Anzio and Nettuno.[2][3][4]

Location edit

The Latin-volscian[1] town stood in the Capo d'Anzio (modern Anzio), on a higher ground and somewhat away from the shore, though it extended down to it. This was defended by a deep ditch, which can still be traced, and by walls, a portion of which, on the eastern side, constructed of rectangular blocks of tufa, was brought to light in 1897.[5] The fortification of the town would  included the acropolis, to which it would be adjacent to the east, isolated but connected.[2] The Latin colony of 467 BC, of which it will be said later, would be installed alongside the fortified Latin-volscian oppidum, also to the est.[3]

A coeval port town, Caenon, was the port under the control of Antium (which did not have a natural harbour of its own):[6] according to alternative theories, the port of Caenon would be located in the Capo d'Anzio,[2] or the port town very north of it,[7] or the town on a hill near Nettuno to the east, and the port over the mouth of the nearby river Loricina.[3]

The settlement of Roman Antium was certainly present in the area of the Capo d'Anzio (in particular, a presumed extensive town since the mid-republican age,[8] the imperial colony and the great harbour of Nero), but a parallel agricultural settlement, with the same name, was likely to be in the same position as modern Nettuno since the colony of 338 BC; so from 60 AD the colonia Antium of Nero in the Capo d'Anzio would coexisted with a supposed, more ancient, civitas Antium in Nettuno, which in the 4th century AD would have been the only real town:[3] [9] a thesis that has found some perplexities[10] or an opposition.[4]

History edit

Volscian Antium edit

In 493 BC - the same year that, according to a theory, the Volsci likely settled in the town[1] - the Roman consul Postumus Cominius Auruncus fought and defeated two armies from Antium and as a result captured the Volscian towns of Longula, Pollusca and Corioli (to the north of Antium).[11]

According to Plutarch[12] the Roman leader Coriolanus, who fought at Corioli, took refuge at Antium to the noble Attius Tullius Aufidius, when the Roman had been accused of disloyalty to Rome and the Volsci. Aufidius obtained consent that, by Volscian hand, Coriolanus was first tried, then assassinated before the end of the trial.

In 469 BC the town Caenon was destroyed by the Roman consul Titus Numicius Priscus.[13]

In 468 BC Antium was captured by the Roman consul Titus Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatus following a war started by the Volsci, and the mentioned Latin colony was planted there the next year. Three Roman ex-consuls were appointed as commissioners to allocate the lands (triumviri coloniae deducendae) amongst Roman colonists. They were Titus Quinctius, the consul of the previous year who had captured Antium from the Volsci; Aulus Verginius Tricostus Caeliomontanus, the consul of 469 BC; and Publius Furius Medullinus Fusus, the consul of 472 BC.[14]

In 464 BC the Antiates were suspected of allying with the Aequi against Rome. The chief men of Antium were summoned to Rome but they did not give adequate explanations. Antium was asked to contribute emergency troops for the Roman war against the Aequi, however the force of 1,000 troops from Antium arrived too late to help.[15]

In 338 BC the consul Gaius Menius Publius suddenly attacked and defeated the troops of Aricia, Lanuvium and Velitres as they were joining the Antiates next to the river Astura.[16] Antium was finally defeated and its warships seized, a part taken to the arsenals in Rome, while the others burned. The town was banned from navigation, and Gaius Menius had the rostra of the burned ships mounted in the Roman Forum as ornaments of the speaker's platform thenceforth called the Rostra.[17][18]

Roman Antium edit

 
Mosaic from the nymphaeum
 
Ruins of the Domus Neroniana

In 338 BC Antium became a colonia with Roman citizenship of the Antiates, [17] and in 317 BC it became a municipium.[19] The Roman colony had duumvirs,[20] and quaestors were also present as magistrates.[2]

During the civil war against Gaius Marius, Antium - breadbasket of Rome [21] - was allied with Sulla: in 87 BC it suffered a surprise attack and was devastated by the Marian troops, with many citizen deaths.[22] [3]

With the expansion of Roman Republic Antium was just far enough away to be insulated from the riots and tumults of Rome. The Romans built magnificent seaside villas there and their remains are conspicuous all along the shore, both to the east and to the northwest of the town.[5] Gaius Maecenas also had a villa. Many ancient masterpieces of sculpture have been found there: the Fanciulla d'Anzio, the Borghese Gladiator (in the Louvre) and the Apollo Belvedere (in the Vatican) were all discovered in the ruins of villas at Antium. When Cicero returned from exile, it was at Antium that he reassembled the battered remains of his libraries, where the scrolls would be secure.

Of the villas, the most famous was the imperial villa, known as Domus Neroniana (Villa of Nero),[5] which was used by each emperor in turn, up to the Severans and which extended some 800 metres (2,600 ft) along the seafront of the Capo d'Anzio. Augustus received a delegation from Rome there to acclaim him Pater patriae ("Father of his Country"). The Julian and Claudian emperors frequently visited it; both Emperor Caligula and Nero were born in Antium. Nero razed the villa on the site to rebuild it on a more massive scale and according to an imperial style. Including a theatre were built in Antium.[5] In 60 AD[23] Nero also founded a colony of veterans and built a new harbour, the projecting moles of which still exist.[5]

Of the famous temple of Fortune (Horace, Od. i. 35) no remains are known,[5] but its location is assumed in the Capo d'Anzio, area of the Domus Neroniana.[3][10]

Late Antiquity edit

There are records of the participation of a few bishops of Antium in synods held in Rome: Gaudentius in 465, Felix in 487, Vindemius in 499 and 501. Barbarian incursions in the 6th century put an end to its existence as a residential bishopric. Accordingly, Antium is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see.[24]

Middle Ages edit

Attacked by the Vandals of Gaiseric (5th century), the Goths of Vitiges (6th century), and then by the Saracens,[25] in the Middle Ages Antium was deserted in favour of Nettuno, which maintained the legacy of the ancient town.[5]

Nettuno is usually attributed only a medieval origin,[4] but in the modern era it was considered a natural heir, a continuation of Antium;[26] [3] a view taken up by a contemporary orientation.[3]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c A. Pensword (2014). "Anzio. Vallo Volsco: Vallo Italico Tirrenico, on CambiaVersoAnzio". cambiaversoanzio.wordpress.com (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-02-02.
  2. ^ a b c d G. Lugli, Saggio sulla topografia dell'antica Antium, Roma (1940).
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h P. Brandizzi Vittucci, Antium: Anzio e Nettuno in epoca romana, Roma, Bardi Editore (2000). ISBN 88-85699-83-9.
  4. ^ a b c H. Solin, Arctos: Acta Philologica Fennica, vol. 36, Helsinki (2002), pp. 210-211.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Antium". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 147.
  6. ^ Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) William Smith "Antium"; The Topography of Rome and Its Vicinity By Sir William Gell, 1846, "Antium"; Handbook for Travellers in Central Italy by John Murray, 1843, "Nettuno", p. 534.
  7. ^ G. Cifani, A. Guidi, A. M. Jaia, Nuove ricerche nel territorio di Colle Rotondo ad Anzio, on G. Ghini (edited by), Lazio e Sabina 7 (atti del Convegno, Roma, 2010), Roma, Edizioni Quasar, 2011.
  8. ^ T. De Haas, G. Tol, P. Attema, Investing in the colonia and ager of Antium, on Daniele Malfitana, Jeroen Problome, John Lund (edited by), «Facta: a journal of roman material culture studies», Pisa-Roma, Fabrizio Serra, vol. V, 2011.
  9. ^ L. Ceccarelli, F. Di Mario, F. Papi et al, Atlante storico ambientale Anzio e Nettuno, Roma, De Luca (2003), pp. 94-96, 160-161.
  10. ^ a b B. Cacciotti, Testimonianze di culti orientali ad Antium, on B. P. Benetucci (curator), Culti orientali tra scavo e collezionismo, Roma, Artemide (2008).
  11. ^ Livy, Ab urbe condita, ii. 33.
  12. ^ Plutarch, Parallel Lives, xx. 1-3; xxii. 1.
  13. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Roman Antiquities, ix. 56; Livy Ab urbe condita, ii. 63.
  14. ^ Livy, ii. 64, 65, iii. 1.
  15. ^ Livy, iii. 4–5.
  16. ^ Livy, viii. 13.
  17. ^ a b Livy, viii. 14.
  18. ^ Florus, Epitomae de Tito Livio bellorum, i. v.
  19. ^ Livy, ix. 20.
  20. ^ Cicero Epistulae ad Atticum, ii. 6.
  21. ^ Appian, Historia romana, De bellis civilibus, i, viii. 69; Valerius Maximus, Factorum et dictorum memorabilium libri IX, i, vi. 5; Livy, Ab urbe condita, xxviii. 11.
  22. ^ Livy, Ab urbe condita, lxxx Periocha; Appian, Historia romana, De bellis civilibus, i, viii. 69.
  23. ^ Tacitus, Annals, xiv. 27; Suetonius,The Twelve Caesars, vi. 9.
  24. ^ Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 ISBN 978-88-209-9070-1), p. 834.
  25. ^ A. La Regina. "PORTO D'ANZIO, on Enciclopedia dell' Arte Antica (1965)". treccani.it (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-02-04.
  26. ^ J. Hondius, Nova et accurata Italiae hodiernae descriptio, Apud B. et A. Elsevir, 1627, pp. 164-165: a map illustrating Neptunium olim Antium, "Nettuno, once Antium".

Further reading edit

  • Antonio Nibby, Dintorni di Roma, i. 181; Notizie degli scavi, passim.
  • Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854) William Smith "Antium"; The Topography of Rome and Its Vicinity By Sir William Gell, 1846, "Antium"; Handbook for Travellers in Central Italy by John Murray, 1843, "Nettuno" p. 534.
  • F. Lombardi, Anzio antico e moderno: opera postuma (1865).
  • G. Lugli, Saggio sulla topografia dell'antica Antium, Roma (1940).
  • A. La Regina. "PORTO D'ANZIO, on Enciclopedia dell' Arte Antica (1965)". treccani.it. Retrieved 2022-02-04.
  • P. Brandizzi Vittucci, Antium: Anzio e Nettuno in epoca romana, Roma, Bardi Editore (2000).
  • H. Solin, Arctos: Acta Philologica Fennica, vol. 36, Helsinki (2002), pp. 210-211.
  • L. Ceccarelli, F. Di Mario, F. Papi et al, Atlante storico ambientale Anzio e Nettuno, Roma, De Luca (2003), pp. 94-96, 160-161.
  • B. Cacciotti, Testimonianze di culti orientali ad Antium, on B. P. Benetucci (curator), Culti orientali tra scavo e collezionismo, Roma, Artemide (2008).
  • G. Cifani, A. Guidi, A. M. Jaia, Nuove ricerche nel territorio di Colle Rotondo ad Anzio, on G. Ghini (edited by), Lazio e Sabina 7 (atti del Convegno, Roma, 2010), Roma, Edizioni Quasar, 2011.
  • T. De Haas, G. Tol, P. Attema, Investing in the colonia and ager of Antium, on Daniele Malfitana, Jeroen Problome, John Lund (edited by), «Facta: a journal of roman material culture studies», Pisa-Roma, Fabrizio Serra, vol. V, 2011.
  • A. Pensword (10 October 2014). "Anzio. Vallo Volsco: Vallo Italico Tirrenico, on CambiaVersoAnzio". cambiaversoanzio.wordpress.com. Retrieved 2022-02-02.

External links edit

  • Illustrated reconstruction of Nero's Villa (in Italian).


antium, ancient, coastal, town, latium, south, rome, oppidum, founded, people, latial, culture, 11th, century, beginning, millennium, then, main, stronghold, volsci, people, until, conquered, romans, plan, shown, within, italyclick, marker, locationanzio, nett. Antium was an ancient coastal town in Latium south of Rome An oppidum was founded by people of Latial culture 11th century BC or the beginning of the 1st millennium BC 1 then it was the main stronghold of the Volsci people until it was conquered by the Romans AntiumPlan of AntiumShown within ItalyClick on the map to see marker LocationAnzio and Nettuno Rome ItalyRegionLazioCoordinates41 26 52 61 N 12 37 44 59 E 41 4479472 N 12 6290528 E 41 4479472 12 6290528TypeSettlementHistoryFounded11th century BC beginning 1st millennium BCAbandonedMiddle AgesCulturesLatial culture Volsci Ancient RomeSite notesConditionRuinedOwnershipPublicPublic accessYes In some versions of Rome s foundation myth Antium was founded by Anteias son of Odysseus The territory of Roman Antium almost entirely corresponded to modern Anzio and Nettuno 2 3 4 Contents 1 Location 2 History 2 1 Volscian Antium 2 2 Roman Antium 2 3 Late Antiquity 2 4 Middle Ages 3 Notes 4 Further reading 5 External linksLocation editThe Latin volscian 1 town stood in the Capo d Anzio modern Anzio on a higher ground and somewhat away from the shore though it extended down to it This was defended by a deep ditch which can still be traced and by walls a portion of which on the eastern side constructed of rectangular blocks of tufa was brought to light in 1897 5 The fortification of the town would included the acropolis to which it would be adjacent to the east isolated but connected 2 The Latin colony of 467 BC of which it will be said later would be installed alongside the fortified Latin volscian oppidum also to the est 3 A coeval port town Caenon was the port under the control of Antium which did not have a natural harbour of its own 6 according to alternative theories the port of Caenon would be located in the Capo d Anzio 2 or the port town very north of it 7 or the town on a hill near Nettuno to the east and the port over the mouth of the nearby river Loricina 3 The settlement of Roman Antium was certainly present in the area of the Capo d Anzio in particular a presumed extensive town since the mid republican age 8 the imperial colony and the great harbour of Nero but a parallel agricultural settlement with the same name was likely to be in the same position as modern Nettuno since the colony of 338 BC so from 60 AD the colonia Antium of Nero in the Capo d Anzio would coexisted with a supposed more ancient civitas Antium in Nettuno which in the 4th century AD would have been the only real town 3 9 a thesis that has found some perplexities 10 or an opposition 4 History editVolscian Antium edit In 493 BC the same year that according to a theory the Volsci likely settled in the town 1 the Roman consul Postumus Cominius Auruncus fought and defeated two armies from Antium and as a result captured the Volscian towns of Longula Pollusca and Corioli to the north of Antium 11 According to Plutarch 12 the Roman leader Coriolanus who fought at Corioli took refuge at Antium to the noble Attius Tullius Aufidius when the Roman had been accused of disloyalty to Rome and the Volsci Aufidius obtained consent that by Volscian hand Coriolanus was first tried then assassinated before the end of the trial In 469 BC the town Caenon was destroyed by the Roman consul Titus Numicius Priscus 13 In 468 BC Antium was captured by the Roman consul Titus Quinctius Capitolinus Barbatus following a war started by the Volsci and the mentioned Latin colony was planted there the next year Three Roman ex consuls were appointed as commissioners to allocate the lands triumviri coloniae deducendae amongst Roman colonists They were Titus Quinctius the consul of the previous year who had captured Antium from the Volsci Aulus Verginius Tricostus Caeliomontanus the consul of 469 BC and Publius Furius Medullinus Fusus the consul of 472 BC 14 In 464 BC the Antiates were suspected of allying with the Aequi against Rome The chief men of Antium were summoned to Rome but they did not give adequate explanations Antium was asked to contribute emergency troops for the Roman war against the Aequi however the force of 1 000 troops from Antium arrived too late to help 15 In 338 BC the consul Gaius Menius Publius suddenly attacked and defeated the troops of Aricia Lanuvium and Velitres as they were joining the Antiates next to the river Astura 16 Antium was finally defeated and its warships seized a part taken to the arsenals in Rome while the others burned The town was banned from navigation and Gaius Menius had the rostra of the burned ships mounted in the Roman Forum as ornaments of the speaker s platform thenceforth called the Rostra 17 18 Roman Antium edit nbsp Mosaic from the nymphaeum nbsp Ruins of the Domus Neroniana In 338 BC Antium became a colonia with Roman citizenship of the Antiates 17 and in 317 BC it became a municipium 19 The Roman colony had duumvirs 20 and quaestors were also present as magistrates 2 During the civil war against Gaius Marius Antium breadbasket of Rome 21 was allied with Sulla in 87 BC it suffered a surprise attack and was devastated by the Marian troops with many citizen deaths 22 3 With the expansion of Roman Republic Antium was just far enough away to be insulated from the riots and tumults of Rome The Romans built magnificent seaside villas there and their remains are conspicuous all along the shore both to the east and to the northwest of the town 5 Gaius Maecenas also had a villa Many ancient masterpieces of sculpture have been found there the Fanciulla d Anzio the Borghese Gladiator in the Louvre and the Apollo Belvedere in the Vatican were all discovered in the ruins of villas at Antium When Cicero returned from exile it was at Antium that he reassembled the battered remains of his libraries where the scrolls would be secure Of the villas the most famous was the imperial villa known as Domus Neroniana Villa of Nero 5 which was used by each emperor in turn up to the Severans and which extended some 800 metres 2 600 ft along the seafront of the Capo d Anzio Augustus received a delegation from Rome there to acclaim him Pater patriae Father of his Country The Julian and Claudian emperors frequently visited it both Emperor Caligula and Nero were born in Antium Nero razed the villa on the site to rebuild it on a more massive scale and according to an imperial style Including a theatre were built in Antium 5 In 60 AD 23 Nero also founded a colony of veterans and built a new harbour the projecting moles of which still exist 5 Of the famous temple of Fortune Horace Od i 35 no remains are known 5 but its location is assumed in the Capo d Anzio area of the Domus Neroniana 3 10 Late Antiquity edit There are records of the participation of a few bishops of Antium in synods held in Rome Gaudentius in 465 Felix in 487 Vindemius in 499 and 501 Barbarian incursions in the 6th century put an end to its existence as a residential bishopric Accordingly Antium is today listed by the Catholic Church as a titular see 24 Middle Ages edit Attacked by the Vandals of Gaiseric 5th century the Goths of Vitiges 6th century and then by the Saracens 25 in the Middle Ages Antium was deserted in favour of Nettuno which maintained the legacy of the ancient town 5 Nettuno is usually attributed only a medieval origin 4 but in the modern era it was considered a natural heir a continuation of Antium 26 3 a view taken up by a contemporary orientation 3 Notes edit a b c A Pensword 2014 Anzio Vallo Volsco Vallo Italico Tirrenico on CambiaVersoAnzio cambiaversoanzio wordpress com in Italian Retrieved 2022 02 02 a b c d G Lugli Saggio sulla topografia dell antica Antium Roma 1940 a b c d e f g h P Brandizzi Vittucci Antium Anzio e Nettuno in epoca romana Roma Bardi Editore 2000 ISBN 88 85699 83 9 a b c H Solin Arctos Acta Philologica Fennica vol 36 Helsinki 2002 pp 210 211 a b c d e f g nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Antium Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 147 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography 1854 William Smith Antium The Topography of Rome and Its Vicinity By Sir William Gell 1846 Antium Handbook for Travellers in Central Italy by John Murray 1843 Nettuno p 534 G Cifani A Guidi A M Jaia Nuove ricerche nel territorio di Colle Rotondo ad Anzio on G Ghini edited by Lazio e Sabina 7 atti del Convegno Roma 2010 Roma Edizioni Quasar 2011 T De Haas G Tol P Attema Investing in the colonia and ager of Antium on Daniele Malfitana Jeroen Problome John Lund edited by Facta a journal of roman material culture studies Pisa Roma Fabrizio Serra vol V 2011 L Ceccarelli F Di Mario F Papi et al Atlante storico ambientale Anzio e Nettuno Roma De Luca 2003 pp 94 96 160 161 a b B Cacciotti Testimonianze di culti orientali ad Antium on B P Benetucci curator Culti orientali tra scavo e collezionismo Roma Artemide 2008 Livy Ab urbe condita ii 33 Plutarch Parallel Lives xx 1 3 xxii 1 Dionysius of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities ix 56 Livy Ab urbe condita ii 63 Livy ii 64 65 iii 1 Livy iii 4 5 Livy viii 13 a b Livy viii 14 Florus Epitomae de Tito Livio bellorum i v Livy ix 20 Cicero Epistulae ad Atticum ii 6 Appian Historia romana De bellis civilibus i viii 69 Valerius Maximus Factorum et dictorum memorabilium libri IX i vi 5 Livy Ab urbe condita xxviii 11 Livy Ab urbe condita lxxx Periocha Appian Historia romana De bellis civilibus i viii 69 Tacitus Annals xiv 27 Suetonius The Twelve Caesars vi 9 Annuario Pontificio 2013 Libreria Editrice Vaticana 2013 ISBN 978 88 209 9070 1 p 834 A La Regina PORTO D ANZIO on Enciclopedia dell Arte Antica 1965 treccani it in Italian Retrieved 2022 02 04 J Hondius Nova et accurata Italiae hodiernae descriptio Apud B et A Elsevir 1627 pp 164 165 a map illustrating Neptunium olim Antium Nettuno once Antium Further reading editAntonio Nibby Dintorni di Roma i 181 Notizie degli scavi passim Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography 1854 William Smith Antium The Topography of Rome and Its Vicinity By Sir William Gell 1846 Antium Handbook for Travellers in Central Italy by John Murray 1843 Nettuno p 534 F Lombardi Anzio antico e moderno opera postuma 1865 G Lugli Saggio sulla topografia dell antica Antium Roma 1940 A La Regina PORTO D ANZIO on Enciclopedia dell Arte Antica 1965 treccani it Retrieved 2022 02 04 P Brandizzi Vittucci Antium Anzio e Nettuno in epoca romana Roma Bardi Editore 2000 H Solin Arctos Acta Philologica Fennica vol 36 Helsinki 2002 pp 210 211 L Ceccarelli F Di Mario F Papi et al Atlante storico ambientale Anzio e Nettuno Roma De Luca 2003 pp 94 96 160 161 B Cacciotti Testimonianze di culti orientali ad Antium on B P Benetucci curator Culti orientali tra scavo e collezionismo Roma Artemide 2008 G Cifani A Guidi A M Jaia Nuove ricerche nel territorio di Colle Rotondo ad Anzio on G Ghini edited by Lazio e Sabina 7 atti del Convegno Roma 2010 Roma Edizioni Quasar 2011 T De Haas G Tol P Attema Investing in the colonia and ager of Antium on Daniele Malfitana Jeroen Problome John Lund edited by Facta a journal of roman material culture studies Pisa Roma Fabrizio Serra vol V 2011 A Pensword 10 October 2014 Anzio Vallo Volsco Vallo Italico Tirrenico on CambiaVersoAnzio cambiaversoanzio wordpress com Retrieved 2022 02 02 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Antium Illustrated reconstruction of Nero s Villa in Italian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Antium amp oldid 1219367375, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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