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Arch of Constantine

The Arch of Constantine (Italian: Arco di Costantino) is a triumphal arch in Rome dedicated to the emperor Constantine the Great. The arch was commissioned by the Roman Senate to commemorate Constantine's victory over Maxentius at the Battle of Milvian Bridge in AD 312. Situated between the Colosseum and the Palatine Hill, the arch spans the Via Triumphalis, the route taken by victorious military leaders when they entered the city in a triumphal procession. [a] Dedicated in 315, it is the largest Roman triumphal arch, with overall dimensions of 21 m (69 ft) high, 25.9 m (85 ft) wide and 7.4 m (24 ft) deep.[1] It has three bays, the central one being 11.5 m (38 ft) high and 6.5 m (21 ft) wide and the laterals 7.4 m (24 ft) by 3.4 m (11 ft) each. The arch is constructed of brick-faced concrete covered in marble.

Arch of Constantine
Arch of Constantine
Arch of Constantine
Shown within Augustan Rome
Click on the map for a fullscreen view
LocationRegio X Palatium
Coordinates41°53′23″N 12°29′27″E / 41.88972°N 12.49083°E / 41.88972; 12.49083
TypeTriumphal arch
History
BuilderConstantine I
FoundedAD 315

The three-bay design with detached columns was first used for the Arch of Septimius Severus in the Roman Forum (which stands at the end of the triumph route) and repeated in several other arches now lost.

Though dedicated to Constantine, much of the sculptural decoration consists of reliefs and statues removed from earlier triumphal monuments dedicated to Trajan (98–117), Hadrian (117–138) and Marcus Aurelius (161–180), with the portrait heads replaced with his own.[2]

History edit

The arch, which was constructed between 312 and 315, was dedicated by the Senate to commemorate ten years (a decennia[b]) of Constantine's reign (306–337) and his victory over the then reigning emperor Maxentius (306–312) at the Battle of Milvian Bridge on 28 October 312,[4] as described on its attic inscription,[5] and officially opened on 25 July 315. Not only did the Roman senate give the arch for Constantine's victory, they also were celebrating decennalia: a series of games that happened every decade during the Roman Empire. On these occasions they also said many prayers and renewed both spiritual and mundane vows.[6] However, Constantine had actually entered Rome on 29 October 312, amidst great rejoicing, and the Senate then commissioned the monument.[7] Constantine then left Rome within two months and did not return until 326.[8]

 
The Arch of Constantine, Rome - painted by Herman van Swanevelt, 17th century

The location, between the Palatine Hill and the Caelian Hill, spanned the ancient route of Roman triumphs (Via triumphalis) at its origin, where it diverged from the Via sacra.[4][9][10] This route was that taken by the emperors when they entered the city in triumph. This route started at the Campus Martius, led through the Circus Maximus, and around the Palatine Hill; immediately after the Arch of Constantine, the procession would turn left at the Meta Sudans and march along the Via sacra to the Forum Romanum and on to the Capitoline Hill, passing through both the Arches of Titus and Septimius Severus.

During the Middle Ages, the Arch of Constantine was incorporated into one of the family strongholds of ancient Rome, as shown in the painting by Herman van Swanevelt, here. Works of restoration were first carried out in the 18th century,[11][c] the last excavations have taken place in the late 1990s, just before the Great Jubilee of 2000. The arch served as the finish line for the marathon athletic event for the 1960 Summer Olympics.

 
Dates of incorporated decorative material

Controversy edit

There has been much controversy over the origins of the arch, with some scholars claiming that it should no longer be referred to as Constantine's arch, but is in fact an earlier work from the time of Hadrian, reworked during Constantine's reign,[4] or at least the lower part.[d] Another theory holds that it was erected, or at least started, by Maxentius,[6][e] and one scholar believed it was as early as the time of Domitian (81–96).[16][4]

Symbolism edit

Whatever the faults of Maxentius, his reputation in Rome was influenced by his contributions to public building. By the time of his accession in 306 Rome was becoming increasingly irrelevant to the governance of the empire, most emperors choosing to live elsewhere and focusing on defending the fragile boundaries, where they frequently founded new cities.

These factors contributed to Maxentius' ability to seize power. In contrast to his predecessors, Maxentius concentrated on restoring the capital; his epithet was conservator urbis suae (preserver of his city). Thus, Constantine was perceived as the deposer of one of the city's greatest benefactors, and needed to acquire legitimacy. Much controversy has surrounded the patronage of the public works of this period. Issuing a damnatio memoriae, Constantine set out to systematically erase the memory of Maxentius. Consequently, there remains considerable uncertainty regarding the patronage of early fourth century public buildings, including the Arch of Constantine, which may originally have been an Arch of Maxentius.[10]

Sculptural style edit

 
Relief panels, round reliefs and frieze over left (west) arch, from south
 
Round reliefs and frieze over right (east) arch, from south

Constantine's Arch is an important example, frequently cited in surveys of art history, of the stylistic changes of the 4th century, and the "collapse of the classical Greek canon of forms during the late Roman period",[17] a sign the city was in decline, and would soon be eclipsed by Constantine's founding of a new capital at Constantinople in 324.[5] The contrast between the styles of the re-used Imperial reliefs of Trajan, Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius and those newly made for the arch is dramatic and, according to Ernst Kitzinger, "violent",[17] that where the head of an earlier emperor was replaced by that of Constantine the artist was still able to achieve a "soft, delicate rendering of the face of Constantine" that was "a far cry from the dominant style of the workshop".[18] It remains the most impressive surviving civic monument from Rome in Late Antiquity, but is also one of the most controversial with regards to its origins and meanings.[4]

Kitzinger compares a roundel of Hadrian lion-hunting, which is "still rooted firmly in the tradition of late Hellenistic art", and there is "an illusion of open, airy space in which figures move freely and with relaxed self-assurance" with the later frieze where the figures are "pressed, trapped, as it were, between two imaginary planes and so tightly packed within the frame as to lack all freedom of movement in any direction", with "gestures that are "jerky, overemphatic and uncoordinated with the rest of the body".[17] In the 4th century reliefs, the figures are disposed geometrically in a pattern that "makes sense only in relation to the spectator", in the largesse scene (below) centred on the emperor who looks directly out to the viewer. Kitzinger continues:

Gone too is the classical canon of proportions. Heads are disproportionately large, trunks square, legs stubby ... Differences in the physical size of figures drastically underline differences of rank and importance which the second-century artist had indicated by subtle compositional means within a seemingly casual grouping. Gone, finally are elaboration of detail and differentiation of surface texture. Faces are cut rather than modeled, hair takes the form of a cap with some superficial stippling, drapery folds are summarily indicated by deeply drilled lines.[19]

The commission was clearly highly important, if hurried, and the work must be considered as reflecting the best available craftsmanship in Rome at the time; the same workshop was probably responsible for a number of surviving sarcophagi.[19] The question of how to account for what may seem a decline in both style and execution has generated a vast amount of discussion. Factors introduced into the discussion include: a breakdown of the transmission in artistic skills due to the political and economic disruption of the Crisis of the Third Century,[20]influence from Eastern and other pre-classical regional styles from around the Empire (a view promoted by Josef Strzygowski (1862–1941), and now mostly discounted),[21] the emergence into high-status public art of a simpler "popular" or "Italic" style that had been used by the less wealthy throughout the reign of Greek models, an active ideological turning against what classical styles had come to represent, and a deliberate preference for seeing the world simply and exploiting the expressive possibilities that a simpler style gave.[22] The sculptors of Constantine's time were more interested in symbolism: both symbolism for religion as well as symbolism for history.[23] One factor that cannot be responsible, as the date and origin of the Venice Portrait of the Four Tetrarchs show, is the rise of Christianity to official support, as the changes predated that.[24]

The stylistic references to the earlier arches of Titus and Septimius Severus, together with the incorporation of spolia from the times of other earlier emperors may be considered a deliberate tribute to Roman history.[25]

Iconography edit

The arch is heavily decorated with parts of older monuments, which assume a new meaning in the context of the Constantinian building. As it celebrates the victory of Constantine, the new "historic" friezes illustrating his campaign in Italy convey the central meaning: the praise of the emperor, both in battle and in his civilian duties. The other imagery supports this purpose: decoration taken from the "golden times" of the Empire under the 2nd century emperors whose reliefs were re-used places Constantine next to these "good emperors", and the content of the pieces evokes images of the victorious and pious ruler.

Another explanation given for the re-use is the short time between the start of construction (late 312 at the earliest) and the dedication (summer 315), so the architects used existing artwork to make up for the lack of time to create new art. It could be that so many old parts were used because the builders themselves did not feel the artists of their time could do better than what had already been done by different people.[23] As yet another possible reason, it has often been suggested that the Romans of the 4th century truly did lack the artistic skill to produce acceptable artwork, and were aware of it, and therefore plundered the ancient buildings to adorn their contemporary monuments. This interpretation has become less prominent in more recent times, as the art of Late Antiquity has been appreciated in its own right. It is possible that a combination of those explanations is correct.[26]

Attic edit

 
South attic

On the top of each column, large sculptures representing Dacians can be seen, which date from Trajan. Above the central archway is the inscription, forming the most prominent portion of the attic and is identical on both sides of the arch. Flanking the inscription on both sides are four pairs of relief panels above the minor archways, eight in total. These were taken from an unknown monument erected in honour of Marcus Aurelius. On the north side, from left to right, the panels depict the emperor's return to Rome after the campaign (adventus), the emperor leaving the city and saluted by a personification of the Via Flaminia, the emperor distributing money among the people (largitio), and the emperor interrogating a German prisoner. On the south side, from left to right, are depicted a captured enemy chieftain led before the emperor, a similar scene with other prisoners (illustrated below), the emperor speaking to the troops (adlocutio), and the emperor sacrificing a pig, sheep and bull (suovetaurilia). Together with three panels now in the Capitoline Museum, the reliefs were probably taken from a triumphal monument commemorating Marcus Aurelius' war against the Marcomanni and the Sarmatians from 169–175, which ended with Marcus Aurelius' triumphant return in 176. On the largitio panel, the figure of Marcus Aurelius' son Commodus has been eradicated following the latter's damnatio memoriae.

From the same time period the two large (3 m high) panels decorating the attic on the east and west sides of the arch show scenes from Trajan's Dacian Wars. Together with the two reliefs on the inside of the central archway, these came from a large frieze celebrating the Dacian victory. The original place of this frieze was either the Forum of Trajan, or the barracks of the emperor's horse guard on the Caelius.

Main section edit

The general layout of the main façade is identical on both sides of the arch, consisting of four columns on bases, dividing the structure into a central arch and two lateral arches, the latter being surmounted by two round reliefs over a horizontal frieze. The four columns are of Corinthian order made of Numidian yellow marble (giallo antico), one of which has been transferred into the Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano and was replaced by a white marble column. The columns stand on bases (plinths or socles), decorated on three sides. The reliefs on the front show Victoria, either inscribing a shield or holding palm branches, while those to the side show captured barbarians alone or with Roman soldiers. Though Constantinian, they are modelled on those of the Arch of Septimius Severus (and the destroyed Arcus novus[f]), and may be considered as a "standard" item.[27]

The pairs of round reliefs above each lateral archway date to the times of Emperor Hadrian. They display scenes of hunting and sacrificing: (north side, left to right) hunt of a boar, sacrifice to Apollo, hunt of a lion, sacrifice to Hercules. On the south side, the left pair show the departure for the hunt (see below) and sacrifice to Silvanus, while those on the right (illustrated on the right) show the hunt of a bear and sacrifice to Diana. The head of the emperor (originally Hadrian) has been reworked in all medallions: on the north side, into Constantine in the hunting scenes and into Licinius or Constantius I in the sacrifice scenes; on the south side, vice versa. The reliefs, c. 2 m in diameter, were framed in porphyry; this framing is only extant on the right side of the northern façade. Similar medallions, of Constantinian origin, are located on the small sides of the arch; the eastern side shows the Sun rising, on the western side, the Moon. Both are on chariots.

The spandrels of the main archway are decorated with reliefs depicting victory figures with trophies (illustrated below), those of the smaller archways show river gods. Column bases and spandrel reliefs are from the time of Constantine.

Constantinian frieze edit

 
Obsidio (detail)
 
Liberalitas (detail)

The horizontal frieze below the round reliefs are the main parts from the time of Constantine,[5] running around the monument, one strip above each lateral archway and including the west and east sides of the arch. These "historical" reliefs depict scenes from the Italian campaign of Constantine against Maxentius which was the reason for the construction of the monument. The frieze starts at the western side with the Departure from Milan (Profectio). It continues on the southern, face, with the Siege of Verona (Obsidio) on the left (South west), an event which was of great importance to the war in Northern Italy. On the right (South east) is depicted the Battle of Milvian Bridge (Proelium) with Constantine's army victorious and the enemy drowning in the river Tiber.[5] On the eastern side, Constantine and his army enter Rome (Ingressus); the artist seems to have avoided using imagery of the triumph, as Constantine probably did not want to be shown triumphant over the Eternal City. On the northern face, looking towards the city, are two strips with the emperor's actions after taking possession of Rome. On the left (North east) is Constantine speaking to the citizens on the Forum Romanum (Oratio), while to the right (North west) is the final panel with Constantine distributing money to the people (Liberalitas).[28][29]

Inner sides of the archways edit

In the central archway, there is one large panel of Trajan's Dacian War on each wall. Inside the lateral archways are eight portraits busts (two on each wall), destroyed to such an extent that it is no longer possible to identify them.

Inscriptions edit

The main inscription on the attic would originally have been of bronze letters. It can still be read easily; only the recesses in which the letters sat, and their attachment holes, remain. It reads thus, identically on both sides (with abbreviations completed in parentheses):

IMP(eratori) · CAES(ari) · FL(avio) · CONSTANTINO · MAXIMO · P(io) · F(elici) · AVGVSTO · S(enatus) · P(opulus) · Q(ue) · R(omanus) · QVOD · INSTINCTV · DIVINITATIS · MENTIS · MAGNITVDINE · CVM · EXERCITV · SVO · TAM · DE · TYRANNO · QVAM · DE · OMNI · EIVS · FACTIONE · VNO · TEMPORE · IVSTIS · REMPVBLICAM · VLTVS · EST · ARMIS · ARCVM · TRIVMPHIS · INSIGNEM · DICAVIT
To the Emperor Caesar Flavius Constantinus, the greatest, pious, and blessed Augustus: because he, inspired by the divine, and by the greatness of his mind, has delivered the state from the tyrant and all of his followers at the same time, with his army and just force of arms, the Senate and People of Rome have dedicated this arch, decorated with triumphs.[5]

The words instinctu divinitatis ("inspired by the divine") have been greatly commented on. They are usually read as sign of Constantine's shifting religious affiliation:[5] The Christian tradition, most notably Lactantius and Eusebius of Caesarea, relate the story of a vision of God to Constantine during the campaign, and that he was victorious in the sign of the cross at the Milvian Bridge. The official documents (esp. coins) still prominently display the Sun god until 324, while Constantine started to support the Christian church from 312 on. In this situation, the vague wording of the inscription can be seen as the attempt to please all possible readers, being deliberately ambiguous, and acceptable to both pagans and Christians. As was customary, the vanquished enemy is not mentioned by name, but only referred to as "the tyrant", drawing on the notion of the rightful killing of a tyrannical ruler; together with the image of the "just war", it serves as justification of Constantine's civil war against Maxentius.

Two short inscriptions on the inside of the central archway transport a similar message: Constantine came not as conqueror, but freed Rome from occupation:

LIBERATORI VRBIS (liberator of the city) — FUNDATORI QVIETIS (founder of peace)

Over each of the small archways, inscriptions read:

VOTIS X — VOTIS XX
SIC X — SIC XX

They give a hint on the date of the arch: "Solemn vows for the 10th anniversary – for the 20th anniversary" and "as for the 10th, so for the 20th anniversary". Both refer to Constantine's decennalia, i.e. the 10th anniversary of his reign (counted from 306), which he celebrated in Rome in the summer of 315. It can be assumed that the arch honouring his victory was inaugurated during his stay in the city.

Works modeled on or inspired by the Arch of Constantine edit

 
Arch of Constantine, viewed from the Colosseum looking south west to Palatine Hill

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ By the "Senate and people" (S.P.Q.R.) according to the inscription, though the Emperor may have "suggested". See also: A. L. Frothingham. "Who Built the Arch of Constantine? III." The Attic, American Journal of Archaeology, Vol. 19, No. 1. (Jan.–Mar., 1915), pp. 1–12
  2. ^ Constantine chose to date his accessionbrate his decennalia in the year July 315 to July 316 [3]
  3. ^ Deane[12] comments that Gradara[13] published an excerpt from the diary of Pietro Bracci in 1732, in which Bracci states that he carved new heads for seven of the Dacian slaves surmounting the columns and a completely new statue for the eighth (right of centre, south side). He also made new heads for the emperors and other figures on the reliefs between the slaves
  4. ^ For which, see Conforto,[14] however, for the contrary view that the whole arch was constructed in the 4th century, see Pensabene & Panella [15]
  5. ^ The controversy extends to a number of other public buildings attributed to Constantine, as hinted at by Aurelius Victor in De Caesaribus[10]
  6. ^ The Arcus novus, was erected by Diocletian ca. 314 on the Via lata, one of three triumphal arches on that road, and was destroyed ca. 1491 during reconstruction of Santa Maria in Via Lata. The remains, including the plinths are now in the Boboli Gardens, in Florence.[27]

Citations edit

  1. ^ Watkin, David (2011). A History of Western Architecture: Fifth Edition. London: Laurence King Publishing. p. 87.
  2. ^ Sande, Siri (2012). "The Arch of Constantine - Who Saw What?". In Birk, Stine; Poulsen, Birte (eds.). Patrons and viewers in late antiquity. Aarhus: Aarhus Universitetsforlag. p. 277. ISBN 978-87-7124-417-5. OCLC 1109724820.
  3. ^ Ferris 2013, p. 20.
  4. ^ a b c d e Ferris 2013, p. 7.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Aicher 2004, p. 184.
  6. ^ a b Stephenson, Paul (2010). Constantine: Roman Emperor, Christian Victor. New York: The Overlook Press. p. 151.
  7. ^ Barnes 1981, pp. 44–47.
  8. ^ Ferris 2013, p. 11.
  9. ^ Lanciani 1892, p. 20.
  10. ^ a b c Marlowe 2010.
  11. ^ Elsner 2000.
  12. ^ Deane 1921, p. 91.
  13. ^ Gradara 1918.
  14. ^ Conforto 2001.
  15. ^ Pensabene & Panella 2001.
  16. ^ Frothingham 1912.
  17. ^ a b c Kitzinger 1977, p. 7.
  18. ^ Kitzinger 1977, p. 29.
  19. ^ a b Kitzinger 1977, p. 8.
  20. ^ Kitzinger 1977, pp. 8–9.
  21. ^ Kitzinger 1977, pp. 9–12.
  22. ^ Kitzinger 1977, pp. 10–18.
  23. ^ a b Watkin, David (2011). A History Of Western Architecture. London: Laurence King Publishing. p. 88.
  24. ^ Kitzinger 1977, pp. 5–6, 9, 19.
  25. ^ Ferris 2013, p. 13.
  26. ^ Kitzinger 1977, pp. 8–15.
  27. ^ a b Ferris 2013, p. 21.
  28. ^ Bandinelli & Torelli 1992.
  29. ^ Follo et al 2015.

References edit

  • Aicher, Peter J. (2004). Rome alive : a source-guide to the ancient city. Wauconda, Ill.: Bolchazy-Carducci. ISBN 978-0865164734. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
  • Bandinelli, Ranuccio Bianchi; Torelli, Mario (1992). L'arte dell'antichità classica. Volume 2: Etruria-Roma (in Italian) (2nd ed.). Torino: Utet. ISBN 978-8877501950. Retrieved 23 October 2015.
  • Barnes, Timothy D. (1981). Constantine and Eusebius. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-16531-1.
  • Conforto, Maria Letizia (2001). Adriano e Costantino: le due fasi dell'arco nella valle del Colosseo (in Italian). Milan: Electa. ISBN 978-8843578399. Retrieved 21 October 2015.
  • Deane, Sidney N, ed. (January–March 1921). "Archaeological News July December 1920". American Journal of Archaeology. 25 (1): 83–109. JSTOR 497891.
  • Elsner, Jaś (2000). "From the culture of spolia to the cult of relics: the Arch of Constantine and the genesis of late antique forms". Papers of the British School at Rome. 68: 149–184. doi:10.1017/S0068246200003901. S2CID 192088697.
  • Ferris, Iain (2013). The Arch of Constantine: Inspired by the Divine. Stroud: Amberley Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1445635446. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  • Follo, Valentina; Harris, Beth; Zucker, Steven (2015). "Arch of Constantine" (video). Art of the Ancient Mediterranean: Roman. Khan Academy. Retrieved 21 October 2015.
  • Frothingham, A. L. (July 1912). "Who Built the Arch of Constantine? Its History from Domitian to Constantine". American Journal of Archaeology. 16 (3): 368–386. doi:10.2307/497194. JSTOR 497194. S2CID 193057848.
  • Gradara, C (1918). "Restauri settecenteschi fatti all'Arco di Costantino". Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Communale di Roma (in Italian). 46: 161–164.
  • Kitzinger, Ernst (1977). Byzantine art in the making: Main lines of stylistic development in mediterranean art, 3rd–7th century. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0674089556. Retrieved 21 October 2015.
    • Review: Art Bulletin 1979
  • Pensabene, Patrizio; Panella, Clementina, eds. (2001). Arco di Costantino: tra archeologia e archeometria (in Italian). Rome: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider. ISBN 978-8882650360. Retrieved 21 October 2015.

Further reading edit

Books edit

  • Bonamente, Giorgio (ed.) 1992. Costantino il Grande dall'Antichità all'Umanesimo; Atti del 2. colloquio sul Cristianesimo nel mondo antico, Università di Macerata, 18-20 dicembre 1990
  • Ewald, Björn C.; Noreña, Carlos F., eds. (2010). The emperor and Rome : space, representation, and ritual. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521519533.
  • Frothingham, Arthur Lincoln (2012). Who Built the Arch of Constantine?: Its History from Domitian to Constantine. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. ISBN 9781477633144. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  • Lanciani, Rodolfo Amedeo (1892). Pagan and Christian Rome. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  • Lenski, Noel, ed. (2012) [2006]. The Cambridge companion to the Age of Constantine (Revised ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781107013407. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  • L'Orange, Hans Peter; Gerkan, Armin von (1939). Der spätantike Bildschmuck des Konstantinsbogens. Berlin: de Gruyter. ISBN 9783110022490. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  • Middleton, John Henry (1892). The remains of ancient Rome. London: Adam and Charles Black. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
  • Richardson, Lawrence (1992). A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 9780801843006. Retrieved 28 October 2015.
  • Ryberg, Inez Scott (1967). Panel Reliefs of Marcus Aurelius (Monographs on archaeology and the fine arts, 14. ASIN: B0006BQ1JW). NY: Archaeological Institute of America. Retrieved 25 October 2015.
    • Contents
  • Varner, Eric R. (2004). Monumenta Graeca et Romana. damnatio memoriae and Roman imperial portraiture. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 90-04-13577-4.

Articles and chapters edit

  • Bieber, Margarete (1911). "Die Medaillons am Konstantinsbogen". Mitteilungen des Kaiserlich Deutschen Archaeologischen Instituts, Roemische Abtheilung (in German): 214–237. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  • Jones, H. Stuart (1906). "Notes on Roman historical sculptures: II The Relief-Medallions of the Arch of Constantine". Papers of the British School at Rome. 3: 229–251. doi:10.1017/S0068246200005006. S2CID 191433014. Retrieved 26 October 2015.
  • Jones, Mark Wilson (March 2000). "Genesis and Mimesis: The Design of the Arch of Constantine in Rome". The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 59 (1): 50–77. doi:10.2307/991562. JSTOR 991562.
  • Koeppel, Gerhard (1986). "Die historischen Reliefs der römischen Kaiserzeit IV: Stadtrömische Denkmäler unbekannter Bauzugehörigkeit aus hadrianischer bis konstantinischer Zeit". Bonner Jahrbücher. 186: 1–90.
  • Marlowe, Elizabeth (June 2006). "Framing the Sun: The Arch of Constantine and the Roman Cityscape". The Art Bulletin. 88 (2): 223–242. doi:10.1080/00043079.2006.10786288. JSTOR 25067243. S2CID 191508817. ()
  • Marlowe, Elizabeth (2010). Liberator Urbis Suae: Constantine and the Ghost of Maxentius. in Ewald & Noreña (2010, pp. 199–219)
  • Patrizio Pensabene (1992). Il reimpiego nell'età costantiniana a Roma, in Bonamente, Giorgio 1992 Pt. 2 p. 749-768

External links edit

  • Volume 1. p. 80.
  • Volume 2, Part 1. p. 118.
  • , a detailed article "for scholars and enthusiasts"
  • Inscriptions illustrated and discussed
  • Google Maps satellite image
  • High-resolution 360° Panoramas and Images of Arch of Constantine | Art Atlas

  Media related to Arch of Constantine at Wikimedia Commons

Preceded by
Obelisk of Montecitorio
Landmarks of Rome
Arch of Constantine
Succeeded by
Arch of Drusus

arch, constantine, italian, arco, costantino, triumphal, arch, rome, dedicated, emperor, constantine, great, arch, commissioned, roman, senate, commemorate, constantine, victory, over, maxentius, battle, milvian, bridge, situated, between, colosseum, palatine,. The Arch of Constantine Italian Arco di Costantino is a triumphal arch in Rome dedicated to the emperor Constantine the Great The arch was commissioned by the Roman Senate to commemorate Constantine s victory over Maxentius at the Battle of Milvian Bridge in AD 312 Situated between the Colosseum and the Palatine Hill the arch spans the Via Triumphalis the route taken by victorious military leaders when they entered the city in a triumphal procession a Dedicated in 315 it is the largest Roman triumphal arch with overall dimensions of 21 m 69 ft high 25 9 m 85 ft wide and 7 4 m 24 ft deep 1 It has three bays the central one being 11 5 m 38 ft high and 6 5 m 21 ft wide and the laterals 7 4 m 24 ft by 3 4 m 11 ft each The arch is constructed of brick faced concrete covered in marble Arch of ConstantineArch of ConstantineArch of ConstantineShown within Augustan RomeClick on the map for a fullscreen viewLocationRegio X PalatiumCoordinates41 53 23 N 12 29 27 E 41 88972 N 12 49083 E 41 88972 12 49083TypeTriumphal archHistoryBuilderConstantine IFoundedAD 315 The three bay design with detached columns was first used for the Arch of Septimius Severus in the Roman Forum which stands at the end of the triumph route and repeated in several other arches now lost Though dedicated to Constantine much of the sculptural decoration consists of reliefs and statues removed from earlier triumphal monuments dedicated to Trajan 98 117 Hadrian 117 138 and Marcus Aurelius 161 180 with the portrait heads replaced with his own 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Controversy 1 2 Symbolism 2 Sculptural style 3 Iconography 3 1 Attic 3 2 Main section 3 2 1 Constantinian frieze 3 3 Inner sides of the archways 4 Inscriptions 5 Works modeled on or inspired by the Arch of Constantine 6 See also 7 Notes 8 Citations 9 References 10 Further reading 10 1 Books 10 2 Articles and chapters 11 External linksHistory editThe arch which was constructed between 312 and 315 was dedicated by the Senate to commemorate ten years a decennia b of Constantine s reign 306 337 and his victory over the then reigning emperor Maxentius 306 312 at the Battle of Milvian Bridge on 28 October 312 4 as described on its attic inscription 5 and officially opened on 25 July 315 Not only did the Roman senate give the arch for Constantine s victory they also were celebrating decennalia a series of games that happened every decade during the Roman Empire On these occasions they also said many prayers and renewed both spiritual and mundane vows 6 However Constantine had actually entered Rome on 29 October 312 amidst great rejoicing and the Senate then commissioned the monument 7 Constantine then left Rome within two months and did not return until 326 8 nbsp The Arch of Constantine Rome painted by Herman van Swanevelt 17th century The location between the Palatine Hill and the Caelian Hill spanned the ancient route of Roman triumphs Via triumphalis at its origin where it diverged from the Via sacra 4 9 10 This route was that taken by the emperors when they entered the city in triumph This route started at the Campus Martius led through the Circus Maximus and around the Palatine Hill immediately after the Arch of Constantine the procession would turn left at the Meta Sudans and march along the Via sacra to the Forum Romanum and on to the Capitoline Hill passing through both the Arches of Titus and Septimius Severus During the Middle Ages the Arch of Constantine was incorporated into one of the family strongholds of ancient Rome as shown in the painting by Herman van Swanevelt here Works of restoration were first carried out in the 18th century 11 c the last excavations have taken place in the late 1990s just before the Great Jubilee of 2000 The arch served as the finish line for the marathon athletic event for the 1960 Summer Olympics nbsp Dates of incorporated decorative material Controversy edit There has been much controversy over the origins of the arch with some scholars claiming that it should no longer be referred to as Constantine s arch but is in fact an earlier work from the time of Hadrian reworked during Constantine s reign 4 or at least the lower part d Another theory holds that it was erected or at least started by Maxentius 6 e and one scholar believed it was as early as the time of Domitian 81 96 16 4 Symbolism edit Whatever the faults of Maxentius his reputation in Rome was influenced by his contributions to public building By the time of his accession in 306 Rome was becoming increasingly irrelevant to the governance of the empire most emperors choosing to live elsewhere and focusing on defending the fragile boundaries where they frequently founded new cities These factors contributed to Maxentius ability to seize power In contrast to his predecessors Maxentius concentrated on restoring the capital his epithet was conservator urbis suae preserver of his city Thus Constantine was perceived as the deposer of one of the city s greatest benefactors and needed to acquire legitimacy Much controversy has surrounded the patronage of the public works of this period Issuing a damnatio memoriae Constantine set out to systematically erase the memory of Maxentius Consequently there remains considerable uncertainty regarding the patronage of early fourth century public buildings including the Arch of Constantine which may originally have been an Arch of Maxentius 10 nbsp South side from Via triumphalis Colosseum to right nbsp North side from the Colosseum nbsp West sideSculptural style edit nbsp Relief panels round reliefs and frieze over left west arch from south nbsp Round reliefs and frieze over right east arch from south Constantine s Arch is an important example frequently cited in surveys of art history of the stylistic changes of the 4th century and the collapse of the classical Greek canon of forms during the late Roman period 17 a sign the city was in decline and would soon be eclipsed by Constantine s founding of a new capital at Constantinople in 324 5 The contrast between the styles of the re used Imperial reliefs of Trajan Hadrian and Marcus Aurelius and those newly made for the arch is dramatic and according to Ernst Kitzinger violent 17 that where the head of an earlier emperor was replaced by that of Constantine the artist was still able to achieve a soft delicate rendering of the face of Constantine that was a far cry from the dominant style of the workshop 18 It remains the most impressive surviving civic monument from Rome in Late Antiquity but is also one of the most controversial with regards to its origins and meanings 4 Kitzinger compares a roundel of Hadrian lion hunting which is still rooted firmly in the tradition of late Hellenistic art and there is an illusion of open airy space in which figures move freely and with relaxed self assurance with the later frieze where the figures are pressed trapped as it were between two imaginary planes and so tightly packed within the frame as to lack all freedom of movement in any direction with gestures that are jerky overemphatic and uncoordinated with the rest of the body 17 In the 4th century reliefs the figures are disposed geometrically in a pattern that makes sense only in relation to the spectator in the largesse scene below centred on the emperor who looks directly out to the viewer Kitzinger continues Gone too is the classical canon of proportions Heads are disproportionately large trunks square legs stubby Differences in the physical size of figures drastically underline differences of rank and importance which the second century artist had indicated by subtle compositional means within a seemingly casual grouping Gone finally are elaboration of detail and differentiation of surface texture Faces are cut rather than modeled hair takes the form of a cap with some superficial stippling drapery folds are summarily indicated by deeply drilled lines 19 The commission was clearly highly important if hurried and the work must be considered as reflecting the best available craftsmanship in Rome at the time the same workshop was probably responsible for a number of surviving sarcophagi 19 The question of how to account for what may seem a decline in both style and execution has generated a vast amount of discussion Factors introduced into the discussion include a breakdown of the transmission in artistic skills due to the political and economic disruption of the Crisis of the Third Century 20 influence from Eastern and other pre classical regional styles from around the Empire a view promoted by Josef Strzygowski 1862 1941 and now mostly discounted 21 the emergence into high status public art of a simpler popular or Italic style that had been used by the less wealthy throughout the reign of Greek models an active ideological turning against what classical styles had come to represent and a deliberate preference for seeing the world simply and exploiting the expressive possibilities that a simpler style gave 22 The sculptors of Constantine s time were more interested in symbolism both symbolism for religion as well as symbolism for history 23 One factor that cannot be responsible as the date and origin of the Venice Portrait of the Four Tetrarchs show is the rise of Christianity to official support as the changes predated that 24 The stylistic references to the earlier arches of Titus and Septimius Severus together with the incorporation of spolia from the times of other earlier emperors may be considered a deliberate tribute to Roman history 25 Iconography editThe arch is heavily decorated with parts of older monuments which assume a new meaning in the context of the Constantinian building As it celebrates the victory of Constantine the new historic friezes illustrating his campaign in Italy convey the central meaning the praise of the emperor both in battle and in his civilian duties The other imagery supports this purpose decoration taken from the golden times of the Empire under the 2nd century emperors whose reliefs were re used places Constantine next to these good emperors and the content of the pieces evokes images of the victorious and pious ruler Another explanation given for the re use is the short time between the start of construction late 312 at the earliest and the dedication summer 315 so the architects used existing artwork to make up for the lack of time to create new art It could be that so many old parts were used because the builders themselves did not feel the artists of their time could do better than what had already been done by different people 23 As yet another possible reason it has often been suggested that the Romans of the 4th century truly did lack the artistic skill to produce acceptable artwork and were aware of it and therefore plundered the ancient buildings to adorn their contemporary monuments This interpretation has become less prominent in more recent times as the art of Late Antiquity has been appreciated in its own right It is possible that a combination of those explanations is correct 26 Attic edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp South attic On the top of each column large sculptures representing Dacians can be seen which date from Trajan Above the central archway is the inscription forming the most prominent portion of the attic and is identical on both sides of the arch Flanking the inscription on both sides are four pairs of relief panels above the minor archways eight in total These were taken from an unknown monument erected in honour of Marcus Aurelius On the north side from left to right the panels depict the emperor s return to Rome after the campaign adventus the emperor leaving the city and saluted by a personification of the Via Flaminia the emperor distributing money among the people largitio and the emperor interrogating a German prisoner On the south side from left to right are depicted a captured enemy chieftain led before the emperor a similar scene with other prisoners illustrated below the emperor speaking to the troops adlocutio and the emperor sacrificing a pig sheep and bull suovetaurilia Together with three panels now in the Capitoline Museum the reliefs were probably taken from a triumphal monument commemorating Marcus Aurelius war against the Marcomanni and the Sarmatians from 169 175 which ended with Marcus Aurelius triumphant return in 176 On the largitio panel the figure of Marcus Aurelius son Commodus has been eradicated following the latter s damnatio memoriae From the same time period the two large 3 m high panels decorating the attic on the east and west sides of the arch show scenes from Trajan s Dacian Wars Together with the two reliefs on the inside of the central archway these came from a large frieze celebrating the Dacian victory The original place of this frieze was either the Forum of Trajan or the barracks of the emperor s horse guard on the Caelius nbsp Detail of relief panel south side right panel of left arch Main section edit The general layout of the main facade is identical on both sides of the arch consisting of four columns on bases dividing the structure into a central arch and two lateral arches the latter being surmounted by two round reliefs over a horizontal frieze The four columns are of Corinthian order made of Numidian yellow marble giallo antico one of which has been transferred into the Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano and was replaced by a white marble column The columns stand on bases plinths or socles decorated on three sides The reliefs on the front show Victoria either inscribing a shield or holding palm branches while those to the side show captured barbarians alone or with Roman soldiers Though Constantinian they are modelled on those of the Arch of Septimius Severus and the destroyed Arcus novus f and may be considered as a standard item 27 nbsp Detail of north plinth on second column from east see gallery viewed from east with Victoria left prisoners right nbsp Detail of western plinths see detail of left plinth in side bar nbsp Round reliefs above right lateral archway from south over friezes nbsp Plinths of columns on north side looking west see detail to right nbsp Plinths north side looking east The pairs of round reliefs above each lateral archway date to the times of Emperor Hadrian They display scenes of hunting and sacrificing north side left to right hunt of a boar sacrifice to Apollo hunt of a lion sacrifice to Hercules On the south side the left pair show the departure for the hunt see below and sacrifice to Silvanus while those on the right illustrated on the right show the hunt of a bear and sacrifice to Diana The head of the emperor originally Hadrian has been reworked in all medallions on the north side into Constantine in the hunting scenes and into Licinius or Constantius I in the sacrifice scenes on the south side vice versa The reliefs c 2 m in diameter were framed in porphyry this framing is only extant on the right side of the northern facade Similar medallions of Constantinian origin are located on the small sides of the arch the eastern side shows the Sun rising on the western side the Moon Both are on chariots The spandrels of the main archway are decorated with reliefs depicting victory figures with trophies illustrated below those of the smaller archways show river gods Column bases and spandrel reliefs are from the time of Constantine nbsp Spandrel over main arch Constantinian frieze edit nbsp Obsidio detail nbsp Liberalitas detail The horizontal frieze below the round reliefs are the main parts from the time of Constantine 5 running around the monument one strip above each lateral archway and including the west and east sides of the arch These historical reliefs depict scenes from the Italian campaign of Constantine against Maxentius which was the reason for the construction of the monument The frieze starts at the western side with the Departure from Milan Profectio It continues on the southern face with the Siege of Verona Obsidio on the left South west an event which was of great importance to the war in Northern Italy On the right South east is depicted the Battle of Milvian Bridge Proelium with Constantine s army victorious and the enemy drowning in the river Tiber 5 On the eastern side Constantine and his army enter Rome Ingressus the artist seems to have avoided using imagery of the triumph as Constantine probably did not want to be shown triumphant over the Eternal City On the northern face looking towards the city are two strips with the emperor s actions after taking possession of Rome On the left North east is Constantine speaking to the citizens on the Forum Romanum Oratio while to the right North west is the final panel with Constantine distributing money to the people Liberalitas 28 29 nbsp West Profectio nbsp South west Obsidio nbsp South east Proelium nbsp East Ingressus nbsp North east Oratio nbsp North west Liberalitas Inner sides of the archways edit In the central archway there is one large panel of Trajan s Dacian War on each wall Inside the lateral archways are eight portraits busts two on each wall destroyed to such an extent that it is no longer possible to identify them Inscriptions editThe main inscription on the attic would originally have been of bronze letters It can still be read easily only the recesses in which the letters sat and their attachment holes remain It reads thus identically on both sides with abbreviations completed in parentheses IMP eratori CAES ari FL avio CONSTANTINO MAXIMO P io F elici AVGVSTO S enatus P opulus Q ue R omanus QVOD INSTINCTV DIVINITATIS MENTIS MAGNITVDINE CVM EXERCITV SVO TAM DE TYRANNO QVAM DE OMNI EIVS FACTIONE VNO TEMPORE IVSTIS REMPVBLICAM VLTVS EST ARMIS ARCVM TRIVMPHIS INSIGNEM DICAVIT To the Emperor Caesar Flavius Constantinus the greatest pious and blessed Augustus because he inspired by the divine and by the greatness of his mind has delivered the state from the tyrant and all of his followers at the same time with his army and just force of arms the Senate and People of Rome have dedicated this arch decorated with triumphs 5 The words instinctu divinitatis inspired by the divine have been greatly commented on They are usually read as sign of Constantine s shifting religious affiliation 5 The Christian tradition most notably Lactantius and Eusebius of Caesarea relate the story of a vision of God to Constantine during the campaign and that he was victorious in the sign of the cross at the Milvian Bridge The official documents esp coins still prominently display the Sun god until 324 while Constantine started to support the Christian church from 312 on In this situation the vague wording of the inscription can be seen as the attempt to please all possible readers being deliberately ambiguous and acceptable to both pagans and Christians As was customary the vanquished enemy is not mentioned by name but only referred to as the tyrant drawing on the notion of the rightful killing of a tyrannical ruler together with the image of the just war it serves as justification of Constantine s civil war against Maxentius Two short inscriptions on the inside of the central archway transport a similar message Constantine came not as conqueror but freed Rome from occupation LIBERATORI VRBIS liberator of the city FUNDATORI QVIETIS founder of peace Over each of the small archways inscriptions read VOTIS X VOTIS XX SIC X SIC XX They give a hint on the date of the arch Solemn vows for the 10th anniversary for the 20th anniversary and as for the 10th so for the 20th anniversary Both refer to Constantine s decennalia i e the 10th anniversary of his reign counted from 306 which he celebrated in Rome in the summer of 315 It can be assumed that the arch honouring his victory was inaugurated during his stay in the city Works modeled on or inspired by the Arch of Constantine editBrandenburg Gate 1770 Potsdam Prussia Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel 1806 Paris Marble Arch 1828 London Arcade du Cinquantenaire 1905 Brussels Union Station 1908 Washington D C American Museum of Natural History east facade 1936 New York City Bond University 1989 Gold Coast Australia Kedleston Hall Derbyshire England Church of Saint Denis facade Paris Arch of triumph Pyongyang North Korea Pitzhanger Manor Ealing London Siegestor Munich nbsp Arch of Constantine viewed from the Colosseum looking south west to Palatine HillSee also editArch of Dolabella Ancient Roman arch a landmark of Rome Italy Aqua Alexandrina Roman aqueduct a landmark of Rome Italy List of Roman triumphal arches List of ancient monuments in RomeNotes edit By the Senate and people S P Q R according to the inscription though the Emperor may have suggested See also A L Frothingham Who Built the Arch of Constantine III The Attic American Journal of Archaeology Vol 19 No 1 Jan Mar 1915 pp 1 12 Constantine chose to date his accessionbrate his decennalia in the year July 315 to July 316 3 Deane 12 comments that Gradara 13 published an excerpt from the diary of Pietro Bracci in 1732 in which Bracci states that he carved new heads for seven of the Dacian slaves surmounting the columns and a completely new statue for the eighth right of centre south side He also made new heads for the emperors and other figures on the reliefs between the slaves For which see Conforto 14 however for the contrary view that the whole arch was constructed in the 4th century see Pensabene amp Panella 15 The controversy extends to a number of other public buildings attributed to Constantine as hinted at by Aurelius Victor in De Caesaribus 10 The Arcus novus was erected by Diocletian ca 314 on the Via lata one of three triumphal arches on that road and was destroyed ca 1491 during reconstruction of Santa Maria in Via Lata The remains including the plinths are now in the Boboli Gardens in Florence 27 Citations edit Watkin David 2011 A History of Western Architecture Fifth Edition London Laurence King Publishing p 87 Sande Siri 2012 The Arch of Constantine Who Saw What In Birk Stine Poulsen Birte eds Patrons and viewers in late antiquity Aarhus Aarhus Universitetsforlag p 277 ISBN 978 87 7124 417 5 OCLC 1109724820 Ferris 2013 p 20 a b c d e Ferris 2013 p 7 a b c d e f Aicher 2004 p 184 a b Stephenson Paul 2010 Constantine Roman Emperor Christian Victor New York The Overlook Press p 151 Barnes 1981 pp 44 47 Ferris 2013 p 11 Lanciani 1892 p 20 a b c Marlowe 2010 Elsner 2000 Deane 1921 p 91 Gradara 1918 Conforto 2001 Pensabene amp Panella 2001 Frothingham 1912 a b c Kitzinger 1977 p 7 Kitzinger 1977 p 29 a b Kitzinger 1977 p 8 Kitzinger 1977 pp 8 9 Kitzinger 1977 pp 9 12 Kitzinger 1977 pp 10 18 a b Watkin David 2011 A History Of Western Architecture London Laurence King Publishing p 88 Kitzinger 1977 pp 5 6 9 19 Ferris 2013 p 13 Kitzinger 1977 pp 8 15 a b Ferris 2013 p 21 Bandinelli amp Torelli 1992 Follo et al 2015 References editAicher Peter J 2004 Rome alive a source guide to the ancient city Wauconda Ill Bolchazy Carducci ISBN 978 0865164734 Retrieved 19 October 2015 Bandinelli Ranuccio Bianchi Torelli Mario 1992 L arte dell antichita classica Volume 2 Etruria Roma in Italian 2nd ed Torino Utet ISBN 978 8877501950 Retrieved 23 October 2015 Barnes Timothy D 1981 Constantine and Eusebius Cambridge MA Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 16531 1 Conforto Maria Letizia 2001 Adriano e Costantino le due fasi dell arco nella valle del Colosseo in Italian Milan Electa ISBN 978 8843578399 Retrieved 21 October 2015 Deane Sidney N ed January March 1921 Archaeological News July December 1920 American Journal of Archaeology 25 1 83 109 JSTOR 497891 Elsner Jas 2000 From the culture of spolia to the cult of relics the Arch of Constantine and the genesis of late antique forms Papers of the British School at Rome 68 149 184 doi 10 1017 S0068246200003901 S2CID 192088697 Ferris Iain 2013 The Arch of Constantine Inspired by the Divine Stroud Amberley Publishing Limited ISBN 978 1445635446 Retrieved 25 October 2015 Follo Valentina Harris Beth Zucker Steven 2015 Arch of Constantine video Art of the Ancient Mediterranean Roman Khan Academy Retrieved 21 October 2015 Frothingham A L July 1912 Who Built the Arch of Constantine Its History from Domitian to Constantine American Journal of Archaeology 16 3 368 386 doi 10 2307 497194 JSTOR 497194 S2CID 193057848 Gradara C 1918 Restauri settecenteschi fatti all Arco di Costantino Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Communale di Roma in Italian 46 161 164 Kitzinger Ernst 1977 Byzantine art in the making Main lines of stylistic development in mediterranean art 3rd 7th century Cambridge Mass Harvard Univ Press ISBN 978 0674089556 Retrieved 21 October 2015 Review Art Bulletin 1979 Pensabene Patrizio Panella Clementina eds 2001 Arco di Costantino tra archeologia e archeometria in Italian Rome L Erma di Bretschneider ISBN 978 8882650360 Retrieved 21 October 2015 Further reading editBooks edit Bonamente Giorgio ed 1992 Costantino il Grande dall Antichita all Umanesimo Atti del 2 colloquio sul Cristianesimo nel mondo antico Universita di Macerata 18 20 dicembre 1990 Ewald Bjorn C Norena Carlos F eds 2010 The emperor and Rome space representation and ritual Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521519533 Frothingham Arthur Lincoln 2012 Who Built the Arch of Constantine Its History from Domitian to Constantine CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform ISBN 9781477633144 Retrieved 29 October 2015 Lanciani Rodolfo Amedeo 1892 Pagan and Christian Rome Boston Houghton Mifflin Retrieved 25 October 2015 Lenski Noel ed 2012 2006 The Cambridge companion to the Age of Constantine Revised ed Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9781107013407 Retrieved 26 October 2015 L Orange Hans Peter Gerkan Armin von 1939 Der spatantike Bildschmuck des Konstantinsbogens Berlin de Gruyter ISBN 9783110022490 Retrieved 26 October 2015 Middleton John Henry 1892 The remains of ancient Rome London Adam and Charles Black Retrieved 25 October 2015 Richardson Lawrence 1992 A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 9780801843006 Retrieved 28 October 2015 Ryberg Inez Scott 1967 Panel Reliefs of Marcus Aurelius Monographs on archaeology and the fine arts 14 ASIN B0006BQ1JW NY Archaeological Institute of America Retrieved 25 October 2015 Contents Varner Eric R 2004 Monumenta Graeca et Romana damnatio memoriae and Roman imperial portraiture Leiden Brill ISBN 90 04 13577 4 Articles and chapters edit Bieber Margarete 1911 Die Medaillons am Konstantinsbogen Mitteilungen des Kaiserlich Deutschen Archaeologischen Instituts Roemische Abtheilung in German 214 237 Retrieved 26 October 2015 Jones H Stuart 1906 Notes on Roman historical sculptures II The Relief Medallions of the Arch of Constantine Papers of the British School at Rome 3 229 251 doi 10 1017 S0068246200005006 S2CID 191433014 Retrieved 26 October 2015 Jones Mark Wilson March 2000 Genesis and Mimesis The Design of the Arch of Constantine in Rome The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 59 1 50 77 doi 10 2307 991562 JSTOR 991562 Koeppel Gerhard 1986 Die historischen Reliefs der romischen Kaiserzeit IV Stadtromische Denkmaler unbekannter Bauzugehorigkeit aus hadrianischer bis konstantinischer Zeit Bonner Jahrbucher 186 1 90 Marlowe Elizabeth June 2006 Framing the Sun The Arch of Constantine and the Roman Cityscape The Art Bulletin 88 2 223 242 doi 10 1080 00043079 2006 10786288 JSTOR 25067243 S2CID 191508817 Full text available on line Marlowe Elizabeth 2010 Liberator Urbis Suae Constantine and the Ghost of Maxentius in Ewald amp Norena 2010 pp 199 219 Patrizio Pensabene 1992 Il reimpiego nell eta costantiniana a Roma in Bonamente Giorgio 1992 Pt 2 p 749 768External links edit1960 Summer Olympics official report Volume 1 p 80 1960 Summer Olympics official report Volume 2 Part 1 p 118 The Arch of Constantine a detailed article for scholars and enthusiasts Inscriptions illustrated and discussed Google Maps satellite image Guided tour of the Arch of Constantine on Roma Interactive High resolution 360 Panoramas and Images of Arch of Constantine Art Atlas nbsp Media related to Arch of Constantine at Wikimedia Commons Preceded byObelisk of Montecitorio Landmarks of RomeArch of Constantine Succeeded byArch of Drusus Portals nbsp Ancient Rome nbsp Italy nbsp History nbsp Architecture Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Arch of Constantine amp oldid 1218150601, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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