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Basilica

In Ancient Roman architecture, a basilica was a large public building with multiple functions, typically built alongside the town's forum. The basilica was in the Latin West equivalent to a stoa in the Greek East. The building gave its name to the architectural form of the basilica.

Digital reconstruction of the 2nd century BC Basilica Sempronia, in the Forum Romanum
19th century reconstruction of the 2nd century AD Basilica Ulpia, part of the Trajan's Forum, Rome
Ruins of the late 5th century AD basilica at Mushabbak, Syria
Reconstruction of the basilica at Fano from a description by its architect Vitruvius

Originally, a basilica was an ancient Roman public building, where courts were held, as well as serving other official and public functions. Basilicas are typically rectangular buildings with a central nave flanked by two or more longitudinal aisles, with the roof at two levels, being higher in the centre over the nave to admit a clerestory and lower over the side-aisles. An apse at one end, or less frequently at both ends or on the side, usually contained the raised tribunal occupied by the Roman magistrates. The basilica was centrally located in every Roman town, usually adjacent to the forum and often opposite a temple in imperial-era forums.[1] Basilicas were also built in private residences and imperial palaces and were known as "palace basilicas".

In late antiquity, church buildings were typically constructed either as martyria, or with a basilica's architectural plan. A number of monumental Christian basilicas were constructed during the latter reign of Constantine the Great. In the post Nicene period, basilicas became a standard model for Christian spaces for congregational worship throughout the Mediterranean and Europe. From the early 4th century, Christian basilicas, along with their associated catacombs, were used for burial of the dead.

By extension, the name was later applied to Christian churches that adopted the same basic plan. It continues to be used in an architectural sense to describe rectangular buildings with a central nave and aisles, and usually a raised platform at the end opposite the door. In Europe and the Americas, the basilica remained the most common architectural style for churches of all Christian denominations, though this building plan has become less dominant in buildings constructed since the late 20th century.

The Catholic Church has come to use the term to refer to its especially historic churches, without reference to the architectural form.

Origins

 
Remains of the Basilica of Pompeii, interior (120 BC)
 
Basilica of Pompeii, tribunal

The Latin word basilica derives from Ancient Greek: βασιλική στοά, romanizedbasilikḗ stoá, lit.'royal stoa'. The first known basilica—the Basilica Porcia in the Roman Forum—was constructed in 184 BC by Marcus Porcius Cato (the Elder).[2] After the construction of Cato the Elder's basilica, the term came to be applied to any large covered hall, whether it was used for domestic purposes, was a commercial space, a military structure, or religious building.[2]

The plays of Plautus suggest that basilica buildings may have existed prior to Cato's building. The plays were composed between 210 and 184 BC and refer to a building that might be identified with the Atrium Regium.[3] Another early example is the basilica at Pompeii (late 2nd century BC). Inspiration may have come from prototypes like Athens's Stoa Basileios or the hypostyle hall on Delos, but the architectural form is most derived from the audience halls in the royal palaces of the Diadochi kingdoms of the Hellenistic period. These rooms were typically a high nave flanked by colonnades.[3]

These basilicas were rectangular, typically with central nave and aisles, usually with a slightly raised platform and an apse at each of the two ends, adorned with a statue perhaps of the emperor, while the entrances were from the long sides.[4][5] The Roman basilica was a large public building where business or legal matters could be transacted. As early as the time of Augustus, a public basilica for transacting business had been part of any settlement that considered itself a city, used in the same way as the covered market houses of late medieval northern Europe, where the meeting room, for lack of urban space, was set above the arcades, however.[clarify][citation needed] Although their form was variable, basilicas often contained interior colonnades that divided the space, giving aisles or arcaded spaces on one or both sides, with an apse at one end (or less often at each end), where the magistrates sat, often on a slightly raised dais. The central aisle – the nave – tended to be wider and taller than the flanking aisles, so that light could penetrate through the clerestory windows.[citation needed]

In the late Republican era, basilicas were increasingly monumental; Julius Caesar replaced the Basilica Sempronia with his own Basilica Julia, dedicated in 46 BC, while the Basilica Aemilia was rebuilt around 54 BC in so spectacular a fashion that Pliny the Elder wrote that it was among the most beautiful buildings in the world (it was simultaneously renamed the Basilica Paulli). Thereafter until the 4th century AD, monumental basilicas were routinely constructed at Rome by both private citizens and the emperors. These basilicas were reception halls and grand spaces in which élite persons could impress guests and visitors, and could be attached to a large country villa or an urban domus. They were simpler and smaller than were civic basilicas, and can be identified by inscriptions or their position in the archaeological context. Domitian constructed a basilica on the Palatine Hill for his imperial residential complex around 92 AD, and a palatine basilica was typical in imperial palaces throughout the imperial period.[3]

Roman Republic

 
Remains of the 2nd century BC Basilica Aemilia by Giuliano da Sangallo in the 15th century AD

Long, rectangular basilicas with internal peristyle became a quintessential element of Roman urbanism, often forming the architectural background to the city forum and used for diverse purposes.[6] Beginning with Cato in the early second century BC, politicians of the Roman Republic competed with one another by building basilicas bearing their names in the Forum Romanum, the centre of ancient Rome. Outside the city, basilicas symbolised the influence of Rome and became a ubiquitous fixture of Roman coloniae of the late Republic from c.100 BC. The earliest surviving basilica is the basilica of Pompeii, built 120 BC.[6] Basilicas were the administrative and commercial centres of major Roman settlements: the "quintessential architectural expression of Roman administration".[7] Adjoining it there were normally various offices and rooms housing the curia and a shrine for the tutela.[8] Like Roman public baths, basilicas were commonly used as venues for the display of honorific statues and other sculptures, complementing the outdoor public spaces and thoroughfares.[9]

Beside the Basilica Porcia on the Forum Romanum, the Basilica Aemilia was built in 179 BC, and the Basilica Sempronia in 169 BC.[3] In the Republic two types of basilica were built across Italy in the mid-2nd to early 1st centuries BC: either they were nearly square as at Fanum Fortunae, designed by Vitruvius, and Cosa, with a 3:4 width-length ratio; or else they were more rectangular, as Pompeii's basilica, whose ratio is 3:7.[10][3]

The basilica at Ephesus is typical of the basilicas in the Roman East, which usually have a very elongated footprint and a ratio between 1:5 and 1:9, with open porticoes facing the agora (the Hellenic forum); this design was influenced by the existing tradition of long stoae in Hellenistic Asia.[3] Provinces in the west lacked this tradition, and the basilicas the Romans commissioned there were more typically Italian, with the central nave divided from the side-aisles by an internal colonnade in regular proportions.[3]

 
Ruins of the Basilica-stoa at Ephesus
 
Model of the Antonine basilica on Brysa Hill, Carthage
 
Ruins of the Trajanic basilica at Baelo Claudia
 
Ruins of the Severan basilica at Leptis Magna
 
Ruins of the basilica at Volubilis, 217/'8. (After anastylosis)

Early Empire

Beginning with the Forum of Caesar (Latin: forum Iulium) at the end of the Roman Republic, the centre of Rome was embellished with a series of imperial fora typified by a large open space surrounded by a peristyle, honorific statues of the imperial family (gens), and a basilica, often accompanied by other facilities like a temple, market halls and public libraries.[6] In the imperial period, statues of the emperors with inscribed dedications were often installed near the basilicas' tribunals, as Vitruvius recommended. Examples of such dedicatory inscriptions are known from basilicas at Lucus Feroniae and Veleia in Italy and at Cuicul in Africa Proconsolaris, and inscriptions of all kinds were visible in and around basilicas.[11]

At Ephesus the basilica-stoa had two storeys and three aisles and extended the length of the civic agora's north side, complete with colossal statues of the emperor Augustus and his imperial family.[7]

The remains of a large subterranean Neopythagorean basilica dating from the 1st century AD were found near the Porta Maggiore in Rome in 1917, and is known as the Porta Maggiore Basilica.[citation needed][12]

After its destruction in 60 AD, Londinium (London) was endowed with its first forum and basilica under the Flavian dynasty.[13] The basilica delimited the northern edge of the forum with typical nave, aisles, and a tribunal, but with an atypical semi-basement at the western side.[13] Unlike in Gaul, basilica-forum complexes in Roman Britain did not usually include a temple; instead a shrine was usually inside the basilica itself.[13] At Londinium however, there was probably no temple at all attached to the original basilica, but instead a contemporary temple was constructed nearby.[13] Later, in 79 AD, an inscription commemorated the completion of the 385 by 120 foot (117 m × 37 m) basilica at Verulamium (St Albans) under the governor Gnaeus Julius Agricola; by contrast the first basilica at Londinium was only 148 by 75 feet (45 m × 23 m).[13] The smallest known basilica in Britain was built by the Silures at Caerwent and measured 180 by 100 feet (55 m × 30 m).[13]

When Londinium became a colonia, the whole city was re-planned and a new great forum-basilica complex erected, larger than any in Britain.[14] Londinium's basilica, more than 500 feet (150 m) long, was the largest north of the Alps and a similar length to the modern St Paul's Cathedral.[14] Only the later basilica-forum complex at Treverorum was larger, while at Rome only the 525 foot (160 m) Basilica Ulpia exceeded London's in size.[14] It probably had arcaded, rather than trabeate, aisles, and a double row of square offices on the northern side, serving as the administrative centre of the colonia, and its size and splendour probably indicate an imperial decision to change the administrative capital of Britannia to Londinium from Camulodunum (Colchester), as all provincial capitals were designated coloniae.[14] In 300 Londinium's basilica was destroyed as a result of the rebellion led by the Augustus of the break-away Britannic Empire, Carausius.[15] Remains of the great basilica and its arches were discovered during the construction of Leadenhall Market in the 1880s.[14]

At Corinth in the 1st century AD, a new basilica was constructed in on the east side of the forum.[7] It was possibly inside the basilica that Paul the Apostle, according to the Acts of the Apostles (Acts 18:12–17) was investigated and found innocent by the Suffect Consul Lucius Junius Gallio Annaeanus, the brother of Seneca the Younger, after charges were brought against him by members of the local Jewish diaspora.[7] Modern tradition instead associates the incident with an open-air inscribed bema in the forum itself.[7]

The emperor Trajan constructed his own imperial forum in Rome accompanied by his Basilica Ulpia dedicated in 112.[16][3] Trajan's Forum (Latin: forum Traiani) was separated from the Temple of Trajan, the Ulpian Library, and his famous Column depicting the Dacian Wars by the Basilica.[16][3] It was an especially grand example whose particular symmetrical arrangement with an apse at both ends was repeated in the provinces as a characteristic form.[3] To improve the quality of the Roman concrete used in the Basilica Ulpia, volcanic scoria from the Bay of Naples and Mount Vesuvius were imported which, though heavier, was stronger than the pumice available closer to Rome.[17] The Bailica Ulpia is probably an early example of tie bars to restrain the lateral thrust of the barrel vault resting on a colonnade; both tie-bars and scoria were used in contemporary work at the Baths of Trajan and later the Hadrianic domed vault of the Pantheon.[17]

In early 123, the augusta and widow of the emperor Trajan, Pompeia Plotina died. Hadrian, successor to Trajan, deified her and had a basilica constructed in her honour in southern Gaul.[18]

The Basilica Hilariana (built c.145–155) was designed for the use of the cult of Cybele.[3]

The largest basilica built outside Rome was that built under the Antonine dynasty on the Byrsa hill in Carthage.[19] The basilica was built together with a forum of enormous size and was contemporary with a great complex of public baths and a new aqueduct system running for 82 miles (132 km), then the longest in the Roman Empire.[19]

The basilica at Leptis Magna, built by the Septimius Severus a century later in about 216 is a notable 3rd century AD example of the traditional type, most notable among the works influenced by the Basilica Ulpia.[2][3] The basilica at Leptis was built mainly of limestone ashlar, but the apses at either end were only limestone in the outer sections and built largely of rubble masonry faced with brick, with a number of decorative panels in opus reticulatum.[20] The basilica stood in a new forum and was accompanied by a programme of Severan works at Leptis including thermae, a new harbour, and a public fountain.[6] At Volubilis, principal city of Mauretania Tingitana, a basilica modelled on Leptis Magna's was completed during the short reign of Macrinus.[21]

Basilicas in the Roman Forum

 
Bust of Augustus from the basilica-stoa of Ephesus, defaced with a Christian cross[9]

Late antiquity

 
Euphrasian Basilica, Poreč, mid-6th century
 
Church of the Acheiropoietos's arcaded single side aisles
 
Church of the Nativity's trabeate doubled side aisles
 
Ruins of the domestic basilica at the Villa Romana del Casale, Piazza Armerina, 4th century

The aisled-hall plan of the basilica was adopted by a number of religious cults in late antiquity.[2] At Sardis, a monumental basilica housed the city's synagogue, serving the local Jewish diaspora.[22] New religions like Christianity required space for congregational worship, and the basilica was adapted by the early Church for worship.[8] Because they were able to hold large number of people, basilicas were adopted for Christian liturgical use after Constantine the Great. The early churches of Rome were basilicas with an apsidal tribunal and used the same construction techniques of columns and timber roofing.[2]

At the start of the 4th century at Rome there was a change in burial and funerary practice, moving away from earlier preferences for inhumation in cemeteries – popular from the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD – to the newer practice of burial in catacombs and inhumation inside Christian basilicas themselves.[23] Conversely, new basilicas often were erected on the site of existing early Christian cemeteries and martyria, related to the belief in Bodily Resurrection, and the cult of the sacred dead became monumentalised in basilica form.[24] Traditional civic basilicas and bouleuteria declined in use with the weakening of the curial class (Latin: curiales) in the 4th and 5th centuries, while their structures were well suited to the requirements of congregational liturgies.[24] The conversion of these types of buildings into Christian basilicas was also of symbolic significance, asserting the dominance of Christianity and supplanting the old political function of public space and the city-centre with an emphatic Christian social statement.[24] Traditional monumental civic amenities like gymnasia, palaestrae, and thermae were also falling into disuse, and became favoured sites for the construction of new churches, including basilicas.[24]

Under Constantine, the basilica became the most prestigious style of church building, was "normative" for church buildings by the end of the 4th century, and were ubiquitous in western Asia, North Africa, and most of Europe by the close of the 7th century.[25] Christians also continued to hold services in synagogues, houses, and gardens, and continued practising baptism in rivers, ponds, and Roman bathhouses.[25][26]

The development of Christian basilicas began even before Constantine's reign: a 3rd-century mud-brick house at Aqaba had become a Christian church and was rebuilt as a basilica.[25] Within was a rectangular assembly hall with frescoes and at the east end an ambo, a cathedra, and an altar.[25] Also within the church were a catecumenon (for catechumens), a baptistery, a diaconicon, and a prothesis: all features typical of later 4th century basilica churches.[25] A Christian structure which included the prototype of the triumphal arch at the east end of later Constantinian basilicas.[25] Known as the Megiddo church, it was built at Kefar 'Othnay in Palestine, possibly c. 230, for or by the Roman army stationed at Legio (later Lajjun).[25] Its dedicatory inscriptions include the names of women who contributed to the building and were its major patrons, as well as men's names.[25] A number of buildings previously believed to have been Constantinian or 4th century have been reassessed as dating to later periods, and certain examples of 4th century basilicas are not distributed throughout the Mediterranean world at all evenly.[27] Christian basilicas and martyria attributable to the 4th century are rare on the Greek mainland and on the Cyclades, while the Christian basilicas of Egypt, Cyprus, Syria, Transjordan, Hispania, and Gaul are nearly all of later date.[27] The basilica at Ephesus's Magnesian Gate, the episcopal church at Laodicea on the Lycus, and two extramural churches at Sardis have all been considered 4th century constructions, but on weak evidence.[24] Development of pottery chronologies for Late Antiquity had helped resolve questions of dating basilicas of the period.[28]

Three examples of a basilica discoperta or "hypaethral basilica" with no roof above the nave are inferred to have existed.[29] The 6th century Anonymous pilgrim of Piacenza described a "a basilica built with a quadriporticus, with the middle atrium uncovered" at Hebron, while at Pécs and near Salona two ruined 5th buildings of debated interpretation might have been either roofless basilica churches or simply courtyards with an exedra at the end.[29] An old theory by Ejnar Dyggve that these were the architectural intermediary between the Christian martyrium and the classical heröon is no longer credited.[29]

The magnificence of early Christian basilicas reflected the patronage of the emperor and recalled his imperial palaces and reflected the royal associations of the basilica with the Hellenistic Kingdoms and even earlier monarchies like that of Pharaonic Egypt.[25] Similarly, the name and association resounded with the Christian claims of the royalty of Christ – according to the Acts of the Apostles the earliest Christians had gathered at the royal Stoa of Solomon in Jerusalem to assert Jesus's royal heritage.[25] For early Christians, the Bible supplied evidence that the First Temple and Solomon's palace were both hypostyle halls and somewhat resembled basilicas.[25] Hypostyle synagogues, often built with apses in Palestine by the 6th century, share a common origin with the Christian basilicas in the civic basilicas and in the pre-Roman style of hypostyle halls in the Mediterranean Basin, particularly in Egypt, where pre-classical hypostyles continued to be built in the imperial period and were themselves converted into churches in the 6th century.[25] Other influences on the evolution of Christian basilicas may have come from elements of domestic and palatial architecture during the pre-Constantinian period of Christianity, including the reception hall or aula (Ancient Greek: αὐλή, romanized: aulḗ, lit.'courtyard') and the atria and triclinia of élite Roman dwellings.[25] The versatility of the basilica form and its variability in size and ornament recommended itself to the early Christian Church: basilicas could be grandiose as the Basilica of Maxentius in the Forum Romanum or more practical like the so-called Basilica of Bahira in Bosra, while the Basilica Constantiniana on the Lateran Hill was of intermediate scale.[25] This basilica, begun in 313, was the first imperial Christian basilica.[25] Imperial basilicas were first constructed for the Christian Eucharist liturgy in the reign of Constantine.[26]

Basilica churches were not economically inactive. Like non-Christian or civic basilicas, basilica churches had a commercial function integral to their local trade routes and economies. Amphorae discovered at basilicas attest their economic uses and can reveal their position in wider networks of exchange.[28] At Dion near Mount Olympus in Macedonia, now an Archaeological Park, the latter 5th century Cemetery Basilica, a small church, was replete with potsherds from all over the Mediterranean, evidencing extensive economic activity took place there.[28][30] Likewise at Maroni Petrera on Cyprus, the amphorae unearthed by archaeologists in the 5th century basilica church had been imported from North Africa, Egypt, Palestine, and the Aegean basin, as well as from neighbouring Asia Minor.[28][31]

According to Vegetius, writing c. 390, basilicas were convenient for drilling soldiers of the Late Roman army during inclement weather.[3]

Basilica of Maxentius

 
Remains of the Basilica of Maxentius and Constantine in Rome. The building's northern aisle is all that remains.
 
Floor plan of the Basilica of Maxentius and Constantine
 
The 4th-century Basilica of Constantine at Trier was a palatine basilica, used for receiving Constantine's political clients. The apse windows are in fact smaller than the side windows, producing an optical illusion of still greater size and distance.

The 4th century Basilica of Maxentius, begun by Maxentius between 306 and 312 and according to Aurelius Victor's De Caesaribus completed by Constantine I, was an innovation.[32][33] Earlier basilicas had mostly had wooden roofs, but this basilica dispensed with timber trusses and used instead cross-vaults made from Roman bricks and concrete to create one of the ancient world's largest covered spaces: 80 m long, 25 m wide, and 35 m high.[3][32] The vertices of the cross-vaults, the largest Roman examples, were 35 m.[32] The vault was supported on marble monolithic columns 14.5 m tall.[32] The foundations are as much as 8 m deep.[17] The vault was supported by brick latticework ribs (Latin: bipedalis) forming lattice ribbing, an early form of rib vault, and distributing the load evenly across the vault's span.[17] Similar brick ribs were employed at the Baths of Maxentius on the Palatine Hill, where they supported walls on top of the vault.[17] Also known as the Basilica Constantiniana, 'Basilica of Constantine' or Basilica Nova, 'New Basilica', it chanced to be the last civic basilica built in Rome.[3][32]

Inside the basilica the central nave was accessed by five doors opening from an entrance hall on the eastern side and terminated in an apse at the western end.[32] Another, shallower apse with niches for statues was added to the centre of the north wall in a second campaign of building, while the western apse housed a colossal acrolithic statue of the emperor Constantine enthroned.[32] Fragments of this statue are now in the courtyard of the Palazzo dei Conservatori on the Capitoline Hill, part of the Capitoline Museums. Opposite the northern apse on the southern wall, another monumental entrance was added and elaborated with a portico of porphyry columns.[32] One of the remaining marble interior columns was removed in 1613 by Pope Paul V and set up as an honorific column outside Santa Maria Maggiore.[32]

Constantinian period

 
Aula Palatina, Constantine's basilica at Trier, c. 310

In the early 4th century Eusebius used the word basilica (Ancient Greek: βασιλική, romanizedbasilikḗ) to refer to Christian churches; in subsequent centuries as before, the word basilica referred in Greek to the civic, non-ecclesiastical buildings, and only in rare exceptions to churches.[34] Churches were nonetheless basilican in form, with an apse or tribunal at the end of a nave with two or more aisles typical.[34] A narthex (sometimes with an exonarthex) or vestibule could be added to the entrance, together with an atrium, and the interior might have transepts, a pastophorion, and galleries, but the basic scheme with clerestory windows and a wooden truss roof remained the most typical church type until the 6th century.[34] The nave would be kept clear for liturgical processions by the clergy, with the laity in the galleries and aisles to either side.[34] The function of Christian churches was similar to that of the civic basilicas but very different from temples in contemporary Graeco-Roman polytheism: while pagan temples were entered mainly by priests and thus had their splendour visible from without, within Christian basilicas the main ornamentation was visible to the congregants admitted inside.[25] Christian priests did not interact with attendees during the rituals which took place at determined intervals, whereas pagan priests were required to perform individuals' sacrifices in the more chaotic environment of the temple precinct, with the temple's facade as backdrop.[25] In basilicas constructed for Christian uses, the interior was often decorated with frescoes, but these buildings' wooden roof often decayed and failed to preserve the fragile frescoes within.[27] Thus was lost an important part of the early history of Christian art, which would have sought to communicate early Christian ideas to the mainly illiterate Late Antique society.[27] On the exterior, basilica church complexes included cemeteries, baptisteries, and fonts which "defined ritual and liturgical access to the sacred", elevated the social status of the Church hierarchy, and which complemented the development of a Christian historical landscape; Constantine and his mother Helena were patrons of basilicas in important Christian sites in the Holy Land and Rome, and at Milan and Constantinople.[27]

Around 310, while still a self-proclaimed augustus unrecognised at Rome, Constantine began the construction of the Basilica Constantiniana or Aula Palatina, 'palatine hall', as a reception hall for his imperial seat at Trier (Augusta Treverorum), capital of Belgica Prima.[3] On the exterior, Constantine's palatine basilica was plain and utilitarian, but inside was very grandly decorated.[35]

In the reign of Constantine I, a basilica was constructed for the Pope in the former barracks of the Equites singulares Augusti, the cavalry arm of the Praetorian Guard.[36] (Constantine had disbanded the Praetorian guard after his defeat of their emperor Maxentius and replaced them with another bodyguard, the Scholae Palatinae.)[36] In 313 Constantine began construction of the Basilica Constantiniana on the Lateran Hill.[25] This basilica became Rome's cathedral church, known as St John Lateran, and was more richly decorated and larger than any previous Christian structure.[25] However, because of its remote position from the Forum Romanum on the city's edge, it did not connect with the older imperial basilicas in the fora of Rome.[25] Outside the basilica was the Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius, a rare example of an Antique statue that has never been underground.[9]

According to the Liber Pontificalis, Constantine was also responsible for the rich interior decoration of the Lateran Baptistery constructed under Pope Sylvester I (r. 314–335), sited about 50 metres (160 ft).[26] The Lateran Baptistery was the first monumental free-standing baptistery, and in subsequent centuries Christian basilica churches were often endowed with such baptisteries.[26]

At Cirta, a Christian basilica erected by Constantine was taken over by his opponents, the Donatists.[36] After Constantine's failure to resolve the Donatist controversy by coercion between 317 and 321, he allowed the Donatists, who dominated Africa, to retain the basilica and constructed a new one for the Catholic Church.[36]

The original titular churches of Rome were those which had been private residences and which were donated to be converted to places of Christian worship.[25] Above an originally 1st century AD villa and its later adjoining warehouse and Mithraeum, a large basilica church had been erected by 350, subsuming the earlier structures beneath it as a crypt.[25] The basilica was the first church of San Clemente al Laterano.[25] Similarly, at Santi Giovanni e Paolo al Celio, an entire ancient city block – a 2nd-century insula on the Caelian Hill – was buried beneath a 4th-century basilica.[25] The site was already venerated as the martyrium of three early Christian burials beforehand, and part of the insula had been decorated in the style favoured by Christian communities frequenting the early Catacombs of Rome.[25]

By 350 in Serdica (Sofia, Bulgaria), a monumental basilica – the Church of Saint Sophia – was erected, covering earlier structures including a Christian chapel, an oratory, and a cemetery dated to c. 310.[25] Other major basilica from this period, in this part of Europe, is the Great Basilica in Philippopolis (Plovdiv, Bulgaria) from the 4th century AD.

Valentinianic–Theodosian period

In the late 4th century the dispute between Nicene and Arian Christianity came to head at Mediolanum (Milan), where Ambrose was bishop.[37] At Easter in 386 the Arian party, preferred by the Theodosian dynasty, sought to wrest the use of the basilica from the Nicene partisan Ambrose.[37] According to Augustine of Hippo, the dispute resulted in Ambrose organising an 'orthodox' sit-in at the basilica and arranged the miraculous invention and translation of martyrs, whose hidden remains had been revealed in a vision.[37] During the sit-in, Augustine credits Ambrose with the introduction from the "eastern regions" of antiphonal chanting, to give heart to the orthodox congregation, though in fact music was likely part of Christian ritual since the time of the Pauline epistles.[38][37] The arrival and reburial of the martyrs' uncorrupted remains in the basilica in time for the Easter celebrations was seen as powerful step towards divine approval.[37]

At Philippi, the market adjoining the 1st-century forum was demolished and replaced with a Christian basilica.[7] Civic basilicas throughout Asia Minor became Christian places of worship; examples are known at Ephesus, Aspendos, and at Magnesia on the Maeander.[24] The Great Basilica in Antioch of Pisidia is a rare securely dated 4th century Christian basilica and was the city's cathedral church.[24] The mosaics of the floor credit Optimus, the bishop, with its dedication.[24] Optimus was a contemporary of Basil of Caesarea and corresponded with him c. 377.[24] Optimus was the city's delegate at the First Council of Constantinople in 381, so the 70 m-long single-apsed basilica near the city walls must have been constructed around that time.[24] Pisidia had a number of Christian basilicas constructed in Late Antiquity, particularly in former bouleuteria, as at Sagalassos, Selge, Pednelissus, while a civic basilica was converted for Christians' use in Cremna.[24]

At Chalcedon, opposite Constantinople on the Bosporus, the relics of Euphemia – a supposed Christian martyr of the Diocletianic Persecution – were housed in a martyrium accompanied by a basilica.[39] The basilica already existed when Egeria passed through Chalcedon in 384, and in 436 Melania the Younger visited the church on her own journey to the Holy Land.[39] From the description of Evagrius Scholasticus the church is identifiable as an aisled basilica attached to the martyrium and preceded by an atrium.[40] The Council of Chalcedon (8–31 October 451) was held in the basilica, which must have been large enough to accommodate the more than two hundred bishops that attended its third session, together with their translators and servants; around 350 bishops attended the Council in all.[41][42] In an ekphrasis in his eleventh sermon, Asterius of Amasea described an icon in the church depicting Euphemia's martyrdom.[39] The church was restored under the patronage of the patricia and daughter of Olybrius, Anicia Juliana.[43] Pope Vigilius fled there from Constantinople during the Three-Chapter Controversy.[44] The basilica, which lay outside the walls of Chalcedon, was destroyed by the Persians in the Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628 during one of the Sasanian occupations of the city in 615 and 626.[45] The relics of Euphemia were reportedly translated to a new Church of St Euphemia in Constantinople in 680, though Cyril Mango argued the translation never took place.[46][47] Subsequently, Asterius's sermon On the Martyrdom of St Euphemia was advanced as an argument for iconodulism at the Second Council of Nicaea in 787.[48]

In the late 4th century, a large basilica church dedicated to Mary, mother of Jesus was constructed in Ephesus in the former south stoa (a commercial basilica) of the Temple of Hadrian Olympios.[49][50] Ephesus was the centre of the Roman province of Asia, and was the site of the city's famed Temple of Artemis, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.[51] It had also been a centre of the Roman imperial cult in Asia; Ephesus was three times declared neokoros (lit.'temple-warden') and had constructed a Temple of the Sebastoi to the Flavian dynasty.[51] The Basilica of the Virgin Mary was probably the venue for the 431 Council of Ephesus and the 449 Second Council of Ephesus, both convened by Theodosius II.[49] At some point during the Christianisation of the Roman world, Christian crosses were cut into the faces of the colossal statues of Augustus and Livia that stood in the basilica-stoa of Ephesus; the crosses were perhaps intended to exorcise demons in a process akin to baptism.[9] In the eastern cemetery of Hierapolis the 5th century domed octagonal martyrium of Philip the Apostle was built alongside a basilica church, while at Myra the Basilica of St Nicholas was constructed at the tomb of Saint Nicholas.[24]

At Constantinople the earliest basilica churches, like the 5th century basilica at the Monastery of Stoudios, were mostly equipped with a small cruciform crypt (Ancient Greek: κρυπτή, romanizedkryptḗ, lit.'hidden'), a space under the church floor beneath the altar.[52] Typically, these crypts were accessed from the apse's interior, though not always, as at the 6th century Church of St John at the Hebdomon, where access was from outside the apse.[52] At Thessaloniki, the Roman bath where tradition held Demetrius of Thessaloniki had been martyred was subsumed beneath the 5th century basilica of Hagios Demetrios, forming a crypt.[52]

The largest and oldest basilica churches in Egypt were at Pbow, a coenobitic monastery established by Pachomius the Great in 330.[53] The 4th century basilica was replaced by a large 5th century building (36 × 72 m) with five aisles and internal colonnades of pink granite columns and paved with limestone.[53] This monastery was the administrative centre of the Pachomian order where the monks would gather twice annually and whose library may have produced many surviving manuscripts of biblical, Gnostic, and other texts in Greek and Coptic.[53] In North Africa, late antique basilicas were often built on a doubled plan.[54] In the 5th century, basilicas with two apses, multiple aisles, and doubled churches were common, including examples respectively at Sufetula, Tipasa, and Djémila.[54] Generally, North African basilica churches' altars were in the nave and the main building medium was opus africanum of local stone, and spolia was infrequently used.[54]

The Church of the East's Council of Seleucia-Ctesiphon was convened by the Sasanian Emperor Yazdegerd I at his capital at Ctesiphon; according to Synodicon Orientale, the emperor ordered that the former churches in the Sasanian Empire to be restored and rebuilt, that such clerics and ascetics as had been imprisoned were to be released, and their Nestorian Christian communities allowed to circulate freely and practice openly.[55]

In eastern Syria, the Church of the East developed at typical pattern of basilica churches.[55] Separate entrances for men and women were installed in the southern or northern wall; within, the east end of the nave was reserved for men, while women and children were stood behind. In the nave was a bema, from which Scripture could be read, and which were inspired by the equivalent in synagogues and regularised by the Church of Antioch.[55] The Council of 410 stipulated that on Sunday the archdeacon would read the Gospels from the bema.[55] Standing near the bema, the lay folk could chant responses to the reading and if positioned near the šqāqonā ("a walled floor-level pathway connecting the bema to the altar area") could try to kiss or touch the Gospel Book as it was processed from the deacons' room to the bema and thence to the altar.[55] Some ten Eastern churches in eastern Syria have been investigated by thorough archaeology.[55]

A Christian basilica was constructed in the first half of the 5th century at Olympia, where the statue of Zeus by Phidias had been noted as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World ever since the 2nd century BC list compiled by Antipater of Sidon.[56][57] Cultural tourism thrived at Olympia and Ancient Greek religion continued to be practised there well into the 4th century.[56] At Nicopolis in Epirus, founded by Augustus to commemorate his victory at the Battle of Actium at the end of the Last war of the Roman Republic, four early Christian basilicas were built during Late Antiquity whose remains survive to the present.[58] In the 4th or 5th century, Nicopolis was surrounded by a new city wall.[58]

In Bulgaria there are major basilicas from that time like Elenska Basilica and the Red Church.

 
Ruins of the Stoudios Monastery, with verd antique colonnade and Cosmatesque floor in situ

Leonid period

On Crete, the Roman cities suffered from repeated earthquakes in the 4th century, but between c. 450 and c. 550, a large number of Christian basilicas were constructed.[59] Crete was throughout Late Antiquity a province of the Diocese of Macedonia, governed from Thessaloniki.[59]

Nine basilica churches were built at Nea Anchialos, ancient Phthiotic Thebes (Ancient Greek: Θη̑βαι Φθιώτιδες, romanizedΤhḗbai Phthiṓtides), which was in its heyday the primary port of Thessaly. The episcopal see was the three-aisled Basilica A, the Church of St Demetrius of Thessaloniki, and similar to the Church of the Acheiropoietos in Thessaloniki.[60] Its atrium perhaps had a pair of towers to either side and its construction dates to the late 5th/early 6th century.[60] The Elpidios Basilica – Basilica B – was of similar age, and the city was home to a large complex of ecclesiastical buildings including Basilica G, with its luxurious mosaic floors and a mid-6th century inscription proclaiming the patronage of the bishop Peter. Outside the defensive wall was Basilica D, a 7th-century cemetery church.[60]

Stobi, (Ancient Greek: Στόβοι, romanizedStóboi) the capital from the late 4th century of the province of Macedonia II Salutaris, had numerous basilicas and six palaces in late antiquity.[61] The Old Basilica had two phases of geometric pavements, the second phase of which credited the bishop Eustathios as patron of the renovations. A newer episcopal basilica was built by the bishop Philip atop the remains of the earlier structure, and two further basilicas were within the walls.[61] The Central Basilica replaced a synagogue on a site razed in the late 5th century, and there was also a North Basilica and further basilicas without the walls.[61] Various mosaics and sculptural decorations have been found there, and while the city suffered from the Ostrogoths in 479 and an earthquake in 518, ceasing to be a major city thereafter, it remained a bishopric until the end of the 7th century and the Basilica of Philip had its templon restored in the 8th century.[61]

The Small Basilica of Philippopolis (Plovdiv, Bulgaria) in Thrace was built in the second half of the 5th century AD.

Justinianic period

Justinian I constructed at Ephesus a large basilica church, the Basilica of St John, above the supposed tomb of John the Apostle.[51] The church was a domed cruciform basilica begun in 535/6; enormous and lavishly decorated, it was built in the same style as Justinian's Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople.[49][24] The Justinianic basilica replaced an earlier, smaller structure which Egeria had planned to visit in the 4th century, and remains of a 2,130 foot (650 m) aqueduct branch built to supply the complex with water probably dates from Justinian's reign.[49][62] The Ephesians' basilicas to St Mary and St John were both equipped with baptisteries with filling and draining pipes: both fonts were flush with the floor and unsuitable for infant baptism.[26] As with most Justinianic baptisteries in the Balkans and Asia Minor, the baptistery at the Basilica of St John was on the northern side of the basilica's nave; the 734 m2 baptistery was separated from the basilica by a 3 m-wide corridor.[26] According to the 6th century Syriac writer John of Ephesus, a Syriac Orthodox Christian, the heterodox Miaphysites held ordination services in the courtyard of the Basilica of St John under cover of night.[49] Somewhat outside the ancient city on the hill of Selçuk, the Justinianic basilica became the centre of the city after the 7th century Arab–Byzantine wars.[49]

At Constantinople, Justinian constructed the largest domed basilica: on the site of the 4th century basilica Church of Holy Wisdom, the emperor ordered construction of the huge domed basilica that survives to the present: the Hagia Sophia.[27] This basilica, which "continues to stand as one of the most visually imposing and architecturally daring churches in the Mediterranean", was the cathedral of Constantinople and the patriarchal church of the Patriarch of Constantinople.[27] Hagia Sophia, originally founded by Constantine, was at the social and political heart of Constantinople, near to the Great Palace, the Baths of Zeuxippus, and the Hippodrome of Constantinople, while the headquarters of the Ecumenical Patriarchate was within the basilica's immediate vicinity.[63]

The mid-6th century Bishop of Poreč (Latin: Parens or Parentium; Ancient Greek: Πάρενθος, romanized: Párenthos) replaced an earlier 4th century basilica with the magnificent Euphrasian Basilica in the style of contemporary basilicas at Ravenna.[64] Some column capitals were of marble from Greece identical to those in Basilica of San Vitale and must have been imported from the Byzantine centre along with the columns and some of the opus sectile.[64] There are conch mosaics in the basilica's three apses and the fine opus sectile on the central apse wall is "exceptionally well preserved".[64]

The 4th century basilica of Saint Sophia Church at Serdica (Sofia, Bulgaria) was rebuilt in the 5th century and ultimately replaced by a new monumental basilica in the late 6th century, and some construction phases continued into the 8th century.[65] This basilica was the cathedral of Serdica and was one of three basilicas known to lie outside the walls; three more churches were within the walled city, of which the Church of Saint George was a former Roman bath built in the 4th century, and another was a former Mithraeum.[65] The basilicas were associated with cemeteries with Christian inscriptions and burials.[65]

Another basilica from this period in Bulgaria was the Belovo Basilica (6th century AD).

The Miaphysite convert from the Church of the East, Ahudemmeh constructed a new basilica c.565 dedicated to Saint Sergius at ʿAin Qenoye (or ʿAin Qena according to Bar Hebraeus) after being ordained bishop of Beth Arbaye by Jacob Baradaeus and while proselytizing among the Bedouin of Arbayistan in the Sasanian Empire.[66] According to Ahudemmeh's biographer this basilica and its martyrium, in the upper Tigris valley, was supposed to be a copy of the Basilica of St Sergius at Sergiopolis (Resafa), in the middle Euphrates, so that the Arabs would not have to travel so far on pilgrimage.[66] More likely, with the support of Khosrow I for its construction and defence against the Nestorians who were Miaphysites' rivals, the basilica was part of an attempt to control the frontier tribes and limit their contact with the Roman territory of Justinian, who had agreed in the 562 Fifty-Year Peace Treaty to pay 30,000 nomismata annually to Khosrow in return for a demilitarization of the frontier after the latest phase of the Roman–Persian Wars.[66] After being mentioned in 828 and 936, the basilica at ʿAin Qenoye disappeared from recorded history, though it may have remained occupied for centuries, and was rediscovered as a ruin by Carsten Niebuhr in 1766.[67] The name of the modern site Qasr Serīj is derived from the basilica's dedication to St Sergius.[66] Qasr Serīj's construction may have been part of the policy of toleration that Khosrow and his successors had for Miaphysitism – a contrast with Justinian's persecution of heterodoxy within the Roman empire.[66] This policy itself encouraged many tribes to favour the Persian cause, especially after the death in 569 of the Ghassanid Kingdom's Miaphysite king al-Harith ibn Jabalah (Latin: Flavius Arethas, Ancient Greek: Ἀρέθας) and the 584 suppression by the Romans of his successors' dynasty.[66]

Palace basilicas

 
Floor plan of a Christian church of basilical form, with part of the transept shaded. Either the part of the nave lying to the west in the diagram or the choir may have a hall structure instead. The choir also may be aisleless.

In the Roman Imperial period (after about 27 BC), a basilica for large audiences also became a feature in palaces. In the 3rd century of the Christian era, the governing elite appeared less frequently in the forums.

They now tended to dominate their cities from opulent palaces and country villas, set a little apart from traditional centers of public life. Rather than retreats from public life, however, these residences were the forum made private.

— Peter Brown, in Paul Veyne, 1987

Seated in the tribune of his basilica, the great man would meet his dependent clientes early every morning.

Constantine's basilica at Trier, the Aula Palatina (AD 306), is still standing. A private basilica excavated at Bulla Regia (Tunisia), in the "House of the Hunt", dates from the first half of the 5th century. Its reception or audience hall is a long rectangular nave-like space, flanked by dependent rooms that mostly also open into one another, ending in a semi-circular apse, with matching transept spaces. Clustered columns emphasised the "crossing" of the two axes.

Christian adoption of the basilica form

 
Structural elements of a gothic basilica.
Variations: Where the roofs have a low slope, the triforium gallery may have own windows or may be missing.

In the 4th century, once the Imperial authorities had decriminalised Christianity with the 313 Edict of Milan, and with the activities of Constantine the Great and his mother Helena, Christians were prepared to build larger and more handsome edifices for worship than the furtive meeting-places (such as the Cenacle, cave-churches, house churches such as that of the martyrs John and Paul) they had been using. Architectural formulas for temples were unsuitable due to their pagan associations, and because pagan cult ceremonies and sacrifices occurred outdoors under the open sky in the sight of the gods, with the temple, housing the cult figures and the treasury, as a backdrop. The usable model at hand, when Constantine wanted to memorialise his imperial piety, was the familiar conventional architecture of the basilicas.[69]

There were several variations of the basic plan of the secular basilica, always some kind of rectangular hall, but the one usually followed for churches had a central nave with one aisle at each side and an apse at one end opposite to the main door at the other end. In (and often also in front of) the apse was a raised platform, where the altar was placed, and from where the clergy officiated. In secular building this plan was more typically used for the smaller audience halls of the emperors, governors, and the very rich than for the great public basilicas functioning as law courts and other public purposes.[70] Constantine built a basilica of this type in his palace complex at Trier, later very easily adopted for use as a church. It is a long rectangle two storeys high, with ranks of arch-headed windows one above the other, without aisles (there was no mercantile exchange in this imperial basilica) and, at the far end beyond a huge arch, the apse in which Constantine held state.

Development

 
 
Assumption of Mary's in Bad Königshofen (Franconia, Germany) is a pseudobasilica

Putting an altar instead of the throne, as was done at Trier, made a church. Basilicas of this type were built in western Europe, Greece, Syria, Egypt, and Palestine, that is, at any early centre of Christianity. Good early examples of the architectural basilica include the Church of the Nativity at Bethlehem (6th century), the church of St Elias at Thessalonica (5th century), and the two great basilicas at Ravenna.

The first basilicas with transepts were built under the orders of Emperor Constantine, both in Rome and in his "New Rome", Constantinople:

Around 380, Gregory Nazianzen, describing the Constantinian Church of the Holy Apostles at Constantinople, was the first to point out its resemblance to a cross. Because the cult of the cross was spreading at about the same time, this comparison met with stunning success.

Yvon Thébert, in Veyne, 1987

Thus, a Christian symbolic theme was applied quite naturally to a form borrowed from civil semi-public precedents. The first great Imperially sponsored Christian basilica is that of St John Lateran, which was given to the Bishop of Rome by Constantine right before or around the Edict of Milan in 313 and was consecrated in the year 324. In the later 4th century, other Christian basilicas were built in Rome: Santa Sabina, and St Paul's Outside the Walls (4th century), and later St Clement (6th century).

A Christian basilica of the 4th or 5th century stood behind its entirely enclosed forecourt ringed with a colonnade or arcade, like the stoa or peristyle that was its ancestor or like the cloister that was its descendant. This forecourt was entered from outside through a range of buildings along the public street. This was the architectural ground-plan of St. Peter's Basilica in Rome, until in the 15th century it was demolished to make way for a modern church built to a new plan.

In most basilicas, the central nave is taller than the aisles, forming a row of windows called a clerestory. Some basilicas in the Caucasus, particularly those of Armenia and Georgia, have a central nave only slightly higher than the two aisles and a single pitched roof covering all three. The result is a much darker interior. This plan is known as the "oriental basilica", or "pseudobasilica" in central Europe. A peculiar type of basilica, known as three-church basilica, was developed in early medieval Georgia, characterised by the central nave which is completely separated from the aisles with solid walls.[71]

Gradually, in the Early Middle Ages there emerged the massive Romanesque churches, which still kept the fundamental plan of the basilica.

In Medieval Bulgaria the Great Basilica was finished around 875. The architectural complex in Pliska, the first capital of the First Bulgarian Empire, included a cathedral, an archbishop's palace and a monastery.[72] The basilica was one of the greatest Christian cathedrals in Europe of the time, with an area of 2,920 square metres (31,400 sq ft). The still in use Church of Saint Sophia in Ohrid is another example from Medieval Bulgaria.

In Romania, the word for church both as a building and as an institution is biserică, derived from the term basilica.

In the United States the style was copied with variances. An American church built imitating the architecture of an Early Christian basilica, St. Mary's (German) Church in Pennsylvania, was demolished in 1997.

Catholic basilicas

 
St Peter's Basilica, Vatican City, a major basilica of the Catholic Church, is a central-plan building, enlarged by a basilical nave

In the Catholic Church, a basilica is a large and important church building. This designation may be made by the Pope or may date from time immemorial.[73][74] Basilica churches are distinguished for ceremonial purposes from other churches. The building does not need to be a basilica in the architectural sense. Basilicas are either major basilicas – of which there are four, all in the diocese of Rome—or minor basilicas, of which there were 1,810 worldwide as of 2019.[75] The Umbraculum is displayed in a basilica to the right side (i.e. the Epistle side) of the altar to indicate that the church has been awarded the rank of a basilica.

See also

Architecture

References

Citations

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  32. ^ a b c d e f g h i Förtsch, Reinhard (2006). "Basilica Constantiniana". Brill's New Pauly.
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  38. ^ Augustine of Hippo, Confessiones, ix:7:15–16
  39. ^ a b c Klein, Konstantin (2018), Nicholson, Oliver (ed.), "Chalcedon", The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780198662778.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-866277-8, retrieved 8 July 2020
  40. ^ Evagrius Scholasticus, Ecclesiastical History, II.3: "The precinct consists of three huge structures: one is open-air, adorned with a long court and columns on all sides, and another in turn after this is almost alike in breadth and length and columns but differing only in the roof above." Whitby, Michael, ed. (2000). The Ecclesiastical History of Evagrius Scholasticus. Translated Texts for Historians 33. Liverpool University Press. pp. 63–64 & notes 24–27. doi:10.3828/978-0-85323-605-4. ISBN 978-0-85323-605-4.
  41. ^ Whitby, Michael, ed. (2000). The Ecclesiastical History of Evagrius Scholasticus. Translated Texts for Historians 33. Liverpool University Press. pp. 63–64 & notes 24–27. doi:10.3828/978-0-85323-605-4. ISBN 978-0-85323-605-4.
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  50. ^ Van Dam, Raymond (2008). Ashbrook Harvey, Susan; Hunter, David G. (eds.). The East (1): Greece and Asia Minor. The Oxford Handbook of Early Christian Studies. Oxford University Press. pp. 323–343. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199271566.003.0017. ISBN 978-0199271566.
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  55. ^ a b c d e f Walker, Joel (2012). Johnson, Scott Fitzgerald (ed.). From Nisibis to Xi'an: The Church of the East in Late Antique Eurasia. The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity. Oxford University Press. pp. 994–1052. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780195336931.013.0031.
  56. ^ a b Morgan, Catherine A.; Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony (2014), Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony (eds.), Eidinow, Esther (asst ed.), "Olympia", The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization (2nd ed.), Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780198706779.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-870677-9
  57. ^ Brodersen, Kai (2014), Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony (eds.), Eidinow, Esther (asst ed.), "Seven Wonders of the ancient world", The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization (2nd ed.), Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780198706779.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-870677-9
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  59. ^ a b Laidlaw, William Allison; Nixon, Lucia F.; Price, Simon R. F. (2014), Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony (eds.), Eidinow, Esther (asst ed.), "Crete, Greek and Roman", The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization (2nd ed.), Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780198706779.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-870677-9
  60. ^ a b c Gregory, Timothy E. (2005) [1991], Kazhdan, Alexander P. (ed.), "Nea Anchialos", The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium, Oxford University Press, doi:10.1093/acref/9780195046526.001.0001, ISBN 978-0-19-504652-6
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  63. ^ Valérian, Dominique (1 February 2013). Clark, Peter (ed.). Middle East: 7th–15th Centuries. The Oxford Handbook of Cities in World History. Oxford University Press. pp. 263–264. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199589531.013.0014.
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  66. ^ a b c d e f Oates, David (1962). "Qasr Serīj: A Sixth Century Basilica in Northern Iraq". Iraq. 24 (2): 78–89. doi:10.2307/4199719. ISSN 0021-0889. JSTOR 4199719. S2CID 164090791.
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  69. ^ . Cartage.org.lb. Archived from the original on 12 January 2012. Retrieved 17 February 2012.
  70. ^ Syndicus, 40
  71. ^ Loosley Leeming, Emma (2018). Architecture and Asceticism: Cultural Interaction between Syria and Georgia in Late Antiquity. Texts and Studies in Eastern Christianity, Volume: 13. Brill. pp. 115–121. ISBN 978-90-04-37531-4.
  72. ^ "Възстановяването на Голямата базилика означава памет, родолюбие и туризъм".
  73. ^ 1 CIC 1917, can. 1180 as quoted in Basilicas Historical and Canonical Development, GABRIEL CHOW HOI-YAN, Toronto, Ontario, Canada 13 May 2003 (revised 24 June 2003). "It was not until 1917 that the Code of Canon Law officially recognized de jure churches that had the immemorial custom of using the title of basilica as having such a right to the title.81 We refer to such churches as immemorial."
  74. ^ The title of minor basilicas was first attributed to the church of San Nicola di Tolentino in 1783. An older minor basilica is referred to as an "immemorial basilica".
  75. ^ "Basilicas in the World". GCatholic.org. 2019. Retrieved 12 December 2019.

General sources

  • Krautheimer, Richard (1992). Early Christian and Byzantine architecture. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-05294-4.
  • Architecture of the basilica
  • Syndicus, Eduard, Early Christian Art, Burns & Oates, London, 1962
  • Basilica Porcia
  • W. Thayer, "Basilicas of Ancient Rome": from Samuel Ball Platner (as completed and revised by Thomas Ashby), 1929. A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (London: Oxford University Press)
  • Paul Veyne, ed. A History of Private Life I: From Pagan Rome to Byzantium, 1987
  • Gietmann, G. & Thurston, Herbert (1913). "Basilica" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links

  • Vitruvius, a 1st-century B.C. Roman architect, on how to design a basilica

basilica, this, article, about, form, building, designation, basilica, canon, catholic, church, byzantine, code, basilika, genus, moth, moth, other, uses, disambiguation, ancient, roman, architecture, basilica, large, public, building, with, multiple, function. This article is about a form of building For the designation basilica in canon law see Basilicas in the Catholic Church For the Byzantine code of law see Basilika For the genus of moth see Basilica moth For other uses see Basilica disambiguation In Ancient Roman architecture a basilica was a large public building with multiple functions typically built alongside the town s forum The basilica was in the Latin West equivalent to a stoa in the Greek East The building gave its name to the architectural form of the basilica Digital reconstruction of the 2nd century BC Basilica Sempronia in the Forum Romanum 19th century reconstruction of the 2nd century AD Basilica Ulpia part of the Trajan s Forum Rome Ruins of the late 5th century AD basilica at Mushabbak Syria Reconstruction of the basilica at Fano from a description by its architect Vitruvius Originally a basilica was an ancient Roman public building where courts were held as well as serving other official and public functions Basilicas are typically rectangular buildings with a central nave flanked by two or more longitudinal aisles with the roof at two levels being higher in the centre over the nave to admit a clerestory and lower over the side aisles An apse at one end or less frequently at both ends or on the side usually contained the raised tribunal occupied by the Roman magistrates The basilica was centrally located in every Roman town usually adjacent to the forum and often opposite a temple in imperial era forums 1 Basilicas were also built in private residences and imperial palaces and were known as palace basilicas In late antiquity church buildings were typically constructed either as martyria or with a basilica s architectural plan A number of monumental Christian basilicas were constructed during the latter reign of Constantine the Great In the post Nicene period basilicas became a standard model for Christian spaces for congregational worship throughout the Mediterranean and Europe From the early 4th century Christian basilicas along with their associated catacombs were used for burial of the dead By extension the name was later applied to Christian churches that adopted the same basic plan It continues to be used in an architectural sense to describe rectangular buildings with a central nave and aisles and usually a raised platform at the end opposite the door In Europe and the Americas the basilica remained the most common architectural style for churches of all Christian denominations though this building plan has become less dominant in buildings constructed since the late 20th century The Catholic Church has come to use the term to refer to its especially historic churches without reference to the architectural form Contents 1 Origins 2 Roman Republic 3 Early Empire 3 1 Basilicas in the Roman Forum 4 Late antiquity 4 1 Basilica of Maxentius 4 2 Constantinian period 4 3 Valentinianic Theodosian period 4 4 Leonid period 4 5 Justinianic period 4 6 Palace basilicas 4 7 Christian adoption of the basilica form 4 7 1 Development 5 Catholic basilicas 6 See also 6 1 Architecture 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 General sources 8 External linksOrigins Edit Remains of the Basilica of Pompeii interior 120 BC Basilica of Pompeii tribunal The Latin word basilica derives from Ancient Greek basilikh stoa romanized basilikḗ stoa lit royal stoa The first known basilica the Basilica Porcia in the Roman Forum was constructed in 184 BC by Marcus Porcius Cato the Elder 2 After the construction of Cato the Elder s basilica the term came to be applied to any large covered hall whether it was used for domestic purposes was a commercial space a military structure or religious building 2 The plays of Plautus suggest that basilica buildings may have existed prior to Cato s building The plays were composed between 210 and 184 BC and refer to a building that might be identified with the Atrium Regium 3 Another early example is the basilica at Pompeii late 2nd century BC Inspiration may have come from prototypes like Athens s Stoa Basileios or the hypostyle hall on Delos but the architectural form is most derived from the audience halls in the royal palaces of the Diadochi kingdoms of the Hellenistic period These rooms were typically a high nave flanked by colonnades 3 These basilicas were rectangular typically with central nave and aisles usually with a slightly raised platform and an apse at each of the two ends adorned with a statue perhaps of the emperor while the entrances were from the long sides 4 5 The Roman basilica was a large public building where business or legal matters could be transacted As early as the time of Augustus a public basilica for transacting business had been part of any settlement that considered itself a city used in the same way as the covered market houses of late medieval northern Europe where the meeting room for lack of urban space was set above the arcades however clarify citation needed Although their form was variable basilicas often contained interior colonnades that divided the space giving aisles or arcaded spaces on one or both sides with an apse at one end or less often at each end where the magistrates sat often on a slightly raised dais The central aisle the nave tended to be wider and taller than the flanking aisles so that light could penetrate through the clerestory windows citation needed In the late Republican era basilicas were increasingly monumental Julius Caesar replaced the Basilica Sempronia with his own Basilica Julia dedicated in 46 BC while the Basilica Aemilia was rebuilt around 54 BC in so spectacular a fashion that Pliny the Elder wrote that it was among the most beautiful buildings in the world it was simultaneously renamed the Basilica Paulli Thereafter until the 4th century AD monumental basilicas were routinely constructed at Rome by both private citizens and the emperors These basilicas were reception halls and grand spaces in which elite persons could impress guests and visitors and could be attached to a large country villa or an urban domus They were simpler and smaller than were civic basilicas and can be identified by inscriptions or their position in the archaeological context Domitian constructed a basilica on the Palatine Hill for his imperial residential complex around 92 AD and a palatine basilica was typical in imperial palaces throughout the imperial period 3 Roman Republic Edit Remains of the 2nd century BC Basilica Aemilia by Giuliano da Sangallo in the 15th century AD Long rectangular basilicas with internal peristyle became a quintessential element of Roman urbanism often forming the architectural background to the city forum and used for diverse purposes 6 Beginning with Cato in the early second century BC politicians of the Roman Republic competed with one another by building basilicas bearing their names in the Forum Romanum the centre of ancient Rome Outside the city basilicas symbolised the influence of Rome and became a ubiquitous fixture of Roman coloniae of the late Republic from c 100 BC The earliest surviving basilica is the basilica of Pompeii built 120 BC 6 Basilicas were the administrative and commercial centres of major Roman settlements the quintessential architectural expression of Roman administration 7 Adjoining it there were normally various offices and rooms housing the curia and a shrine for the tutela 8 Like Roman public baths basilicas were commonly used as venues for the display of honorific statues and other sculptures complementing the outdoor public spaces and thoroughfares 9 Beside the Basilica Porcia on the Forum Romanum the Basilica Aemilia was built in 179 BC and the Basilica Sempronia in 169 BC 3 In the Republic two types of basilica were built across Italy in the mid 2nd to early 1st centuries BC either they were nearly square as at Fanum Fortunae designed by Vitruvius and Cosa with a 3 4 width length ratio or else they were more rectangular as Pompeii s basilica whose ratio is 3 7 10 3 The basilica at Ephesus is typical of the basilicas in the Roman East which usually have a very elongated footprint and a ratio between 1 5 and 1 9 with open porticoes facing the agora the Hellenic forum this design was influenced by the existing tradition of long stoae in Hellenistic Asia 3 Provinces in the west lacked this tradition and the basilicas the Romans commissioned there were more typically Italian with the central nave divided from the side aisles by an internal colonnade in regular proportions 3 Ruins of the Basilica stoa at Ephesus Model of the Antonine basilica on Brysa Hill Carthage Ruins of the Trajanic basilica at Baelo Claudia Ruins of the Severan basilica at Leptis Magna Ruins of the basilica at Volubilis 217 8 After anastylosis Early Empire EditBeginning with the Forum of Caesar Latin forum Iulium at the end of the Roman Republic the centre of Rome was embellished with a series of imperial fora typified by a large open space surrounded by a peristyle honorific statues of the imperial family gens and a basilica often accompanied by other facilities like a temple market halls and public libraries 6 In the imperial period statues of the emperors with inscribed dedications were often installed near the basilicas tribunals as Vitruvius recommended Examples of such dedicatory inscriptions are known from basilicas at Lucus Feroniae and Veleia in Italy and at Cuicul in Africa Proconsolaris and inscriptions of all kinds were visible in and around basilicas 11 At Ephesus the basilica stoa had two storeys and three aisles and extended the length of the civic agora s north side complete with colossal statues of the emperor Augustus and his imperial family 7 The remains of a large subterranean Neopythagorean basilica dating from the 1st century AD were found near the Porta Maggiore in Rome in 1917 and is known as the Porta Maggiore Basilica citation needed 12 After its destruction in 60 AD Londinium London was endowed with its first forum and basilica under the Flavian dynasty 13 The basilica delimited the northern edge of the forum with typical nave aisles and a tribunal but with an atypical semi basement at the western side 13 Unlike in Gaul basilica forum complexes in Roman Britain did not usually include a temple instead a shrine was usually inside the basilica itself 13 At Londinium however there was probably no temple at all attached to the original basilica but instead a contemporary temple was constructed nearby 13 Later in 79 AD an inscription commemorated the completion of the 385 by 120 foot 117 m 37 m basilica at Verulamium St Albans under the governor Gnaeus Julius Agricola by contrast the first basilica at Londinium was only 148 by 75 feet 45 m 23 m 13 The smallest known basilica in Britain was built by the Silures at Caerwent and measured 180 by 100 feet 55 m 30 m 13 When Londinium became a colonia the whole city was re planned and a new great forum basilica complex erected larger than any in Britain 14 Londinium s basilica more than 500 feet 150 m long was the largest north of the Alps and a similar length to the modern St Paul s Cathedral 14 Only the later basilica forum complex at Treverorum was larger while at Rome only the 525 foot 160 m Basilica Ulpia exceeded London s in size 14 It probably had arcaded rather than trabeate aisles and a double row of square offices on the northern side serving as the administrative centre of the colonia and its size and splendour probably indicate an imperial decision to change the administrative capital of Britannia to Londinium from Camulodunum Colchester as all provincial capitals were designated coloniae 14 In 300 Londinium s basilica was destroyed as a result of the rebellion led by the Augustus of the break away Britannic Empire Carausius 15 Remains of the great basilica and its arches were discovered during the construction of Leadenhall Market in the 1880s 14 At Corinth in the 1st century AD a new basilica was constructed in on the east side of the forum 7 It was possibly inside the basilica that Paul the Apostle according to the Acts of the Apostles Acts 18 12 17 was investigated and found innocent by the Suffect Consul Lucius Junius Gallio Annaeanus the brother of Seneca the Younger after charges were brought against him by members of the local Jewish diaspora 7 Modern tradition instead associates the incident with an open air inscribed bema in the forum itself 7 The emperor Trajan constructed his own imperial forum in Rome accompanied by his Basilica Ulpia dedicated in 112 16 3 Trajan s Forum Latin forum Traiani was separated from the Temple of Trajan the Ulpian Library and his famous Column depicting the Dacian Wars by the Basilica 16 3 It was an especially grand example whose particular symmetrical arrangement with an apse at both ends was repeated in the provinces as a characteristic form 3 To improve the quality of the Roman concrete used in the Basilica Ulpia volcanic scoria from the Bay of Naples and Mount Vesuvius were imported which though heavier was stronger than the pumice available closer to Rome 17 The Bailica Ulpia is probably an early example of tie bars to restrain the lateral thrust of the barrel vault resting on a colonnade both tie bars and scoria were used in contemporary work at the Baths of Trajan and later the Hadrianic domed vault of the Pantheon 17 In early 123 the augusta and widow of the emperor Trajan Pompeia Plotina died Hadrian successor to Trajan deified her and had a basilica constructed in her honour in southern Gaul 18 The Basilica Hilariana built c 145 155 was designed for the use of the cult of Cybele 3 The largest basilica built outside Rome was that built under the Antonine dynasty on the Byrsa hill in Carthage 19 The basilica was built together with a forum of enormous size and was contemporary with a great complex of public baths and a new aqueduct system running for 82 miles 132 km then the longest in the Roman Empire 19 The basilica at Leptis Magna built by the Septimius Severus a century later in about 216 is a notable 3rd century AD example of the traditional type most notable among the works influenced by the Basilica Ulpia 2 3 The basilica at Leptis was built mainly of limestone ashlar but the apses at either end were only limestone in the outer sections and built largely of rubble masonry faced with brick with a number of decorative panels in opus reticulatum 20 The basilica stood in a new forum and was accompanied by a programme of Severan works at Leptis including thermae a new harbour and a public fountain 6 At Volubilis principal city of Mauretania Tingitana a basilica modelled on Leptis Magna s was completed during the short reign of Macrinus 21 Basilicas in the Roman Forum Edit Bust of Augustus from the basilica stoa of Ephesus defaced with a Christian cross 9 Basilica Porcia first basilica built in Rome 184 BC erected on the personal initiative and financing of the censor Marcus Porcius Cato Cato the Elder as an official building for the tribunes of the plebs Basilica Aemilia built by the censor Aemilius Lepidus in 179 BC Basilica Sempronia built by the censor Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus in 169 BC Basilica Opimia erected probably by the consul Lucius Opimius in 121 BC at the same time that he restored the temple of Concord Platner Ashby 1929 Basilica Julia initially dedicated in 46 BC by Julius Caesar and completed by Augustus 27 BC to AD 14 Basilica Argentaria erected under Trajan emperor from AD 98 to 117 Basilica of Maxentius and Constantine built between AD 308 and 312 Late antiquity Edit Euphrasian Basilica Porec mid 6th century Church of the Acheiropoietos s arcaded single side aisles Church of the Nativity s trabeate doubled side aisles Ruins of the domestic basilica at the Villa Romana del Casale Piazza Armerina 4th century The aisled hall plan of the basilica was adopted by a number of religious cults in late antiquity 2 At Sardis a monumental basilica housed the city s synagogue serving the local Jewish diaspora 22 New religions like Christianity required space for congregational worship and the basilica was adapted by the early Church for worship 8 Because they were able to hold large number of people basilicas were adopted for Christian liturgical use after Constantine the Great The early churches of Rome were basilicas with an apsidal tribunal and used the same construction techniques of columns and timber roofing 2 At the start of the 4th century at Rome there was a change in burial and funerary practice moving away from earlier preferences for inhumation in cemeteries popular from the 2nd and 3rd centuries AD to the newer practice of burial in catacombs and inhumation inside Christian basilicas themselves 23 Conversely new basilicas often were erected on the site of existing early Christian cemeteries and martyria related to the belief in Bodily Resurrection and the cult of the sacred dead became monumentalised in basilica form 24 Traditional civic basilicas and bouleuteria declined in use with the weakening of the curial class Latin curiales in the 4th and 5th centuries while their structures were well suited to the requirements of congregational liturgies 24 The conversion of these types of buildings into Christian basilicas was also of symbolic significance asserting the dominance of Christianity and supplanting the old political function of public space and the city centre with an emphatic Christian social statement 24 Traditional monumental civic amenities like gymnasia palaestrae and thermae were also falling into disuse and became favoured sites for the construction of new churches including basilicas 24 Under Constantine the basilica became the most prestigious style of church building was normative for church buildings by the end of the 4th century and were ubiquitous in western Asia North Africa and most of Europe by the close of the 7th century 25 Christians also continued to hold services in synagogues houses and gardens and continued practising baptism in rivers ponds and Roman bathhouses 25 26 The development of Christian basilicas began even before Constantine s reign a 3rd century mud brick house at Aqaba had become a Christian church and was rebuilt as a basilica 25 Within was a rectangular assembly hall with frescoes and at the east end an ambo a cathedra and an altar 25 Also within the church were a catecumenon for catechumens a baptistery a diaconicon and a prothesis all features typical of later 4th century basilica churches 25 A Christian structure which included the prototype of the triumphal arch at the east end of later Constantinian basilicas 25 Known as the Megiddo church it was built at Kefar Othnay in Palestine possibly c 230 for or by the Roman army stationed at Legio later Lajjun 25 Its dedicatory inscriptions include the names of women who contributed to the building and were its major patrons as well as men s names 25 A number of buildings previously believed to have been Constantinian or 4th century have been reassessed as dating to later periods and certain examples of 4th century basilicas are not distributed throughout the Mediterranean world at all evenly 27 Christian basilicas and martyria attributable to the 4th century are rare on the Greek mainland and on the Cyclades while the Christian basilicas of Egypt Cyprus Syria Transjordan Hispania and Gaul are nearly all of later date 27 The basilica at Ephesus s Magnesian Gate the episcopal church at Laodicea on the Lycus and two extramural churches at Sardis have all been considered 4th century constructions but on weak evidence 24 Development of pottery chronologies for Late Antiquity had helped resolve questions of dating basilicas of the period 28 Three examples of a basilica discoperta or hypaethral basilica with no roof above the nave are inferred to have existed 29 The 6th century Anonymous pilgrim of Piacenza described a a basilica built with a quadriporticus with the middle atrium uncovered at Hebron while at Pecs and near Salona two ruined 5th buildings of debated interpretation might have been either roofless basilica churches or simply courtyards with an exedra at the end 29 An old theory by Ejnar Dyggve that these were the architectural intermediary between the Christian martyrium and the classical heroon is no longer credited 29 The magnificence of early Christian basilicas reflected the patronage of the emperor and recalled his imperial palaces and reflected the royal associations of the basilica with the Hellenistic Kingdoms and even earlier monarchies like that of Pharaonic Egypt 25 Similarly the name and association resounded with the Christian claims of the royalty of Christ according to the Acts of the Apostles the earliest Christians had gathered at the royal Stoa of Solomon in Jerusalem to assert Jesus s royal heritage 25 For early Christians the Bible supplied evidence that the First Temple and Solomon s palace were both hypostyle halls and somewhat resembled basilicas 25 Hypostyle synagogues often built with apses in Palestine by the 6th century share a common origin with the Christian basilicas in the civic basilicas and in the pre Roman style of hypostyle halls in the Mediterranean Basin particularly in Egypt where pre classical hypostyles continued to be built in the imperial period and were themselves converted into churches in the 6th century 25 Other influences on the evolution of Christian basilicas may have come from elements of domestic and palatial architecture during the pre Constantinian period of Christianity including the reception hall or aula Ancient Greek aὐlh romanized aulḗ lit courtyard and the atria and triclinia of elite Roman dwellings 25 The versatility of the basilica form and its variability in size and ornament recommended itself to the early Christian Church basilicas could be grandiose as the Basilica of Maxentius in the Forum Romanum or more practical like the so called Basilica of Bahira in Bosra while the Basilica Constantiniana on the Lateran Hill was of intermediate scale 25 This basilica begun in 313 was the first imperial Christian basilica 25 Imperial basilicas were first constructed for the Christian Eucharist liturgy in the reign of Constantine 26 Basilica churches were not economically inactive Like non Christian or civic basilicas basilica churches had a commercial function integral to their local trade routes and economies Amphorae discovered at basilicas attest their economic uses and can reveal their position in wider networks of exchange 28 At Dion near Mount Olympus in Macedonia now an Archaeological Park the latter 5th century Cemetery Basilica a small church was replete with potsherds from all over the Mediterranean evidencing extensive economic activity took place there 28 30 Likewise at Maroni Petrera on Cyprus the amphorae unearthed by archaeologists in the 5th century basilica church had been imported from North Africa Egypt Palestine and the Aegean basin as well as from neighbouring Asia Minor 28 31 According to Vegetius writing c 390 basilicas were convenient for drilling soldiers of the Late Roman army during inclement weather 3 Basilica of Maxentius Edit Remains of the Basilica of Maxentius and Constantine in Rome The building s northern aisle is all that remains Floor plan of the Basilica of Maxentius and Constantine The 4th century Basilica of Constantine at Trier was a palatine basilica used for receiving Constantine s political clients The apse windows are in fact smaller than the side windows producing an optical illusion of still greater size and distance The 4th century Basilica of Maxentius begun by Maxentius between 306 and 312 and according to Aurelius Victor s De Caesaribus completed by Constantine I was an innovation 32 33 Earlier basilicas had mostly had wooden roofs but this basilica dispensed with timber trusses and used instead cross vaults made from Roman bricks and concrete to create one of the ancient world s largest covered spaces 80 m long 25 m wide and 35 m high 3 32 The vertices of the cross vaults the largest Roman examples were 35 m 32 The vault was supported on marble monolithic columns 14 5 m tall 32 The foundations are as much as 8 m deep 17 The vault was supported by brick latticework ribs Latin bipedalis forming lattice ribbing an early form of rib vault and distributing the load evenly across the vault s span 17 Similar brick ribs were employed at the Baths of Maxentius on the Palatine Hill where they supported walls on top of the vault 17 Also known as the Basilica Constantiniana Basilica of Constantine or Basilica Nova New Basilica it chanced to be the last civic basilica built in Rome 3 32 Inside the basilica the central nave was accessed by five doors opening from an entrance hall on the eastern side and terminated in an apse at the western end 32 Another shallower apse with niches for statues was added to the centre of the north wall in a second campaign of building while the western apse housed a colossal acrolithic statue of the emperor Constantine enthroned 32 Fragments of this statue are now in the courtyard of the Palazzo dei Conservatori on the Capitoline Hill part of the Capitoline Museums Opposite the northern apse on the southern wall another monumental entrance was added and elaborated with a portico of porphyry columns 32 One of the remaining marble interior columns was removed in 1613 by Pope Paul V and set up as an honorific column outside Santa Maria Maggiore 32 Constantinian period Edit Aula Palatina Constantine s basilica at Trier c 310 In the early 4th century Eusebius used the word basilica Ancient Greek basilikh romanized basilikḗ to refer to Christian churches in subsequent centuries as before the word basilica referred in Greek to the civic non ecclesiastical buildings and only in rare exceptions to churches 34 Churches were nonetheless basilican in form with an apse or tribunal at the end of a nave with two or more aisles typical 34 A narthex sometimes with an exonarthex or vestibule could be added to the entrance together with an atrium and the interior might have transepts a pastophorion and galleries but the basic scheme with clerestory windows and a wooden truss roof remained the most typical church type until the 6th century 34 The nave would be kept clear for liturgical processions by the clergy with the laity in the galleries and aisles to either side 34 The function of Christian churches was similar to that of the civic basilicas but very different from temples in contemporary Graeco Roman polytheism while pagan temples were entered mainly by priests and thus had their splendour visible from without within Christian basilicas the main ornamentation was visible to the congregants admitted inside 25 Christian priests did not interact with attendees during the rituals which took place at determined intervals whereas pagan priests were required to perform individuals sacrifices in the more chaotic environment of the temple precinct with the temple s facade as backdrop 25 In basilicas constructed for Christian uses the interior was often decorated with frescoes but these buildings wooden roof often decayed and failed to preserve the fragile frescoes within 27 Thus was lost an important part of the early history of Christian art which would have sought to communicate early Christian ideas to the mainly illiterate Late Antique society 27 On the exterior basilica church complexes included cemeteries baptisteries and fonts which defined ritual and liturgical access to the sacred elevated the social status of the Church hierarchy and which complemented the development of a Christian historical landscape Constantine and his mother Helena were patrons of basilicas in important Christian sites in the Holy Land and Rome and at Milan and Constantinople 27 Around 310 while still a self proclaimed augustus unrecognised at Rome Constantine began the construction of the Basilica Constantiniana or Aula Palatina palatine hall as a reception hall for his imperial seat at Trier Augusta Treverorum capital of Belgica Prima 3 On the exterior Constantine s palatine basilica was plain and utilitarian but inside was very grandly decorated 35 In the reign of Constantine I a basilica was constructed for the Pope in the former barracks of the Equites singulares Augusti the cavalry arm of the Praetorian Guard 36 Constantine had disbanded the Praetorian guard after his defeat of their emperor Maxentius and replaced them with another bodyguard the Scholae Palatinae 36 In 313 Constantine began construction of the Basilica Constantiniana on the Lateran Hill 25 This basilica became Rome s cathedral church known as St John Lateran and was more richly decorated and larger than any previous Christian structure 25 However because of its remote position from the Forum Romanum on the city s edge it did not connect with the older imperial basilicas in the fora of Rome 25 Outside the basilica was the Equestrian Statue of Marcus Aurelius a rare example of an Antique statue that has never been underground 9 According to the Liber Pontificalis Constantine was also responsible for the rich interior decoration of the Lateran Baptistery constructed under Pope Sylvester I r 314 335 sited about 50 metres 160 ft 26 The Lateran Baptistery was the first monumental free standing baptistery and in subsequent centuries Christian basilica churches were often endowed with such baptisteries 26 At Cirta a Christian basilica erected by Constantine was taken over by his opponents the Donatists 36 After Constantine s failure to resolve the Donatist controversy by coercion between 317 and 321 he allowed the Donatists who dominated Africa to retain the basilica and constructed a new one for the Catholic Church 36 The original titular churches of Rome were those which had been private residences and which were donated to be converted to places of Christian worship 25 Above an originally 1st century AD villa and its later adjoining warehouse and Mithraeum a large basilica church had been erected by 350 subsuming the earlier structures beneath it as a crypt 25 The basilica was the first church of San Clemente al Laterano 25 Similarly at Santi Giovanni e Paolo al Celio an entire ancient city block a 2nd century insula on the Caelian Hill was buried beneath a 4th century basilica 25 The site was already venerated as the martyrium of three early Christian burials beforehand and part of the insula had been decorated in the style favoured by Christian communities frequenting the early Catacombs of Rome 25 By 350 in Serdica Sofia Bulgaria a monumental basilica the Church of Saint Sophia was erected covering earlier structures including a Christian chapel an oratory and a cemetery dated to c 310 25 Other major basilica from this period in this part of Europe is the Great Basilica in Philippopolis Plovdiv Bulgaria from the 4th century AD Valentinianic Theodosian period Edit In the late 4th century the dispute between Nicene and Arian Christianity came to head at Mediolanum Milan where Ambrose was bishop 37 At Easter in 386 the Arian party preferred by the Theodosian dynasty sought to wrest the use of the basilica from the Nicene partisan Ambrose 37 According to Augustine of Hippo the dispute resulted in Ambrose organising an orthodox sit in at the basilica and arranged the miraculous invention and translation of martyrs whose hidden remains had been revealed in a vision 37 During the sit in Augustine credits Ambrose with the introduction from the eastern regions of antiphonal chanting to give heart to the orthodox congregation though in fact music was likely part of Christian ritual since the time of the Pauline epistles 38 37 The arrival and reburial of the martyrs uncorrupted remains in the basilica in time for the Easter celebrations was seen as powerful step towards divine approval 37 At Philippi the market adjoining the 1st century forum was demolished and replaced with a Christian basilica 7 Civic basilicas throughout Asia Minor became Christian places of worship examples are known at Ephesus Aspendos and at Magnesia on the Maeander 24 The Great Basilica in Antioch of Pisidia is a rare securely dated 4th century Christian basilica and was the city s cathedral church 24 The mosaics of the floor credit Optimus the bishop with its dedication 24 Optimus was a contemporary of Basil of Caesarea and corresponded with him c 377 24 Optimus was the city s delegate at the First Council of Constantinople in 381 so the 70 m long single apsed basilica near the city walls must have been constructed around that time 24 Pisidia had a number of Christian basilicas constructed in Late Antiquity particularly in former bouleuteria as at Sagalassos Selge Pednelissus while a civic basilica was converted for Christians use in Cremna 24 At Chalcedon opposite Constantinople on the Bosporus the relics of Euphemia a supposed Christian martyr of the Diocletianic Persecution were housed in a martyrium accompanied by a basilica 39 The basilica already existed when Egeria passed through Chalcedon in 384 and in 436 Melania the Younger visited the church on her own journey to the Holy Land 39 From the description of Evagrius Scholasticus the church is identifiable as an aisled basilica attached to the martyrium and preceded by an atrium 40 The Council of Chalcedon 8 31 October 451 was held in the basilica which must have been large enough to accommodate the more than two hundred bishops that attended its third session together with their translators and servants around 350 bishops attended the Council in all 41 42 In an ekphrasis in his eleventh sermon Asterius of Amasea described an icon in the church depicting Euphemia s martyrdom 39 The church was restored under the patronage of the patricia and daughter of Olybrius Anicia Juliana 43 Pope Vigilius fled there from Constantinople during the Three Chapter Controversy 44 The basilica which lay outside the walls of Chalcedon was destroyed by the Persians in the Byzantine Sasanian War of 602 628 during one of the Sasanian occupations of the city in 615 and 626 45 The relics of Euphemia were reportedly translated to a new Church of St Euphemia in Constantinople in 680 though Cyril Mango argued the translation never took place 46 47 Subsequently Asterius s sermon On the Martyrdom of St Euphemia was advanced as an argument for iconodulism at the Second Council of Nicaea in 787 48 In the late 4th century a large basilica church dedicated to Mary mother of Jesus was constructed in Ephesus in the former south stoa a commercial basilica of the Temple of Hadrian Olympios 49 50 Ephesus was the centre of the Roman province of Asia and was the site of the city s famed Temple of Artemis one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World 51 It had also been a centre of the Roman imperial cult in Asia Ephesus was three times declared neokoros lit temple warden and had constructed a Temple of the Sebastoi to the Flavian dynasty 51 The Basilica of the Virgin Mary was probably the venue for the 431 Council of Ephesus and the 449 Second Council of Ephesus both convened by Theodosius II 49 At some point during the Christianisation of the Roman world Christian crosses were cut into the faces of the colossal statues of Augustus and Livia that stood in the basilica stoa of Ephesus the crosses were perhaps intended to exorcise demons in a process akin to baptism 9 In the eastern cemetery of Hierapolis the 5th century domed octagonal martyrium of Philip the Apostle was built alongside a basilica church while at Myra the Basilica of St Nicholas was constructed at the tomb of Saint Nicholas 24 At Constantinople the earliest basilica churches like the 5th century basilica at the Monastery of Stoudios were mostly equipped with a small cruciform crypt Ancient Greek krypth romanized kryptḗ lit hidden a space under the church floor beneath the altar 52 Typically these crypts were accessed from the apse s interior though not always as at the 6th century Church of St John at the Hebdomon where access was from outside the apse 52 At Thessaloniki the Roman bath where tradition held Demetrius of Thessaloniki had been martyred was subsumed beneath the 5th century basilica of Hagios Demetrios forming a crypt 52 The largest and oldest basilica churches in Egypt were at Pbow a coenobitic monastery established by Pachomius the Great in 330 53 The 4th century basilica was replaced by a large 5th century building 36 72 m with five aisles and internal colonnades of pink granite columns and paved with limestone 53 This monastery was the administrative centre of the Pachomian order where the monks would gather twice annually and whose library may have produced many surviving manuscripts of biblical Gnostic and other texts in Greek and Coptic 53 In North Africa late antique basilicas were often built on a doubled plan 54 In the 5th century basilicas with two apses multiple aisles and doubled churches were common including examples respectively at Sufetula Tipasa and Djemila 54 Generally North African basilica churches altars were in the nave and the main building medium was opus africanum of local stone and spolia was infrequently used 54 The Church of the East s Council of Seleucia Ctesiphon was convened by the Sasanian Emperor Yazdegerd I at his capital at Ctesiphon according to Synodicon Orientale the emperor ordered that the former churches in the Sasanian Empire to be restored and rebuilt that such clerics and ascetics as had been imprisoned were to be released and their Nestorian Christian communities allowed to circulate freely and practice openly 55 In eastern Syria the Church of the East developed at typical pattern of basilica churches 55 Separate entrances for men and women were installed in the southern or northern wall within the east end of the nave was reserved for men while women and children were stood behind In the nave was a bema from which Scripture could be read and which were inspired by the equivalent in synagogues and regularised by the Church of Antioch 55 The Council of 410 stipulated that on Sunday the archdeacon would read the Gospels from the bema 55 Standing near the bema the lay folk could chant responses to the reading and if positioned near the sqaqona a walled floor level pathway connecting the bema to the altar area could try to kiss or touch the Gospel Book as it was processed from the deacons room to the bema and thence to the altar 55 Some ten Eastern churches in eastern Syria have been investigated by thorough archaeology 55 A Christian basilica was constructed in the first half of the 5th century at Olympia where the statue of Zeus by Phidias had been noted as one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World ever since the 2nd century BC list compiled by Antipater of Sidon 56 57 Cultural tourism thrived at Olympia and Ancient Greek religion continued to be practised there well into the 4th century 56 At Nicopolis in Epirus founded by Augustus to commemorate his victory at the Battle of Actium at the end of the Last war of the Roman Republic four early Christian basilicas were built during Late Antiquity whose remains survive to the present 58 In the 4th or 5th century Nicopolis was surrounded by a new city wall 58 In Bulgaria there are major basilicas from that time like Elenska Basilica and the Red Church Santa Sabina Rome 422 432 Interior of Santa Sabina with spolia Corinthian columns from the Temple of Juno Regina Basilica church of the Monastery of Stoudios Constantinple 5th century as depicted in the Menologion of Basil II c 1000 Apse of the ruined Great Basilica Antioch in Pisidia The floor dates to late 4th century and the walls to the 5th or 6th century The building has a semi circular interior and a polygonal exterior Bird s eye view of the Elenska Basilica complex Pirdop Bulgaria The Red Church Perushtitsa Bulgaria Ruins of the Stoudios Monastery with verd antique colonnade and Cosmatesque floor in situ Leonid period Edit On Crete the Roman cities suffered from repeated earthquakes in the 4th century but between c 450 and c 550 a large number of Christian basilicas were constructed 59 Crete was throughout Late Antiquity a province of the Diocese of Macedonia governed from Thessaloniki 59 Nine basilica churches were built at Nea Anchialos ancient Phthiotic Thebes Ancient Greek 8h bai F8iwtides romanized Thḗbai Phthiṓtides which was in its heyday the primary port of Thessaly The episcopal see was the three aisled Basilica A the Church of St Demetrius of Thessaloniki and similar to the Church of the Acheiropoietos in Thessaloniki 60 Its atrium perhaps had a pair of towers to either side and its construction dates to the late 5th early 6th century 60 The Elpidios Basilica Basilica B was of similar age and the city was home to a large complex of ecclesiastical buildings including Basilica G with its luxurious mosaic floors and a mid 6th century inscription proclaiming the patronage of the bishop Peter Outside the defensive wall was Basilica D a 7th century cemetery church 60 Stobi Ancient Greek Stoboi romanized Stoboi the capital from the late 4th century of the province of Macedonia II Salutaris had numerous basilicas and six palaces in late antiquity 61 The Old Basilica had two phases of geometric pavements the second phase of which credited the bishop Eustathios as patron of the renovations A newer episcopal basilica was built by the bishop Philip atop the remains of the earlier structure and two further basilicas were within the walls 61 The Central Basilica replaced a synagogue on a site razed in the late 5th century and there was also a North Basilica and further basilicas without the walls 61 Various mosaics and sculptural decorations have been found there and while the city suffered from the Ostrogoths in 479 and an earthquake in 518 ceasing to be a major city thereafter it remained a bishopric until the end of the 7th century and the Basilica of Philip had its templon restored in the 8th century 61 The Small Basilica of Philippopolis Plovdiv Bulgaria in Thrace was built in the second half of the 5th century AD Drawing of the 5th century Church of the Acheiropoietos by Charles Texier 1864 Leonid basilica Church of the Acheiropoietos Thessaloniki 450 60 5th century mosaic of a basilica Louvre Justinianic period Edit Justinian I constructed at Ephesus a large basilica church the Basilica of St John above the supposed tomb of John the Apostle 51 The church was a domed cruciform basilica begun in 535 6 enormous and lavishly decorated it was built in the same style as Justinian s Church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople 49 24 The Justinianic basilica replaced an earlier smaller structure which Egeria had planned to visit in the 4th century and remains of a 2 130 foot 650 m aqueduct branch built to supply the complex with water probably dates from Justinian s reign 49 62 The Ephesians basilicas to St Mary and St John were both equipped with baptisteries with filling and draining pipes both fonts were flush with the floor and unsuitable for infant baptism 26 As with most Justinianic baptisteries in the Balkans and Asia Minor the baptistery at the Basilica of St John was on the northern side of the basilica s nave the 734 m2 baptistery was separated from the basilica by a 3 m wide corridor 26 According to the 6th century Syriac writer John of Ephesus a Syriac Orthodox Christian the heterodox Miaphysites held ordination services in the courtyard of the Basilica of St John under cover of night 49 Somewhat outside the ancient city on the hill of Selcuk the Justinianic basilica became the centre of the city after the 7th century Arab Byzantine wars 49 At Constantinople Justinian constructed the largest domed basilica on the site of the 4th century basilica Church of Holy Wisdom the emperor ordered construction of the huge domed basilica that survives to the present the Hagia Sophia 27 This basilica which continues to stand as one of the most visually imposing and architecturally daring churches in the Mediterranean was the cathedral of Constantinople and the patriarchal church of the Patriarch of Constantinople 27 Hagia Sophia originally founded by Constantine was at the social and political heart of Constantinople near to the Great Palace the Baths of Zeuxippus and the Hippodrome of Constantinople while the headquarters of the Ecumenical Patriarchate was within the basilica s immediate vicinity 63 The mid 6th century Bishop of Porec Latin Parens or Parentium Ancient Greek Paren8os romanized Parenthos replaced an earlier 4th century basilica with the magnificent Euphrasian Basilica in the style of contemporary basilicas at Ravenna 64 Some column capitals were of marble from Greece identical to those in Basilica of San Vitale and must have been imported from the Byzantine centre along with the columns and some of the opus sectile 64 There are conch mosaics in the basilica s three apses and the fine opus sectile on the central apse wall is exceptionally well preserved 64 The 4th century basilica of Saint Sophia Church at Serdica Sofia Bulgaria was rebuilt in the 5th century and ultimately replaced by a new monumental basilica in the late 6th century and some construction phases continued into the 8th century 65 This basilica was the cathedral of Serdica and was one of three basilicas known to lie outside the walls three more churches were within the walled city of which the Church of Saint George was a former Roman bath built in the 4th century and another was a former Mithraeum 65 The basilicas were associated with cemeteries with Christian inscriptions and burials 65 Another basilica from this period in Bulgaria was the Belovo Basilica 6th century AD The Miaphysite convert from the Church of the East Ahudemmeh constructed a new basilica c 565 dedicated to Saint Sergius at ʿAin Qenoye or ʿAin Qena according to Bar Hebraeus after being ordained bishop of Beth Arbaye by Jacob Baradaeus and while proselytizing among the Bedouin of Arbayistan in the Sasanian Empire 66 According to Ahudemmeh s biographer this basilica and its martyrium in the upper Tigris valley was supposed to be a copy of the Basilica of St Sergius at Sergiopolis Resafa in the middle Euphrates so that the Arabs would not have to travel so far on pilgrimage 66 More likely with the support of Khosrow I for its construction and defence against the Nestorians who were Miaphysites rivals the basilica was part of an attempt to control the frontier tribes and limit their contact with the Roman territory of Justinian who had agreed in the 562 Fifty Year Peace Treaty to pay 30 000 nomismata annually to Khosrow in return for a demilitarization of the frontier after the latest phase of the Roman Persian Wars 66 After being mentioned in 828 and 936 the basilica at ʿAin Qenoye disappeared from recorded history though it may have remained occupied for centuries and was rediscovered as a ruin by Carsten Niebuhr in 1766 67 The name of the modern site Qasr Serij is derived from the basilica s dedication to St Sergius 66 Qasr Serij s construction may have been part of the policy of toleration that Khosrow and his successors had for Miaphysitism a contrast with Justinian s persecution of heterodoxy within the Roman empire 66 This policy itself encouraged many tribes to favour the Persian cause especially after the death in 569 of the Ghassanid Kingdom s Miaphysite king al Harith ibn Jabalah Latin Flavius Arethas Ancient Greek Ἀre8as and the 584 suppression by the Romans of his successors dynasty 66 Saint Sophia Serdica Sofia built 4th 8th centuries Ostrogothic Basilica of Christ the Redeemer Ravenna 504 Rededicated 561 to St Apollinaris Basilica of Sant Apollinare in Classe near Ravenna in Italy Justinianic Church of the Nativity Bethlehem after 529 Floor plan of the Justinianic Basilica of St John Ephesus after 535 6 Interior of the ruined Basilica of Bahira Bosra Ruins of the 10th century Church of Achillius of Larissa on the eponymous island of Agios Achilleios Mikra Prespa a typical basilica church 68 Belovo Basilica Belovo Municipality BulgariaPalace basilicas Edit Floor plan of a Christian church of basilical form with part of the transept shaded Either the part of the nave lying to the west in the diagram or the choir may have a hall structure instead The choir also may be aisleless In the Roman Imperial period after about 27 BC a basilica for large audiences also became a feature in palaces In the 3rd century of the Christian era the governing elite appeared less frequently in the forums They now tended to dominate their cities from opulent palaces and country villas set a little apart from traditional centers of public life Rather than retreats from public life however these residences were the forum made private Peter Brown in Paul Veyne 1987 Seated in the tribune of his basilica the great man would meet his dependent clientes early every morning Constantine s basilica at Trier the Aula Palatina AD 306 is still standing A private basilica excavated at Bulla Regia Tunisia in the House of the Hunt dates from the first half of the 5th century Its reception or audience hall is a long rectangular nave like space flanked by dependent rooms that mostly also open into one another ending in a semi circular apse with matching transept spaces Clustered columns emphasised the crossing of the two axes Christian adoption of the basilica form Edit See also Christianised sites Structural elements of a gothic basilica Variations Where the roofs have a low slope the triforium gallery may have own windows or may be missing In the 4th century once the Imperial authorities had decriminalised Christianity with the 313 Edict of Milan and with the activities of Constantine the Great and his mother Helena Christians were prepared to build larger and more handsome edifices for worship than the furtive meeting places such as the Cenacle cave churches house churches such as that of the martyrs John and Paul they had been using Architectural formulas for temples were unsuitable due to their pagan associations and because pagan cult ceremonies and sacrifices occurred outdoors under the open sky in the sight of the gods with the temple housing the cult figures and the treasury as a backdrop The usable model at hand when Constantine wanted to memorialise his imperial piety was the familiar conventional architecture of the basilicas 69 There were several variations of the basic plan of the secular basilica always some kind of rectangular hall but the one usually followed for churches had a central nave with one aisle at each side and an apse at one end opposite to the main door at the other end In and often also in front of the apse was a raised platform where the altar was placed and from where the clergy officiated In secular building this plan was more typically used for the smaller audience halls of the emperors governors and the very rich than for the great public basilicas functioning as law courts and other public purposes 70 Constantine built a basilica of this type in his palace complex at Trier later very easily adopted for use as a church It is a long rectangle two storeys high with ranks of arch headed windows one above the other without aisles there was no mercantile exchange in this imperial basilica and at the far end beyond a huge arch the apse in which Constantine held state Comparison of cross sections of churches Basilica The central nave extends to one or two storeys more than the lateral aisles and it has upper windows Pseudo basilica i e false basilica The central nave extends to an additional storey but it has no upper windows Stepped hall The vaults of the central nave begin a bit higher than those of the lateral aisles but there is no additional storey Hall church All vaults are almost on the same level Aisleless church with wallside pilasters a barrel vault and upper windows above lateral chapelsDevelopment Edit Assumption of Mary s in Bad Konigshofen Franconia Germany is a pseudobasilica Putting an altar instead of the throne as was done at Trier made a church Basilicas of this type were built in western Europe Greece Syria Egypt and Palestine that is at any early centre of Christianity Good early examples of the architectural basilica include the Church of the Nativity at Bethlehem 6th century the church of St Elias at Thessalonica 5th century and the two great basilicas at Ravenna The first basilicas with transepts were built under the orders of Emperor Constantine both in Rome and in his New Rome Constantinople Around 380 Gregory Nazianzen describing the Constantinian Church of the Holy Apostles at Constantinople was the first to point out its resemblance to a cross Because the cult of the cross was spreading at about the same time this comparison met with stunning success Yvon Thebert in Veyne 1987 Thus a Christian symbolic theme was applied quite naturally to a form borrowed from civil semi public precedents The first great Imperially sponsored Christian basilica is that of St John Lateran which was given to the Bishop of Rome by Constantine right before or around the Edict of Milan in 313 and was consecrated in the year 324 In the later 4th century other Christian basilicas were built in Rome Santa Sabina and St Paul s Outside the Walls 4th century and later St Clement 6th century A Christian basilica of the 4th or 5th century stood behind its entirely enclosed forecourt ringed with a colonnade or arcade like the stoa or peristyle that was its ancestor or like the cloister that was its descendant This forecourt was entered from outside through a range of buildings along the public street This was the architectural ground plan of St Peter s Basilica in Rome until in the 15th century it was demolished to make way for a modern church built to a new plan In most basilicas the central nave is taller than the aisles forming a row of windows called a clerestory Some basilicas in the Caucasus particularly those of Armenia and Georgia have a central nave only slightly higher than the two aisles and a single pitched roof covering all three The result is a much darker interior This plan is known as the oriental basilica or pseudobasilica in central Europe A peculiar type of basilica known as three church basilica was developed in early medieval Georgia characterised by the central nave which is completely separated from the aisles with solid walls 71 Gradually in the Early Middle Ages there emerged the massive Romanesque churches which still kept the fundamental plan of the basilica In Medieval Bulgaria the Great Basilica was finished around 875 The architectural complex in Pliska the first capital of the First Bulgarian Empire included a cathedral an archbishop s palace and a monastery 72 The basilica was one of the greatest Christian cathedrals in Europe of the time with an area of 2 920 square metres 31 400 sq ft The still in use Church of Saint Sophia in Ohrid is another example from Medieval Bulgaria In Romania the word for church both as a building and as an institution is biserică derived from the term basilica In the United States the style was copied with variances An American church built imitating the architecture of an Early Christian basilica St Mary s German Church in Pennsylvania was demolished in 1997 Old St Peter s Rome as the 4th century basilica had developed by the mid 15th century in a 19th century reconstruction St John in the Lateran is both an architectural and an ecclesiastical basilica Romanesque basilica of nowadays Lutheran Bursfelde Abbey in Germany Chester Cathedral in England a Gothic style basilica St Sebald s in Nuremberg has a basilical nave and a hall choir Palma Cathedral on Mallorca in Spain has windows on three levels one above the aisles one above the file of chapels and one in the chapels A rare American church built imitating the architecture of an Early Christian basilica St Mary s German Church in Pennsylvania now demolished Alexander Nevsky Cathedral in SofiaCatholic basilicas EditMain article Basilicas in the Catholic Church St Peter s Basilica Vatican City a major basilica of the Catholic Church is a central plan building enlarged by a basilical nave In the Catholic Church a basilica is a large and important church building This designation may be made by the Pope or may date from time immemorial 73 74 Basilica churches are distinguished for ceremonial purposes from other churches The building does not need to be a basilica in the architectural sense Basilicas are either major basilicas of which there are four all in the diocese of Rome or minor basilicas of which there were 1 810 worldwide as of 2019 update 75 The Umbraculum is displayed in a basilica to the right side i e the Epistle side of the altar to indicate that the church has been awarded the rank of a basilica See also Edit Christianity portalMacellum Roman covered market Market hall modern covered market Courthouse Curia Municipal curiae Town hallArchitecture Edit Architecture of cathedrals and great churches Byzantine architecture Church architectureReferences EditCitations Edit Henig Martin ed A Handbook of Roman Art Phaidon p 55 1983 ISBN 0714822140 Sear F B Architecture 1 a Religious section in Diane Favro et al Rome ancient Grove Art Online Oxford Art Online Oxford University Press Retrieved 26 March 2016 subscription required a b c d e Roberts John ed 2007 basilica The Oxford Dictionary of the Classical World Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780192801463 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 280146 3 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Dumser Elisha Ann 2010 Basilica in Gagarin Michael ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece and Rome Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195170726 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 517072 6 The Oxford Dictionary of Christian Art and Architecture 2013 ISBN 978 0 19968027 6 p 117 The Institute for Sacred Architecture Articles The Eschatological Dimension of Church Architecture sacredarchitecture org a b c d Donati Jamieson C 4 November 2014 Marconi Clemente ed The City in the Greek and Roman World The Oxford Handbook of Greek and Roman Art and Architecture online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199783304 013 011 ISBN 978 0 19 978330 4 a b c d e f Davis Thomas W 2019 Caraher William R Davis Thomas W Pettegrew David K eds New Testament Archaeology Beyond the Gospels The Oxford Handbook of Early Christian Archaeology Oxford University Press pp 45 63 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199369041 013 34 ISBN 978 0 19 936904 1 a b Darvill Timothy 2009 basilica The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Archaeology Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780199534043 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 953404 3 a b c d Kristensen Troels Myrup 2019 Caraher William R Davis Thomas W Pettegrew David K eds Statues The Oxford Handbook of Early Christian Archaeology Oxford University Press pp 332 349 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199369041 013 19 ISBN 978 0 19 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Libya 18 369 379 Rogerson Barnaby 2018 In Search of Ancient North Africa A History in Six Lives London Haus Publishing p 283 ISBN 978 1 909961 55 5 Goodman Martin David 2014 Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds Eidinow Esther asst ed synagogue The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization 2nd ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198706779 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 870677 9 Morris Ian 2014 Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds Eidinow Esther asst ed dead disposal of The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization 2nd ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198706779 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 870677 9 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Talloen Peter 2019 Caraher William R Davis Thomas W Pettegrew David K eds Asia Minor The Oxford Handbook of Early Christian Archaeology Oxford University Press pp 494 513 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199369041 013 24 ISBN 978 0 19 936904 1 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Stewart Charles Anthony 2019 Caraher William R Davis Thomas W 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J 2005 1991 Kazhdan Alexander P ed Basilica Discoperta The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195046526 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 Fragoulis K Minasidis C Mentzos A 2014 Poulou Papadimitriou Natalia Nodarou Eleni Kilikoglou Vassilis eds Pottery from the Cemetery Basilica in the Early Byzantine City of Dion LRCW 4 Late Roman Coarse Wares Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Mediterranean 2 volume set Archaeology and archaeometry The Mediterranean a market without frontiers Oxford UK British Archaeological Reports pp 297 304 doi 10 30861 9781407312514 ISBN 978 1 4073 1251 4 Manning Sturt W 2002 The late Roman church at Maroni Petrera survey and salvage excavations 1990 1997 and other traces of Roman remains in the lower Maroni Valley Cyprus Manning Andrew Eckardt Hella Nicosia Cyprus A G Leventis Foundation p 78 ISBN 9963 560 42 3 OCLC 52303510 a b c d e f g h i Fortsch Reinhard 2006 Basilica Constantiniana Brill s New Pauly Aurelius Victor de 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Dictionary of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198662778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 retrieved 8 July 2020 Evagrius Scholasticus Ecclesiastical History II 3 The precinct consists of three huge structures one is open air adorned with a long court and columns on all sides and another in turn after this is almost alike in breadth and length and columns but differing only in the roof above Whitby Michael ed 2000 The Ecclesiastical History of Evagrius Scholasticus Translated Texts for Historians 33 Liverpool University Press pp 63 64 amp notes 24 27 doi 10 3828 978 0 85323 605 4 ISBN 978 0 85323 605 4 Whitby Michael ed 2000 The Ecclesiastical History of Evagrius Scholasticus Translated Texts for Historians 33 Liverpool University Press pp 63 64 amp notes 24 27 doi 10 3828 978 0 85323 605 4 ISBN 978 0 85323 605 4 Papadakis Aristeides 2005 1991 Kazhdan Alexander P ed Chalcedon Council of The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium online ed Oxford University Press doi 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The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198662778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 retrieved 8 July 2020 a b c d e f Thonemann Peter 22 March 2018 Nicholson Oliver ed Ephesus The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198662778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 Van Dam Raymond 2008 Ashbrook Harvey Susan Hunter David G eds The East 1 Greece and Asia Minor The Oxford Handbook of Early Christian Studies Oxford University Press pp 323 343 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199271566 003 0017 ISBN 978 0199271566 a b c Calder William Moir Cook John Manuel Roueche Charlotte Spawforth Antony 2014 Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds Eidinow Esther asst ed Ephesus The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization 2nd ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198706779 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 870677 9 a b c Johnson Mark J 2005 1991 Kazhdan Alexander P ed Crypt The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University 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19 870677 9 Brodersen Kai 2014 Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds Eidinow Esther asst ed Seven Wonders of the ancient world The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization 2nd ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198706779 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 870677 9 a b Purcell Nicholas Murray William M 2014 Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds Eidinow Esther asst ed Nicopolis The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization 2nd ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198706779 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 870677 9 a b Laidlaw William Allison Nixon Lucia F Price Simon R F 2014 Hornblower Simon Spawforth Antony eds Eidinow Esther asst ed Crete Greek and Roman The Oxford Companion to Classical Civilization 2nd ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198706779 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 870677 9 a b c Gregory Timothy E 2005 1991 Kazhdan Alexander P ed Nea Anchialos The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195046526 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 a b c d Kazhdan Alexander P 2005 1991 Kazhdan Alexander P ed Stobi The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195046526 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 Ozis Unal Atalay Ayhan Ozdemir Yalcin 1 December 2014 Hydraulic capacity of ancient water conveyance systems to Ephesus Water Supply 14 6 1010 1017 doi 10 2166 ws 2014 055 ISSN 1606 9749 Valerian Dominique 1 February 2013 Clark Peter ed Middle East 7th 15th Centuries The Oxford Handbook of Cities in World History Oxford University Press pp 263 264 doi 10 1093 oxfordhb 9780199589531 013 0014 a b c Kinney Dale 2005 1991 Kazhdan Alexander P ed Porec The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195046526 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 a b c Rizos Efthymios Darley Rebecca 2018 Nicholson Oliver ed Serdica The Oxford Dictionary of Late Antiquity Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780198662778 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 866277 8 a b c d e f Oates David 1962 Qasr Serij A Sixth Century Basilica in Northern Iraq Iraq 24 2 78 89 doi 10 2307 4199719 ISSN 0021 0889 JSTOR 4199719 S2CID 164090791 Simpson St John 1994 A Note on Qasr Serij Iraq British Institute for the Study of Iraq 56 149 151 doi 10 2307 4200392 JSTOR 4200392 Curcic Slobodan 2005 1991 Kazhdan Alexander P ed Church Plan Types The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780195046526 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 Basilica Plan Churches Cartage org lb Archived from the original on 12 January 2012 Retrieved 17 February 2012 Syndicus 40 Loosley Leeming Emma 2018 Architecture and Asceticism Cultural Interaction between Syria and Georgia in Late Antiquity Texts and Studies in Eastern Christianity Volume 13 Brill pp 115 121 ISBN 978 90 04 37531 4 Vzstanovyavaneto na Golyamata bazilika oznachava pamet rodolyubie i turizm 1 CIC 1917 can 1180 as quoted in Basilicas Historical and Canonical Development GABRIEL CHOW HOI YAN Toronto Ontario Canada 13 May 2003 revised 24 June 2003 It was not until 1917 that the Code of Canon Law officially recognized de jure churches that had the immemorial custom of using the title of basilica as having such a right to the title 81 We refer to such churches as immemorial The title of minor basilicas was first attributed to the church of San Nicola di Tolentino in 1783 An older minor basilica is referred to as an immemorial basilica Basilicas in the World GCatholic org 2019 Retrieved 12 December 2019 General sources Edit Krautheimer Richard 1992 Early Christian and Byzantine architecture New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 05294 4 Architecture of the basilica Syndicus Eduard Early Christian Art Burns amp Oates London 1962 Basilica Porcia W Thayer Basilicas of Ancient Rome from Samuel Ball Platner as completed and revised by Thomas Ashby 1929 A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome London Oxford University Press Paul Veyne ed A History of Private Life I From Pagan Rome to Byzantium 1987 Heritage Foundation of Newfoundland and Labrador Gietmann G amp Thurston Herbert 1913 Basilica In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company External links Edit Look up basilica in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Basilicas Vitruvius a 1st century B C Roman architect on how to design a basilica Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Basilica amp oldid 1147239685, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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