The Borneo Post

Rome restores towering colonnade of Trajan’s Basilica

- Alexandria Sage

ROME: Rome’s most majestic forum has recovered some of its former glory with a partial reconstruc­tion of the imposing columns of Trajan’s basilica - using funds from a nowsanctio­ned Russian oligarch.

The restoratio­n of a portion of the Basilica Ulpia, which soared above the ancient Italian city for over a millennia, helps bring to life the grandeur and magnificen­ce of the original marble monument.

While most work on Rome’s ubiquitous ruins points downwards, the rebuilding of the basilica’s two-storey Corinthian colonnade has brought the focus up - over 23 metres to be exact.

“If visitors can’t sense the height of the monuments, they won’t understand the meaning of the architectu­re,” Claudio Parisi Presicce, Rome’s top official for cultural heritage, told AFP on a tour of the site.

The Basilica Ulpia was the centrepiec­e of Trajan’s Forum, the largest and last of the imperial forums, named a er Marcus Ulpius Traianus, emperor from 98 to 117 AD.

Inaugurate­d in the second century, it mostly collapsed during the Middle Ages, but was unearthed by excavation­s in the early 19th century and 1930s.

The current project, which began in 2021, identified three green marble columns that had been le for nearly 100 years “propped up in a corner with no connection with the floor plan,” Parisi Presicce said.

Engineers returned them to their proper place atop four granite pillars that mark the outer perimeter of the basilica’s first nave.

Between the two stories of columns, archaeolog­ists and technician­s have recreated the entablatur­e with its decorative frieze depicting winged victories sacrificin­g bulls.

Sanctioned donor

The project was funded with a 1.5-million-euro donation made in 2015 by Uzbekistan-born oligarch Alisher Usmanov.

He was later sanctioned by the European Union and US following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, accused by the US Treasury of being close to Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Estimated by Forbes last year to possess a US$14.4 billion fortune from the metals and mining industries, Usmanov is an Italophile who had previously given money for Rome restoratio­n projects.

He was named the ‘most generous charity donor’ by the Sunday Times’ Rich List in 2021, having donated 4.2 billion to charity over 20 years.

Parisi Presicce brushed aside questions about the donation, reiteratin­g that it was made before Usmanov was sanctioned and noting that Rome’s ancient heritage was “universal”.

Showing off

Trajan’s extensive military campaigns, including his nearannihi­lation of the Dacians in today’s Romania, extended Rome’s boundaries to their farthest limits.

His two bloody Dacian wars are depicted in a spiralling bas relief on Trajan’s Column, located just north of the basilica, a monument built to glorify the emperor’s victories and his spoils of war.

With the basilica, Trajan “built a monument using the most precious materials that could be used for that moment”, said Parisi Presicce, such as coloured marbles mined in far-away Egypt, Asia and Africa.

The basilica, home to civil and criminal courts and other state business, was made up of five central aisles separated by rows of columns.

Built by celebrated architect Apollodoru­s of Damascus, it was covered by a bronze roof, while statues of conquered Dacians and decorative panels of military banners decorated the facade.

Earlier excavation­s had unearthed the forum and traces of its basilica, but while the massive granite pillars running down the length of the basilica were restored and re-erected, the colonnade was still missing its second tier.

Segments of the original marble from the frieze on the entablatur­e - now kept safe in warehouses or museums - have been recreated in resin, along with lost portions bearing fewer details.

This allows the viewer to see the difference between the originals and the approximat­ions, common practice in modern restoratio­n, which also means the work is reversible.

The final steps of the project involve recreating the southern stairs to the basilica, incorporat­ing slabs of ancient yellow marble found at the site.

Currently, Rome has 150 archaeolog­ical projects planned through 2027, the vast majority of them paid for by EU post-pandemic recovery funds.

The city’s 500-person cultural heritage department includes about 40 archaeolog­ists and some 40 art historians, and another approximat­ely 50 architects, surveyors and engineers.

 ?? — AFP photos ?? A picture shows the partial reconstruc­tion of the two-storey colonnade of the basilica Ulpia in the Trajan forum, in Rome.
— AFP photos A picture shows the partial reconstruc­tion of the two-storey colonnade of the basilica Ulpia in the Trajan forum, in Rome.
 ?? ?? A picture shows a detail of the partial reconstruc­tion of the two-storey colonnade of the basilica Ulpia.
A picture shows a detail of the partial reconstruc­tion of the two-storey colonnade of the basilica Ulpia.
 ?? ?? A detail of the partial reconstruc­tion of the two-storey colonnade of the basilica Ulpia.
A detail of the partial reconstruc­tion of the two-storey colonnade of the basilica Ulpia.
 ?? ?? Claudio Parisi Presicce
Claudio Parisi Presicce

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