Underground Rome – Part One
While walking through the streets of Rome, no matter where
you stroll, there are 3000 years’ worth of ancient human activity beneath your
feet. Remains of the earliest settlement, temples from republican Rome, and
ruins of the imperial period slowly come to light as the modern city evolves.
Construction of the subway has brought out many old villas, mosaics and
frescoed walls.
In addition to the well-known ancient underground attractions,
others have been recently opened to the public: underground areas of the Terme
di Caracalla, the Vergine aqueduct under the Rinascente department store, and
the Domitian stadium under Piazza Navona.
Some underground sites have the advantage of having been
protected over the years by later construction above them. One such example is
the area under San Clemente.
The Basilica of San Clemente, http://basilicasanclemente.com/eng, named for the fourth pope, who died around the year 100, during the reign of Trajan, is a time machine of the city across the centuries. Constructions from the first, third, fourth centuries, Middle Ages and then additions in the eighteenth century are overlaid on four levels.
Three churches were successively built on this spot.
After the Normans sacked the fourth century church in 1084, it was
reconstructed at the beginning of the twelfth century. The main structure that
we see today of the Basilica is from this period, but the atrium, the portico
and the façade were added in the eighteenth century. Toward the middle of the
nineteenth century excavations were begun that brought to light the remains of
the fourth century church below, which, in turn, had been constructed over an
earlier building that once housed the imperial Roman mint.
Be prepared to go back in
time, in the labyrinth of a sacred and profane world. San Clemente is an
incredibly suggestive place and the underground exploration culminates in a
visit to a space in the form of a grotto dedicated to the mysterious god
Mithras. As you descend, there are well-situated lights and appropriate restorations,
which allow you to see old frescoes and part of the ruins incorporated into the
walls. On the left is a marble pagan inscription, which, when you turn it over
shows that it has been reused for a Christian burial. “To Sorus, rest in peace,
erected by his brother Euritidiranus.”
Continuing the descent, observe how the arches of the old
church have been filled in to better support the newer church above. The fourth
century basilica is also formed by a nave and two aisles, and is directly under
the new. The numerous frescoes from the eighth to the eleventh centuries are
rather faded, but an interesting fragment of a ninth century Last Judgment
stands out. Frescoes of the lives of Sant’Alessio and San Clemente are also
painted here.
Proceeding still lower, we find structures from the first
and third centuries. On this third level, there are the ruins of an enormous
rectangular building with walls of tuff and travertine about two feet thick
that was the imperial Roman mint. Part of this massive edifice supports the
current architectonic complex, that is the western wall, two side walls of the
building, two walls of the twelfth century church and three walls of the fourth
century basilica.
In the courtyard of a first century apartment block a mithraeum
was erected, which included a pronaos (vestibule) and triclinium
(dining room). In the latter, we see the altar and the benches where the
participants of this mysterious religion sat. The god Mithras was born from a
rock and ascended into heaven. The vault of the grotto represented the heavens,
that is, the universe. On the ceiling were stars and constellations known at
that time.
Mithras was a Persian god introduced to Rome by the soldiers stationed in the east.
Like Jesus, Mithras was a savior god, come to earth to show the way and oppose
evil; he died and rose again. His followers were baptized in bull’s blood. The
legionnaires built temples to the god Mithras all over the empire. This
religion was very popular with the Roman aristocracy and was in direct
competition with Christianity until it was outlawed in 395. This religion put
emphasis on loyalty and faith and, for this, held particular sway on the
military. The Roman legions introduced it in all parts of the empire and
remains of mithraeums have been found in many countries.
The muscular god Mithras is represented while killing a
bull, whose blood makes the earth fertile. Even though the cult originated in
Persia, a bearded and reclining Roman god, possibly Oceanus or Neptune, often
assists in the foreground of the scene. A dog instrumental in finding the bull
is sometimes depicted while the tail of the bull terminates in a large stalk of
grain that symbolizes the cycle of life made possible by the blood of the
animal.
It has been estimated that during the third century about
2000 Mithraeums flourished in the city. For another example, see the description
of the Mithraeum of Santa Prisca in Walk 2 of my book Walk Rome.
The fourth and last layer is mostly unexplored and consists
in part of houses that were destroyed during the famous fire in 64 AD during
emperor Nero’s reign. One area, not yet brought to light, contains a structure
from the republican period. The excavations continue and each year new rooms
and floors are discovered. The sound made by rushing water under a grate in the
floor is the final surprise.
Excavations were begun on the third level in 1867, but
gradually ground water seeped in to make it inaccessible. It rose until it
reached the door of the triclinium in 1912, indicated by a sign posted. That
same year Cardinal O’Connor of Boston
had a canal built 700 yards long to drain away the water that pressed on the
foundations. The water pours into the Cloaca Massima, a drainage system, built
in the sixth century BC and still functioning, which leads to the Tiber. This
channel crosses the fourth level under the church, six yards under the level of
the mithraeum, and passes under the nearby Via Labicana.
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