Discoveries on Rome's Palatine Hill

j d worthington

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While doing work on the Palatine Hill, they've found some very exciting things...

Rome's Palatine Hill shows new treasures - Yahoo! News

ROME - Work on Rome's Palatine Hill has turned up a trove of discoveries, including what might be the underground grotto where ancient Romans believed a wolf nursed the city's legendary founders Romulus and Remus.

Archaeologists gathered Tuesday at a conference to save crumbling monuments on the Palatine discussed findings of studies on the luxurious imperial homes threatened by collapse and poor maintenance that have forced the closure of much of the hill to the public.

While funds are still scarce, authorities plan to reopen some key areas of the honeycombed hill to tourists by the end of the year, including frescoed halls in the palaces of the emperor Augustus and of his wife, Livia.

It was during the restoration of the palace of Rome's first emperor that workers taking core samples from the hill found what could be a long-lost place of worship believed by ancient Romans to be the cave where a she-wolf suckled Romulus and Remus, the abandoned twin sons of the god of war Mars.

Irene Iacopi, the archaeologist in charge of the Palatine and the nearby Roman Forum, said experts used a probe to peer into the 52-foot-deep cavity and found a vaulted space decorated with frescoes, niches and seashells. It is too early to say for sure whether the worship place known as "lupercale"_ from "lupa," Latin for wolf — has been found, but Roman texts say that it was close to Augustus' palace and that the emperor had restored it, Iacopi said.

Other finds to have emerged recently from the Palatine's largely unexplored palaces and temples include an ancient Roman sewer, insignia believed to have belonged to the emperor Maxentius, terra-cotta statues and an alabaster tiger striped with gray marble.

Today rainwater seeps through stones, roots bore through bricks and retaining walls crack under layer after layer of construction, from the eighth-century B.C. remains of Rome's first fledgling huts to a medieval fortress and Renaissance villas.

Only a quarter of the Palatine's nearly 500 buildings are above the ground and just 40 percent of the hill's 67 acres can be visited.

The latest closure came in November 2005, when a 16th-century wall collapsed one night in a well-visited area near the emperor Tiberius' palace. No one was hurt, but the collapse prompted authorities to study the stability of the hill and its monuments.

Experts said Tuesday they are considering restoring the ancient Roman sewage system to help drain rainwater.

The story was carried by AP, is by Ariel David, datelined Tues., Jan. 23, 2007, and titled "Rome's Palatine Hill shows new treasures".
 
Its articles like this one that percolate my imaginative juices! Not just the Palatine, but all the Seven Hills of Rome are literally honeycombed with such forgotten grottoes, catacombs, cisterns and sewers. What unhallowed rites and rituals were performed in these dank, shadowy chambers far from the warm embrace of day and the prying eyes of the average plebian?

While we're on the topic, here's a recommendation for one of my favourite books, one of which I'm sure you'll find as fascinating as I do:
Amazon.com: Subterranean Rome (I Piccoli Di Arsenale): Books: Ivana Della Portella
 
Thanks, Curt! That one looks very inviting indeed. Think I may have to pick up a copy... Much obliged!:D
 

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