Marforio

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Marphurius
Italian: Marforio
Palazzo Nuovo
Coordinates41°53′37.50″N 12°28′59.77″E / 41.8937500°N 12.4832694°E / 41.8937500; 12.4832694

Marphurius

Pasquin. As at the other five "talking statues", pasquinades—irreverent satires
poking fun at public figures—were posted beside Marforio in the 16th and 17th centuries.

The statue and its location

Marforio is a large 1st century

Neptune, or the Tiber. It was the humanist and antiquarian Andrea Fulvio who first identified it as a river god, in 1527.[5] The Marfoi was a landmark in Rome from the late 12th century.[6] Poggio Bracciolini wrote of it as one of the sculptures surviving from Antiquity,[7] and in the early 16th century it was still near the Arch of Septimius Severus, where the various authors reported it.[8]

The origin of its name is a matter of some debate. It was discovered with a granite basin bearing the inscription mare in foro,[9] but may take its name from the Latin name for the area in which it was discovered (Martis Forum), or from the Marioli (or Marfuoli) family who owned property near the Mamertine Prison, also near the forum, where the statue was sat until 1588.

Palazzo dei Conservatori
. Part of the face, the right foot, and the left hand holding a shell were restored in 1594. In 1645, the building of the Palazzo Nuovo enclosed the fountain in its courtyard.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The Encyclopedia Britannic: Vol. XVIII. New York: Henry G. Allen and Co. 1888.
  2. ^ Jourdain, Eleanor F. (1921). Dramatic Theory and Practice in France. London: Longmans, Green, and Co.
  3. .
  4. ^ The restoration of his right hand, grasping a shell, was inspired by, and supported, the identification as Oceanus.
  5. ^ Fulvio, Antiquitatis Urbis 1527, noted by Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny, Taste and the Antique: The Lure of Classical Sculpture 1500-1900 (Yale University Press) 1981:259.
  6. ^ Roberto Valentini and Giuseppe Zucchetti, Codice topographa della Città di Roma (1940-53) vol. III: p. 226.
  7. ^ Bracciolini, De varietate fortunae, written over a long period, ca 1430 to 1445.
  8. ^ Haskell and Penny 1981:258.
  9. ^ The black and white granite basin was shifted to form a fountain for watering cattle in the Campo Vaccino, as the Roman Forum had become; it was removed in 1818 to stand before one of the Horse Tamers on the Quirinal Hill, often known in the past as Alexander and Bucephalus (Haskell and Penny 1981:136, 258.

Bibliography

  • Rendina, C., "Pasquino statua parlante”, ROMA ieri, oggi, domani, n. 20, February 1990.

External links

Media related to Marforio at Wikimedia Commons

Preceded by
Il Facchino
Landmarks of Rome
Marforio
Succeeded by
Fontana del Moro