List of obelisks in Rome

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19th century collage of the twelve obelisks in Rome at the time (the Dogali obelisk was found later). Note the photos of 10 and 11 are incorrectly swapped.

The city of Rome harbours thirteen ancient obelisks, the most in the world. There are eight ancient Egyptian and five ancient Roman obelisks in Rome, together with a number of more modern obelisks; there was also until 2005 an ancient Ethiopian obelisk in Rome.

The Romans used special heavy cargo carriers called

obelisk ships to transport the monuments down the Nile[clarification needed] to Alexandria and from there across the Mediterranean Sea to Rome. On site, large Roman cranes
were employed to erect the monoliths.

Ancient Egyptian obelisks

At least eight obelisks created in antiquity by the Egyptians were taken from Egypt after the

Roman conquest
and brought to Rome.

Name Original Commissioner Location Height
(with base)
Description Image
Lateranense
Tuthmosis IV
Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano

41°53′12.6″N 12°30′17.2″E / 41.886833°N 12.504778°E / 41.886833; 12.504778 (Lateranense)
(32.18 m
(45.70 m)
Tallest obelisk in Rome, and the largest standing ancient Egyptian obelisk in the world, originally weighing around 455 
spina of the Circus Maximus.map Found in three pieces in 1587, restored approximately 4 m shorter by Pope Sixtus V, and erected near the Lateran Palace and Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran in 1588 in the place of the equestrian statue of Marcus Aurelius, which was moved to the Capitoline Hill. Current version weighs around 330 tons.[2]
Vaticano Unknown St. Peter's Square

41°54′8.1″N 12°27′26.1″E / 41.902250°N 12.457250°E / 41.902250; 12.457250 (Vaticano)
(25.5 m
(41 m)[A 1]
Vatican Circus.map Relocated by Pope Sixtus V in 1586 using a method devised by Domenico Fontana; the first monumental obelisk raised in the modern period, it is the only obelisk in Rome that has not toppled since Roman times. During the Middle Ages, the gilt ball on top of the obelisk was believed to contain the ashes of Julius Caesar.[3][4] Fontana later removed the ancient metal ball, now in a Rome museum, that stood atop the obelisk and found only dust. Pedro Tafur in his Andanças[4][5]
(c. 1440) mentions that many passed between the ground and the "tower" base "thinking it a saintly thing".
Flaminio
Ramses II
Piazza del Popolo

41°54′38.6″N 12°28′34.8″E / 41.910722°N 12.476333°E / 41.910722; 12.476333 (Flaminio)
(24 m
(36.50 m)
Originally from
Solare obelisk and erected on the spina of the Circus Maximus.map Found with the Lateranense obelisk in 1587 in two pieces and erected by Pope Sixtus V in 1589. Sculptures with lion fountains were added to the base in 1818. Weighs around 235 tons.[2]
Solare
Psammetichus II
(21.79 m
(33.97 m)
Originally from
Heliopolis.map Brought to Rome by Augustus in 10 BC with the Flaminio obelisk to form the gnomon of the Solarium Augusti in the Campus Martius.map Found in the 16th century but reburied. Rediscovered and erected by Pope Pius VI in front of the Palazzo Montecitorio
in 1792.
Macuteo
Ramses II
Piazza della Rotonda

41°53′57.6″N 12°28′36.3″E / 41.899333°N 12.476750°E / 41.899333; 12.476750 (Macuteo)
(26.34 m
(14.52 m)
Originally one of a pair at the Temple of
San Macuto and erected in Piazza Macuta. Moved to the front of the Pantheon by Pope Clement XI in 1711 over a fountain by Filippo Barigioni
.
Minerveo Apries Piazza della Minerva

41°53′52.7″N 12°28′39.2″E / 41.897972°N 12.477556°E / 41.897972; 12.477556 (Minerveo)
(25.47 m
(12.69 m)
Originally one of a pair from
Bernini, behind the Pantheon in Piazza della Minerva. The other of the pair is in Urbino
.

This is the smallest obelisk in Rome, with a height of 5.47 meters.[6][contradictory]

Dogali
Ramses II
Baths of Diocletian

41°54′7.8″N 12°29′50.9″E / 41.902167°N 12.497472°E / 41.902167; 12.497472 (Dogali)
(2?
(6.34 m)
Originally one of a pair from
Termini Station
and moved to its present site in 1924.
Matteiano
Ramses II
Villa Celimontana

41°53′0.2″N 12°29′43.2″E / 41.883389°N 12.495333°E / 41.883389; 12.495333 (Matteiano)
(22.68 m
(12.23 m)
Originally one of a pair at the Temple of
Capitoline. Moved to Villa Celimontana after Michelangelo redesigned the square in the late 16th century. Lost again; fragments rediscovered and re-erected in 1820. Smallest obelisk in Rome.[contradictory
]

Ancient Roman obelisks

At least five obelisks were manufactured in Egypt in the Roman period at the request of the wealthy Romans, or made in Rome as copies of ancient Egyptian originals.

Name Location Height
(with base)
Description Image
Agonalis

(Pamphilius)

Piazza Navona

41°53′56.3″N 12°28′23.1″E / 41.898972°N 12.473083°E / 41.898972; 12.473083 (Agonalis)
(16.53 m
(30+ m)
A copy commissioned by Domitian and erected at the Temple of Serapis. Moved to the Circus of Maxentius by Maxentius. The Earl of Arundel paid a deposit and attempted to ship the four pieces to London in the late 1630s but Urban VIII disallowed its export.[7]

Erected on top of the

Bernini
in 1651.

Quirinale (14.63 m
(28.94 m)
Originally erected on the eastern flank of the
Dioscuri (called the 'Horse Tamers') from the Baths of Constantine
.
Esquiline (14.75 m
(25.53 m)
Originally erected on the western flank of the Mausoleum of Augustus, paired with the Quirinale obelisk. Found in 1527 and erected in 1587 by Pope Sixtus V behind Santa Maria Maggiore.
Sallustiano Trinità dei Monti

41°54′22.1″N 12°28′59.6″E / 41.906139°N 12.483222°E / 41.906139; 12.483222 (Sallustiano)
(13.91 m
(30.45 m)
Above the
Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano in 1734, but kept horizontal. Erected in 1789 by Pope Pius VI
.
Pinciano Pincian Hill

41°54′38.9″N 12°28′47.1″E / 41.910806°N 12.479750°E / 41.910806; 12.479750 (Pinciano)
(19.24 m
(17.26 m)
Commissioned by Hadrian and erected in Tivoli for the tomb of Antinous. Moved to Rome by Elagabalus to decorate the spina of the Circus Varianus. Found in the 16th century near the Porta Maggiore. Moved to the Palazzo Barberini, then moved to the Vatican by Pope Clement XIV; finally erected on the Pincian by Pope Pius VII in 1822.

Obelisk of Axum

The Obelisk of Axum in Rome in 2002

There was also an Ethiopian obelisk in Rome, the

Italian occupation of Ethiopia in 1937. It was struck by lightning in May 2002. After being restored, it was returned to Ethiopia
in April 2005.

Modern obelisks

EUR district

There are five well-known modern obelisks in Rome:

Former locations of some obelisks

See also

Monoliths

  • Cleopatra's Needle
  • List of Roman monoliths
  • List of largest monoliths in the world

Roman triumphal monuments

Notes

  1. Chigi
    arms in bronze, in all 41 m to the cross on its top

References

  1. ^ "NOVA Online | Mysteries of the Nile | A World of Obelisks: Rome". PBS.
  2. ^ a b "Menhir's, Obelisks and Standing stones".
  3. ^ Touring Club Italiano, Roma e Dintorni.
  4. ^
    E. Denison Ross and Eileen Power, translated and edited with an introduction by Malcolm Letts (New York, London: Harper & brothers 1926):

    On the other side of it is a high tower made of one piece of stone, like a three-cornered diamond raised upon three brazen feet; and many, taking it for a holy thing, creep between the ground and the base of that tower. This was a work undertaken in honour of Julius Caesar and assigned for his burial, and on the top of it are three large gilt apples in which is the dust of the Emperor [sic

    ] Julius Caesar, and certainly it is a noble edifice and marvellously ordered and very strange. It is called Caesar's needle, and in the middle and at the base, and even at the top, are a few ancient letters carved in the stone which now cannot well be read, but in fact they record that the body of Julius Caesar was buried there.

  5. , entry carnicol, page 880.
  6. ^ L'Italia. Roma (guida rossa), Touring Club Italiano, Milano 2004
  7. ^ Edward Chaney, "Roma Britannica and the Cultural Memory of Egypt: Lord Arundel and the Obelisk of Domitian", in Roma Britannica: Art Patronage and Cultural Exchange in Eighteenth-Century Rome, eds. D. Marshall, K. Wolfe and S. Russell, British School at Rome, 2011, pp. 147-70.

Further reading

External links