Porta Palatina
The Palatine Gate (
The Palatine Gate represents the primary archaeological evidence of the city's Roman phase. It is one of the world's best preserved 1st-century BC Roman gateways. Together with the ancient theatre's remains, located a short distance away, it is part of the so-called Archaeological Park, which opened in 2006.[1]
Etymology
The name Porta Palatina literally refers to a
The most trusted theory suggests that it might be either the former Casa del Senato (House of the Senate), a
A second theory hints to the presence of an alleged adjacent amphitheatre built near present-day Borgo Dora, a historical neighbourhood developing right outside the old city walls (north of the Porta Palatina).[note 2] This facility might rapidly have fallen into disrepair and, as a result, it might simply have been dubbed palazzo by the ancients.
Over the centuries, however, the Palatine Gate was also known by some other names, such as Porta Comitale (Count's Gate, allegedly referring to a count's residence),[2] Porta Doranea or Porta Doranica (since it led to the Dora river) and later as Porta Palazzo (a clear synonym of Porta Palatina).[3][note 3]
Features
The Porta Principalis Dextra served as an access to the
Quite similar to the ancient Porta Decumana, built into the medieval structure of the present-day Palazzo Madama, the Palatine Gate represents an example of a typical Roman gate facing a cavaedium (quadrangular courtyard on the inside of the city walls), the remains of which are placed in front of the gate.[note 4] Erected on a square base, the two angular towers are more than thirty metres high and feature a sixteen-sided structure. The central body, namely the interturrio, is about twenty metres long and is characterized by two orders of windows, the lower one composed of arch windows and the upper one made up of jack arch windows. The underlying portion features four entryways: the central ones are larger and taller and are vehicle accessible, while the two entryways to the sides are narrower and shorter and served as pedestrian passageways. The grooves along the entryways' inner walls suggest the original presence of the so-called cateractae, an alleged system of gate gratings operated from the upper floor.
On the ground near the gate is still part of the guardhouse added in the Roman period, on which one can see the furrows on the stones caused by the transit of wagons.
The pair of bronze statues depicting
History
From the ancient age to the 16th century
Built in the 1st century during the Augustan Age or the Flavian Age, the Porta Principalis Dextra may predate the construction of the city walls and was perhaps built on the location of an earlier Republican Age gate.[note 5]
This facility served as a city gate for a long time and was turned into a
The 18th century
The Palatine Gate was supposed to be torn down in the early
In 2006 the City of Turin started a restoration of the archaeological area, with the intent to improve the park, make the towers accessible to the public and build an underground parking for the carts of the nearby Porta Palazzo open market.
Notes
- Lothair (in 947) and Frederick Barbarossa. However, we have no documentation confirming these events with certainty.
- circus.
- ^ To this day, the name Porta Palazzo lives on in the nearby mercato di Porta Palazzo, the historical open market of the neighbourhood which is also the biggest one of its kind in Europe.
- ^ Small traces of a statio are left to testify the presence of the cavaedium, which was about twelve yards wide as we can assume nowadays.
- ^ Surveys carried out between 1936 and 1938 revealed the remnants of structures that lead to assume the presence of an earlier Republican Age gate.
References
Citations
- ^ "Museo Archeologico di Torino". Archived from the original on 2013-04-24.
- ^ Commentari dell'Ateneo di Brescia. Ateneo di Brescia. 1828. p. 293. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
Porta Comitale Torino.
- ^ Craveri, Giovanni Gaspare (1753). Guida de' forestieri per la real città di Torino. Gian Domenico Rameletti. p. 165. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
porta palazzo.
Sources
- Torricella, Giuseppe - Torino e le sue vie, Turin, Le Livre Précieux, 1971.
- Cardoza, A. e Symcox, G. - Storia di Torino, Turin, Einaudi, 2006.
- Luisa Papotti, La Porta Palatina. L'intervento di restauro degli anni novanta, in Liliana Mercando (a cura di), Archeologia a Torino. Dall'età preromana all'Alto Medioevo, Umberto Allemandi & C., Turin, 2003, pp. 89–96.
- Claudio Franzoni, Le mura di Torino: riuso e "potenza delle tradizioni", in Enrico Castelnuovo (a cura di), Torino. Prima capitale d'Italia, I luoghi dell'arte, Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana Treccani, Rome, 2010, pp. 13–22.
- Gruppo Archeologico Torinese, Guida archeologica di Torino, Turin, p. 102.
- Politecnico di Torino Dipartimento Casa-Città, Beni culturali ambientali nel Comune di Torino, Società degli Ingegneri e degli Architetti in Torino, Torino 1984, p. 286.
External links
- Media related to Porta Palatina (Turin) at Wikimedia Commons