Devoir de Philosophie

Rome (Italy) - geography.

Publié le 27/05/2013

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Rome (Italy) - geography. I INTRODUCTION Rome (Italy), capital city of Italy and of Lazio (Latium) Region and Rome Province, on the Tiber River, in the central part of the country near the Tyrrhenian Sea. Vatican City, most of which is located in an enclave within Rome, is the seat of the papacy of the Roman Catholic church and has been recognized as an independent state by the Italian government since 1929. The majestic dome of Saint Peter's Basilica in Vatican City dominates the Roman skyline. For centuries, Rome has been called the Eternal City, a title earned through its importance as one of the great cities of Western civilization, as the capital of the Roman Empire, and as the world center of the Roman Catholic church. Since 1871 it has been the capital of united Italy. II ECONOMY Only after World War II (1939-1945) was Rome's status as the leading city of Italy again realized, as it overtook such major cities as Milan and Naples. Rome's economy remains essentially based on two activities, government operations and tourism. The majority of the city's workers are employed in these fields, in wholesale and retail trade, and in other service industries. In addition, Rome has become the site of the headquarters of many multinational corporations and agencies, including the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD), and World Food Program. After World War II, Rome also developed a wide base of industries. Traditional products such as textiles and tourist souvenirs were supplemented by printed materials, highfashion clothing, processed food, pharmaceuticals, machinery, and paper and metal products. The motion picture industry is also important. Rome is a central point in Italy's railroad system and also is connected by highway with many parts of the country. Leonardo da Vinci International Airport, situated near the seacoast, is one of the busiest in Europe. The city is served by a subway system. III THE URBAN LANDSCAPE According to tradition, Rome was founded in 753 BC on one of the Seven Hills--a term used for centuries to describe the Capitoline, Quirinal, Viminal, Esquiline, Caelian, Aventine, and Palatine hills surrounding the old community. Archaeological evidence indicates, however, that human settlement here dates from at least 1000 BC. The Capitoline Hill (Monte Capitoline) was long the seat of Rome's government, and the Palatine Hill was the site of such great structures as the Palace of the Flavians, built by the Roman emperor Domitian. As a result of construction through the centuries, most of the Seven Hills are now hardly distinguishable from the adjacent plain. Other hills of Rome include the Pincian (Pincio) and the Janiculum. Rome today is easily divided into two regions: the inner city, within the Aurelian Wall, built in the late 3rd century AD to enclose the area around the Seven Hills; and the sprawling outer city, with its suburbs. The historical center is a small area, located almost entirely on the eastern (left) bank of the Tiber. The monuments of Rome's past greatness are, for the most part, within the historical center, in stark contrast to the modern districts. The street pattern of the city reflects its long and complex history. The Via del Corso traverses most of the historic center from the Piazza Venezia, the geographic center of Rome, to the Piazza del Popolo, at the foot of Pincio Hill. Its use dates from the Middle Ages, when it was a horse-racing course. The monument to Victor Emmanuel II, the fi...

« of Etruscan and Roman art and is located in the mid-16th-century country house of Pope Julius III, and the Borghese Gallery, a museum of paintings and sculpture housedin an early 17th-century palace.

The National Roman Museum, designed by Michelangelo, features exhibits of Greek and Roman sculpture, including the Ludovisi Collectionof antiquities.

Important collections of art and decorative pieces can also be seen in some of the city’s other palaces.

Among these are the Farnese Palace, built between1514 and 1589; the mid-15th century Venetian Palace, with a noted collection of small Renaissance bronzes; and the Palazzo Barberini, a 17th-century baroque palace witha remarkable picture gallery.

See also Roman Art and Architecture. VI HISTORY According to legend, the city of Rome was founded by Romulus (with his brother, Remus, in some accounts) in 753 BC.

Although archaeological evidence suggests earlier habitations on the site, extended human settlement may well have dated from this time.

Traces of an Iron Age village from the mid-8th century BC have been found on the Palatine Hill.

The legend of the rape of the Sabine women ( see Sabines) and the subsequent merger of the Romans and Sabines are similarly supported by excavated remains. Earliest Rome was a kingdom with two classes, the patricians (nobles) and the plebeians (commoners).

The Senate, or Council of Elders, elected the monarchs and limitedtheir power.

For more detailed information on the early history of Rome, see Ancient Rome and Roman Empire. A Republican Rome Etruscan kings ruled Rome from the 7th to the late 6th century BC, but when the last monarch was overthrown, about 510 BC, a republic was established.

Rome subsequently began to absorb the surrounding areas.

After a Gallic invasion early in the 4th century BC, the so-called Servian Wall was built around the city.

The first aqueduct in Rome was built in 312 BC.

At the same time, the Via Appia ( see Appian Way), connecting the city with southern Italy, was constructed.

Rome continued to grow during and after the Punic Wars (264-146 BC).

During that time the first basilica, a type of building that could accommodate crowds in bad weather, was constructed (184 BC) in the Forum. After the assassinations (133 and 121 BC) of the brothers Tiberius and Gaius Gracchus, who had attempted to institute land reforms to aid the poor, the city experienced a period of instability that climaxed in the civil wars of the 1st century BC.

Julius Caesar ultimately became dictator and instituted a series of reforms.

The Forum had become crowded with structures and monuments and needed to be expanded; the Forum of Caesar was then planned.

It was completed under Augustus, the first emperor, who alsobuilt the Forum of Augustus. B Imperial Rome By the early imperial period, Rome was the hub of the Roman Empire, both physically, as the center of the Italian road system, and psychologically, as the capital of theworld.

This vast agglomeration had adequate water supply and efficient sewers, but the overcrowding of poor people in tenements resulted in frequent fires.

EmperorAugustus instituted the vigiles, or fire fighters with police powers.

In addition, vehicles were not allowed in the crowded streets except at night, and legislation was passedrestricting the maximum height of buildings.

A disastrous fire in AD 64 nevertheless destroyed much of the center of the city.

For Nero, the emperor then in power, this was an opportunity to build his palatial Golden House. The Flavian dynasty ( AD 69-96), in order to gain favor with the Roman populace, began a program of public works.

The most prominent of these was the amphitheater known as the Colosseum, which could accommodate gladiatorial games and even mock sea battles staged for huge crowds.

Few or no large-scale industries existed in Romeat the time, and adequate employment was not available for the vast population; hence, the grain dole and games (bread and circuses) that had begun during Republicantimes continued.

In addition to events in amphitheaters, chariot races were arranged in circuses and pantomimes in sumptuous theaters. Emperor Trajan had the last of the imperial forums built in the early 2nd century.

By that time, huge baths, some of them even including libraries, had become a fixture ofthe city’s life; the largest were built by Caracalla and Diocletian in the 3rd century.

Because of the deterioration already threatening the empire, a wall was built around thecity during the 3rd century.

By the following century, however, it was clear that the imperial court would have to be closer to the borders.

Emperor Constantine the Greattherefore founded the city of Constantinople as the Christian “New Rome.” Although Rome then began to decline, the first major Christian basilicas, among them the originalSaint Peter’s, were constructed during this period. C Decline of the City In 410 and 455 Rome was sacked by invading Germanic tribes.

Attempts were made to preserve the physical plant of the city in the face of growing chaos, but occupationby the Ostrogoths in the 6th century, subsequent Byzantine reoccupation, and concomitant destruction all contributed to a precipitous decline, and the population dwindled.The city was, however, the seat of the papacy, and a certain number of people remained.

Under Pope Gregory I the decline was even arrested for a while, but Italy laterbecame a battleground again; in the 9th century a new low ebb was reached when Arabs attacked the area around the city, including the Vatican.

During the Middle Ages,the built-up areas shrank until they were confined to the shore of the Tiber, where water was available.

Only one of the ancient aqueducts was still operable. D Papal Glory The city’s fortunes began to improve in the 11th century, although improvement lagged at the beginning of the 14th century, when the popes settled in Avignon.

Thepapacy returned to Rome in 1377, and after the middle of the 15th century the city became a center of Renaissance culture.

Massive papal patronage of the arts began toenrich Rome.

During the papacy (1447-1455) of Nicholas V the defense walls were repaired, palaces built, and churches restored.

Major artists and architects now worked inRome, and by the end of the century it had supplanted Florence as the primary focal point of the Renaissance.

The sack of the city in 1527 by Habsburg mercenaries was atemporary setback.

During the 16th century Michelangelo, Donato Bramante, Raphael, and other artists worked for the popes, and construction of the new Saint Peter’sBasilica progressed.

It was not until the reign (1585-1590) of Pope Sixtus V, however, that the dense, confused medieval urban pattern began to be modernized.

Threemajor streets were laid out to radiate from the Piazza del Popolo to the center of the city.

Sixtus also built squares and fountains, and he restored the Acqua Feliceaqueduct.

In addition, old churches were refurbished, and Saint Peter’s dome was completed. The dramatic baroque style that characterized Counter-Reformation Rome was predominant in structures of the 17th century.

Sculptors and architects, such as GianlorenzoBernini and Francesco Borromini, changed the face of Rome during this period.

In the 18th century Rome enjoyed a period of relative quiet under papal rule.

Structures builtin a subdued rococo style in the early part of the century later gave way to neoclassic structures.

In 1797 Napoleon Bonaparte took Rome and appropriated many arttreasures.

Ultimately, after the Congress of Vienna in 1815, Rome became papal again.

Napoleon’s occupation of Italy, however, had stimulated a nationalist reaction, andin 1861 Italy was unified under the house of Savoy.

Because of Rome’s position as papal headquarters it had to be forcibly taken by the kingdom of Italy in 1870.

The popethen made himself a “prisoner of the Vatican.” E National Capital After the city became the capital of united Italy in 1871, feverish growth followed.

Whole new quarters were constructed.

By the beginning of the 20th century the entirearea within the ancient walls had been built up, and the city began to expand outward.

High embankments were built along the Tiber to prevent floods, and Rome was. »

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