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13. The Prince and the Palace: Human Made Divine on the Palatine Hill

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Roman Architecture (HSAR 252)

Professor Kleiner investigates the major architectural commissions of the emperor Domitian, the last Flavian emperor. She begins with the Arch of Titus, erected after Titus' death by his brother Domitian on land previously occupied by Nero's Domus Transitoria. The Arch celebrated Titus' greatest accomplishment--the Flavian victory in the Jewish Wars--and may have served as Titus' tomb. Professor Kleiner also discusses the Stadium of Domitian, the shape of which is preserved in Rome's Piazza Navona. Her major focus is the vast Imperial Palace on the Palatine Hill designed by the architect Rabirius and featuring Domitian as dominus et deus (lord and god). Constructed from brick-faced concrete and revetted with multicolored imported marbles, this structure was divided into public and private wings, and was so magnificent that it served as the urban residence of all subsequent Roman emperors. The lecture concludes with the so-called Forum Transitorium, a narrow forum begun by Domitian and finished by his successor Nerva, which features a temple to Domitian's patron goddess Minerva and a series of decorative columnar bays that create a lively in-and-out undulation that heralds the beginning of a "baroque" phase in Roman architecture.

00:00 - Chapter 1. The Jewish Wars, the Flavian Dynasty, and the Arch of Titus
14:18 - Chapter 2. The Arch of Titus: Triumph and Tomb
23:25 - Chapter 3. Domitians Succession and Stadium (The Piazza Navona)
33:11 - Chapter 4. Domitian as Dominus et Deus in the Palatine Palace
46:14 - Chapter 5. Rabirius Architectural Innovations
01:02:06 - Chapter 6. The Forum Transitorium and Incipient Baroque Architecture

Complete course materials are available at the Open Yale Courses website: http://open.yale.edu/courses

This course was recorded in Spring 2009.

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