Friday, February 1, 2019

2019 1st Greetings from Rome from Carol

Dear Family, Friends and Readers,
We have been here 12 days and have adjusted to the seven hour time difference from Chicago. Every time we look at the American Midwest's weather reports, we are especially glad to be here, and hope your weather improves soon.
(A reminder, sometimes smaller screens don't show the full length of my blog entries, which can be accessed through a tiny "MORE" tab. The end is marked as such. If you tire of the blather, it is possible to view just the photos by clicking on one of them.)
There are advantages to being retired, the main ones for us are being able to visit Rome for more than the traditional two weeks' annual vacation of the still-employed and being able to come in the off-off season, when travel and accommodation prices are lower.
So what have we been doing? 
We've not been sitting at a cafe on the Via Veneto waiting for the movie stars to stroll by as one could back in the 1950's. Early on we hauled in groceries (mainly from a nice supermarket across the street) and other supplies, and we have been slowly wandering around some favorite sites. 
I thought you might enjoy some of my favorite sunny-day photos, taken in previous years.

The Tiber, the bridge to Castle Sant' Angelo  with
only one corner of its fortifications showing, 
and the dome of St. Peter's.

The Castle Sant' Angelo, originally the family tomb of the Emperor Hadrian, later a papal fortress, with the dome of St. Peter's in the background. The angel atop the castle commemorates the vision of the angel sheathing his sword to signal the end of an early plague in Rome. 

View from the Vittoriano (typewriter) monument over some of the Imperial Forums. The better preserved half of the Colosseum is hard to miss. To its right is a side view of the large basilica of Maxentius (completed by his conqueror in an early 300's civil war, Constantine, who became the Emperor of Rome).


The Forum Boarium, or site along the Tiber of the ancient cattle market. The church of Santa Maria in Cosmedin and its 12th century bell tower. At the right is part of the round temple to Hercules, later a small church. 

The Aventine Hill, with flowering trees in spring.

A very quiet, small piazza in the medieval part of the Trastevere neighborhood.



San Paolo fuori le mure/St. Paul outside the walls


This idyllic scene of St. Paul Outside the Walls and its monastery was painted by Van Wittel in the later 1600's. The main differences between this view and now are the then-inhabited areas of Rome were a couple miles away. The flood-restraining walls on the Tiber are a couple centuries in the future. 
view of St. Paul from a Tiber bridge 2010. The modern built up area isn't obvious in this shot.
The Basilica of Saint Paul Outside the Walls was built over the burial site of St. Paul, outside ancient Rome's city walls (but now well within the expanded city). 


These maps show the difference a couple of centuries can make. The built up part of Rome now extends for miles past the basilica (red circle).

It is less than 3 miles from the Pantheon, with a subway stop nearby, but many tourists miss this treat.

(I've shown you this photo before, looking towards St. Paul from the subway stop. Alas, yes, that is a famous American burger outlet on the near corner.)

Right, a view of the basilica's mid 1800's bell tower, intended to look like an ancient light house. The outer walls were built to fortify the basilica and monastery from pirate raids in the 9th century. 


This is an earlier view of the Basilica and monastery from a luxurious 17th century cabinet 

The real treats are behind those plain outer walls. Below is the forecourt that was redone in the later 1800's, with granite columns from Lake Maggiore (near Swiss border). The 150 columns were polished in Milan, sent by barge down the Po River to the Adriatic Sea, then shipped all the way around Italy to the Tiber, then put in shallower draught boats and ferried upriver to this spot. 
The four sided quadriportico is 
70 meters or 230 feet long.








The inside of the basilica has FIVE aisles. If you squint, you might see a small dark blob, partially blocking the lit-up display in front of the altar--that's a person.


This is one of the four side aisles. Overall, the basilica is 490 feet long, 260 feet wide, main nave is 98 feet wide and the height of the main nave is 240 feet (73 meters)
This is one of the windows above the main nave, done to resemble the ancient panes of thin sheets of alabaster.


Moving further down the nave, the mosaics in the bowl-shaped apse and the structure over the main altar (the baldacchino) are easier to see. 
Yes, the basilica's staff has the thankless task of setting up and then storing away 
endless rows of chairs as needed.

These mosaics were done by 
Venetian master mosaicists 
in the early 1200's, with Christ in the center, 
as Pantocrator or Omnipotent,
flanked by Saints Luke, Paul, Peter and Andrew.
For a full description of all the saints 

and the banners they hold, go to http://www.vatican.va/various/basiliche/
san_paolo/en/basilica/oro_basilica.htm

Catholics will note the unusual hand gesture
of Christ's blessing, which is in the Byzantine style. The tiny white blob to the left of Christ's foot is a representation of Pope Honorius III (1216-1227), who had the work on these 
mosaics finished. It is hard to see, but there
 is water flowing from Christ's throne, 
nurturing the lush growth and animals along 
this band of the mosaics.

The second row of mosaics show several apostles, each with a banner quoting Scripture. The two angels are flanking items from 
Christ's crucifixion.


The Baldacchino and 

the Easter Candlestick

Even though we have visited St. Paul's 
many times, I realized I didn't know much 
about the altar covering Baldacchino and 
the large Easter Candlestick, 
so this time I looked more closely. 
It is very easy to be overwhelmed by 
the mosaics and the general sensation of being in an ancient Roman basilica when in the nave.

The apse is to the left, the main part of 
the nave would be to the right. The fenced 
area before the baldacchino protects a "confessio" or lower area with 
very important relics or items. 

Inside the confessio. The faithful believe 
the chain in the blue lit box is part of those 
used on St. Paul in his captivity 
before his beheading.

The grill on the right is the same one from 
the previous photo. This photo was taken 
from the basilica's floor, looking down 
into the confessio.

The glass panel protects remains of the 4th century, original Constantinian basilica's apse. I've read that first church had two apses, this 
one here, and the other one under the modern apse, which would have been a comparatively small building. It was replaced with one less 
than a half century later with the much larger basilica, dedicated in 395 AD, because of the throngs of the faithful who came to worship 
at what they believed to be the tomb of 
St. Paul. This basilica was larger than the original St. Peter's, also built by Constantine. 
It was in the early 1500's that the massive 
work began on the modern St. Peter's which surpasses St. Paul's in size.

The grill on the right allows a glimpse 
towards an ancient wall protecting the burial
site of St. Paul, the entire reason for this basilica's existence. There were pagan burial grounds in this general area, followed by  centuries of Christian burials. (Some 2,000 
of the fragments of those burial slabs, tombs, altars and sarcophagi are artfully displayed 
in the cloister.)


High up on a wall of the museum is a plaster 
cast of what is believed to be the original slab over St. Paul's burial. The holes were made 
for pilgrims to dip a strip of cloth into and 
then to take away as a healing relic. 
{We enlightened moderns may sniff at such beliefs, but have you ever heard what fans 
can do to a movie star, tearing off bits of a 
jacket their idol is wearing?} 

The Baldacchino over the main altar


 

The baldacchino, 
looking towards the rear of the basilica.
Finished in 1285, this incorporates elements of the French Gothic (especially the three lobed arches and spires). The four supporting columns are porphyry, used by the ancients only for royalty. 



The reliefs on the Baldacchino's front, facing the congregation, show the abbot Bartolommeo, who commissioned this altar canopy in the 1280's from the sculptor Arnolfo di Cambio, better known for his work in Florence.



He is shown presenting it to St. Paul, and to Constantine and Theodosius, the founders of the original basilica. St. Paul with his sword is on the left corner, St. Peter with his keys is on the right.




This view of one side of the baldacchino shows 
the Fall of Eve and Adam. It is hard to see,
(I didn't bring my telephoto lens with me),
but Eve has already bitten the apple, 
for she is partially covering herself 
due to her new sense of shame, and she is
 about to take another bite from the apple 
offered by the infamous snake. 

Adam, on the right has also eaten of 

the forbidden fruit, and is shameful while interacting with God, who is shown in a small circle. 
The larger statue on the right corner is St. Paul; 
St. Peter is on another corner. The other 
two corner pieces may be St. Timothy and maybe possibly be St. Benedict, (this was and still is a Benedictine establishment). However, the Vatican's website says the fourth corner figure is Bartholomew, Abbot when the baldacchino was finished in 1285.




The spandrels above the arch on the third side 
show the offerings to God of Abel (left) and Cain. 




This enlargement may help to show the
details of Able's sacrifice of an animal 
(perhaps a lamb or a calf) receiving a 
blessing from the hand of God 
that appears from the clouds.
Cain's sacrifice of grain sheafs 
receives no such blessing, 
and Cain's unhappy scowl forebodes 
the hatred for his brother 
that will drive him to commit 
the first murder.

I don't find much reassurance that jealousy
and hatred go back in humans to our 
very roots, far longer than the tales of 
these two brothers, 
the first generation of Adam and Eve.
I've read a thoughtful paper 
proposing the inclusion 
of these last two Biblical subjects 
were there to reassure the congregants 
that although humans fail, 
there is hope for all.


The fourth side of the baldacchino 
is dismissed by scholars, as it was added
in the mid 1800's, 
and no one can find references 
to what had originally been there.
I think it still is worth looking at, 
showing King David and Solomon, 
who the Christians saw as prophets of 
the coming of the Messiah.


General view of the baldacchino, 
main altar, the apse with its mosaics, 
and the Easter Candlestick.


The Easter (Paschal) Candelstick.

This oversized candlestick is for the display 
of a candle lit during a special service during 
the night before Easter Sunday. To Christians, this represents Christ as the tree of life and 
the light of the world, and his bringing light 
into a world of darkness. 
The images carved into this one recount 
the tale of Christ's Passion 
for the mostly illiterate faithful.

 
At the bottom, the female figures are 
thought to have represented 
"The Whore of Babylon", 
as a symbol of evil in the world.

 

I'm still looking for an explanation of this band of intertwined animals and vines.

This 1200's candlestick is 5.5 meters,
or 18 feet high.

 
Another side of the candlestick shows 
Christ being questioned by Caiaphas.
The above photo shows Christ 
being mocked by the soldiers' feigning worshipful obedience.

Here is Pontius Pilate, 
the Roman administrator, symbolically 
and literally washing his hands 
of the entire affair.

Above, Christ's crucifixion between 
two condemned criminals. 


Above, the second tier left shows the 
risen Christ  in an almond shaped oval 
that represents an opening between 
the spiritual world of Heaven and earth. 
It is on the side facing the mass' participants, 
not towards the faithful in the nave.
A large statue of St. Paul is in the background.

More twisted vines and animals 
at the top of the candlestick.

What happened in 1823?

You may have noticed I've been referring 
to parts of this basilica that date back
only to the mid or late 1800's. 
In 1823, during some renovations, 
there was a devastating fire that destroyed 
the roof, nearly all the pillars in the nave, partially melted the heavy bronze doors, 
but fortunately the apse and its mosaics, 
as well as the Easter candlestick, 
the Apostle's tomb and the cloister 
were largely spared. During the long reconstruction process, 
several archeological finds of other tombs 
and burials were revealed.


Photo of a wall-sized reproduction of an engraving done immediately after the fire, looking towards the triumphal arch and 
the main altar area.


Painting done in 1823, looking from under the apse towards the rear of the basilica. 

This portico on the north end of the transept 
was added to use some of the few nave columns 
that survived the 1823 fire.

It was decided to rebuild the basilica 
as close to what it may have looked like originally. 



A floor plan of the present day basilica, 
with the main altar area and apse with its mosaics at the top, center. The cloister 
is at the right of the T shape, the above portico is at the left. The large forecourt at the bottom of the plan.


A quick view of the Cloister


A view midway down one of the four sides 
of the 1200's cloister for the Benedictine 
monks. (This was spared by the fire.) 
Not all the columns still have their inlaid mosaics, some were never so embellished.


Two of the capitals on the columns 
in the cloister wall. 


Two of the younger monks were 
heading to the basilica for evening vespers.


A FEW of the slabs from earlier burials near 
(and some from areas now beneath) 
the basilica, as well as small pagan altars 
to the memory of deceased loved ones.




When we used to come to Rome in October, 
the carefully tended rose garden 
would still be in full bloom. 
In late January, I was able to find 
one small rose plant with 
tiny rosebuds starting to form.






*****End of this posting. 
Thanks for sloughing through.******

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