Augusta Emerita
Roman theater in Mérida
Augusta Emerita is located in Spain
Augusta Emerita
Shown within Spain
LocationMérida, Extremadura, Spain
RegionLusitania
Coordinates38°55′N 6°20′W / 38.917°N 6.333°W / 38.917; -6.333
TypeSettlement
History
Founded25 BC
CulturesRoman
Official nameArchaeological Ensemble of Mérida
TypeCultural
Criteriaiii, iv
Designated1993 (17th session)
Reference no.664
RegionEurope and North America

Augusta Emerita, also called Emerita Augusta,[1] was a Roman colonia founded in 25 BC in present day Mérida, Spain. The city was founded by Roman Emperor Augustus to resettle Emeriti soldiers from the veteran legions of the Cantabrian Wars, these being Legio V Alaudae, Legio X Gemina, and possibly Legio XX Valeria Victrix.[citation needed] The city, one of the largest in Hispania, was the capital of the Roman province of Lusitania, controlling an area of over 20,000 square kilometres (7,700 sq mi). It had three aqueducts and two fora.[2]

Augusta Emerita. The theater and amphitheater are visible to the right, along the city wall.

The city was situated at the junction of several important routes. It sat near a crossing of the Guadiana river. Roman roads connected the city west to Felicitas Julia Olisippo (Lisbon), south to Hispalis (Seville), northwest to the gold mining area, and to Corduba (Córdoba) and Toletum (Toledo).[2]

Today the Archaeological Ensemble of Mérida is one of the largest and most extensive archaeological sites in Spain and a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1993.[3]

Roman theatre

Main article: Roman Theatre (Mérida)

The theatre was built from 16 to 15 BC and dedicated by the consul Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa.[4] It has seating for around 6000 spectators.[5] It was renovated in the late 1st or early 2nd century AD, possibly by the emperor Trajan[6] or Hadrian.[5] Later, it was renovated again between 330 and 340 during the reigns of Constantine and his sons, when a walkway around the monument and new decorative elements were added. Subsequently, with the advent of Christianity as Rome's sole state religion, theatrical performances were officially declared immoral: the theatre was abandoned and most of its fabric was covered with earth, leaving only its upper tiers of seats (summa cavea). In Spanish tradition, these were known as "The Seven Chairs" in which it is popularly thought that several Moorish kings held court to decide the fate of the city.

Roman amphitheatre

Roman Amphitheatre

Main article: Amphitheatre of Mérida

The amphitheatre was dedicated in 8 BC, for use in gladiatorial contests and staged beast-hunts. It has an elliptical arena, surrounded by tiered seating for around 15,000 spectators, divided according to the requirements of Augustan ideology: the lowest seats were reserved for the highest status spectators. Only these lowest tiers survive. Once the games had fallen into disuse, the stone of the upper tiers was quarried for use elsewhere.

Roman circus

Main article: Roman circus of Mérida

The circus of Augusta Emerita was built some time around 20 BC, and was in use for many years before its dedication some thirty years later, probably during the reign of Augustus' successor, Tiberius. It was sited outside the city walls, alongside the road that connected Emeritus in Corduba (Córdoba) with Toletum (Toledo). The arena plan was of elongated U-shape, with one end semicircular and the other flattened. A lengthwise spina formed a central divide within, to provide a continuous trackway for two-horse and four-horse chariot racing.[7] The track was surrounded by ground level cellae, with tiered stands above. At some 400m long and 100m wide, the Circus was the city's largest building, and could seat about 30,000 spectators – the city's entire population, more or less. Like most circuses throughout the Roman Empire, Mérida's resembled a scaled-down version of Rome's Circus Maximus.[8]

Roman bridge at Merida seen from the Alcazaba

Roman bridge over the Guadiana

Main article: Puente Romano, Mérida

The bridge can be considered the focal point of the city. It connects to one of the main arteries of the colony, the Decumanus Maximus, or east-west main street typical of Roman settlements.

The location of the bridge was carefully selected at a ford of the river Guadiana, which offered as a support a central island that divides it into two channels. The original structure did not provide the continuity of the present, as it was composed of two sections of arches joined at the island, by a large Starling. This was replaced by several arcs in the 17th century after a flood in 1603 damaged part of the structure. In the Roman era the length was extended several times, adding at least five consecutive sections of arches so that the road is not cut during the periodic flooding of the Guadiana. The bridge spans a total of 792 m, making it one of the largest surviving bridges of ancient times.

Acueducto de los Milagros

Los Milagros Aqueduct

Main article: Acueducto de los Milagros

This aqueduct dates from the early 1st century BC, and was part of the supply system that brought water to Mérida from the Proserpina Dam located 5 km from the city. The arcade is fairly well preserved, especially the section that spans the valley of the river Albarregas.

It is known as Acueducto de los Milagros (English: "Miraculous Aqueduct"), because it seems a miracle that it is still standing.

Rabo de Buey-San Lázaro Aqueduct

This aqueduct brought water from streams and underground springs located north of the city. The subterranean part of the aqueduct is very well preserved, but the structure built to cross the Albarregas valley is not. The only surviving elements of that structure are three pillars and their arches located next to the monument of the Roman circus and near to another aqueduct built in the 16th century, partly composed of material reused from the Roman aqueduct.

Temple of Diana

"Temple of Diana"

This temple is a municipal building belonging to the city forum. It is one of the few buildings of religious character preserved in a satisfactory state. Despite its name, wrongly assigned on its discovery, the building was dedicated to the Imperial cult.[9] It was built in the late 1st century BC or early in the Augustan era. In the sixteenth century AD it was partly re-used for the palace of the Count of Corbos.[10]

Rectangular, and surrounded by columns, it faces the front of the city's Forum. This front is formed by a set of six columns ending in a gable. It is mainly built of granite.

Arch of Trajan

Arch of Trajan

An entrance arch, possibly to the provincial forum. It was located in the Cardo Maximus, one of the main streets of the city and connected it to the municipal forum. Made of granite and originally faced with marble, it measures 13.97 metres (45.8 ft) high, 5.70 metres (18.7 ft) wide and 8.67 metres (28.4 ft) internal diameter. It is believed to have a triumphal character, although it could also serve as a prelude to the Provincial Forum. Its name is arbitrary, as the commemorative inscription was lost centuries ago.

Mithraeum House

This building was found fortuitously in the early 1960s, and is located on the southern slope of Mount San Albín. Its proximity to the location of Mérida's Mithraeum led to its current name. The whole house was built in blocks of unworked stone with reinforced corners. It demonstrates the peristyle house with interior garden and a room of the famous western sector Cosmogonic Mosaic, an allegorical representation of the elements of nature (rivers, winds, etc.) overseen by the figure of Aion. The complex has been recently roofed and renovated.

As mentioned above, it is not considered the actual Mithraeum but a domus. The remains of the Mithraeum are uphill from it in a plot corresponding to a current bullring. This site has rendered prime examples of the remnants of Mithraism. According to professor Jaime Alvar Ezquerra of the Charles III University of Madrid, the oldest Mithraeum artefacts are observed outside of Rome and Mérida "is at the head of the provincial places where the cult is encountered". These are currently located in the National Museum of Roman Art in Mérida, including the latest remains found in excavations as recently as 2003. He notes that some of the sculptures being discovered at the site are in very good condition, leading him to believe they were "hidden on purpose".[11]

Los Columbarios

Roman columbaria

The Columbaria are two roofless funeral buildings, part of a necropolis outside the walls of the Roman city. Both are the best examples of funerary constructions in Emerita. The materials used for manufacturing of the building are unworked stone and granite for the seating. Both buildings have preserved their identifying epigraphs of the original gens (families) who owned them, the gens Voconia and the gens Iulia.

Recently, the area has been arranged as a promenade and park about the relation to death of Mérida inhabitants. Quotations of Epicurians and Stoics are displayed in panels, and tomb remains and trees are mixed with panels explaining Roman funerary practices. Two Roman mausoleums are also on the same site. During the 1970s this was the slum dwelling of a tin-worker's family.

The area is accessed through the Mérida Mithraeum House.

Other archaeological sites

Protected sites

These are the protected sites of the Archaeological Ensemble of Mérida as listed by UNESCO:

Code Name Place
664-001 Acueducto de los Milagros Mérida
664-002 Aqueduct of San Lázaro Mérida
664-003 Alcantarilla Bridge Mérida
664-004 Guadiana River Dam, Puente Romano, Alcazaba Mérida
664-005 Roman Theatre, Amphitheatre, Amphitheatre House Mérida
664-006 Trajan's Arch, Concordia Temple Mérida
664-007 Santa Catalina Basilica (Xenodochium) Mérida
664-008 Casa Herrera Basilica Mérida
664-009 Santa Eulalia Basilica [es]: Interpretation Centre, Temple of Mars Mérida
664-010 Roman circus Mérida
664-011 Mithraeum House, Columbaria Funerary Area Mérida
664-012 Church of Santa Clara [es] and Visigothic Art Collection Mérida
664-013 Cornalvo Dam Mérida
664-014 Proserpina Dam Mérida
664-015 Roman Forum Mérida
664-016 Roman Wall and Albarrana Islamic Tower Mérida
664-017 National Museum of Roman Art Mérida
664-018 Santa Eulalia Obelisk Mérida
664-019 Roman Bridge over Albarregas River Mérida
664-020 Temple of Diana Mérida
664-021 Thermal Baths at Reyes Huertas St. Mérida
664-022 Thermal Baths at Alange [es] Alange[12]

See also

References

  1. ^ "City of Emerita Augusta". Spanish Art. Retrieved May 5, 2020.
  2. ^ a b "Augusta Emerita". Livius.org. Retrieved Sep 27, 2019.
  3. ^ "Archaeological Ensemble of Mérida". unesco.org. Retrieved Sep 27, 2019.
  4. ^ "El Teatro Romano de Mérida". Revista de Historia (in Spanish). 23 June 2016. Archived from the original on 18 September 2018. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  5. ^ a b Ring, Trudy, ed. (1995). Southern Europe: International Dictionary of Historic Places. Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. p. 72. ISBN 1-884964-05-2. Retrieved Sep 27, 2019.
  6. ^ Lanchas, Sofía (2013). "La ciudad romana. Tipología y función de edificios públicos" (PDF). IES San Paio (in Spanish). Xunta de Galicia. pp. 8–9. Archived from the original (PDF) on 17 April 2018. Retrieved 18 September 2018.
  7. ^ The spina was 223m long and 8.5m wide, substantial and ornate.
  8. ^ The Circus Maximus seated approximately 150,000.
  9. ^ Fishwick, Duncan (2004). The Imperial Cult in the Latin West, v.3. Brill. pp. 41–69. ISBN 90-04-12806-9. Retrieved Sep 27, 2019.
  10. ^ The Imperial Gazetteer: A General Dictionary of Geography, Physical, Political, Statistical, and Descriptive, with a Supplement Bringing the Geographical Information Down to the Latest Dates. Blackie. 1874. p. 338.
  11. ^ Santos Fernández, Jose Luís; Espinosa, Merche (6 March 2005). "Mérida. La ciudad alberga los restos dedicad os al culto de Mitra más antiguos de la Península Ibérica". Yahoo! Groups. Yahoo!. Archived from the original on 14 July 2014. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
  12. ^ A 18 km southwest of Merida.