Circus of Nero

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Not to be confused with the older and larger Circus Maximus.

The Circus of Nero or Circus of Caligula was a circus in ancient Rome.

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It was begun by Caligula on the property of his mother Agrippina on the Ager Vaticanus (today's rione of Borgo), and finished by Nero. The circus building's alignment is the same on the same axis as both new and old St Peter's to the left as you look at the western front from the piazza.

See also: Saint Peter's tomb

The Via Cornelia ran parallel with the north side of the Circus, and its course can be traced with precision, for pagan tombs have been discovered at various times along its edges. Sante Bartoli's memoirs record that when Alexander VII was building the left wing of Bernini's colonnade and the lefthand fountain, a tomb was discovered with a bas-relief above the door representing a marriage-scene ("vi era un bellissimo bassorilievo di un matrimonio antico"). Others were soon found. The best discovery, that of pagan tombs exactly on the line of St Peter's tomb, was made in the presence of Grimaldi, November 9, 1616:

" "On that day, I entered a square sepulchral room the ceiling of which was ornamented with designs in painted stucco. There was a medallion in the centre, with a figure in high relief. The door opened on the Via Cornelia, which was on the same level. This tomb is located under the seventh step in front of the middle door of the church. I am told that the sarcophagus now used as a fountain, in the court of the Swiss Guards, was discovered at the time of Gregory XIII in the same place, and that it contained the body of a pagan."

Main article: Saint Peter's tomb

The circus was the site of the first organized, state-sponsored martyrdoms of Christians in 65. Two years later, Saint Peter and many other Christians shared their fate. The circumstances were described in detail by Tacitus in a well-known passage of the Annals, (xv.45).

The site for crucifixions in the Circus would have been along the spina ("spine"), as suggested by early Acts of Peter describing the spot of his martyrdom as inter duas metas ("between the two metae or turning-posts", which would have been equidistant between the two ends of the circus). This identification is likely to be genuine given the trauma of the event for the Christian community. An obelisk found at the centre of this circus's spina was re-erected in St Peter's Square in the 16th century by the architect Domenico Fontana.

St Peter would probably have been buried near the location of his martyrdom, in the cemetery mentioned above and on a site suggested by the basilica (see below).

A reconstruction of the Basilica around 1450.
A reconstruction of the Basilica around 1450.

Some time in the 5th century the exact spot of Peter's martyrdom was marked by a chapel "of the Crucifixion." The origin and meaning of the name were confused in the course of time with Christ Crucified and the chapel itself was lost. A basilica ("Old St Peter's") was then erected by Constantine over the site, using some of the existing walling of the Circus of Nero. The basilica was sited so that its apse was centred on Peter's tomb (now beneath the high altar of "New St Peter's").

  • Lacus Curtius website: Circus of Nero, plan superposed with the Basilicas, showing the tomb of Peter, and text by Rodolfo Lanciani describing the largely inadvertent archaeology
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