8 September

1737 birth of Samuel Wyatt

comparative plans
exhibit 1
screen names
1997.09.08

thanks, i
2000.09.08 13:12

time
2000.09.08

[no subject]
2001.09.08 08:32
Re: Ambrose buildings, even today
2001.09.08 08:48
Re: Sarcophagi
2001.09.08 09:29
recognitio
2001.09.08 15:37
Happy Mary's Birthday
2001.09.08 15:58
back to the Campo Marzio
2001.09.08 16:50

a slave to reenactment
2002.09.08 16:29

Quondam
2002.09.08

040908a.db I. Kahn Collagio

are the origins common ? can we prove it ?
2005.09.08 10:54
2005.09.08 12:04
2005.09.08 17:17
Hadrian was born in Spain
2005.09.08 11:13
2005.09.08 11:51
2005.09.08 12:58
2005.09.08 13:48
2005.09.08 14:09
2005.09.08 15:08
2005.09.08 16:18
2005.09.08 17:48
2005.09.08 17:59
2005.09.08 18:01

"The directional indices T-M-P-L suggest...
2007.09.08

08090801.db House 15, dxf scan
08090802.db House 15, Bye House, plans


"The directional indices T-M-P-L suggest templa, however their use is fairly conventional. Tramontane, literally "between the montains", is the name of the north wind or the north star as seen over the Alps. Meridióne is south, from the Latin meridianis for midday when Dianus, god of light and the sun, and male counterpart of Diana, is highest in the sky. Pončnte is west or the west wind, possibly from the Latin ponere "to put, or set down" in relation to the setting sun, while Levante is east, possibly from levare "to raise" in relation to the rising sun."
--R. James Aitken, Piranesi-Vico-Il Campo Marzio: Foundations and the Eternal City.




Not too long ago, countable days actually, I first learned of Melania the Younger, and how her (enormously expensive) family estate just outside the walls of Rome at the Salarian Gate, was one of the great properties (along with the Gardens of Sallust) that were plundered when Alaric and his Visigoths broke into (at the Salarian Gate) and sacked Rome for the first time. The Visigoths initially camped for many months outside the walls of Rome (near the Salarian Gate) thereby starving the city by disrupting all deliveries of grain from Africa to the city. The Salarian Gate, the Gardens of Sallust, and the Gardens Valeriani (Melania's inheritance) are all delineated within Piranesi's Ichnographia Campi Martii right where they are supposed to be. Interestingly, right next to this complex of buildings/structures, Piranesi also delineates a Porticus Neronianae, a completely fictitious building in the shape of a large cross within a circle (a composition, coincidentally, that follows the circle/square juncture pattern similar to the Timepiece gauge of the theory of chronosomatics). Within a day of assimilating all this new (to me) data, I came to see how the inner circle of the Porticus Neronianiae matches the circle of the compass/north arrow that Piranesi also delineated within the Ichnographia, and I came to see how if you rotate the cross of the Porticus Neronianae 45 degrees, its four points then correspond exactly to the four cardinal points of global direction. The Porticus Neronianae of Piranesi's Ichnographia Campi Martii is the X that marks the spot where the first attacking Visigoths camped. [There are even more 'symbols' to interpret here, like 'shifting winds' and Nero as anti-Christ precursor, but more on that latter.]
--Re: crossology


"The end of Livy Book 5 describes the rebuilding of Rome in the wake of the Gallic sake. The Romans were in a great hurry to rebuild, he writes, and for this reason there was no order to the new city, so that forma . . .urbis sit occupatae magis quam divisae similis, 'the arrangement of the city resembles that of a place taken over rather than portioned out'. Occupata here may be read as evoking Rome's recent occupation by the Gauls. Kraus draws our attention to Tacitus' reading of this Livian episode, which the latter author makes use of in his account of the destruction of Rome in the Neronian fire and the city's subsequent rebuilding. Tacitus' account presents Nero's fire as worse than the Gallic sack, for it causes destruction of monuments witnessing the origins of Rome. Rome is then rebuilt; large areas in the centre of the city are taken over for Nero's Domus Aurea. Nero's appropriation of the city is like that of a foreign enemy."
--Catharine Edwards, Writing Rome: textual approaches to the city.



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