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CulturalHeritageOnline: Auditorium of Maecenas

Auditorium of Maecenas


The so-called Auditorium of Maecenas (actually a nymphaeum, rather than an auditorium) is an ancient Roman architecture located in the Esquilino district, in Largo Leopardi, along Via Merulana.

Today the site, which can be visited by reservation, is managed by the Capitoline Superintendence.

Auditorium di Mecenate - Roma

The building, which was part of the Horti Maecenatis, was excavated in 1874.

It is a large rectangular basement hall (24.10 x 10.60 m), with an apse on one of the smaller sides and dates back to the creation of the villa, towards 30 BC Through a passage by Horace, the place was identified with the villa of Maecenas on the Esquiline, which was built on the top of the area of a necropolis and on the leveling of the ancient agger.

Auditorium di Mecenate - Roma

On the Via Leopardi side the building overlapped the Servian Walls, causing a section of it to be destroyed. We know from Suetonius that the Roman emperor, Augustus, often slept in the house of Maecenas when he fell ill.

Auditorium di Mecenate - Roma

After the death of Maecenas (8 BC) the villa was annexed to the imperial properties and then granted to Tiberius after his return from his exile in Rhodes.

Auditorium di Mecenate - Roma

He undertook some renovations; The garden paintings of the third style nymphaeum date back to this phase, to be related to the frescoes of the underground nymphaeum of the villa of Livia (end of the 1st century BC).



Auditorium of Maecenas
Address: Largo Leopardi, 2, 00185 Roma Italia
Phone: 060608
Site: https://www.sovraintendenzaroma.it/i_luoghi/roma_antica/monumenti/auditorium_di_mecenate

Location inserted by Culturalword

Auditorium of Maecenas Map


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