{"id":3484,"date":"2018-12-04T12:25:09","date_gmt":"2018-12-04T11:25:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.toursevilla.com\/?p=3484"},"modified":"2018-12-05T07:57:33","modified_gmt":"2018-12-05T06:57:33","slug":"roman-city-of-italica-a-new-unesco-site","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.toursevilla.com\/en\/roman-city-of-italica-a-new-unesco-site\/","title":{"rendered":"Roman city of Italica, A new UNESCO site?"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Roman city of Italica in Santiponce 8 km from Seville is proposed to obtain the category of World Heritage by Unesco in the year 2020. This would suppose a fourth monument \/ historical place of the city of Seville with this distinction after the Alc\u00e1zar, the Cathedral and the Archive of Indies, all named Unesco World Heritage in 1987.<\/p>\n
Italica has some ruins of the II century d. C exceptionally preserved, some mosaics that are counted among the best in Spain and an amphitheater, even in occasional use, that had once a capacity for 25,000 spectators. Also this city was historically the cradle of two of the greatest Roman emperors: Trajan and Hadrian.<\/p>\n
Let’s get to know her a little better.<\/p>\n
Today it remains of its ancient splendor a spectacular amphitheater in which could fit up to 25,000 spectators, the famous Colosseum in Rome had room for 50,000. In this way, this dimension made the amphitheater an exceptional place for a small provincial town like Here the gladiatorial games were celebrated while in the nearby theater the theatrical representations of tragedies and Greek and Roman comedies took place: Sophocles, Aristophanes or Juvenal.<\/p>\n We can also walk through its ample rich houses, many of them still paved with beautiful mosaics. Let’s not forget that the Italica we visit today was an urbanization for rich families. Each house occupied half a block. Most of them had two floors, a main courtyard or atrium and a back garden where there was a small altar for the home gods. The outer part of the houses was rented for Tabernae, that is, shops: bakeries, hardware stores …<\/p>\n In addition, the life in Italica counted on thermes (public baths), gymnasium (place so that the young people did sport, but that also were schools) and palestra (track of races).<\/p>\n And of course, temples to the different gods of the Roman pantheon and to the Emperor Trajan himself, considered as divine. In the same entrance of the amphitheater, Nemesis (goddess of warriors and Vengeance) and Celestis (goddess of Heaven) were worshiped in<\/a>Italica was founded by General Scipio, a prestigious Roman military man in 206 BC, as a settlement for veteran soldiers already retired from the Second Punic War. But that first city of Italica lies under the current town of Santiponce. The ruins we can visit today are an
\nextension of the city during the time of the Emperor Hadrian in the second century AD, this area was owned by the nearby monastery of San Isidoro del Campo, because it belonged to their properties they were never urbanized, but on the other hand it was object of extensive
\nplundering and theft. From its abandonment in the 4th century to the 18th century (and officially until the beginning of the 20th century) a plan for the protection and assessment of its historical content was not carried out. This was thanks to the Sevillian archaeologist
\nFrancisco de Bruna, but by then many of his marbles and mosaics had disappeared.<\/p>\nRoman City<\/h2>\n
\nItalica.<\/p>\n
\nsmall temples. An ex-voto or offering in the form of a footprint testifies to this.<\/p>\n