词条 | Ostia |
释义 | Ostia Italy modern Ostia Antica, Italy ![]() New baths, temples, and warehouses were built to support the thriving community. At the height of Ostia's prosperity in the early 2nd century AD, its population was approximately 50,000. The growing population was accommodated by means of tall brick apartment buildings of three, four, and five stories. The floors in these buildings were paved with mosaic, and the walls elaborately painted; the larger flats had up to 12 rooms. The growth in wealth raised the standard of public generosity of leading citizens. Public funds were restricted, but magistrates were expected to show their appreciation of honours in a practical way; it was they who provided most of the sculpture that adorned the public buildings and public places and who built most of the temples. Ostia also was sufficiently vital to Rome to receive the attention of emperors. Its three largest sets of public baths were the result of imperial generosity. Little new building occurred after the end of the 2nd century. Ostia suffered from the decline of the Roman economy beginning in the 3rd century. As trade decreased, the town became more popular as a residential area for the wealthy—Augustine, returning to Africa with his mother, Monica, stayed in Ostia, not Portus. Barbarian raids of the 5th and following centuries caused population loss and economic decline. Ostia was abandoned after the erection of Gregoriopolis, site of Ostia Antica, by Pope Gregory IV (827–844). The Roman ruins were quarried for building materials in the Middle Ages and for sculptors' marble in the Renaissance. Archaeological excavation was begun in the 19th century under papal authority and was sharply accelerated between 1939 and 1942, until about two-thirds of the Roman town was uncovered. |
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