Rome is the
city that boaststhe greatest number of obelisks in the world. Most
of these distinctive monuments are Egyptians and were transported
to the Eternal City by the emperors of the first centuries after
Christ.
Some imitations, though, were created during
the Roman age with the same granite used by the Egyptians either without
the inscriptions or with hieroglyphics as a copy of the models of
the Pharaoh age but with many mistakes.
In ancient Egypt the obelisks had deep religious significance as
well as showing the royalty of the Pharaoh.
In Rome on the other hand,
the obelisks were symbols of power and victory and were mostly used
to embellish circuses, temples and tombs, neglecting all original
inscriptions that covered the monuments.
A large number of obelisks were damaged in the Middle
Ages and were restored by Pope Sisto V (1585-1590). He undertook significant
transformations and restorations of the city and wanted the obelisks
to be moved to the hinge spots of the Holy City. Therefore, he contributed
to transform the features of Rome from a Medieval into a Baroque town.
The
oldest and tallest obelisk in Rome is the one in
the middle of the Square of S. Giovanni in Laterano. Originally, it
was built in front of the Temple of Amon in Karnak by order of Pharaoh
Tutmosi III (XV century BC). In 357 AD, Emperor Constant II, had a
special ship built in order to carry the monument to Rome, and place
it right in the center of the Circus Maximus.
The
obelisk in the “Piazza del Popolo” is known as the
Flaminio obelisk named after the ancient “Via Flaminia” and
is the second oldest one in Rome. This was also brought to Rome by
Augusto in 10 AD in order to decorate the Circus Maximus.
The two obelisks
fell when the circus went into decline and disuse, and were buried
under the rising street level. At the end of XVI Century, Pope Sisto
V had them restored and placed in their current locations.
The
obelisk standing in St. Peter’s Square does not have hieroglyphics,
but it is surely Rome’s most famous obelisk from ancient times.
Emperor Caligula wanted the obelisk to be transported from Elaiopoli
(Cairo City) to Rome in 37 AD, in order to decorate Nero’s Circus.
There are many legends about this extraordinary monument. The most
well known is the belief that Julius Cesar’s ashes were stored
in the top of the obelisk.
In Montecitorio Square, there stands the
obelisk of Pharaoh Psammetico II (VI BC). Emperor Augusto brought it to Rome in order to use it
as a gnomon of a huge sundial devised by the brilliant Agrippa. The
spire was positioned to throw its shadow in the exact center of the “Ara
Pacis” on the emperor's birthday.
A certain number of small obelisks of approximately 4.5 meters of
height come, from the area of the “Iseum Campense”, the
Temple of Iside and Serapide in “Campo
Marzio”. Of the
magnificent structure of the temple there is nothing left but a memory.
All the obelisks were in recent times relocated to the center of the
most characteristic squares of Rome.
One of these sits on the elephant
statue attributed to Bernini - the famous "pulcin
of the Minerva",
located behind the Pantheon. The precious obelisk dates back to the
age of Ramses II. In
front of the Pantheon, a second obelisk of the
same origins, adorns the late-Renaissance fountain.
The small obelisk of “Villa
Celimontana” at the Celio
is less well- known. It was part of the private collection of the
Mattei family. The inscriptions date it back to the age of Ramses
II.
A fourth small spire, crowned by a star, is situated on the ancient
site of the Baths
of Diocletian. It rests on a small monument in memory
of the Italian soldiers who fell in the battle of Dogali (Ethiopia,
1887). Another obelisk of similar dimensions and origin was located
in the gardens of Villa
Medici , The French Academy, on top of the
Pincio, until 1790, when it was taken to Florence, where it remains.
In the XIX Century a copy of the spire was made to replace the original
one.
One
of the most famous Roman obelisks is certainly the one that stands
over the Fountain
of the Rivers by Bernini in Piazza Navona. Placed
in the center of the stadium of Domitian, it has the odd distinction
of being decorated with "fake" Egyptian hieroglyphics inaccurately
copied by Roman stonecutters with many mistakes.
As in the previous
case, the
obelisk that rises from the top of the famous Spanish
Steps is also in the Egyptian style. This monument is called “Sallustian” because
it was formerly placed in the Sallustian
Gardens (I Century).
The
obelisk that one admires in the gardens
of the Pincio instead,
is a Roman reproduction of the age of the Emperor Hadrian. The same
for the twin obelisks that, created in Rome, once decorated the entrance
of the “Mausoleum
of Augustus” in the “Campo
Marzio”.