British School at Rome

Archaeologists in Rome Link Sanctuary of Nemi to Aeneas's Golden Bough

Some 10 miles south-east of Rome, archaeologists have been excavating a site they believe was of great religious importance to the ancient Romans as well as to bronze-age communities. The dig at the sanctuary of Diana and Nemi (also known as Diana Nemorense), overlooking Lake Nemi, has found ceramic pieces dating from the 13th and 12th centuries BC, a stone enclosure and evidence that a large religious complex once existed there.

The archaeologists involved in the excavation, including Filippo Coarelli, a leading expert on ancient Rome and former professor of archaeology at the University of Perugia, believe that the site they've been examining in recent months could even be associated with the legend of the Trojan Aeneas.

Interview: Simon Keay Explains why Portus is as Important as Stonehenge

The discovery of a unique amphitheatre and other structures at Rome's ancient maritime port is putting the archaeological site of Portus on the map. For decades it's been a much over-looked site next to Fiumicino's international runway and scholarly attention has focused on neighbouring Ostia Antica, but experts now believe it is a unique site that should rank alongside monuments such as Stonehenge or Angkor Wat.

Portus

Key Dates

Building began during the reign of Claudius and was inaugurated during Nero's rule, in the first century AD. Trajan enlarged the port in around 116 AD. The imperial palace was reformed one century later.

Key People

Most construction at Portus was done under Claudius and Trajan.

Portus was the principal maritime port of ancient Rome for most of the imperial period. Construction began during the reign of Claudius by digging out a huge man-made harbour protected by sea walls. It is located on the coast about two kilometres north of Ostia Antica, to the north of the Tiber mouth at Ostia, and near to Rome's main international airport, Fiumicino. The port was finalised during the reign of the emperor Nero and then greatly enlarged by the emperor Trajan. It was at this time that an amphitheatre would have been built within the complex of the 'palazzo imperiale', where most of the port's administrative business would have been done by the port official – known as Procurator Portus Utriusque. The port would have supplied the city of Rome with imports from large cargo ships until the Byzantine period and beyond. Portus was the conduit through which most of the key foodstuffs, marble, glass and metalwork that were consumed in Rome were imported from the Mediterranean provinces. 

Images
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Simon Keay

Simon Keay
Expert in Classical and Historical Archaeology

Simon Keay is Professor of Roman Archaeology at the University of Southampton and Research Professor at the British School at Rome.

He has worked at Portus, the ancient port of Rome for the past ten years. For the last three years he has directed the Portus Project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), investigating and excavating the site of the original port of Rome, close to the present day international airport at Fiamicino. This project is co-directed by Dr Graeme Earl of the University of Southampton and Professor Martin Millett of the University of Cambridge with the Soprintendenza di Beni Archeologici di Ostia Antica.

Simon’s research centres around the archaeology of the Roman Empire, with particular emphasis on trade, urbanism and culture change in the western Mediterranean.

Among his other projects, Simon has undertaken fieldwork in Spain at Tarragona, Peñaflor and Italica, including the AHRC-funded project Urban Connectivity in Iron-Age and Roman Southern Spain. He was also co-director of the AHRC-funded Roman towns in the Tiber Valley Project, the publication of which is nearly complete, and Director of the AHRC-funded project Roman Amphorae: A Digital Resource.

He speaks fluent Italian, Spanish and French and has a good knowledge of Catalan, Portuguese and German.

Current position

Professor of Archaeology at the University of Southampton

Images
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Digital Reconstruction of Roman Amphitheatre Discovered at Portus

I blogged earlier about the discovery of major Roman structures at Rome's principal maritime port from the middle of the first century onwards. As part of the Portus Project, a team of archaeologal experts worked together with the Archaeological Computing Research Group at Southampton University to create digital images to aid excavators at the site. These two images show what the amphitheatre and the entrance to the port would have looked like 1,800 years ago.

The Amphitheatre

The amphitheatre has emerged at a location that excavators say is inside an 'imperial' palace complex - whose main function was port-related administration.

Emperor's Private Amphitheatre Discovered in Major Find at Portus, Rome's 'Other' Harbour Town

Several major archaeological discoveries have been made at the site of one of Rome's ancient harbours. An oval amphitheatre, a 90m canal as well as many smaller objects (including marble statues) have emerged during excavations of Portus, the cargo port of ancient Rome, about two miles north of its better-known counterpart, Ostia Antica.

The team of archaeologists working at the site is led by the University of Southampton, who are working with Cambridge University, the Superintendency for the Archaeological Heritage of Ostia and the British School at Rome.

Amphitheatre Fit For an Emperor

Vespasian's Imperial Villa Discovered North East of Rome

A luxurious villa dating from the time of the emperor Titus Flavius Vespasian has been uncovered in the Sabine countryside about 100km north east of Rome. The size, opulence and date of the villa are very strong indications that it is in the fact the villa of Vespasian himself, who is known to have owned a summer residence in the area near Cittareale, north east of the provincial town of Rieti (also a Roman town).

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