Italica

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is about the city. Italica is also the name of the cultivar group

of the species Brassica oleracea, commonly known as Broccoli.

The Roman amphitheatre at Italica seated 25,000
The Roman amphitheatre at Italica seated 25,000
Italica's amphitheatre pit
Italica's amphitheatre pit
Pits were filled with water for the naumachia
Pits were filled with water for the naumachia
A walkway in Italica
A walkway in Italica
A hallway that circles the ampitheatre
A hallway that circles the ampitheatre
The House of the Birds complete with mosaic floor
The House of the Birds complete with mosaic floor
The House of the Planetarium
The House of the Planetarium

The city of Italica (north of modern day Santiponce, 9 km NW of Seville, Spain) was founded in 206 BC by the Roman general Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus in order to settle Roman soldiers wounded in the Battle of Ilipa, where the Carthaginian army was defeated during the Second Punic War. The name Italica bound the colonia to their Italian origins.

Italica was the birthplace of Roman Emperors Trajan and Hadrian. Hadrian was generous to his home town, which he made a colonia; he added temples, including a Trajaneum venerating Trajan, and rebuilt public buildings. Italica’s amphitheater seated 25,000 spectators—half as many as the Flavian Amphitheatre in Rome— and was the third largest in the Roman Empire. The city's Roman population at the time is estimated to have been only 8000. The games and theatrical performances funded by the local aristocracy, who filled the positions of magistrate, were a means of establishing status: the size of the amphitheater shows that the local elite was maintaining status that extended far beyond Italica itself.

The modern town of Santiponce overlies the "old city" of Republican times founded by Scipio and pre-Roman Iberian city. The well-preserved city is the nova urbs magnificently laid out under Hadrian's patronage.

A shift of the Guadalquivir River bed, probably due to siltation— a widespread problem in antiquity that followed removal of the forest cover—left Italica isolated, high and dry. The city started to dwindle as early as the 3rd century. Later Seville grew nearby, and no modern city covered most of Italica's foundations. The result is an unusually well-preserved Roman city of Hispania Baetica, and unexpected riches in the Museo Arqueologico of Seville, with its famous marble colossus of Trajan. In Italica, cobbled Roman streets are visible, and mosaic floors still in situ. The excavation of Italica began in 1781 and continues.

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