弗里吉亚希拉波利斯的早期拜占庭城墙:拆除和回收帝国时代的纪念碑

T. Ismaelli, G. Scardozzi, S. Bozza, Rosangela Ungaro
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引用次数: 0

摘要

该研究涉及弗里吉亚(土耳其德尼兹利)希拉波利斯的城墙,这些城墙是在公元4世纪下半叶或公元5世纪初通过系统地回收帝国时代公共纪念碑和殡葬建筑的建筑块而建造的。保存完好的防御工事遗迹沿着城市的北部、东部和南部包围了城市,留下了大片的城区。在意大利考古使团的研究活动中,对遗迹进行了地形DGPS调查,并对重新使用的街区实施了地理数据库,主要目的有三个:1)重建城墙的建筑工地;ii)识别被拆除的帝国时代用作“采石场”的纪念碑,并研究早期拜占庭希拉波利斯的石材采购策略;(三)分析大型工事建筑遗址与其他同时期建筑遗址的关系及其对城市社会经济生活的影响。这项研究使我们能够追踪城墙建筑遗址的发展,从北部开始,主要重新利用了墓地、北剧院、北集市和沿着高原的商店,这些街区不包括在早期的拜占庭神庙中。此外,位于城市中心的体育馆和其他纪念碑的许多材料尚未在地面上被识别,特别是在东部和南部的墙壁上重复使用。最后,回收街区的位置甚至可以重建各种交通路线,将被拆除的纪念碑连接到城墙的不同部分。封面:罗马晚期的城墙,西门(Porta Oea)以南的部分,有一世纪陵墓的再利用块(弗朗西斯卡·比吉绘制)和南希尔兹(Arbeia)的里贾纳墓碑(泰恩和威尔档案馆和博物馆/布里奇曼图像)。E-ISSN(网络版)2611-3686ISSN(印刷版)0065-0900
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early Byzantine city walls of Hierapolis in Phrygia: demolishing and recycling the Imperial era monuments
The study concerns the city walls of Hierapolis in Phrygia (Denizli, Turkey), which were built in the second half of the 4th century AD or at the beginning of the 5th century AD, by systematically recycling architectural blocks from Imperial-era public monuments and funerary edifices. The preserved remains of the fortifications enclose the city along its northern, eastern and southern sides, leaving out large sectors of the urban area. Within the research activities of the Italian Archaeological Mission, topographical DGPS surveys of the remains were performed, and a geodatabase of the reemployed blocks was implemented with three main aims: i) the reconstruction of the building site of the city walls; ii) the identification of the demolished monuments of the Imperial-era used as “quarries” and the study of the procurement strategies of stone materials in the early-Byzantine Hierapolis; iii) the analysis of the relationship between the large building site of the fortifications and the other coeval construction sites and their impact on the socio-economic life of the city. The research allowed us to trace the development of the building site of the city walls, which, starting from the north, mainly reemployed blocks from the necropolises, North Theatre, North Agora and the shops along the plateia not-included into the early Byzantine Hierapolis. Moreover, numerous materials from the Gymnasium and other monuments located in the central part of the city but not yet identified on the ground were especially reused in the eastern and southern sectors of the walls. Lastly, the location of the recycled blocks made it possible even to reconstruct the various transportation routes linking the demolished monuments to the different sectors of the city walls.   On cover:Late Roman wall, the portion immediately south of the West Gate (Porta Oea) with re-used blocks from first-century mausolea (Drawing by Francesca Bigi) and Tombstone of Regina from South Shields (Arbeia) (Tyne and WearArchives and Museums/ Bridgeman Images). E-ISSN (online version) 2611-3686 ISSN (print version) 0065-0900
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