A lot of people think of ancient rome as a pretty monochrome place.
The emporor that paved rome with marble.
The basilica julia in the roman forum was one of the few buildings to be constructed from marble in rome under emperor augustus dr favro said this may be why rome earned its reputation as a city of.
The walls of private residences were decorated with bright wall frescoes public spaces were adorned.
This legend eventually became the legend of the marble emperor greek.
The emperor hadrian was well known for building monuments across the roman empire a territory that had reached its widest extent when his reign began in a d.
The emperor king turned into marble.
Although his claim that he found the city brick and left it marble is exaggerated augustus and his colleagues did provide it with many fine public buildings baths theatres temples and warehouses.
In reality however the ancient city was a riot of colour.
It was trajan who not only expanded the borders of the roman empire to their greatest extent but also governed with singular benevolence and generosity toward his subjects.
The colour of empire.
In the popular imagination its temples and palaces gleam with polished white marble while a visit to the ruins of the roman forum or a viewing of russell crowe s gladiator is tinted with beige and ochre.
His adopted son and successor augustus attempted to transform rome into a worthy capital for the new roman empire.
Constantine palaiologos hero of the final christian days of constantinople had not died but had been rescued turned into marble and immortalized by an angel moments before he was to be killed by the ottomans.
With the availability of local marble and absence of war rome s first emperor was free to begin a massive construction project throughout the city.
Just before augustus came to power the carrara marble quarries on the northwest coast of italy were opened and the roman world entered an era of relative peace known as the pax romana.
The many marbles of ancient rome.