- Alyscamps
The Alyscamps is a large Roman
necropolis , which is a short distance outside the walls of the old town ofArles ,France . It was one of the most famous necropolises of the ancient world. The name is a corruption of theLatin "Elisii Campi" (that is,Champs-Élysées or Elysian Fields). They were famous in theMiddle Ages and are referred to by Ariosto in "Orlando Furioso " and by Dante in the "Inferno." [Lawrence Durrell, "Caesar's Vast Ghost,"Faber and Faber, 1990; paperback with corrections 1995; ISBN 0-571-21427-4; see page 98 in the reset edition of 2002]Roman cities traditionally forbade burials within the city limits. It was therefore common for the roads immediately outside a city to be lined with tombs and mausoleums; the
Appian Way outsideRome provides a good example. The Alyscamps was Arles' main burial ground for nearly 1,500 years. It was the final segment of theAurelian Way leading up to the city gates and was used as a burial ground for well-off citizens, whose memorials ranged from simple sarcophagi to elaborate monuments.The Alyscamps continued to be used after the city was Christianised in the 4th century.
Saint Genesius , a Roman civil servant beheaded in 303 for refusing to follow orders to persecute Christians, was buried there and rapidly became the focus of a cult.Saint Trophimus , possibly the firstbishop of Arles , was buried there soon afterwards. It was claimed thatChrist himself attended the ceremony, leaving the imprint of his knee on a sarcophagus lid.The area became a highly desirable place to be buried and tombs soon multiplied. As early as the 4th century there were already several thousand tombs, necessitating the stacking of sarcophagi three layers deep. Burial in the Alyscamps became so desirable that bodies were shipped there from all over Europe, with the Rhône boatmen making a healthy profit from the transportation of coffins to Arles.
The Alyscamps continued to be used well into medieval times, although the removal of Saint Trophimus' relics to the cathedral in 1152 reduced its prestige. During the
Renaissance the necropolis was systematically looted, with city councillors giving sarcophagi as gifts to distinguished visitors and local people using funerary stones as building material. It was further damaged by the arrival of the railway and a canal in the 19th century, both of which sliced across the site. In late October 1888Vincent van Gogh andPaul Gauguin chose the Alyscamps as the first site for their expeditions where they painted side by side [Martin Gayford, "The Yellow House: Van Gogh, Gauguin, and Nine Turbulent Weeks in Arles," Fig Tree, Penguin, 2006. ISBN 0-670-91497-5. See page 61] ; by this time it was a remnant of its former self. It has since been somewhat restored as an open-air museum. In his final book "Caesar's Vast Ghost,"Lawrence Durrell recommends the Alyscamps for its beauty and atmosphere; he writes: "It is unique in its charm." [Lawrence Durrell, work cited, page 100.]The better of the remaining sarcophagi are now on display in the
Museum of Ancient Arles , which has one of the best collections of Roman sarcophagi to be found anywhere outside Rome itself.External links
* [http://www.up.univ-mrs.fr/tresoc/libre/integral/libr0122.pdf "Lis Aliscamp" — A short history (in Langue d'Oc, with translation into French)]
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