- Gilt Bronzes from Cartoceto di Pergola
The Gilt Bronzes from Cartoceto di Pergola is the only Roman gilt
bronze equestrian group still in existence. Originally, it was composed of twohorse s with twoknight s, only one of which remains, and two women standing.Discovery & restoration
In June 1946, hundreds of little pieces of gilt bronze, some weighing hundreds of kilograms, were discovered in
Santa Lucia di Calamello , nearCartoceto di Pergola (PU),Italy . The discovery itself is credited to Canon Giovanni Vernarecci, who was at the time the archaeological inspector ofFossombrone , and the circumstances of the discovery are known from his written testimony.The bronzes were recovered by Vernarecci and Nereo Alfieri, regional inspector of the "Soprintendenza alle Antichità delle Marche". The restoration was completed in several periods between 1949 and 1988. In all, 318 pieces were joined together to reconstitute the four statues.
Original position
The group was recovered not far from the intersection of the
Via Flaminia and the Via Salaria Gallica. The location, isolated from any urban center, has led to the conjecture that the group was removed from its original position and set aside in a repositioning sometime inlate antiquity , or perhaps under the Byzantines — it has been hypothesized that this was as a result of adamnatio memoriae . ["Archeologia nelle Marche", Mario Luni, 2003, ISBN 88-392-0744-9]The bronzes' original position is still uncertain. The most accepted hypothesis is that the group was originally on a base in some public area (probably the forum of a Roman city near the discovery site. Notable candidates are: "Forum Sempronii" (
Fossombrone ), which was the closest city, "Sentinum" (Sassoferrato ), where the existence a foundry for large statues has been attested, or "Suasa ", because other large fragments of a similar gilt bronze horse were found there (these are being conserved at theWalters Art Gallery inBaltimore ).Identification
The group is composed of two horsemen, two women, and two horses. The people were probably all from one of the senatorial families. The identification of the people is uncertain, and various hypotheses have been suggested. Initially, the group was identified with the imperial family of the
Julio-Claudian Dynasty , dating the statues between 20 and 30 AD: the horsemen were thought to beNero Caesar and Drusus III, the sons ofGermanicus , and the women to beLivia Drusilla (Germanicus' grandmother) andAgrippina the Elder (Germanicus' wife).The hypothesis now most widely accepted establishes a date between 50 BC and 30 BC, and identifies the people with a prestigious legate's family from the territory in which they were discovered, the
Ager Gallicus . Several candidates have been proposed, including the family of Domitius Ahenobarbus, as well asMarcus Satrius (senator and patron of "Sentinum") andLucius Minucius Basilus (founder of "Cupra Maritima", modernCupra Marittima ).A last hypothesis sees the group originally located in the Heraion of Samo and the people as the family of Cicero, identifying one of the horsemen with Cicero himself.
;Horsemen:The best-conserved horseman is a mature man (about 40 years old), whose clothes (the "
paludamentum " andtunic ) identify him as a high-ranking military officer in time of peace, further supported by the position of the right arm, raised in the symbol of peace. Little remains of the other horseman but fragments.;Women:The surviving standing figure depicts an old woman, whose
Hellenistic hairstyle (characteristic of the second half of the first century allows the group to be dated. The woman is dressed in astole andpalla . The other female figure is substantially less preserved, with only the lower portions of her body surviving.;Horses:The horses are presented with one raised front leg. The
pectoral s are decorated withTriton s eNereid s, seahorses and dolphins. The harnesses are adorned with metal on which are represented various gods: Jupiter, Venus, Mars,Juno ,Minerva , and Mercury.Technique and materials
The statues were made using the lost-wax method, using primarily an alloy of
copper with traces oflead . After assembly, the statues were covered with gold leaf.Controversy
Because of its extraordinary archaeological importance, the group has been the object of a long controversy between the "Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici delle Marche" and the commune of Pergola, over who would keep it and where (in the National Archeological Museum of the Marche, in
Ancona , or in theMuseo dei Bronzi dorati e della città di Pergola ). The resulting compromise provides for alternating the original bronzes and a perfect copy between the two sites.Another copy, intended to show them in their original state, is displayed on the roof of the Palazzo Ferretti (the site of the National Archaeological Museum of the Marche) as a symbol of local archeology.
References
See also
*
Pergola, Italy , (PU)
*Via Flaminia
*Suasa External links
*enit: [http://www.bronzidorati.com Museo dei Bronzi dorati e della città di Pergola]
*it: [http://www.archeomarche.it Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici delle Marche]
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