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Murus Servii Tullii

 p350  Article on pp350‑355 of

Samuel Ball Platner (as completed and revised by Thomas Ashby):
A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome,
London: Oxford University Press, 1929.

Black-and‑white images are from Platner; any color photos are mine © William P. Thayer



[A piece of Roman wall about 15 meters long and a story and a half tall. It is part of the Servian wall in Rome.]

The uppermost bit of the wall in the Via S. Anselmo
(the "Via di Porta S. Paolo" of Platner's time, mentioned in the text below).

Murus Servii Tullii: * the wall ascribed by tradition (Liv. I.44; Dionys. IV.13) to the sixth of the kings of Rome (ascriptions to Ancus Martius, such as vir. ill. v.1, Flor. I.1.14 need not be taken into account; see Jord. I.1.201), perhaps in completion of work already begun by Tarquinius Priscus (Strabo V.3.7, p234; LIV. 1.36; Dionys. III.67).

There is considerable discord in the tradition as to which hills were added to the city by which kings (see Pomerium); but the statement that Servius Tullius added the Esquiline and the Viminal (Strabo cit.; cf. Dionys. IV.13) is consistent with the facts (Jord. II.206‑208, cf. figs. 1, 3).

It is probable that the original settlements on the Palatine, Capitol, Quirinal, etc., had no stone walls, but relied on natural features or sometimes on earthworks, e.g. Murus Terreus Carinarum (q.v.).

There are remains of a wall in smallish blocks of grey tufa (cappellaccio) at various points on the line of the later enceinte, which are usually (despite the denial of Carter in Proc. Amer. Phil. Soc. XLVIII. (1909), 136) assigned to the original wall of Servius Tullius of the sixth century B.C. (Jord. I.1.252‑253).


[A close-up of some ancient Roman masonry. It is part of the Servian Walls.]

36 Murus Servii Tulli

 p351  The blocks employed are from 0.20 to 0.30 metre high, 0.55 to 0.66 wide and 0.75 to 0.90 long. The most important sections of this wall are to be seen:

(a) at the head of the Via delle Finanze, where the Villa Spithoever once stood. This fine section of it (Ill. 36), some 35 metres long, was discovered in 1907, but a modern street has been run through the middle of it; while other pieces were discovered to the south-west in the garden of the Ministry of Agriculture (LF 10; see Ann. d. Inst. 1871, 57; Jord. I.1.212, n23l, m, n; NS 1885, 249; 1907, 438, 504‑510; 1909, 221‑223; BC 1909, 119‑121; 343‑348; YW 1910, 16‑17). Other similar remains appear to have been found near S. Susanna and S. Maria della Vittoria in the seventeenth century (Bartoli, Mem. 98, ap. Fea, Misc. I.250; Jord. I.1.212), and some of it was still visible in 1867 (Jord. k), though not mentioned in other lists (BC 1888, 15‑17).

(b) in the Piazza dei Cinquecento, opposite the station (BC 1876, 122).​1


[A small segment, about 3 meters long, of the top of a massive stone wall constructed of squared blocks. A bit of grass is growing on top of it. It is a detail of a fragment of the so‑called Servian wall in front of the Termini train station in Rome.]
One of the first sights the typical visitor sees in Rome, since it's in front of the train station,
is also one of the most ancient witnesses to the City's past. Almost everyone ignores it.

(c) at the south-west angle of the Palatine (TF 93, fig. 3; Delbrück, Tempel des Apollo im Marsfelde, pl. III, reproduced by Stuart Jones, Companion, p32, fig. 7, and ASA 3, 4, is better).

(d) on the north side of the Capitol, under the retaining wall in front of the German Embassy above the Vicolo della Rupe Tarpea (Ann. d. Inst. 1871, 49‑51; BC 1872, 139); omitted by Jord. I.1.207, regarding it as a part of the substructions of the area of the temple of Jupiter (supra, 48, 96; Jord. I.2.74; BC 1875, 182, 183; Ann. d. Inst. 1876, 149; cf. Ficoroni, Vestigia, I.42; Piranesi, Antichità, I. pl. 44.2). The two probably coincided at this point.

(e) in the garden of the Palazzo Colonna at the west end of the Quirinal (Ann. d. Inst. 1852, 324; Jord. d, I.1.211, n18).

Of these fragments of wall, (a) and (e) undoubtedly belonged to the outer line, while (b) was the retaining wall at the back of the agger, which, no doubt, existed from the first. Of (d) we can say nothing certain, and (c) may belong either to the Palatine or to the Servian enceinte.

To ascribe them to the wall of the city of the Four Regions is impossible, as (a) and (b) would both then be excluded; and it is very doubtful if this city ever had a wall of its own.

Frank maintains (TF 117, 18) that the battering back of the courses, the use of anathyrosis and the presence of walls of Grotta Oscura tufa of the fourth century B.C. in conjunction with these fragments, are sufficient to make it probable that they should also be assigned to the same period.

It seems, however, more likely that the cappellaccio wall should, as far as our knowledge goes at present, be attributed to the sixth century B.C.2

 p352  The line of wall (text fig. 3) began at the Tiber, crossed the low ground to the south-west corner of the Capitol, ran north-east along the edge of the cliffs of this hill and the Quirinal, until it almost reached the head of the valley between the Quirinal and the Pincian (Collis Hortorum). Then it ran southwards across the table­land of the Esquiline, crossed the valley between the mons Oppius and the Caelian, followed the cliffs on the south-east and south of this hill, then probably followed the south-west side of the Palatine, and thence ran south of the forum Boarium to the Tiber again.

It is possible that we should attribute to the enceinte of this period an arch with a span of 12 Roman feet (3.30 metres), found in 1885 forty metres south of S. Maria in Cosmedin and constructed of voussoirs of cappellaccio (NS 1886, 274; cf. AJA 1918, 175‑176). Its left (south-east) side joined a wall of the same material, which ran into the hill. A paved road passed through it, which was taken to be the Clivus Publicius (q.v.), but it had been blocked up by a wall in opus reticulatum. Borsari (BC 1888, 21) maintained that it was the Porta Trigemina (q.v.), but it is most improbable that the road passing through it would have been blocked up at so early a period as the second century A.D. Nor, as Hülsen points out (Mitt. 1889, 260), does its position suit what we know of the line of the Servian wall. Frank (AJA cit.) attributed it to the wall of the 'City of the four regions,' omitting the Aventine; but later, apparently forgetting the information he had obtained from Lanciani (who stated that, as far as he could remember, the material was cappellaccio), he assumed that the material was Fidenae tufa, which is full of scoriae, and that it belonged to the Palatine wall of the fourth century B.C. (TF 95, 96).

It is probable that a consequence of the Etruscan victory over the Romans at the beginning of the Republic was the dismantling of the fortifications of the city. A treaty such as that concluded with Porsena, in which the Romans were forbidden to carry weapons of iron (Plin. NH XXXIV.139; Mommsen, Rom. Hist. I.414), would doubtless have included this: and the success of the Gallic invasion can hardly be understood unless Rome was an open town.3

As the result of the Gallic invasion, the whole enceinte was enormously reinforced and strengthened, the original line, however, being for the most part, if not entirely, retained.

To the construction of this wall the following passages have generally been referred:

 p353  Liv. VI.32.1: ut tributo novum fenus contraheretur in murum a censoribus locatum saxo quadrato faciundum (377 B.C.).

VII.20.9: Legionibus Romam reductis relicum anni muris turribusque reficiendis consumptum (353 B.C.).


[A schematic map of ancient Rome.]

TEXT FIGURE 3.

It is natural that so great a work as this should have taken a considerable number of years to build.

To this reconstruction belongs all the masonry of larger blocks. Frank remarks that, though the majority of the blocks measure 58‑61 cm. high, there is a good deal of irregularity even on the outer face, where he  p354 has noted measures as low as 51 cm. and as high as 64, while on the inside, where the agger conceals the blocks, the measurements vary from 40 to 68 cm. The material, however, is entirely Grotta Oscura tufa; and this seems an even clearer test than that of measurement. The quarry marks too (Ann. d. Inst. 1876, 72; Richter, Antike Steinmetzzeichen) cannot be referred to an earlier period than the fourth century B.C., and, as the stone came from the Grotta Oscura quarries, in the territory of Veii, soon after the fall of that town, it is suggested that they may be Etruscan rather than Roman (AJP 1924, 68‑69). In this enceinte the Aventine was for the first time probably included; and a fine piece of wall belonging to it may be seen in the depression between the greater and the lesser Aventine in the Via di Porta S. Paolo. As this meant an increased weakness from the defensive point of view, it was quite natural that the builders of the original wall should have left it and the valley of the circus Maximus out of their scheme (Ann. d. Inst. 1855, 87‑92; Klio 1911, 93; AJA 1918, 178; TF 119, 120, where, as it stands, it is attributed to 90‑80 B.C., but the presence of blocks from the fourth century wall is maintained). The continuation has been cleared to the north-west of it on the greater Aventine (Gnomon, III.191, 192) and is almost entirely of Grotta Oscura tufa.

From the porta Collina to the porta Esquilina, where the Servian wall, instead of following the edge of the hill, was obliged to cross the table­land at the base of the Quirinal, Viminal and Esquiline, it was strengthened by a great mound, described by Dionysius (IX.68; cf. IV.54) as seven stadia in length and 50 feet thick, with a ditch in front of it 30 Roman feet deep and 100 wide (Cic. de Rep. II.11; Varro ap. Censorin. 17.8; Strab. V.3.7, p234; Plin. NH III.67; XXXVI.104). The porta Viminalis was the only gate which passed through this part of the fortifications, which were further strengthened by towers. With a part of the outer wall of the agger near by, it is still preserved in the railway station. Another piece may be seen in the Piazza Manfredo Fanti (LF 23).

Other parts of the enceinte were fortified in the same way; but this was the agger par excellence, and long after its function had ceased it is spoken of by ancient authors as a prominent feature (Hor. Sat. I.8.13: aggere in aprico spatiari; see Puticuli; Juv. 8.43: ventoso sub aggere), and it was indeed the highest point in Rome. It was thus used to denote a quarter of the city (pomarius de agger(e) a proseucha, CIL VI.9821); and (in contrast with the campus Viminalis sub aggere of the Notitia, which lay between the porta Viminalis and the castra Praetoria; Mitt. 1891, 113) we get a district known as super aggerem (Hist. Aug. Elag. 30: cum alter maneret in Capitolio, alter in Palatio, alter super aggerem, alter in Caelio, alter trans Tiberim), and it survived as a local name in the form Superage as late as 1051 (in loco qui vocatur Superage non longe a Sancta Maria Maiore), from which the church took the name of Superagius  p355 (ASRSP 1889, 199‑213; De Rossi, Piante 13), and even in 1527 (Fulvius, antiq. 1. ii. f. 21ter, G.i.).

Many other portions of the wall are preserved, but are too insignificant to deserve separate mention, with the exception of an arch on the slope of the Quirinal, in the modern Palazzo Antonelli,​4 which is only 1.05 metres in span, and therefore not a city gate (TF 120, who attributes it to 87 B.C.). For the remains on the Capitol, see Arx.

We cannot admit either that the Palatine was still a separate community when the wall of blocks 2 feet high was built on its north-west side or that this wall was part of a larger enceinte; and we must therefore suppose that it continued to be separately fortified as late as the fourth century B.C. as an additional internal citadel or fort (CR 1902, 336; YW 1907, 22).

For the remains of the wall of the fourth century B.C., see Ann. d. Inst. 1871, 40‑85; Jord. I.1.201‑295; BC 1876, 24‑38, 121‑134, 165‑210; 1888, 12‑22; 1912, 67‑81; NS 1884, 223; 1910, 495‑513 (Boni, whose views as to relative dates, expressed at the end of the article, do not seem to be acceptable); Mon. L. XV.746‑753; Klio 1911, 83‑123; TF 111‑124; RE I. A. i.1026.


The Authors' Notes:

1 Another piece was found in 1926 with possible remains of a postern, almost opposite the entrance to the offices of the Museo Nazionale Romano (Museo delle Terme) in Via Gaeta (YW 1927, 103).

Thayer's Note: And since then, apparently, while rooting around in the basement of Termini train station, they've found a few other pieces of it. This one, the smallest, is in a McDonald's, as you can see.


[A stack of stone blocks, 7 courses high, each course made up of two or three stones. It now looks something like a pillar, and is supported on a modern brick base; but it is a fragment of the so‑called Servian wall, in the basement of Termini train station, inside a small MacDonald's eatery, the logo of which can be seen in the background, along with a couple of seated patrons.]

2 To attribute it to the fifth or earlier part of the fourth, and the agger itself to the sixth, supposing that neither the inner nor the outer walls were integral parts of the original agger (Pl. 45, 115, 116), is simply to leave the agger in the air, as either of its ends could easily have been turned. Of course it might be a tenable hypothesis, admitting that 'all weak points of the circuit were fortified in this way' (LR 62; cf. NS 1884, 223; BC 1892, 284) that there was at first no wall connected with any of the aggeres and that for the rest of the line the cliffs of the various hills were considered to afford sufficient defence, but it seems to be highly improbable.

3 Prof. Hülsen has kindly communicated this view to me, and I fully agree with it.

4 The statement in Gnomon, I.300, that a piece of the Servian wall had been found in the Via Mazzarino rests on a misconception of the position of this arch and of the line taken by the wall, and is, further, incorrect, as the blocks were not in situ.


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