City walls and gate (porta caesarea) - part of the ancient Roman town Salona (Solin, Croatia)
Part of city walls and one of gates in ancient Salona.
Short description:
The construction of the Salonitan city walls took several centuries. The old part of the city - 'Urbs vetus' - was trapezoidal in shape. It was encircled by walls as early as the 2nd century BC. The walls surrounding the old city nucleus are best preserved to the north and south of the 'Porta Caesarea. They have been built of huge stone blocks having an external and an internal surface. On the north-east corner of the walls remains of a square angle-tower, made of massive stone blocks, have been found.
Upon conquering the Illyrian Delmati and the ensuring period of peace, the Pax Romana, Salona was graduelly starting to expand outside the walls. During the reign of Emperor Marcus Aurelius around 170 A.D., under constant threat of incursions of Germanic tribes Quadi and Marcomanns, both the west and east suburbs were being encircled by walls and fortified with towers (so far more than 90 towers have been discovered). In the course of the construction of the walls some of the already existing buildings were used, thereby becoming their integral part. The surface part of the water supply system was built into the west wall of the eastern part of the city.
The amphitheatre, too, was incorporated into the defence system in much the same way. From that time onwards the walls of Salona were extending from the amphitheatre in the west to the city gate (Porta Andetria) in the north-east. This was how Salona assumed an elongated elliptical shape, with axes being about 1,600m in the east-west direction and some 700m extending from the north to the south. The walls circmference was approximately 4,080m. The walls were not equally wide, their width varying from 1.9m to 2.5m.
The walls were subsequently repaired on several occasions, depending upon the immediate danger of war. During the reign of Emperor Theodosius II in the early 5th century all the towers were reconstructed, as witnessed by an inscription cut into the city walls. During the Byzantine-Gothic wars in the first half of the 6th century, following the conquest of Salona by the Byzantine army, the walls started to be repaired in order to improve security and defence, and triangular endings were added to some square shaped towers.
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Eric Clark's Travel Videos - Solin Croatia - Solona Roman Ruins - Colosseum Amphitheater Church City
Eric Clark's Travel Videos - Solin Croatia - Solona Roman Ruins - Colosseum, Amphitheater and City
My name is Eric Clark and I am a world traveler. I have been around the world a few times and decided to help fund my travels by sharing my videos and pictures. I have been to almost every country and would be glad to give tips and pointers. Drop me a note. = )
From Wikipedia
Salona (Ancient Greek: Σάλωνα) was an ancient city and the capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia. The name Salona preserves the language of the early inhabitants of this area whom the Romans called Dalmatae, and considered to be part of a larger group called Illyrians.[1] Salona (or Salon) is situated in today's town of Solin, right next to Split, in modern-day Croatia.
First mention of the name Salon originates about 7th century BC as an Illyrian settlement near the spring of river Jadro. In the first millennium BC the Greeks set up an emporium (marketplace) there. After the conquest by the Romans, Salona became the capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia. because it sided with the future Roman emperor Gaius Julius Caesar in the civil war against Pompeii's and Marcus Licinius Crassus of the first Triumvirate. Martia Iulia Valeria Salona Felix (the full name of the ancient city) was founded probably after the Roman civil wars under Julius Caesar. The early Roman city encompassed the area around the Forum and Theatre, with an entrance, the Porta Caesarea, on the north-east side, The walls were fortified with towers during the reign of Augustus. The early trapezoidal shape of the city was transformed by eastern and western expansion of the city. The city quickly acquired Roman characteristics: walls; a forum; a theatre; an amphitheater – the most conspicuous above-ground remains today; public baths; and an aqueduct.[6] Many inscriptions in both Latin and Greek have been found both inside the walls and in the cemeteries outside, since Romans forbade burials inside the city boundaries. A number of fine marble sarcophagi from those cemeteries are now in the Archaeological Museum of Split. All this archaeological evidence attests to the city's prosperity and integration into the Roman Empire.
Aqueduct of Salona
Salona had a mint that was connected with the mint in Sirmium and silver mines in the Dinaric Alps through Via Argentaria. When the Roman Emperor Diocletian retired, he erected a monumental palace nearby. This massive structure, known as Diocletian's Palace, became the core of the modern city of Split.
Salona's continuing prosperity resulted in extensive church building in the fourth and fifth centuries, including an episcopal basilica and a neighboring church and baptistery inside the walls, and several shrines honoring martyrs outside. These have made it a major site for studying the development of Christian sacred architecture.
Salona was largely destroyed in the invasions of the Avars and Slavs in the seventh century AD, though the exact year of the destruction still remains an open subject between archaeologists. Refugees from Salona settled inside the Diocletian's Palace.
Church
crypts
coffins
Manastirine part of ancient Roman town Salona (Croatia, Solin)
Old church at Manastirine part of ancient Salona.
Short description: The remains of the basilica and the cementary of Manastirine constitute the most important Early Christian complex of Salona, situated outside the town. In the north-eastern part of the site remnants have been found originating from the earliest history of Salona, dating back to the 2nd century B.C. In the 1st century A.D. a Roman pagan necropolis started to grow in the area of Manastirine, as confirmed both by numerous grave inscriptions and walls of 'hortus' - arranged and fenced cemetery plot.
The first christian funeral known to have taken place at the necropolis was the one of the Salonitan bishop martyr Domnio, who had come to Salona from Syrian city of Antioch. He was executed in the amphitheatre of Salona on the the 10th of April 304A.D., during Diocletian's last persecutions of Christians. Domnio's body was deposited in a vaulted tomb, around which the Salonitan Christians soon commenced to bury their dead.
At the end of the 4th century a simple square building was eracted, the Memorial Chapel I, containing the tombs of Domnio and his successors to the Salonitan bishop's chair. Simultaneously private chapels, the so-called memories, were being eracted, accommodating the graves and sarcophagi of more affluent Christians. The Memorial Chapel I is surrounded by square-shaped buidings with apses.
At the end of the 4th century, during the German incursions, the entire complex was partly destroyed, and after that, in the middle of the 5th century a large three-naved basilica (42x20m), with a pronounced apse on the east side, was erected above. The Memorial Chapel I and Domnio's grave were thus left in the 'presbytery' (shrine) of the basilica.
In the 6th century the basilica was annexed and reconstructed. On the west side a 'narthex' with a three-part entrance was added, and the interior of the basilica was fitted with new furnishings. In the nave, in front of the 'transept', a 'schola cantorum' enclosed by 'plutei' was built, providing the space for the church choir. A new marble altar partition decorated with a sea-shell motif was mounted, separating the 'presbytery' with the altar and the martyr's grave from the rest of the church.
In the early 7th century both the basilica and the cemetery were looted and partly destroyed. The church was subsequently entirely reconstructed once again, and the 'presbytery' was adapted for the pilgrims visiting the grave of the martyr Domnio.
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The Ancient Roman Ruins of Salona - Croatia HD
Salona was an ancient city and capital of Dalmatae in the time of the Roman empire. Dalmatae is modern day Dalmatia, part of Croatia, and Salona is modern day Solin. Colonia Martia Iulia Salona (full name of the ancient city) was founded after the Roman civil wars under Julius Caesar, but it's roots date back in the time of the Greeks. In the time of the Roman Emperor Diocletian, he built a palace nearby, this structure, known as Diocletian's Palace, became the core of the modern city of Split. Salona was destroyed in the invasions of the Avars and Slavs in the sixth and seventh centuries CE. Today only shells remain of this ancient city and they are in order of appearance: Amphitheatre, Basilica of the Five Martyrs, Theatre & Forum, Five Bridges, Episcopal center & city baths and Manastirine.
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Solin (Salona) ruins, Croatia. Split - Solin.
Solin (Salona), Croatia. Travel to roman city of Solin by car. Small video about our travel to Croatia and Solin.
Solin developed on the location of ancient town of Salona which was the capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia and the birthplace of Emperor Diocletian. Salona was an early Roman settlement, which became overshadowed when Emperor Diocletian constructed the nearby Diocletian's Palace in about the year 300 AD.
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Episcopal centre part of the ancient Roman town Salona (Solin,Croatia)
Short description of the Episcopal centre of the Salona:
The centre of the Early Christian Salona is located in the eastern part of the town ( 'Urbs Nova Orientalis), in the immediate vicinity of the Christian oratory (Oratorium A), where the first Salonitan Christian secretly gathered for prayer and worship. It was the oldest church of Salona, called 'domus ecclesiae', and was used from the middle of the 3rd century, from the time of Salonitan Bishop Venantius. The oratory was situated in the baths of a private house, whose largest room was converted and adapted for the Christian liturgy. The room was divided by a partition into two parts: the 'presbytery' with a semicircular bench for the clergy and the space for the congregation. To the south of the 'Oratorium A' there was another oratory, Oratorium B.
After the Edict of Milan on Religious Tolerance 313 A.D. an episcopal centre was built on this location consisting of twin basilicas, a baptisery, and a bishop's palace. In the time of the Bishops Symferius and Esychius in the early 5th century two monumental longitudinal basilicas, the so-called 'basilicae geminae', were eracted. The northern basilica ( 'Basilica urbana' ), dedicated to Christ, is the largest three-naved basilica was dedicated to Domnio and other Salonitan martyrs. Both basilicas had a common covered atrium, the 'narthex', on the west side. In the 6th century a monumental basilica with a Greek cross layout was built in the place of the southern longitudinal basilica by Bishop Honorius II.
In the 5th century a rectangular baptistery with a hexagonal baptismal font ( 'piscina' ) was built to the north of the twin basilicas. A 'catechumeneum', a room for religious education, was located to the west of the baptistery. The floor was decorated with a mosaic depicting two deer drinking water from a 'kantharos' and the Psalm verses: SICUT CERVUS DESIDERAT AD FONTES AQUARUM ITA DESIDERAT ANIMA MEA AD TE DEUS. (As a hart longs / for flowing streams, / so longs my soul / for thee, O God.). Auxiliary rooms: a waiting room and a dressing room were placed to the east of the baptistery. In the course of the reconstruction and restoration of the Episcopal Centre the baptistery was given an octagonal form with a cross-shaped baptismal font.
The bishop's palace, the episcopium, was situated north of the 'basilica urbana' and comprised a larg number of rooms, preserved in their foundations. Some rooms were designed to be used for practical, i.e. husbandry purposes. The main door leading to the palace was in Peter's Street, named after numerous architectural fragments bearing the incised monogram of Bishop Peter.
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Oldest part of ancient Roman town Salona (Croatia,Solin)
Short description of the Roman forum with capitolium, the ancient theatre and the another temple:
The centre of the ancient Salona's public and political life, the 'forum', is located in the south-east part of the old town nucleus. It was situated close to one of the town's communications ( 'cardo maximus' ) on a natural elevation, extending from the north to the south, shaped as an elongated rectangle (45x70m). During the regin of Emperor Augustus on its north side of the town's main religious centre the 'capitolium', the temple, was built, dedicated to the 'capitoline' triad - Jupiter, Juno and Minerva. The 'capitolium' complex consisted of three separate architectural elements. The central edifice of a square ground-plan with a staircase was flanked by a temple ( 'tetrastyle prostyle' type) on each side. To the north of the 'forum' remnants of the town baths ( 'thermae' ) have been found, originating from the Early Imperial period, while the city hall, the 'curia', built in the 1st century A.D., was located to the east.
The theatre was built in the latter half of 1st century A.D. in the immediate vicinity of the 'forum', on the west side. It was partly constructed on a natural slope. By its dimensions (65x58m) the Salonitan theatre ranks among medium-sized edifices of this type in the Roman world. The auditorium ( 'cavea' ) was semicircular, with two tiers of seats, and could accommodate some 3,500 spectators. In front of the auditorium there was a semicircular 'orchestra' with seats reserved for senior officials and distinguished citizens.
On the auditorium's outer shell there were a number of openings formed and supported by massive arched pillars. On its north side three rectangular pillars formed a double monumental entrance to the auditorium. The theatre could also be entered through two lateral entrances ( 'paradoi' ), leading to the 'orchestra' and to the lower tiers of the auditorium. The theatrical performance took place on a raised podium ( 'pulpitum' ) in front of the scaena', whose facade, the 'scaenae frons' was lavishly articulated with decorative architectural elements. In the middle of the facade a deep semicircular niche was located, with the main gate, the 'porta regia', leading to the stage.
To the south of the theatre there was a temple of the 'tetrastyle prostyle' type dating from an earlier period and dedicated to either Dionysus or Liber. It consisted of a square 'cela' and a deep vestibule ( pronaos), and the facade had four massive channelled columns adorned with Corinthian capitals. It was eracted on a high podium with an access staircase which was removed later, while the theatre was being built. During the final stage of the construction a porch was added to each side of the temple.
In the 2nd and the 3rd century A.D. the 'forum' expanded and porches were built, while the 'capitoline temples' were reconstructed and the 'curia' resored. In Diocletian's time the theatre was also redecorated and a porch was added to its south side. In the 4th century Salona became a Christian town, the 'forum' thereby losing its significance and role as the city centre.
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Croatia, Salona (Solin) - Christian Basilicas
Salina was an ancient city and the capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia. The name Salona preserves the language of the early inhabitants of this area whom the Romans called Dalmatae, and considered to be part of a larger group called Illyrians. Salona (or Salon) is situated in today's town of Solin, right next to Split, in modern-day Croatia.
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Big public baths and 5 bridges in ancient Roman town Salona(Croatia,Solin)
Short description:
The great cityy thermae/baths
The baths, 'thermae', are an amenity typical of the Roman civilisation and therefore constituted an indispensable part of the Roman urban culture. They were the venu of intensive social and cultural life.
Remains of a number of both private and public baths have discovered in Salona. The best preserved are the so-called Great City Thermae built at the end of the 2nd or the beginning of the 3rd century A.D. in the east part of the town. The building is rectangular in shape with three symmetrically arranged apses in the north and one in the west.
The complex of the thermae was reached from the south side and in the centre there was an open yard with a porch. To the north there was an adjoining elongated spacious room, housing a semicircular pool, the 'piscina', filled with cold water, the 'frigidarium'. To the left there were two dressing rooms, with benches for sitting and openings in the wall for clothes. The room to the west was also used as a massage room, the 'unctorium'. The room ending with an apse served both as a lounge and an exercise room. To the right there were hot baths and the sauna: 'caldarium', 'tepidarium', and 'sudatorium'.
The Salonitan thermae were heated in a usual way - by hypocaustics. From the furnace room, the 'preafurnium', the hot air was conducted between the hypocaustic bars and, circulating through hollow ceramic tubes, the 'tubuli', heated the rooms. The thermae were finely decorated, which is evident from the remnants of frescoes on the walls and fragments of mosaics covering the floor.
Two crosses cut into the stone lintels by the eastern wall of the 'caldarium' bear witness to the fact that in the late antiquity the City Thermae were used by the Salonitan Christians as well.
The five bridges
...,outside the walls enclosing the old city, 'Urbs vetus', westernmost backwater of the Jadro was flowing. In the 1st century B.C. it was built five-arch bridge supported by massive pylons. It was constructed from finely chiselled stones arranged in a regular pattern and connected with mortar. The bridge was situated on an important regional road which was a continuation of the old city main communication, 'decumanus maximus'. The road was passing through the eastern city gate, the so-called 'Porta Caesarea' and, in the immediate vicinity of the bridge, branched into two roads. First was leading towards the north-east to the so-called 'Porta Andetria' and further into the hinterland, and the other across the bridge in the direction of 'Epetium' (Stobreč) and further southwards along the Adriatic coast. As early as the 1st century B.C. alongside this road necropoles grew, many of them being gradually abandoned as the city was spreading eastwards.
In the late antiquity a building was eracted to the north of the bridge whose exact purpose has not been established. It is believed to have been either a textile and dying workshop or an olive oil manufacture. To the west of the bridge there is a road paved with stone of irregular pattern, as well as remnants of residential buildings.
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Salona, Solin
Music: Titans - Vangelis
Gate of Dalmatia: Most beautiful place in the world (Klis,Solin,Split-Croatia)
Klis fortress and surrounding
Roman amphitheatar in Salona (Croatia)
A roman city of Salona was the biggest city on eastern coast of Adriatic sea (60 000 inhabitans). The emperor Diocletianus build his residence near the city. Nowdays is here city of Solin and just few kilometers away city of Split.
Ruïne Amphitheatre Salona/Solin Croatia
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Inside Split Synagogue, Split, Dalmatia, Croatia
Split Synagogue was built in roughly 1500. Located on Zidovski Prolaz, or the Jewish Passage, it is the second oldest continuously operational Sephardic Synagogue in the world.
It was built into the western wall of Diocletian's palace by Jews escaping the Inquisition in Spain and Portugal. In 1573, a Jewish Cemetery was approved and built on Marjan Hill, which overlooks the town of Split. Jews arrived in Dalmatia, during the early centuries of the Christian era, with the conquering Roman armies. Romans established the city of Salona just behind Split, in the 1st Century, where Jewish traders and craftsmen settled. Archaeological excavations have discovered artifacts of Jewish origin dating from this period and clues to the existence of a Synagogue dating back to the time of Diocletian who was Roman Emperor from 284 to 305.
Old Town City Walls of Dubrovnik Croatia Travel Vlog123
The Walls of Old Town Dubrovnik are a series of defensive stone walls surrounding the city of Dubrovnik in southern Croatia. Today's intact city walls, constructed mainly during the 12th–17th centuries, mostly a double line, have long been a source of pride for Dubrovnik. The walls run an uninterrupted course of approximately 1,940 metres (6,360 ft) in length, encircling most of the old city, and reach a maximum height of about 25 metres (82 ft). The bulk of the existing walls and fortifications were constructed during the 14th and 15th centuries, but were continually extended and strengthened up until the 17th century.
Diocletian's Crypt (Split)
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Tusculum & Centrum Salona, Croatia
Salona walls and thermae (baths) date from the 2nd Century. Towers and a gate, Porta Caesarea, were added in the 6th Century. The Salona Gardens lead you from the top area to the lower area. Background music is Smooth Ridin by Huma-Huma.
ROMAN RUINS SALONA PART 3 (SOLIN-SPLIT,CROATIA,EU)
Very old beautiful roman ruins in Solin suburb of Split.
The first christian church in Salona (Croatia)
A roman city of Salona was the biggest city on eastern coast of Adriatic sea (60 000 inhabitans). The emperor Diocletianus build his residence near the city. Just few kilometers away is city of Split.