Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The Basilica Ulpia, Early Christian Churches and the Roman Double Truss

View through CrossRef
ABSTRACTThe most prominent and long-lasting of the timber truss-roofed buildings from imperial Roman times was the Basilica Ulpia, the interior of which has been reconstructed by recent writers but with little agreement regarding the upper sections. The reconstruction that best passes the test of engineering viability is shown here to be the one published by James E. Packer in 1997, but Packer’s reconstruction is unconvincing with regard to the roof. The argument advanced now is that the roof was constructed with double trusses of the kind once found in the early Christian basilicas of Old St Peter’s and San Paolo fuori le Mura, and then recorded in the eighteenth century by Jean-Baptiste Rondelet, which were very similar in size to those used for the Basilica Ulpia. The spacing of roof trusses was determined by the nave column spacing. Engineering analysis determines that the trusses had sufficient capacity to support the roof and that the double-truss arrangement was critical to avoid overloading the stone architraves. The article speculates that doubling the Roman truss may have been a previous innovation. It argues that the later early Christian basilicas relied on the Roman double truss because of its proven performance, and that this continuity was recognised by Auguste Choisy and others who considered their use to be a reflection of earlier Roman practice.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: The Basilica Ulpia, Early Christian Churches and the Roman Double Truss
Description:
ABSTRACTThe most prominent and long-lasting of the timber truss-roofed buildings from imperial Roman times was the Basilica Ulpia, the interior of which has been reconstructed by recent writers but with little agreement regarding the upper sections.
The reconstruction that best passes the test of engineering viability is shown here to be the one published by James E.
Packer in 1997, but Packer’s reconstruction is unconvincing with regard to the roof.
The argument advanced now is that the roof was constructed with double trusses of the kind once found in the early Christian basilicas of Old St Peter’s and San Paolo fuori le Mura, and then recorded in the eighteenth century by Jean-Baptiste Rondelet, which were very similar in size to those used for the Basilica Ulpia.
The spacing of roof trusses was determined by the nave column spacing.
Engineering analysis determines that the trusses had sufficient capacity to support the roof and that the double-truss arrangement was critical to avoid overloading the stone architraves.
The article speculates that doubling the Roman truss may have been a previous innovation.
It argues that the later early Christian basilicas relied on the Roman double truss because of its proven performance, and that this continuity was recognised by Auguste Choisy and others who considered their use to be a reflection of earlier Roman practice.

Related Results

The Church Basilica
The Church Basilica
The debate over whether the early church basilica was “imperial” is bound up with many other questions, including the origins of the building type, and whether building types have ...
Politics, Ideology and Landscape: Early Christian Tigranakert in Artsakh
Politics, Ideology and Landscape: Early Christian Tigranakert in Artsakh
Tigranakert in Artsakh was founded at the end of 90s BC by the Armenian King Tigranes II the Great (95–55 BC) and in the Early Christian period continued to play a role of an impor...
Late Antique Knossos. Understanding the city: evidence of mosaics and religious architecture
Late Antique Knossos. Understanding the city: evidence of mosaics and religious architecture
Interpretation of the historical and epigraphical data can only provide a bare outline of the political and social environment of Knossos between the 5th and 7th centuries AD. Cons...
Physician and miracle worker. The cult of Saint Sampson the Xenodochos and his images in eastern Orthodox medieval painting
Physician and miracle worker. The cult of Saint Sampson the Xenodochos and his images in eastern Orthodox medieval painting
Saint Sampson, whose feast is celebrated on June 27, was depicted among holy physicians. However, his images were not frequent. He was usually accompanied with Saint Mokios (...
Form and Function of the Side Chambers of Fifth- and Sixth-Century Churches in Ravenna
Form and Function of the Side Chambers of Fifth- and Sixth-Century Churches in Ravenna
Side chambers-rooms flanking the apses of churches-occur throughout broad geographical areas in the Christian East, and within a wide chronological span, ranging from the 5th throu...
An Internalization of Doctrine to Strengthen Christian Identity: Considering a Mosaic Approach
An Internalization of Doctrine to Strengthen Christian Identity: Considering a Mosaic Approach
The aim of this research was to highlight the importance of internalizing Christian religious doctrine in strengthening Christian identity, due to the declining faith among Indones...
Il Patriarchio, la basilica lateranense e la liturgia
Il Patriarchio, la basilica lateranense e la liturgia
Il contributo prende in considerazione il Laterano medievale nella prospettiva della liturgia e del culto. Il gruppo lateranense si delinea come entità complessa, suddivisa in tre ...
The “Double Apostolate” as an Image of the Church. A Study of Early Medieval Apse Mosaic in Rome
The “Double Apostolate” as an Image of the Church. A Study of Early Medieval Apse Mosaic in Rome
As large cities claimed apostolic founding of their churches, the Roman church declared that it was constituted on the “double apostolate” of Peter and Paul. The concordia apostolo...

Back to Top