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24 Patric-AlexanderKreuz
Fig. 7:Concordia,
detail of the canal
according toold
plans.
Two inscriptions of the late 1st/early 2nd century AD are usually connected to this initiative.37
Both inscriptions, formerly free-standing, approx. 1.1mhigh stelae, were found in the area of
the canal andmust have been erected in its context. They document for the public that two
prominent inhabitants of Concordia, both liberti of the sameperson andboth seviri, took over
thecosts for steps (crepidines) of twosectionsof thecanal, itself not explicitlymentioned (inter
murumet pontem, and inter duos pontes; these specifications onlymake sense for the canal as
the object of the initiative, aswell as the context of the inscriptions). This large-scale improve-
ment of the local infrastructurewas therefore a private donation and euergetic contribution to
the local topography.Moreover, since thecity’s layoutwithcanal–andstreetgrid–hadexisted
already for some time, itwas a subsequent initiative thatmusthavehad some impact.
Buthowcould this initiativebeunderstood in its urbancontext?With the inner-city canal,
water was already a formative component of the initial layout and urban space of Concordia.
Yet in its embedding, a conspicuous local approach is evident. From the beginning integrated
in a remarkably consistent way into the layout of the city, the canal, being a part of it, was
subsequently theobjectofarchitecturalarticulationasamonumental locale.This,however,did
not result inasophisticatedorevengrandiosearchitectonicdesign,suchasapromenade.Finds
from thearea indicate anongoing commercial useof at least parts of the canal,38 although the
actualharbourwith its corresponding infrastructurewas locatedoutside thecity.39Yet thearea
of thecanalwasalsosought forofficialmonuments.Anhonorary inscription forahigh-ranking
imperial official of the Late Antonine period found in the eastern section of the canal steps
points toacertainpublicity in thisarea:40 the inscriptionwith its sizeof 150×80cmmusthave
formedpart of an impressivehonorarymonument erected somewhere along the canal.
37 CIL V, 1886 and 1887; Bertolini 1880, 414 no. 10 pl. 14 (findspot); Vigoni 2006, 464 fig.6f.; Vigoni 2013, 104
figs. 73. 74. Against a connection of both inscriptionswith the steps proper and for a different assessment of the
urban role of the canal, seeLaird 2015, 254‒261.
38 Vigoni 2013, 125‒154.
39 Vigoni 2013, 109‒111 fig. 78pl. 2. 5.
40 CILV, 1874;Bertolini 1880, 415no. 11 pl. 14;Vigoni 2013, 105 fig. 75.
The Power of Urban Water
Studies in premodern urbanism
- Titel
- The Power of Urban Water
- Untertitel
- Studies in premodern urbanism
- Autoren
- Nicola Chiarenza
- Annette Haug
- Ulrich Müller
- Verlag
- De Gruyter Open Ltd
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-11-067706-5
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 28.0 cm
- Seiten
- 280
- Kategorie
- Technik