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2 FromNature to Topography 25
Therefore, although a commercial use of the canal for the inner-city handling of goods is
likely, the wide area of the steps contiguous to the street grid, their monumental design, the
presentation of freestanding inscriptions and, later, of amassive honorarymonument, both of
whichpresupposeand implyacertainpublicity,mayargueagainst itsuseasapurely commer-
cial infrastructure. It is a hypothetical, but nevertheless appealing assumption to imagine this
urban area along the northern side of the canal as amore high-profile location, possibly even
with a sought-after public character. The case of Concordia thus indicates a more coherent,
âtotalâ appropriationofwater than theone inneighbouringAltinumor inVeronamentionedat
thebeginning. In its subordination to the local streetgridand its completearchitecturalization,
it is conceivedhereasa topographicalplace, asa locale for thepublic, for localised interaction
andevenmonumental communicationâapart from the forum.
With their ambitious architectural initiatives, Verona and Iulia Concordia confront uswith
two different approaches to including or even embracingwater, i.e. local watercourses, on a
largescale intheir topography. InVerona, theriverwasoneelementofamonumental reshaping
of a complete hillside, including river embankment, theatre, terraces, and a sanctuary. The re-
sult was a veduta-like arrangement, with the river serving as a visual starting point, yet also
distancing the viewer. In Iulia Concordia, on the other hand,we find a localwatercourse com-
pletely subordinated to the city layoutwith its orthogonal systemof streets and insulae, and,
thanks to thesubsequentdonationof thesteps,upgradedasa locale.Yetdespite thesedifferent
approaches,both inVeronaandIuliaConcordiawaterwasembedded inaremarkablycoherent,
prominentwayas anelement of anoverall urbanarrangement.Naturebecame topography.
Localwater and local identity: the caseof Padua
Themany-layered local âtreatmentâ of water within urban space in northern Italy finds a rare
and unusual facet in the case of Padua, pointing to the potentialmeaning of water in a local
cityscapebeyondthe infrastructuraloraestheticaspectsoutlinedabove.Alreadyduring the late
Republicanperiod, the oldVenetic and laterRomancitywaspraised for its prosperity. Accord-
ing to Strabo, Padua was the best of all the cities in the region. The geographer Pomponius
Mela characterises the city in his De Chorographia as urbs opulentissima.41 City and territory
were, according toLivy, himself aPaduan, characterisedbywatercourses, canals anda lagoon
landscape.
An important urban factorwas the riverMetuacus,which surrounded the core area of the
ancient city. Several areas and infrastructures of the Roman âriverscapeâ of Padua are known
fromarchaeological excavations. Bridges, piers, andwarehouses along the river formedan im-
portant part of the Metuacusâ waterside. Yet one of the structures, excavated in todayâs Via
Battisti 1, is of particular interest: awide, probably semicircular architectural settingbuilt from
large trachyteblocksanddated to themiddleof the 1st centuryBC.42 Theknownremainsof the
onlypartially excavatedarchitecture allow for a reconstructionas akindofwide, steppedexe-
drawith at least seven 29cmhigh steps, opening towards the river and descending to it. Due
to its unusual layout, the structure canhardly be interpreted exclusively as a pier for thehan-
dling of goods. Rather, it has features of amonumental architectural setting that instead indi-
catea specific character asaplace for a specialpurpose. The riverwould thusbea topographi-
cal space for adiscrete locationwith a specificmonumental quality.43
41 Mela 1, 60.
42 RutaSerafini 2002, 57f.; Vigoni 2013, 99f. fig.66; Zara 2018, 132 fig.92; 447no. 114.
43 Yet the concrete appearanceof this constructionbeyond the architectural layout or even its valorisation as an
installation remain unclear. The use of the very durablematerial trachyte aswell as nomention of awhite lime-
stone or anydecorative elements point to a rather utilitariandesign. Considering this, it is hypothetical â yet has
a certain charmâ to connect this constructionwith a regularly staged naval battle to celebrate a historic victory
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 MĂŒller
- 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