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Nicolas Lamare
3 Fountains and theAncient City
Social Interactions, Practical Uses, andPleasantSights
Abstract: Fountainswere remarkable buildings in ancient cities. First, their functional aspect
aswatersuppliersmadethemessential todaily life.Then,under theRomanEmpire, theygradu-
ally acquired a role as ornamentation of the space and as amanifestation of the political dis-
course thatmodified their architecture and appearance. Because of these dual characteristics,
both functionalanddecorative, fountains, especiallymonumental fountains, areveryappropri-
ate buildings for conducting an analysis of urban space and its perception. Where were the
fountains located inthecity?Howdidtheyfit into thearchitectural framework?Whofrequented
themonadaily basis?Howdid they evolve over time? This article argues that fountainswere
buildings in their own right, whose practical and decorative functionsmust be considered in
an equivalentway. Focusing onNorthAfrica provinces, it looks at the perception of fountains
in the city, as monumental buildings and constructions decorated with water, which is their
raisond’être.
Theimageof theRomancityhas longbeenassociatedwithwater,mainlybecauseof thearcades
of the aqueducts that still dominate the landscape around the ancient towns. The presence of
water incities,both indomestic andpublic spaces, its abundanceand (over)consumptionhave
longbeenconsideredessentialcharacteristicsof imperialurbanspace.Amongthewater-related
monuments, fountains are themost representative, because they distributedwater and, in the
caseof themostmonumentalof them,staged it.Astudyof theseparticularbuildingsaddresses
several interconnectedissues.Thearchitectureanddecorationof thefountainsallowustostudy
the stagingofpower, but alsoof theprofusionofwater. In fact, the visual andacousticdimen-
sionof thecontinuous flowofwater in thecity is in response to thedesire to showthedomina-
tion of man over the natural elements and the hazards of resource availability and climate
change.Moreover,written testimoniesmake it possible to capture themental concepts relating
towater in the city,whichwas essential as an element of everyday life and as a characteristic
element of urbanaesthetics.
Focusing onNorthAfrica provinceswith comparisons, this article falls into two parts, the
first one dedicated to the Roman imperial period, followed by an investigation devoted to the
late antique city, a period for which the problems are different, even though fountains still
playedanessential role. For eachperiod, threeaspects arediscussed. First, the location, along
with the visibility andaccessibility of the fountainswill be analysedaccording to the available
sources. In a secondpart, fountainswill be discussed as ameeting point, a place of gathering
or recreation, in their social dimension. Ina thirdpart, thediscussionwill focuson thevisuali-
sation of fountains, based on architectural data, and on themeaning intended to be given to
themonuments, thanks to epigraphic texts.1
1 The ideas presented in this article are based on a PhDdissertation onmonumental fountains in RomanNorth
Africa. Cf. Lamare 2019. Iwould like to thankAnnetteHaugandNicolaChiarenza for their invitation to theUrban
Water Colloquium, the reviewers for their remarks onmy paper, as well as Nichole Sheldrick for improving the
first draft of theEnglish text. Allmistakes remainmyown.All dates areAD.
OpenAccess.©2020Nicolas Lamare, publishedbyDeGruyter. Thiswork is licensedunder theCreative
CommonsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives4.0 License.
https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110677065-003
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