Arch of Constantine

Title

Arch of Constantine

Date

312-315

Identifier

1397

Work Type

Single Built Works

Work Location

Italy (nation)
Rome (inhabited place)

Style/Period

Imperial (Roman)

Subject

triumphal arches (memorial arches)
Constantine I, Emperor of Rome, -337
columns (architectural elements)
Corinthian capitals

Description

View of columns with Corinthian capitals along one side of the Arch of Constantine in Rome, Italy. "This huge triumphal arch (21 meters high), with three barrel-vaulted passageways, was erected to commemorate Constantine's victory over Maxentius at the Battle of Milvian Bridge in 312. It is just west of the Colosseum and dwarfs the nearby Arch of Titus. It incorporates recycled sculpture from earlier monuments, in part as some suggest, because creativity and technical skill had fallen off by this time period, but perhaps also because of a desire to associate Constantine with the "good emperors" Trajan, Hadrian, and Marcus Aurelius, whose monuments were cannibalized for sculpture. The faces of these emperors were recut to the features of Constantine,"--by Mary Ann Sullivan, Bluffton University.

Material/Medium

marble (rock)

Measurements

21 meters high

Reproduction Type

jpeg

ID Number

A1REROM1-6312E28A28

Files

A1REROM1-6312E28A28.jpg
Date Added
August 29, 2013
Collection
LTU Digital Images
Item Type
VRA Core
Tags
, , ,
Citation
“Arch of Constantine,” LTU Digital Images, accessed April 23, 2024, https://ltuimagecollection.omeka.net/items/show/12230.