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Pleasure gardens, or horti, offered elite citizens of ancient Rome a retreat from the noise and grime of the city, where they could take their leisure and even conduct business amid lovely landscaping, architecture, and sculpture. One of the most important and beautiful of these gardens was the horti Sallustiani, originally developed by the Roman historian Sallust at the end of the first century B.C. and later possessed and perfected by a series of Roman emperors. Though now irrevocably altered by two millennia of human history, the Gardens of Sallust endure as a memory of beauty and as a significant archaeological site, where fragments of sculpture and ruins of architecture are still being discovered. In this ambitious work, Kim Hartswick undertakes the first comprehensive history of the Gardens of Sallust from Roman times to the present, as well as its influence on generations of scholars, intellectuals, and archaeologists. He draws from an astonishing array of sources to reconstruct the original dimensions and appearance of the gardens and the changes they have undergone at specific points in history. Hartswick thoroughly discusses the architectural features of the garden and analyzes their remains. He also studies the sculptures excavated from the gardens and discusses the subjects and uses of many outstanding examples.
Kim J. Hartswick is Academic Director of the CUNY Baccalaureate Program at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York.
Acknowledgments Introduction Part I. Topography and History Location and Topography Boundaries The Original Owner: C. Sallustius Crispus Inheritors of Sallust's Gardens Imperial Properties Plantings in Garden Estates The Hortus as Self-Display Post-antique Period The Ludovisi Josef Spithoever The 1880's "Building Fever" and Its Aftermath Part II. The Architecture of the Gardens The Destailleur Plan and Pertinent Ancient Remains The "Vestibule" in the Piazza Sallustio An Obelisk Wall(s) of Niches A Cryptoporticus The So-called Circus of Flora Temples of Venus Part III. Sculptural Finds Artemis, Iphigenia, and a Hind Niobids Gauls The World of Dionysos "Nymphs" and Candelabra The Ludovisi and Boston "Thrones" Ludovisi "Throne": Discovery and Early Theories Boston "Throne": Discovery and Early Reports Use and Reuse Egyptian Sculptures Sculptures Found in 1888 Near the Via Boncompagni Orestes and Electra Addendum: The Templum Gentis Flaviae and the Three Temples of Fortune Afterword Notes Abbreviations of Periodicals and Series Bibliographic Abbreviations Illustration Credits Index
In several aspects this book will be a standard for the next decades. (Bryn Mawr Classical Review)