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Jeff Matthews
2002-2012 entry
June 2009
Via Antiniana & a Roman bridge to Vomero
In Naples,
one expects to find Roman and earlier Greek ruins at
sea level; indeed, the discovery of large-scale
structures and even of ships in the ancient Roman port
has led to considerable delay in the construction of
the new underground train line, the metropolitana.
(It was, of course, that construction that led to the
discoveries in the first place.)
It is less known that the Romans built on the Vomero
hill above and behind the main body of the city.
Before the Romans cut through the Posillipo hill with
the tunnel now popularly called the “Neapolitan Crypt” for an
easy (once you got the tunnel dug!) sea-level passage
out of the city to the west, the only road from Naples
to Pozzuoli was the Via Antiniana (the etymology of
the name is unknown). It was a hill climber and a
major demonstration of something the Romans did very
well in their Imperial Age—road building.
At the Neapolitan end, the via Antiniana started at
the center of Neapolis and passed through a gate in
the western wall. (All of the following points of
reference are modern names.) It then climbed the
steep salita
[ascent] Tarsia, went past Piazza Mazzini
and up via Salvator
Rosa and its extension, via Cerra; it
skirted around and below the highpoint of the hill
(where the Sant’Elmo castle stands) and moved across
in a straight line to the ridge along via Belvedere and
along the top of Vomero, east to west, to drop down at
the other end of Vomero onto the plain that led to the
via Domiziana
and Pozzuoli. The Via Antiniana was rebuilt as late as
100 A.D. There are still visible remnants of the
roadbed (basolato)
on the Vomero (at Piazza
degli Artisti), and some paving stones,
called basoli,
have been used over the centuries in structures built
in the area, including the villa Salve (also known as
the villa Winspeare).
At the bottom of the Vomero on the Pozzuoli side,
several bits of the road are preserved in the excavated thermal baths on
via Terracina
near the Fair Grounds (the Mostra
d’Oltremare) and on the grounds of the Mostra,
itself.
During the excavation for the Salvator Rosa metro
station (approximately half-way up the hill on via
Salvator Rosa), remains were found of a bridge-viaduct
of the Via Antiniana (photo, top). Some of that
structure has been restored as an archaeological site
and may be viewed. The structure is believed to have
consisted of seven arches. It was built in reticulated
brickwork; the lintels of the arches consisted of
slabs, called bipedal bricks, (60 cm—23.6 inches—on a
side) clamped into the back vaults. The barrel vaults
were built with a cast of cement in a wooden framework
supported by centerings. A system of large brackets in
piperno rock
anchored to the high part of the walls was used to
hook scaffolding for the maintenance of the viaduct.
Parts of the bridge were actually incorporated into an
18th-century building, itself torn down during the
excavations for the new train line.
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