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Keyword: domusaurea

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  • First Pisa, now Rome's Colosseum - it's leaning

    07/29/2012 1:44:45 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 28 replies
    Yahoo! News ^ | 7/29/12 | Catherine Hornby
    ROME (Reuters) - The ancient Colosseum of Rome, where gladiators fought for their lives, is slanting about 40 cm (16 inches) lower on the south side than on the north, and authorities are investigating whether it needs urgent repairs. Experts first noticed the incline about a year ago and have been monitoring it for the past few months, ... Tests have also started to observe the effects that traffic on nearby busy roads may have on the monument. Professor Giorgio Monti, from La Sapienza's construction technology department, warned there may be a crack in the base below the amphitheatre. "The...
  • Sphinx Room at Domus Aurea re-emerges [Nero's lost palace]

    05/15/2019 9:26:38 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 19 replies
    Redazione ANSA ^ | May 8, 2019 | unattributed
    A beautifully decorated room has been discovered at Emperor Nero's famed Domus Aurea (Golden House) in Rome and brought back to light after 2,000 years. The hall is decorated with panthers, centaurs and a delightful sphinx. Experts chanced upon the room while they were doing restoration work on the vault of a neighbouring part of the palace... It was made thanks to a platform erected to restore the vault of room 72 od the sprawling and sumptuous complex, one of the 150 rooms hitherto rediscovered in the grand House the controversial emperor built in 64 AD after the great fire...
  • Nero's Golden Palace to partly reopen - Domus Aurea

    01/31/2007 7:17:00 PM PST · by NormsRevenge · 14 replies · 610+ views
    AP on Yahoo ^ | 1/31/07 | Marta Falconi - ap
    ROME - Nero's Golden Palace will partly reopen to visitors next week, offering rare insight into archaeologists' efforts to preserve the first-century imperial residence from decay and humidity. Visitors will have access to half of the palace, wandering through a maze of underground passageways, officials said Wednesday. They can also climb a 43-foot scaffolding and take a close look at the building's frescoed vaulted ceilings, as restorers and archaeologists work to clean the paint. "People will have the chance to get to know the monument itself and the efforts to maintain and preserve it," said archaeologist Irene Pignatelli, leading a...