Where is ariminum




















The following year the city rose up under the leadership of Pietro Renzi but the revolutionaries' control of the city only lasted 3 days as Swiss troops immediately responded and Renzi and other leaders were forced to take refuge beyond the territory's borders.

After a relatively quiet decade, in March Rimini and the entire Romagnolo delegation voted to join the Kingdom of Italy under the goverment of Turin. Since that time, the political parties of all persuasions seen throughout Italy have also been part of the fabric of Rimini.

In the elections before the First World War, Rimini was run by administrations of varying factions until the sides split generally into those who supported intervention and those who preferred to remain neutral. Many men from the city were killed in the first and second world wars and this was disastrous for a city that, located near the eastern Maginot line, suffered particular damage from bombardments that reduced the city to ruins.

Rimini came out of the latter conflict ready to rebuilt itself and become the modern capital of seaside entertainment. The origin of Rimini is very probably Greek. The ancient name of the city, 'Ariminum', is however Umbrian in derivation and Pausanias often mentions the great Umbrian king Arimno in his writings; ancient coins found in the city are evidence of the rule of this king.

The area was later inhabited by the Celtic people the Senonian Gauls but in BC the site was occupied by the Romans and a Latin colony was established on the borders of Umbria and Aemilium. The strategic and sea-based location of the city meant it grew in importance and was bestowed with facilities. The censor Flaminius opened the road named in his honour the Via Flaminia , and later Marcus Aemilius Lepidus extended it to Piacenza following which it was renamed the Via Aemilia. The 2 nd and early 3 rd centuries CE saw especially fruitful agricultural production in the hinterland of the city, which became especially notable for wine production.

Ariminum suffered in the various invasions starting in the mid to late 4th century CE, but did maintain some semblance of stability due to its proximity to Ravenna in the waning years of the Roman Empire and the rise of Ostrogothic hegemony.

Getting There: Rimini is the largest city in the popular stretch of Adriatic beaches between Ravenna and Ancona, and as such is pretty well connected to the rest of the country, particularly in the busy summer season. A more reliable airport in the off-season might be the Aeroporto di Bologna — Guglielmo Marconi. Trains depart from Bologna to Rimini fairly regularly upwards of twice an hour much of the day even in the off-season.

The trip ranges from 53 minutes to about 2 hours depending on the train, and fares start at about 10 Euros one way. If traveling by personal vehicle, a lot just to the north of the Tiberius Bridge is an affordable, accessible, and convenient place to park.

Now it spans a canal that ends a short distance past the bridge after the Marecchia River was diverted northward and the original course turned into a park. The bridge owes its name to being completed in 21 CE during the reign of Tiberius, though it was started under Augustus and is sometimes referred to as the Augustus Bridge for this reason. Monumental inscriptions still present on the interior of the parapets note the contribution of both emperors toward its construction.

Decorative faux niches adorn both sides of the bridge, with brick breakwaters facing to the west. The bridge carries traffic over the river even today, and it was the only bridge on the Marecchia that was not destroyed by retreating Germans in It was supposedly fitted with charges that malfunctioned and did not explode, sparing the bridge the fate of many other Roman bridges in Northern Italy in see Verona. The museum is open in the summer June 1 to August 31 , Tuesday to Sunday from to The rest of the year it is open Tuesday to Friday from to and to Saturdays and Sundays it is open continuously from to The museum is closed on Monday year round.

Admission is 7 Euros and includes entrance to the nearby Domus del Chirurgo archaeological area. A number of small finds and ceramics from tombs dating back as far as the 13 th century BCE make up part of the collection. There is a section of the museum devoted to the Domus del Chirurgo, with a few rooms reconstructed. The titular surgical instruments from the Domus del Chirurgo are on display along with some fragments of wall paintings from the archaeological area.

A number of mosaics are on display, many in a great state of preservation, if not a little incomplete in some instances. One, in particular, depicts Anubis surrounded by African animals, though unfortunately some of the mosaic is missing.

Another depicts a harbor scene. There are quite a few figural and geometric mosaics present. The museum is fairly sizable, it took me about an hour and a half to get through it. There is not much in the way of information in any other language than Italian. A few of the larger informational cards had English translations, but the information for most objects did not. This archaeological area has the same hours as the museum and is a part of the same compulsory combined ticket. CE, Rimini.

Mosaic, 5th cent. Room with hypocaust of a Palace dating 5th cent. Mosaics from the Domus at the Vescovado, Imperial age, Rimini. Roman Mosaic, Rimini. Mosaic 2nd cent.

Mosaic from Palazzo Diotallevi, Rimini. Roman mosaic, Rimini. Orpheus Statue, 3rd cent. Herm of Priapus 1st cent. Little bronze statue of Venus, 2nd c. Little bronze statue of Venus. Little bronze statues of Gods.

Stone dedicated to Hercules, 2nd cent. Bas-relief with teacher and student, 1st cent. Decorative glass, 3rd cent. In the city centre, in what is now Piazza Tre Martiri , the memory of the Forum can be seen, which was the heart of the public and economic life of the city in the ancient Roman period. The archaeological discoveries from that time are visible in sections that have not been covered by modern paving.

These ruins show how, during the Age of Augustus, this area was completely paved and decorated with honorary monuments, statues and inscriptions in memory of the emperors and benefactors of the community.

In the vicinity of the ancient coastline, during the period of Emperor Hadrian second century AD stood a great amphitheater , large enough to contain over 12, spectators — only the Colosseum in Rome was larger at the time. Rediscovered at the end of the nineteenth century, today two arches of the exterior portico and part of the arena and cavea still remain.



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