What's New!

Detailed Sitemap

All images © by Roberto Piperno, owner of the domain. Write to romapip@quipo.it. Text edited by Rosamie Moore.
Page added in February 2011.

- Sabratha: eastern quarters
(Detail of a mosaic from Leptis Magna in the Museum of Tripoli)


Sabratha was one of the ports of Roman Tripolis which had strong business ties with Ostia, the port of Rome; in both towns the main baths were located near the Forum (see the Forum of Sabratha in page one).

Baths by the sea: pool

The baths were built on the edge of a cliff having a commanding view over the sea; the construction technique adopted by local engineers relied more on blocks of sandstone (which were quarried in the vicinity of the town) rather than on masonry; this may explain why vaults and pillars have not survived to our time.


Baths by the sea: toilets

There are still more questions than answers on the social role of toilets in the Roman world. The marbles and columns which decorated the toilets at Sabratha (and the view!) indicate that people did not pay a cursory visit to these facilities, but sat and chatted, without feeling uncomfortable about the lack of privacy (the similarity with the
toilets at Ostia is striking).

Baths by the sea: mosaics and in the background: Temple to Isis (far left) and the theatre (far right)

The baths were decorated with coloured mosaics with a variety of geometric patterns; a recurring motif throughout the whole Roman Empire was based on pelta, the shields of the Amazons (you may wish to see a pelta in a relief in the Museum of Corinth or a fountain showing four pelta in Domus Flavia, one of the imperial palaces in Rome).
Solomon's knot was another popular decorative motif which can be seen in the image above; it is found in many ancient synagogues, but also in non Jewish buildings (see the Solomon's knots in the Synagogue of Sardis).

Temple to Isis

When storms threaten their lives seamen from Genoa and Marseille trust their safety to statues of the Virgin Mary which are housed in sanctuaries near their hometowns which are visible from a great distance; the seamen of Sabratha did the same with Isis, an Egyptian goddess which in the Greek-Roman world received the epithet of Stella Maris (Star of the Sea); the Temple to Isis at Sabratha stood on an isolated cliff so that it could be easily identified; ceremonies were held in spring on the expanse of water near the temple to celebrate the beginning of the sailing season.


Theatre

The conquest of Libya in 1911-12 was justified by the Italian government of the time with the need for providing the population of the country with new work opportunities (Italy had extremely high emigration rates); after WWI the Fascist regime placed the Italian presence in Libya into a different context: that of reviving the ancient Roman Empire. Although Italian archaeologists had a conservative approach to the reconstruction of ancient monuments, at Sabratha they were subject to political pressure and, in order to make visible the heritage of Rome in the region, they reconstructed major parts of the town's large theatre (the French acted similarly at
Krak des Chevaliers in Syria).
On March 19, 1937, Benito Mussolini, the Italian leader of Fascism, visited Sabratha and attended the first modern performance at its theatre (Oedipus the King by Sophocles); on the next day however, during his visit to Leptis Magna, Mussolini criticized the Italian governor of Libya for the excessive reconstruction of the ancient buildings.

Theatre: reconstructed "proscaenium", the decorated wall behind the scene

The theatre was built in 175-200 AD, so it was started by
Emperor Marcus Aurelius; the construction was continued by his son Commodus and completed with a lavish proscaenium by Emperor Septimius Severus who was born in Leptis Magna; this time frame is applicable also to the enlargement of the theatre of Ostia.

Reliefs portraying Hercules (left), the three Graces (centre) and Hermes (right)

The area which best survived to our time is the base of the stage which was decorated with reliefs portraying gods and scenes from comedies and dances; the image used as background for this page shows a relief portraying Paris being asked by Hermes which of three goddesses was the fairest.

House of the Peristilium

Italian archaeologists unearthed a private villa near the theatre; its courtyard was surrounded by columns (peristilium means columns around); among the fine mosaics which decorated the floor of its halls, one depicts a maze, the
Cretan Labyrinth.

Museum of Sabratha: (above) The Riddle of the Sphinx; (below) floor mosaic decorated with a motif based on "pelta", the Amazons' shields

The Museum of Sabratha has a large selection of mosaics, paintings, statues and reliefs found in private houses and villas; the prevailing subjects are linked to the Greek myth, an effect of the Romanization of the region, which in origin had a Phoenician culture.

Museum of Sabratha: Leda and the Swan from the House of Leda

The union of Leda with Zeus in the form of a swan was a subject which led to depicting a scene which in today's world would fall into the category of soft porn; this relaxed approach to sex was common to all parts of the Roman Empire (see a
statue of Leda at Dion in Greece).

Museum of Sabratha: (left) Fall; (right) Orpheus with the lyre and surrounded by animals (see
a similar work of art - external link at the Byzantine and Christian Museum of Athens)

An explanation for the repetitiveness of some subjects in works of art throughout the Roman Empire is that they were manufactured in one location and then shipped as a luxury item; Afrodisia, a town in Asia Minor, was known for its marble quarries and its talented sculptors and maybe the elaborate table support portraying Orpheus shown above was manufactured there; also mosaics maybe were made in one place and shipped to another; this could have been easily done for the small life scenes or portraits which often were inserted into a large mosaic decorated with geometric patterns; mosaics with small medallions portraying the Four Seasons have been found in many locations (see the Mosaic of the Four Seasons from Ostia at S. Paolo alle Tre Fontane in Rome).

Museum of Sabratha: Mosaic portraying Liber Pater, a local god, as Dionysus and a detail of the decoration which surrounds the main scene

Return to
page one to see the Forum or move to:
Introductory page
Oea (Tripoli)
Leptis Magna

SEE THESE OTHER EXHIBITIONS (for a full list see my detailed index).