this post was submitted on 09 May 2024
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History

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[โ€“] came_apart_at_Kmart@hexbear.net 12 points 6 months ago (9 children)

these are incredible. the upper right section, outside the wall. my guess is the baby volcano thing is the old roman amphitheater... but try as i might, i cannot figure out what that also-probably-roman and very long structure is to its left (northeast of the amphitheater, east of the city). by the 1400s the structure seems to be gone and all that remains is a depression converted into farm land.

it's massive... some kind of old colosseum for like chariot racing?

[โ€“] MelianPretext@hexbear.net 9 points 6 months ago* (last edited 6 months ago)

That's how it usually goes, either the outer circuit of the circus and amphitheaters are used as support walls for housing, the entire thing is turned into a ramshackle fortress for a feudal petty noble or the flat space is used for farming by local peasantry who don't need to clear any rubble.

Here's a visual reconstruction for comparison of the city during Roman times by archaeologist Jean Claude Golvin

Also, for an interesting historical sweep of where things turned out, here's a pictoral map made of the city in 1953, still largely bombed out following WWII.

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