The Palace of the Emperor Titus
John Bostock, ed., chapter 4.4.] [4: Sear, Frank, Roman Architecture, Cornell University Press, 1983, 145.] [5: Parker, 74.] [6: Suetonius, Divus Titus, Alexander Thomson, ed., Tit. 7.] The Palace was destroyed in the 16th century long after being restored by Hadrian in 238 AD. The marble materials and other building parts were reused by architects of the Renaissance for building Christian churches. The Church of Gesu and the fountain of the Cortile del Belvedere in the Vatican, for example, each ended up with the some of the ancient materials used to construct the Palace.[footnoteRef:7] [7: Gibbon, Edward, Decline… Continue Reading...