ALEXANDER THE SEVENTH DEDICATED
TO THE DIVINE WISDOM
THIS ANCIENT OBELISK,
A MONUMENT OF THE EGYPTIAN ATHENA,
UNEARTHED FROM THE GROUND
AND SET UP IN THE SQUARE
ONCE MINERVA'S
NOW BELONGING TO THE MOTHER OF GOD
IN THE YEAR OF SALVATION 1667.
As it happens there are a number of other survivals from the Iseum/Serapeum complex in the Campus Marti. Some are on display, others alas are remembered less substantially.
We can start with another cat. Just south of St. Maria Sopra Minerva we have a street named....
The "Gatta" that gives the street its name has a perch high up on a ledge. It is watching us with a decidedly superior attitude. The Egyptians put some ridiculous notions of divinity into the empty heads of felines and we have been living with it ever since.
We can start with another cat. Just south of St. Maria Sopra Minerva we have a street named....
The "Gatta" that gives the street its name has a perch high up on a ledge. It is watching us with a decidedly superior attitude. The Egyptians put some ridiculous notions of divinity into the empty heads of felines and we have been living with it ever since.
Via Della Gatta intersects with Via di Pi di Marmo. The street of the marble foot. There can only be one reason for a name like that and here it is:
Near at hand is an obscure little church called Santo Stefano del Cacco, or alternatively as Santo Stefano de Pinea. This structure actually reuses in its nave 12 columns from the Temple of Isis, and gets its name from a statue - sadly now lost - that also turned up. Perhaps the Egyptian god Thot, who has a dog's head, it was felt to look more like a monkey. Cacco is a corruption of the word Macaque, a much later word for monkey that while originally of African origin, wandered into wider use via Portuguese in the 1700s.
Isis herself might be making a cameo appearance in modern day Rome, although she has wandered a ways out of her usual neighborhood. Over in Piazza San Marco stands a statue dubbed "Madame Lucrezia".
The style of dress is similar to contemporary depictions of Isis or one of her priestesses. This is one of the six Talking Statues of Rome which were - and to some extent still are - places where satirical anonymous notes criticizing the politically powerful of the day get posted for the general amusement of all. Madame Lucrezia gets her name from her one time owner, Lucrezia d'Alagno who had a rather saucy affair with the King of Naples back in the 1400s.
Several more obelisks from the Iseum/Serapeum complex are also extant, they deserve their own posts on another day.
Recalling the alternate name for Santo Stefano I will finish by pointing out that the entire region, or Rione, of Rome in which the ancient temples existed is now called Pigna, or "Pine Cone". This is after a huge bronze pine cone that once graced a fountain near the temple complex but probably associated with a public bath. I did not make it over to the Vatican where it now resides, so this photo is via Wikipedia and credited to Lance Mountain.
Really quite the collection of odds and ends still in or near their original locations. Other items including a rather nice crocodile and some sphinxes are to be found in the various museums of Rome.
Isis herself might be making a cameo appearance in modern day Rome, although she has wandered a ways out of her usual neighborhood. Over in Piazza San Marco stands a statue dubbed "Madame Lucrezia".
The style of dress is similar to contemporary depictions of Isis or one of her priestesses. This is one of the six Talking Statues of Rome which were - and to some extent still are - places where satirical anonymous notes criticizing the politically powerful of the day get posted for the general amusement of all. Madame Lucrezia gets her name from her one time owner, Lucrezia d'Alagno who had a rather saucy affair with the King of Naples back in the 1400s.
Several more obelisks from the Iseum/Serapeum complex are also extant, they deserve their own posts on another day.
Recalling the alternate name for Santo Stefano I will finish by pointing out that the entire region, or Rione, of Rome in which the ancient temples existed is now called Pigna, or "Pine Cone". This is after a huge bronze pine cone that once graced a fountain near the temple complex but probably associated with a public bath. I did not make it over to the Vatican where it now resides, so this photo is via Wikipedia and credited to Lance Mountain.
Really quite the collection of odds and ends still in or near their original locations. Other items including a rather nice crocodile and some sphinxes are to be found in the various museums of Rome.
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