22. Rome Redux: The Tetrarchic Renaissance
Roman Architecture (HSAR 252) Professor Kleiner characterizes thirdcentury Rome as an architectural wasteland due to the rapid change of emperors, continuous civil war, and a crumbling economy. There was no time to build and the only major architectural commission was a new defensive wall. The crisis came to an end with the rise of Diocletian, who created a new form of government called the Tetrarchy, or fourman rule, with two leaders in the East and two in the West. Diocletian and his colleagues instituted a major public and private building campaign in Rome and the provinces, which reflected the Empire s renewed stability. Professor Kleiner begins with Diocletian s commissions in Romea fivecolumn monument dedicated to the tenth anniversary of the formation of the Tetrarchy, the restoration of the Curia or Senate House, and the monumental Baths of Diocletian. She then presents Diocletian s Palace at Split, designed as a military camp and including the emperor s octag
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