Ancient Roman Boundary Marker Found at Dig

This pomerial stone marked the city limits and dates from 49 AD
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Jul 17, 2021 1:20 PM CDT
Dig Unearths Stone Marker For Ancient Rome Boundary
Rome's Mayor Virginia Raggi, center, backdropped by the Ara Pacis (Altar of Peace) presents to journalists an archeological finding emerged during the excavations at a Mausoleum in Rome, Friday.   (AP Photo/Domenico Stinellis)

Archaeologists have discovered a rare stone delineating the city limits of ancient Rome that dates from the age of Emperor Claudius in 49 A.D. and was found during excavations for a new sewage system. Rome Mayor Virginia Raggi was on hand for the unveiling Friday of the pomerial stone, a huge slab of travertine that was used as a sacred, military, and political perimeter marking the edge of the city proper with Rome’s outer territory, per the AP. It was found June 17 during excavations for a rerouted sewer under the mausoleum of Emperor Augustus, near the central Via del Corso in Rome’s historic center. In ancient Rome, the area of the pomerium was a consecrated piece of land along the walls, where it was forbidden to farm, live, or build and through which it was forbidden to enter with weapons.

At a press conference in the Ara Pacis museum near the mausoleum, Claudio Parisi Presicce, director of the Archaeological Museums of Rome, said the stone had both civic and symbolic meaning. “The founding act of the city of Rome starts from the realization of this ‘pomerium,''' he said of the consecrated area. The stone features an inscription that allowed archaeologists to date it to Claudius and the expansion of the pomerium in 49 A.D., which established Rome's new city limits. Raggi noted that only 10 other stones of this kind had been discovered in Rome, the last one 100 years ago. “Rome never ceases to amaze and always shows off its new treasures,” she said. The stone will be on display at the Ara Pacis museum, the Richard Meier-designed home of a 1st century altar until the Augustus museum opens.
(More ancient Rome stories.)

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