Yesterday after two hideously muggy, grimly overcast days—the sky heavy and enervating—the heat finally dropped below blood temperature and blue skies returned. It was a beautiful day for a wander over the Caelian Hill and my morning tour visited the gloriously timeless and relentlessly evocative church of Santo Stefano Rotondo. Just a stone’s throw from the melee in the valley of the Colosseum below, exacerbated by the simply interminable Metro works, much of the Celio appears as it must have done to a medieval pilgrim. Its proximity to the prosaic somehow renders its otherness even more “other”. I love it more than I can say.
The church of Saint Stephen dates to the second half of the fifth century and is a splendid example of early Christian architecture. Built during the death throes of the Roman Empire, perhaps during the reign of Pope Simplicius (468-483), the centrally-planned structure recalls both Roman mausolea (Cecilia Metella, Augustus, Hadrian, Constantina), and the martyria of the Constantinian era (the church of the Holy Sepulchre at Jerusalem, the long lost Church of the Holy Apostles at Constantinople).
It heralds the birth of a papal building programme, under the direct control of the Bishop of Rome and no longer entirely reliant on the financing and building of churches by wealthy congregations (a matter of decades earlier the nearby, and vast, Basilica of Sts John and Paul, of which more anon, had been sponsored by the senator Pammachius).
The crumbling of Imperial Rome, which no more fell in a day than it was built in one, was characterised in architectural terms by a sort of auto-cannibalism: the city of the popes began devouring the city of the emperors. My tutor at university, Dr James Lawson, memorably described it as “scavenger architecture”. The columns at Santo Stefano Rotondo are fine examples of this scavenging.
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