Ancient theater of Sabratha | |
Coordinates: | 32.8053°N 12.485°W |
Location: | Sabratha, Proconsular Africa |
Type: | Roman style Theatre |
Height: | 22m |
Begin: | End of the 1st or beginning of the 2nd century |
Extra Label: | Heritage status |
Extra: | Monument of a site classified as World Heritage in 1982 Monument classified as World Heritage in Danger in 2016 |
The ancient theater of Sabratha is the Roman theater of the ancient city of Sabratha in Proconsular Africa (now modern Tripolitania), on the Mediterranean coast of northwestern Libya. The date and circumstances of its construction are undetermined, as are those of its abandonment. Archaeologists can only advance approximate hypotheses, and place its construction around the end of the first century or the beginning of the second. After centuries of abandonment, excavators rediscovered the city and its monument during the Italian occupation of Libya in the early 20th century. The excavation and restoration work carried out between 1927 and 1937 made the theater the most important monument on the Sabratha site, the largest theater in Roman Africa, and the most spectacular in the Roman world in two respects: the colonnade of its stage wall was almost completely reconstructed by a three-level anastylosis, and an exceptional series of bas-reliefs adorned the base of the stage (the pulpitum). It could accommodate around 5,000 spectators and, in its restored state, still holds 1,500.
The period of World War II and the Libyan monarchy dampened interest in Sabratha, which resurfaced when the site was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1982, for which the theater was a key monument in the dossier. However, the serious deterioration of the Libyan situation from 2011 onwards raised fears concerning the conservation of the monument and its bas-reliefs, a concern noted by the site's inclusion on the list of World Heritage in Danger on July 14, 2016.
The theater was probably built at the request of private sponsors.[1] The date of construction, which is not known with certainty, can be placed at the crossroads of the 1st and 2nd centuries AD, a period of great prosperity for the province of Proconsular Africa.[2] Archaeologist Antonino Di Vita places it in the reign of Commodus (180-192) or, with reservations, in that of Septimius Severus (193-211).[3]
The theater was probably damaged, like the rest of the city, during the natural disasters that struck Sabratha, which Antonino Di Vita dates to between 306 and 310, but some inscriptions found in the theater indicate that it was still in use in the mid-fourth century.[4] It was again affected by the earthquakes and tsunamis of 365 that struck the eastern Mediterranean.[5] Abandoned after a fire, as evidenced by the layers of ash found during excavations, it was occupied by private dwellings, then used as a quarry for reclaimed material during the Byzantine reoccupation of Africa in the 2nd century.
As Libya became an Italian colony at the beginning of the 20th century, Italian archaeologists were the driving force behind the rediscovery of the theater. From the 1920s onwards, the Fascist regime's propaganda supported research that testified to the ancient Roman presence on this territory and justified Italian colonization as a return. Restoration of the most spectacular monuments became a priority.[6] When Renato Bartoccini began excavating the theater in 1927, it was no more than a mound of sand and masonry. Giacomo Guidi succeeded him in 1928, and from 1932 onwards undertook a meticulous restoration of the stage wall, based on the study of the surviving foundations and the scattered columns that had been found. The restoration, completed in 1937 by Giacomo Caputo, gave the building its present monumental stature.[7] It was inaugurated by Mussolini, who ended his tour of Libya by attending a performance of Sophocles' Oedipus Rex in this exceptional setting. At the same time, the creation of the Libyan coastal road was commemorated by the issue on March 15, 1937 of Italian colonial postage stamps depicting the theater's tiers behind two columns in the foreground.[8]
World War II and the post-war period delayed the publication of a descriptive monograph of the theater by the Italian Giacomo Caputo until 1959.[9]
The entire archaeological complex was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1982, on the basis of a report noting its "grandiose monuments, the most famous of which is the theater, with the three orders of columns of its frons scenae".[10] A timid opening up of the country to tourism from 1993, accentuated in 2003 with the lifting of the air embargo on the country, meant that Sabratha and its theater could be admired among the so-called must-see sites.[11]
The theater is the emblematic monument of Sabratha's archaeological site, but its conservation is under threat: the local stones, of mediocre quality, are not protected by a plaster as in Antiquity, and are exposed to corrosion from winds and salt-laden sea spray, while tourism at the end of the 20th century has raised the risk of vandalism.[12] More seriously, in 2014, the deterioration of the political situation in Libya since 2011 prompted UNESCO to express concern about the risk of illicit trafficking of archaeological heritage objects.[13] More recently, in 2015, the head of the Libyan Antiquities Service, Ahmed Hassan, warned of the possibility of looting and ransacking of antiquities as in Iraq and Syria.[14] For these reasons, the entire site of Sabratha and its theater were included on the list of World Heritage in Danger on July 14, 2016.[15]
The building, located to the east of the forum and close to the sea, is oriented so that spectators face north, but is significantly out of line with the regular plan of the district.[16] It is built from sandstone quarried nearby, which gives the restored monument a reddish hue. This is not the original color, as the whole was covered in stucco, traces of which remain. The foundation rests on rocky ground, the slight depression of which was used to hollow out the central orchestra.[17] Unlike other ancient theaters, which take advantage of a hillside to support their structure, Sabratha's ancient theater was built on flat ground, which necessitated the construction of a substantial frame to form the cavea.
Externally, the semicircular cavea had three tiers of arcades; restoration has partially revealed only two. Each floor consists of a series of arcades framed by Doric pilasters. The arcades are supported by massive masonry pillars decorated with smooth Corinthian pilasters.[18] The 24 arcades on the first level gave access on either side of the hemicycle to two vomitorium (vomitoria) that sloped gently down to the orchestra, and to a gallery that ran around the cavea from one vomitorium to the other. This gallery served the interior of the cavea via 25 vaulted entrances: six entrances opened onto the staircases leading to the upper gallery, which in turn served the 5 vomitoria giving access to the tiers; six other entrances led to an interior corridor at ground level, the ends of which connected the lateral vomitoria. Finally, the thirteen remaining entrances led to rooms of indeterminate use, perhaps service rooms for theatrical equipment or spectator rooms.[19]
Inside, the cavea is classically divided into three levels or maeniana: the lower level (ima cavea), in good condition, comprises 12 tiers, divided into six radiating sectors (cunei) by seven staircases. The second level (media cavea) has 7 tiers divided into seven sectors, accessed via five vomitories from the semicircular corridor on the second floor. The third level (summa cavea), which has disappeared and whose height would have equalled that of the stage wall, would have had fifteen tiers, made of stone or perhaps wood.[20] [21]
The stage wall (frons scænæ), over 22 metres high and now practically restored to its original form, is one of the most remarkable parts of the theater, the result of an anastylosis unparalleled in Roman theaters. Archaeologists recovered the base of the wall and most of the columns that once adorned it, and patiently reinstalled 96 columns, most of them original, over three floors. The height of each column made it possible to deduce which floor it was on: 5.54 meters for the first level, 4.90 meters for the second, 3.65 meters for the highest.[22] The columns on the first level are in pavonazzo marble, imported from Phrygia; those on the second level are in white marble; the third level combines pavonazzo and granite columns.[23] Although they are all Corinthian, they vary in appearance: smooth columns, vertically fluted or spiral columns, and even mixed columns, fluted on two-thirds of the shaft and smooth above.[24] While the reassembly of the colonnaded decoration is appreciated by onlookers and most archaeologists, the rear façade, crude and unfinished, is considered by some to be archaeologically implausible[25] and unhappy in appearance.[26]
According to the Roman theater architecture recommended by Vitruvius,[27] the stage wall includes three double doors at the back of large semicircular apses. In the center are the royal doors (valvae regiae), 1.95 meters wide, reserved for the main characters, and on either side are the so-called foreigners' or guests' doors (valvae hospitales), only 1.37 meters wide, for the secondary characters. Each opening is preceded by a columned forecourt that extends the full height of the wall, giving it a monumental appearance.
In this way, the stage wall forms a fixed backdrop for both outdoor scenes, where it forms a street lined with columns, and indoor scenes, where it forms a palace.[28]
Finally, like the frons scænæ in the ancient theater of Orange, the ones in the ancient theater of Sabratha are a typical example of those derived from the architectural canons of Asia Minor, and later developed and perfected by the Romans.[29]
The stage measures 42.70 by 8.55 meters, with a height of 1.38 meters above the orchestra. It was covered with a wooden floor, which accentuated the sound. Actors gained access either through three monumental doors in the stage wall, or from large side rooms serving as backstage areas, through doors known as "forum side" and "country side", the equivalent of the modern "courtyard side" and "garden side". These rooms also communicated with the cavea
Under the stage floor, a pit with a dirt floor (the hyposcenium) was accessible via an eleven-step service staircase. Stagehands could stand in this basement, which was dug out more than a metre from the orchestra, and could raise or lower scenery elements or characters through trapdoors opening onto the stage floor. A narrow ditch just behind the pulpitum was used to manoeuvre the stage curtain. A pipe pierced through the pulpitum drained rainwater from the orchestra and cavea, collecting it in a pit in the center of the basement. A second, large-diameter pipe ran from this pit under the stage wall, acting as a spillway and preventing flooding of the basement in the event of a heavy downpour.
The orchestra, a semicircular space between the stage and the cavea, is still almost completely covered with its original paving, made of marble imported from Proconnese. Four low, wide tiers were reserved for movable seats for the notables. They accessed the orchestra directly via the two lateral vomitories (aditus maximi), terminated by barriers depicting sculpted dolphins. A 1.50-metre-high balustrade surrounded these reserved tiers, isolating them from the cavea.[31]
The pulpitum, the small wall separating the stage from the orchestra, is divided alternately into three semicircular niches, corresponding to the apses in the stage wall, and four rectangular niches. Each niche is bordered by small projections with a flat face framed by two colonnettes. At each end of the pulpitum, a five-step staircase, concealed by a low wall, leads from the stage to the orchestra. This form, indented by niches, is common and can be found in other theaters in Roman Africa, but the pulpitum in the ancient theater of Sabratha offers exceptional ornamentation after restoration. In fact, the front of the pulpitum is decorated with white marble reliefs in the round, forming a series of tableaux that have been largely reconstructed, and which have no equivalent in other Roman theaters.[32] The themes represented do not form an overall unity: some evoke the various forms of Roman-style theatrical spectacle, while the central motif is a political allegory, and mythological figures fill the intervals. The motifs represented are as follows:
The main dimensions of the theater are as follows:
Documents used as a source for this article: