Caelian Hill


The Caelian Hill is one of the famous seven hills of Rome.

Geography

The Caelian Hill is a sort of long promontory about long, to wide, and tall in the park near the Temple of Claudius. The hill overlooks a plateau from which the Esquiline, Viminal and Quirinal hills also arise.
Caeliolus corresponds to a section of the hill, maybe the westernmost one, towards the valley that houses the Colosseum, or the one now occupied by the Basilica dei Santi Quattro Coronati.

History

Archaic age

Under the reign of Tullus Hostilius, the entire population of Alba Longa was forcibly resettled on the Caelian Hill. According to a tradition recounted by Livy, the hill received its name from the Etruscan folk hero Caelius Vibenna, because he either settled there or was honored posthumously by his friend Servius Tullius. Other authors have linked the name to the Latin caelum, "heaven". Nevertheless, the former name of the hill probably was Querquetulanus mons due to the abundance of oaks. Scholarship suggests that there existed the ethnic name Querquetulani as a designation of the previous inhabitants of Caelius, in pre-Etruscan times.
Mons Caelius would have been included in the city perimeter under the reign of Ancus Marcius. The list of Septimontium mentions it, and it was part of the 1st city quarter in the division made by Servius Tullius. In the later Augustan division, it became the Regio II Caelimontium.
A trace of the archaic period remains in the memory of cults of woods and sources, such as that of the nymph Egeria in the wood of Camenae, just outside Porta Capena. Numa Pompilius is said to have been particularly devoted to his sanctuary.

Republican age

In Republican age, as well in Imperial Rome, the Caelian Hill was a fashionable residential district and the site of residences of the wealthy. A section of Pliny the Elder's Natural History, "Who Was the First to Encrust the Walls of Houses at Rome with Marble", attests to this. Mamurra, a soldier who served under Julius Caesar in Gaul and profited tremendously from corruption, achieved this expensive feat on the Caelian Hill; Horace and Catullus mocked him accordingly.
Most of the hill was outside the holy enclosure of the Pomerium, therefore worshippers were allowed to build temples to foreign divinities, such as the Temple of Minerva Capta or the old Sacellum of Diana, outside the Servian Wall.
Some sepulchres, such as the burial chamber in Via Celimontana, just before Piazza di San Giovanni in Laterano, date back to that time.

Imperial age

Under Augustus the Caelian Hill was one of the 14 divisions of the town, called Caelimontium. The area between the Lateran and Porta Maggiore was included in the v Regio, though physically it is part of the hill.
On the higher point of the side facing the Colosseum, the Temple of Claudius was erected: it was dedicated to the Emperor Claudius, who was deified after his death.
The remains found in the area of the hill allow one to reconstruct a conspicuous housing phase in the second half of the 2nd Century AD, while former buildings of the 1st Century BC were probably destroyed by a fire in AD 27.
Jerome alleges that Marcus Aurelius was born on the Caelian Hill in AD 121.
In the 4th century rich domus, surrounded by vast parks, stood on the hill, such as the ones belonging to the Symmachi and Tetrici families, as well as the domus Faustae, maybe belonged to the wife of Consantine I. The property of the Annii, of Domitia Lucilla Minor and of the Quintilii became part of the Domus Vectiliana of Commodus.
In the interurban area of the hill several barracks were built for the troops stationed in the capital: in the site of the Basilica of Saint Stephen in the Round there were the Castra Peregrina, close to a large house of the Valerii. Opposite, stood the headquarters of the V Cohort of the Vigiles.
In a land possession of the Laterani family Septimius Severus built between 193 and 197 the castra nova equitum singularium, a new barrack for the knights corps of the imperial guard, opposite the former barrack built under Trajan. When Constantine I dissolved the corps, the new basilica dedicated to the Messiah, which later became the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran, partially occupied the area of the Severian camp.
The buildings of the Caelian hill were badly damaged during the sack of Alaric in 410; starting from this period, the hill was subject to increasing abandonment and ruralization.

Middle Ages

In the 6th Century it was part of the II Roman ecclesiastical region due to its proximity to the Lateran basilica, so much so that the toponym of "Laterano" was often used for the entire hill. The erection of the Patriarchium, probably still in 6th Century, gave rise to the creation of various tituli and xenodochia.
New churches continued to be built, initially to replace and above the former tituli, later independently, such as the Basilica of Saints John and Paul, the Basilica of the Four Crowned Martyrs, the Basilica of St. Mary in Domnica, the Basilica of St. Stephen in the Round, the church of San Giovanni a Porta Latina, the church of San Gregorio al Celio, the church of San Tommaso in Formis, the church of San Sisto Vecchio
Monasteries, often surrounded by estates and gardens, were also founded on the hill, as well as some towers of noble families, mainly in the 10th and 11th centuries. A new destruction was suffered with the sack of 1084.
Since the 12th century, it was part of the Regio Montium, which even extended to the Quirinal Hill.

Later history

Today the Caelian Hill is included in the Rione of the same name and, continuing its vocation for assistance, hosts the Policlinico Militare del Celio, built on a project by Salvatore Bianchi and Filippo Laccetti.
George Santayana lived in a room at the Convent of English blue sisters on the Caelian Hill from 1912 until his death.

Monuments