Sarah Benson

 

Cornell University

 

Mechanical Tourism: The Case of the Capitoline Hill

 

The Capitoline Hill was first highlighted as a key site for the lover of antiquities in medieval literary descriptions of Rome. These "guides"--inaccurate, unillustrated, devoid of maps, and available in only a small number of manuscript copies--seem to us hilariously different from those on which we rely today. During our panel's visit to the Capitoline Hill, I will pose some questions about the history of this reliance.

Between the age of the manuscript guide and the world wide web, new instruments for measuring the topography and monuments of a city and the new technologies for printing images brought about a media revolution that transformed the expectations and experiences of both real and virtual tourists. In the case of representations of Rome, we will see that the Capitoline Hill was of particular importance to the new mechanically informed tourist.

 

Some basic bibliography:

 

Select pictorial chronology:

Piazza del Campidoglio

from Gamucci, Le antichità della città di Roma, 1569

Piazza del Campidoglio

from Marliani, Urbis Romae Topographia, 1588

Forum seen from Campidoglio

from Scamozzi, Discorsi sopra l'antichità di Roma, 1583

Forum seen from Campidoglio

from Marliani, Urbis Romae Topographia, 1588

Piazza del Campidoglio

from Totti, Ritratto di Roma Moderna, 1652

Piazza del Campidoglio

from Rossini, Il Mercurio Errante , 1760

Return to Walking Panel Home Page


Sarah Benson, June 1998, sbb6 at cornell.edu
 

back to Mediated Rhetoric and the Technologies of Communication in Roman Tourist Sites main page