Naples and Campania, Day Four
16 May 2008
Mia Reinoso Genoni
miagenoni@post.harvard.edu

Our focus on
Campanian Antiquity ended with a series of visits to sites of the "
Phlegrean Fields" (
Campi Flegrei); derived from the Greek
phlegraios, or "burning," this area is west of Vesuvius and includes Naples,
Baia, and
Cumae. We started at
Baia, which was a popular Roman resort and spa, featuring numerous volcanic hot springs. It was not harmed by Vesuvius, and was a site of interest for the ruling families of Naples throughout her long history. Pictured here is an image of the
Aragonese fortress in
Baia, taken from offshore during our boat trip.
Baia was named after
Baios, Odysseus' navigator, believed to have died in the bay. The fortress now houses the Archaeological Museum of the
Phlegrean Fields.

In the museum are the remnants of the
Nymphaeum at
Punta Epitaffio (left) as well as a model reconstruction (right). The
Nymphaeum was a luxury banquet hall, and the scene featured Odysseus and
Baios serving Polyphemus.

Our next stop was to the aptly named
Piscina Mirabile, easily one of the most memorable and awe-inspiring structures I have ever encountered. So-named by Petrarch, it is a Roman reservoir that collected rainwater for the fleet at
Misenium, dating to the Age of Augustus. The structure is 15 m deep, 70 m long, and 25.5 m wide, dug into the
tufa and covered in
cocciopesto to waterproof the walls. As this picture shows, many of us were simply awestruck by the
Piscina...

though John
Martine, who kindly agreed to serve as my referent for scale (5'7" - see below), expressed the sentiment best.

Even these pictures, which cannot do justice to the magnificent structure, continue to amaze me. I find myself continually reminded of the Cathedral of
Speyer in Germany. For more details on the
Piscina, there is an English-language tourism information site that is helpful:
http://www.ulixes.it/english/e_pg02afr06a.html
Still agog, we turned our attention to
Cumae, which was the earliest Greek colony on the Italian peninsula, dating to c. 740
BCE. Seen here is the entrance to the Sybil's Grotto. As Virgil reports in the
Aeneid, the
Cumaean Sibyl was greatly venerated during the Age of Augustus. The Grotto is an intensely
yonic structure, with a ponderous triangular entrance at which one was supposed to whisper questions, and receive the answer without ever catching a glimpse of the Sybil.
(Photo by Peter Goltra.)This interior view accurately conveys the heft and power of the structure.

A medieval fortress was built among the ancient ruins, and from it one can see the
Arco Felice in the distance, evidence of the Roman infrastructure.

After climbing all the way up the via Sacra one reaches the so-called Temple of Jupiter, where one can see both the (reinforced) remnants of Antiquity...

as well as Early Christian adaptations, such as the baptistery basin.

We ended our visit to the
Phlegrean Fields with a trip to the
Cratere della Solfatara, one of the youngest and best preserved volcanoes in the area. Also on site are a Roman
sudatorium and a Bourbon
Vulcanologic Observatory, further reminders of the many and layered histories of
Campania.