The Nemi ships were two ships, of different sizes, built under the reign of the Roman emperor Caligula in the 1st century AD on Lake Nemi. Although the purpose of the ships is speculated upon, the larger ship was an elaborate floating palace, which contained quantities of marble, mosaic floors, heating and plumbing, and amenities such as baths. Both ships featured technology thought to have been developed historically later. It has been stated that the emperor was influenced by the lavish lifestyles of the Hellenistic rulers of Syracuse and Ptolemaic Egypt. Recovered from the lake bed in 1929, the ships were destroyed by fire in 1944 during World War II.
Location
Lake Nemi (Italian: Lago di Nemi, Latin: Nemorensis Lacus) is a small circular volcanic lake in the Lazio region of Italy, 30 km (19 mi) south of Rome. It has a surface of 1.67 km2 (0.64 sq mi) and a maximum depth of 33 m (108 ft).
There is considerable speculation regarding why the emperor Caligula chose to build two large ships on such a small lake. From the size of the ships it was long held that they were pleasure barges, though, as the lake was sacred, no ship could sail on it under Roman law (Pliny the Younger, Litterae VIII-20) implying a religious exemption.[1]
Caligula particularly favoured the Egyptian Isis cult which he had established in Rome and also supported that of Diana Nemorensis, whom, in the Roman tradition of syncretism, he likely viewed as an aspect of Isis.[2]
Situated on opposite sides of the lake and atop the crater walls are the towns of Genzano and Nemi. Genzano was dedicated by the Romans to the goddess Cynthia, a cult associated with that of Diana Nemorensis. Nemi did not exist in Roman times. The name Nemi derives from the Latin nemus Aricinum (grove of Ariccia), Ariccia being an important nearby town associated with the worship of Diana and the god Virbius (the Latin name for Hyppolytus, a young man whom Diana loved). Located at Nemi are the ruins of an ancient temple dedicated to Diana, which was connected by the Via Virbia to the Via Appia (the Roman road between Rome and Brindisi).[3]
During the time of the Roman Empire, the area around Genzano was used by wealthy Roman citizens for its clean air, uncontaminated water and cooler temperatures during the hot summer months. The lake has its own microclimate and is protected from wind by the crater walls. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, Lord Byron, and Charles Gounod all lived in Nemi and noted the reflection of the Moon, seen in the centre of the lake during summer. This phenomenon is the source of the Roman name for the lake, Speculum Dianae (Diana's Mirror).[3]
Recovery
Local fishermen had long been aware of the existence of the wrecks, and had explored them and removed small artefacts, often using grappling hooks to pull up pieces, which they sold to tourists.[4] In 1446, Cardinal Prospero Colonna and Leon Battista Alberti followed up on the stories regarding the remains and discovered them lying at a depth of 18.3 metres (60 ft), which at that time was too deep for effective salvage. They damaged the ships by using ropes with hooks to tear planks from them. Alberti learned little more than the type of wood and that it was covered in lead sheathing. In 1535, Francesco De Marchi dived on the wreck using a diving helmet.[5] His finds included bricks, marble paving stones, bronze, copper, lead artefacts, and a great number of timber beams. From material recovered he added the knowledge that mortise and tenon joints had been used in their construction. Despite the successful salvage of entire structures and parts, there was no academic interest in the ships, so no further research was performed. The objects recovered were lost and their fate remains unknown.[3]
By 1827, interest had revived and it had become a widespread belief that earlier material recovered either had been part of a temple to Diana or was from the villa of Julius Caesar cited by Suetonius. Annesio Fusconi built a floating platform from which to raise the wrecks. Several of his cables broke, and he called a halt until he could find stronger cables. When he returned, he found that the locals had dismantled his platform to make wine barrels. This led him to abandon the project.[3]
In 1895, with the support of the Ministry of Education, Signor Eliseo Borghi began a systematic study of the wreck site and discovered that the site contained two wrecks instead of the one expected.[6] Among the material Borghi recovered was the bronze tiller head of one of the rudders and many bronze heads of wild animals. Borghi placed all of his finds in his own museum and offered to sell the collection to the Government. The timbers he recovered were discarded and lost, while no contextual referencing was documented for any of his finds. Felice Barnabei, director general of the Department of Antiquity and Fine Art, claimed all of the artefacts for the National Museum and submitted a report requesting the recovery cease because of the "devastation of the two wrecks". An engineer from the Regia Marina (the Italian Royal Navy) surveyed the site to determine the feasibility of recovering the two ships intact. The engineer concluded that the only viable way was to partially drain the lake.[3]
In 1927 Prime Minister Benito Mussolini ordered Guido Ucelli to drain the lake and recover the ships. With the help of the Regia Marina, the Italian Army, industry and private individuals, an ancient Roman underground water conduit linking the lake to farms outside the crater was reactivated. The conduit was connected to a floating pumping platform on 20 October 1928 and the lake level began dropping. By 28 March 1929, the water level had dropped 5 m (16 ft), and the first ship (prima nave) broke the surface. By 10 June 1931, the prima nave had been recovered and the second ship (seconda nave) was exposed. By this time the water level had dropped more than 20 m (66 ft) with over 40,000,000 m3 of water removed. As a result of the weight reduction, on 21 August 1931, 500,000 m3 of mud erupted from the underlying strata causing 30 hectares (74 acres) of the lake floor to subside. Work ceased and, while the risks of continuing the project were debated, the lake began refilling. As the seconda nave had already partly dried out, the submersion caused considerable damage. On 10 November 1931, the Minister of Public Works ordered the project and all research abandoned.[3]
On 19 February 1932, the Navy Ministry, which had been a partner in the recovery, petitioned Mussolini to resume the project. Joining with the Ministry of Education, they received permission to take over responsibility for it, and pumping to drain the lake recommenced on 28 March. Around this time a small boat was found, about 10 m (33 ft) long, with a pointed bow and a square stern. It had been loaded with stones in order to sink it and is believed to be contemporaneous with the ships. Technical problems prevented the recovery of the seconda nave until October 1932. A purpose-built museum constructed over both ships was inaugurated in January 1936.[3]
Construction
Both vessels were constructed using the Vitruvian method, a shell-first building technique used by the Romans.[1]
- Step 1: construction of the profile.
- Step 2: construction of the keel and the flat bottom up to the second order of cincti, in two phases.
- Step 3: construction of the shell up to the third wale (topgallant bulwarks).
- Step 4: Insertion of the ribs, first those with trabes (crossbeam bracing) and then those without.
The species selected were known to work well for Mediterranean shipbuilding. Shipwrights used oak for the keel and the end posts, the ship’s spine. They also used oak for the internal framing, the through-beams, and the stanchions. Naturally curved timbers were employed for the posts and frames. Mediterranean shipbuilders prized softwoods like pine and fir for their flexibility and resistance to water. They provided the planking on the exterior hull and the thickened timbers on the exterior and interior, the wales and stringers, all of which had to be bent into place.[7]
The hull had been sheathed in three layers of lead sheathing to protect the timbers from shipworms; as there are none in freshwater lakes, this design feature was not only costly of effort and weight but useless. It is evidence that the ships' hulls were constructed following standardised Roman shipbuilding techniques rather than being purpose-built. The topside timbers were protected by paint and tarred wool and many of their surfaces decorated with marble, mosaics, and gilded copper roof tiles. There was a lack of coordination between the structure of the hull and that of the superstructures, which suggests that naval architects designed the hulls, and civil architects then designed the superstructure to use the space available after the hulls were completed.[1] After their recovery, the ships' hulls were found to be completely empty and unadorned.
They were steered using 11.3 m (37 ft)-long quarter oars, with the seconda nave equipped with four, two off each quarter and two from the shoulders, while the prima nave was equipped with two. Similar pairs of steering leeboards appear frequently in early 2nd-century depictions of ships.[8]
The seconda nave was almost certainly powered by oars, as structural supports for the rowing positions protrude along the sides of the hull. The prima nave had no visible means of propulsion so was likely towed to the centre of the lake when in use.[3]
A lead pipe found on one of the wrecks had Property of Gaius Caesar Augustus Germanicus stamped on it while many tiles had dates of manufacture. Together it leaves little doubt as to when the ships were built or for whom.[8]
Suetonius describes two ships built for Caligula; "...ten banks of oars...the poops of which blazed with jewels...they were filled with ample baths, galleries and saloons, and supplied with a great variety of vines and fruit trees." It is reasonable to speculate that the Nemi ships were equipped to a comparable standard. One year after being launched, following the assassination of Caligula (24 January 41),[3] the ships were stripped of precious objects, overballasted and then intentionally sunk.
Prima nave
The first ship recovered was 70 m (230 ft) long, with a beam (width) of 20 m (66 ft).
The hull was divided into three "active" or main sections. The general shape of the hull appears wider at the stern and narrower at the bow; in fact, the main section is not amidships but is displaced towards the stern. The superstructures appear to have been made of two main blocks of two buildings each, connected by stairs and corridors, built on raised parts of the deck at either end. This distribution gives the ship a discontinuous look and has no similarity to any other ancient construction.[1]
Seconda nave
The second ship recovered was the larger at 73 m (240 ft) in length and with a beam of 24 m (79 ft).
The superstructure appears to have been made with a main section amidships, a heavy building at the stern and a smaller one at the prow. Although nothing remains of the stern and prow buildings their existence is indicated by the shorter spacing of the decks supporting cross beams and distribution of ballast.[1] The arrangement of the seconda nave superstructures is comparable to that of the shrines depicted on an Isian lamp held by the Museum of Ostia. If not coincidental, this is further evidence of worship of Isis rather than Diana.[1]
Technology
The discovery proved that the Romans were capable of building large ships. Before the recovery of the Nemi ships, scholars often ridiculed the idea that the Romans were capable of building a ship as big as some ancient sources reported the Roman grain carriers were.[9]
For centuries large numbers of lead bars had been found on the Mediterranean seabed, and there was debate over whether they were anchor stocks or not. It was argued by some that iron-tipped wooden anchors secured by ropes were not heavy enough to be effective, so they had to have metal stocks, and there was considerable academic controversy over the issue. The Nemi ships, constructed during the transition period when iron anchors were replacing wooden ones, were the first Roman wrecks found to have intact anchors, and confirmed that the lead bars were indeed anchor stocks.[10] Two types of anchor were found, one of oak with iron-tipped flukes and a stock of lead and another of iron with a folding timber stock that closely matched the design of the Admiralty pattern anchor, re-invented in 1841. In the 1960s, a similar anchor was found in Pompeii, and in 1974 another was found buried near Aberdarewllyn in Gwynedd, Wales. These further discoveries confirmed that these technologically advanced anchors were a standard Roman design.[10]
Both ships had several hand-operated bilge pumps that worked like a modern bucket dredge, the oldest example of this type of bilge pump ever found. The pumps were operated by what may have been the oldest crank handles yet discovered;[11] however, the reconstruction of the cranked pump from fragments, including a wooden disk and an eccentric peg, has been dismissed as "archaeological fantasy".[12]
Piston pumps (ctesibica machina: Vitruvius X.4?7) supplied the two ships with hot and cold running water via lead pipes. The hot water supplied baths while the cold operated fountains and supplied drinking water. This plumbing technology was later lost and only re-discovered in the Middle Ages.
Each ship contained a rotating platform. One was mounted on caged bronze balls and is the earliest example of the thrust ball bearing previously believed to have been first envisioned by Leonardo da Vinci but only developed much later. Previous Roman ball bearing finds (used for water wheel axles in thermal baths) had a lenticular shape. The second platform was almost identical in design but used cylindrical bearings. Although consensus is that the platforms were meant for displaying statues, it has also been suggested that they may have been meant for deck cranes used to load supplies.[13]
Destruction
The ships were destroyed by fire during World War II on the night of 31 May 1944.[14] Several shells of the United States Army hit the museum around 8:00 p.m., causing little damage but forcing the German artillery to leave the area. Around two hours later, smoke was seen coming from the museum. There are conflicting views on which side was responsible for the destruction:
At that time, Allied forces were pursuing the retreating German army northward through the Alban Hills toward Rome. On 28 May a German artillery post was established within 400 feet (120 m) of the museum ... An official report filed in Rome later that year described the tragedy as a wilful act on the part of the German soldiers. A German editorial blamed the destruction on American artillery fire. The true story of what happened that night will probably never be known.[14]
A new and comprehensive investigation by Flavio Altamura and Stefano Paolucci (2023)[15] shows that the only plausible explanation for the blaze is that it was caused by the misguided Allied grenades. Statements by eyewitnesses partly served to cover up their own misconduct.
John McManamon, S. J. (2023) offers two further points:
At 10:00 p.m. a fire broke out. Flames erupted in both exhibition halls simultaneously, turning the entire edifice into a blazing inferno. The museum guards and Nemi residents provided unanimous eyewitness testimony on two points. First, the fire erupted fully an hour and forty-five minutes after the Allies ended their artillery bombardment. Second, there was not a breath of wind on that late spring night. Whatever caused the fire to intensify so rapidly, it was not a strong breeze.[16]
Only the bronzes, a few charred timbers, and some material stored in Rome survived the fire. Because of the destruction, research effectively stopped until the 1980s. The museum was restored and reopened in 1953. One-fifth scale models of the ships were built in the Naples naval dockyard, and these, along with the remaining artefacts, are housed there.
In September 2017 a panel made of inlaid marble and mosaic then in the collection of a private owner in New York City was rediscovered by the antiquities restorer and author Dario del Bufalo. Subsequently the New York County District Attorney's Office seized the artefact, which was confirmed to have come from the Nemi Museum, and to have once decorated the floor of Caligula's ship.[17] It had been bought by two American antique dealers, Helen and Nereo Fioratti, from an aristocratic family in the late 1960s, and used since then as the surface of a coffee table in their home. In October it was officially repatriated to Italian authorities.[18][19]
Project Diana
Photographs, as well as drawings made for the Italian Navy survey and those made by the archaeologist G. Gatti, survived, allowing reconstructions to be made of the two ships.
In 1995, the Association Dianae Lacus (Lake of Diana Association) was founded to preserve the culture and history of the Nemi Lake area. The Association initiated Project Diana, which involved constructing a full-size replica of the Roman prima nave (first ship) of Lake Nemi. Since no record is known to exist of the shape and size of the buildings and temples built on the deck, the replica was to be constructed to deck level only and when completed would be moored on the lake in front of the museum.
On 18 July 1998, the town council of Nemi voted to fund the construction of the forward section, and work commenced in the Torre del Greco shipyards. This section was completed in 2001 and transported to the Nemi museum, where the rest of the vessel was to be constructed. The estimated final cost of the reconstruction was 7.2 million Euros (US$10.7 million).[3]
According to the Association Dianae Lacus website, on 15 November 2003 the large Italian employer and business confederation Assimpresa announced its immediate sponsorship of all timber required for the construction.[20] However, no press releases have been made since 2004, and the association's web site was deleted on 1 October 2011.
Original pieces
Original individual pieces from the Nemi ships that were recovered from Lake Nemi between 1895 and 1932.[21]
- Apotropaic (Gorgoneion) handle in the form of a Medusa head was attached to the head of a wooden beam
- Lion protome with a round cross-section was placed as an attached end-piece on one of the two rudder axes
- Wolf protome with a square cross-section. These were set at the ends of two wooden beams in one of the ships' longitudinal axes for a platform on the long side that primarily served as a landing stage
- Lion protome with a square cross-section. These were set at the ends of two wooden beams in one of the ships' transverse axes as extensions for platforms on each side of the ship that primarily served as landing stages. Their rings were probably used to secure the ship to the dock
- Lion protome from another angle
- Panther protome with a square cross-section. These were set at the ends of two wooden beams in one of the ships' transverse axes as extensions for platforms on each side of the ship that primarily served as landing stages. Like those of the similar lion protome, their rings were probably used to fasten the ship to the dock
- Apotropaic bronze left forearm was attached to the beam of one of two oar boxes on the second ship. This served to stabilize the respective rudder
- Apotropaic bronze right forearm was attached to the beam of one of two oar boxes of the second ship. Like the left forearm, this served to stabilize the respective rudder
See also
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Notes on the Architecture of Some Roman Ships: Nemi and Fiumicino pdf" (PDF). Hellenic Institute for the Preservation of Nautical Tradition. August–September 1985. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 June 2010. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
- ↑ Apuleius (1998). The Golden Ass. Penguin classics. ISBN 978-0140435900.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Purtell, John (18 March 2001). "Project Diana". Association Dianae Lacus. Archived from the original on 1 July 2010. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
- ↑ Nick, Squires (3 April 2017). "Italy hunts for Emperor Caligula's long-lost third pleasure ship, after reports of snagged fishing nets in Lake Nemi". The Telegraph.
- ↑ Jung, Michael: A new hypothesis on Francesco De Marchi (1504–1576) and his dives in Lake Nemi in 1535 (pdf).
- 1 2 The Galleys of Lake Nemi. Scientific American Volume 95 Number 02 (July 1906). 14 July 1906. pp. 25–26.
- ↑ McManamon, John (2023). From Caligula to the Nazis: The Nemi Ships in Diana's Sanctuary. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press. pp. 159–160. ISBN 978-1-64843-114-2.
- 1 2 Lucas, Alan (March 2005). "The Lake Nemi Ships". Afloat Magazine. Archived from the original on 11 October 2009. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
- ↑ "Caligula's Nemi Ships". Nordic Underwater Archaeology. Archived from the original on 14 May 2011. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
- 1 2 Muckelroy, Keith (1978). Maritime archaeology: New studies in archaeology. Cambridge University Press. pp. 148–149. ISBN 0-521-29348-0.
- ↑ Bunch, Bryan H. (2004). The history of science and technology. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 81. ISBN 0-618-22123-9.
- ↑ White 1962, pp. 105f.; Oleson 1984, pp. 230f.
- ↑ Russo, Flavio & Ferruccio (2009). Ancient Engineers' Inventions: Precursors of the Present. Springer. p. 171. ISBN 978-90-481-2252-3.
- 1 2 Deborah N. Carlson, "Caligula's Floating Palaces." Archaeology. May/June 2002, Vol. 55, Issue 3, p. 26
- ↑ Flavio Altamura, Stefano Paolucci, L'incendio delle navi di Nemi. Indagine su un cold case della Seconda guerra mondiale, Passamonti Editore, Grootaferrata 2023, ISBN 979-1221031065
- ↑ McManamon, John (2023). From Caligula to the Nazis: The Nemi Ships in Diana's Sanctuary. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-64843-114-2.
- ↑ James C. McKinley Jr. (19 October 2017). "A Remnant from Caligula's Ship, Once A Coffee Table, Heads Home". The New York Times.
- ↑ Michael S. Rosenwald (20 October 2017). "Newly discovered: A mosaic from Caligula's pleasure barge being used as a coffee table in N.Y." The Washington Post.
- ↑ "Roman Emperor Caligula's coffee table". www.cbsnews.com. 21 November 2021.
- ↑ "Foundation Day 15th November 2003". Archived from the original on 7 December 2003.
- ↑ Sarah Wolfmayr: Die Schiffe vom Lago di Nemi, Diplomarbeit 2010, Institut für Archäologie, Graz 2009 (in German)
Sources
- Altamura, Flavio; Paolucci, Stefano (2023), L'incendio delle navi di Nemi. Indagine su un cold case della Seconda guerra mondiale, Passamonti Editore, Grootaferrata, ISBN 979-1221031065
- McManamon, John M., S.J. (2023), From Caligula to the Nazis: The Nemi Ships in Diana’s Sanctuary, Texas A&M University Press, ISBN 978-1-64843-114-2
- Oleson, John Peter (1984), Greek and Roman Mechanical Water-Lifting Devices: The History of a Technology, University of Toronto Press, ISBN 90-277-1693-5
- White, Lynn Jr. (1962), Medieval Technology and Social Change, Oxford: At the Clarendon Press
External links
- Nemi Ships
- "Mad Emperor's Galley Emerges after 2,000 Years." Popular Science, November 1929, p. 59.
41°43′20″N 12°42′6″E / 41.72222°N 12.70167°E