A forum in ancient Rome was a marketplace. Buying and selling went on and some were specialized for items such as meat, fish and vegetables. The main forum or Forum Romanum was also originally a marketplace but it evolved into the city's civic center. It contained the various temples, basilicas, the senate house and the rostra where politicians made their speeches. The center of the empire or the "umbilicus" was located there. This was the place from which all distances were measured.
A forum in ancient Rome was a marketplace. Buying and selling went on and some were specialized for items such as meat, fish and vegetables. The main forum or Forum Romanum was also originally a marketplace but it evolved into the city's civic center. It contained the various temples, basilicas, the senate house and the rostra where politicians made their speeches. The center of the empire or the "umbilicus" was located there. This was the place from which all distances were measured.
A forum in ancient Rome was a marketplace. Buying and selling went on and some were specialized for items such as meat, fish and vegetables. The main forum or Forum Romanum was also originally a marketplace but it evolved into the city's civic center. It contained the various temples, basilicas, the senate house and the rostra where politicians made their speeches. The center of the empire or the "umbilicus" was located there. This was the place from which all distances were measured.
A forum in ancient Rome was a marketplace. Buying and selling went on and some were specialized for items such as meat, fish and vegetables. The main forum or Forum Romanum was also originally a marketplace but it evolved into the city's civic center. It contained the various temples, basilicas, the senate house and the rostra where politicians made their speeches. The center of the empire or the "umbilicus" was located there. This was the place from which all distances were measured.
A forum in ancient Rome was a marketplace. Buying and selling went on and some were specialized for items such as meat, fish and vegetables. The main forum or Forum Romanum was also originally a marketplace but it evolved into the city's civic center. It contained the various temples, basilicas, the senate house and the rostra where politicians made their speeches. The center of the empire or the "umbilicus" was located there. This was the place from which all distances were measured.
A forum in ancient Rome was a marketplace. Buying and selling went on and some were specialized for items such as meat, fish and vegetables. The main forum or Forum Romanum was also originally a marketplace but it evolved into the city's civic center. It contained the various temples, basilicas, the senate house and the rostra where politicians made their speeches. The center of the empire or the "umbilicus" was located there. This was the place from which all distances were measured.
A forum in ancient Rome was a marketplace. Buying and selling went on and some were specialized for items such as meat, fish and vegetables. The main forum or Forum Romanum was also originally a marketplace but it evolved into the city's civic center. It contained the various temples, basilicas, the senate house and the rostra where politicians made their speeches. The center of the empire or the "umbilicus" was located there. This was the place from which all distances were measured.
A forum in ancient Rome was a marketplace. Buying and selling went on and some were specialized for items such as meat, fish and vegetables. The main forum or Forum Romanum was also originally a marketplace but it evolved into the city's civic center. It contained the various temples, basilicas, the senate house and the rostra where politicians made their speeches. The center of the empire or the "umbilicus" was located there. This was the place from which all distances were measured.
A forum in ancient Rome was a marketplace. Buying and selling went on and some were specialized for items such as meat, fish and vegetables. The main forum or Forum Romanum was also originally a marketplace but it evolved into the city's civic center. It contained the various temples, basilicas, the senate house and the rostra where politicians made their speeches. The center of the empire or the "umbilicus" was located there. This was the place from which all distances were measured.
it was used for i dont know you tell me? A forum is a marketplace, you could loosely compare it to a mall. Some specialized in certain items, others were general. They came in all sizes. When people think of the Forum Romanum, or the Roman forum, they generally think of the civic center of Rome. It started out as a marketplace, but over the years it evolved into the "downtown" of ancient Rome. It had the various temples, basilicas, rostra, the senate house, the public notice board, etc. etc.
It depends. The Romans had two types of fora: the forum civilium and the forum venalium. The former was the civic forum and the latter was the commercial forum, or market. The forum civilium was the civic centre and the heart of a city and its public, political, judicial and administrative life. It was comparable to a city centre. It had a comitium, the place where the popular assemblies met to vote, public speeches were made and public debates were held. It had a senate house. Roman towns had their own local senate, modelled on the senate of the city of Rome. It had the courts were trials were conducted and administrative offices. It had public buildings (basilicas), shops, entertainments and important temples.
The city of Rome had several fora (plural of forum) venalia (plural of venalium): the Forum Boarium (cattle market) the Forum Suarium (meat market) the Forum Piscarium (fish market) the Forum Holitorium (vegetable market) the Forum Vinarium (wine market) the Forum Pistorium (bakers' market) and the Forum Cuppedinis (delicatessen market).
In the city of Rome the Forum or Forum Magnum as the Romans called it (Roman Forum is a modern term) which was a forum civilium, also had the aerarium (the treasury) which has in the temple of Saturn, the tabularium (the state archives) which was built on the slope of the Capitoline Hill, the regia (the residence of the Pontifex Maximus, the chief priest of Roman state religion) and the saenaculum (which was a place where the senators gathered before the entering the senate house for formal summons). It had several platforms for public speeches. The oldest one was called the rostra (plural of rostrum). The name came from the six rostra (warship rams) of captured warships which were and mounted to its side. It faced the north side of the comitium towards the senate house. Later it came to be called Rostra Vetera (Elder Rostra) when other platforms were built. These were called rostra with the addition of the name of their builders or the person it honoured. There was also the Graecostasis at the southwest end of the Comitium, to the west of the rostra. The name refers to the Greek ambassadors for whom the platform was built after the annexation of mainland Greece. It became a platform for representatives of foreign nations and dignitaries from the Roman provinces (conquered territories).
In the city of Rome there are four other fora civilia (plural of civilis) which are called imperial fora because they were built by emperors. They were named after the emperors who had them built: Augustus, Vespasian, Nerva and Trajan. Julius Caesar also had his own forum civilium built. Caesar was not an emperor.
A forum in ancient Rome was a marketplace. Buying and selling went on and some were specialized for items such as meat, fish and vegetables. The main forum or Forum Romanum was also originally a marketplace but it evolved into the city's civic center. It contained the various temples, basilicas, the senate house and the rostra where politicians made their speeches. The center of the empire or the "umbilicus" was located there. This was the place from which all distances were measured.
a meeting place
Augustus built an entirely new Roman Forum. In the Temple of Mars Ultor were statues of Mars, Venus and of the deified Julius Caesar. Augustus often used his own funds to develop new building projects.
Archaeologists know that the Roman forum existed because they have unearthed it and anyone who goes to Rome can see it.Archaeologists know that the Roman forum existed because they have unearthed it and anyone who goes to Rome can see it.Archaeologists know that the Roman forum existed because they have unearthed it and anyone who goes to Rome can see it.Archaeologists know that the Roman forum existed because they have unearthed it and anyone who goes to Rome can see it.Archaeologists know that the Roman forum existed because they have unearthed it and anyone who goes to Rome can see it.Archaeologists know that the Roman forum existed because they have unearthed it and anyone who goes to Rome can see it.Archaeologists know that the Roman forum existed because they have unearthed it and anyone who goes to Rome can see it.Archaeologists know that the Roman forum existed because they have unearthed it and anyone who goes to Rome can see it.Archaeologists know that the Roman forum existed because they have unearthed it and anyone who goes to Rome can see it.
A Roman forum would have been in any and all Roman cities. A forum was a marketplace or a town square. Civic buildings, temples, and merchants could all be in the forum especially in a small town. The larger towns and cities generally had several fora with the civic forum being separate from the merchandising forum.
In coins.
they were displayed in the Roman Forum (market place)
The Roman civic centre was the forum civilium. It was distinct and separate from the forum venalium, the commercial forum, or market. The Roman forum, which the Romans called Forum or Forum Magnum (Roman forum is a modern term)was the civic centre of the city of Rome.
The Roman version of an agora was the forum.
The purpose of the Forum or Forum magnum (this is how the Romans called this forum, Roman Forum is a modern term) did not change; it was used in the same way. New fora (plural for forum) were added. The first new forum was built by Julius Caesar (the Forum of Caesar) during the Late Republic. The imperial fora which were added were: the Forum of Augustus, the Forum of Trajan, the Forum of Nerva and the Forum of Vespasian. The new fora were built to add to the glory of the men who commissioned them and because more space was needed for administrative buildings.
Augustus built an entirely new Roman Forum. In the Temple of Mars Ultor were statues of Mars, Venus and of the deified Julius Caesar. Augustus often used his own funds to develop new building projects.
The forum was a place like a market where you could buy things, it was a big open building/space in a city.
the roman forum was in the center of Rome people went there to trade and perform
The Roman Forum was a public center for politics, the economy & religion.
The Forum Romanum.
A Roman Forum is a rectangular square or plaza surronded by ancient ruins. For centuries it this forum was the center of the Roman public life where elections were held or criminal trials.
There probably were spell and potions sold in Rome. However, they would not have been sold at the Forum or Forum Magnum, as the Roman called it, (Roman Forum is a modern term. This forum was not a market. It Was a forum civilium; that is, a civic centre. The forum civilium was distinct and separate from the fora venalia (plural of forum venalium), the commercial fora, or markets.
No. The Forum and the Coliseum were in different parts of the city.
yes. the government met in the forum.