For the Romans, Nimes was a major city in Gaul on the Via Domitia, a 170-mile Roman road that ran along the Mediterranean coastline and into Lyon (north) and the Pyrenees (south).
From 1673 until the French revolution in 1789, Augustinian monks made the temple into a church. After the revolution, the building served as a depot and a granary. In 1791, the Maison Carrée was sold as public property. In the 19th century, the entire quarter of this section of the city underwent considerable change, including restoration of the ancient temple and the removal of several adjacent buildings around the Maison Carrée. After serving as the Archives for the first prefecture of the Gard Department, it was later transformed into a museum in 1823 and listed as an historic monument in 1840.
Between 2006 and 2010, the façade of the Maison Carrée was completely restored. Today, visitors may enter the building and watch a short film about the original family who built it and whose progeny were entrusted with its keep.
The Maison Carrée was built between 2-5 C.E., when the Emperor Augustus had a number of public buildings constructed in the colony of Nemausus (Nimes), to promote its development. Limestone rocks from the local quarries of Lens and Barutel were used to construct the temple and several other Roman monuments of Nimes. These materials are occasionally used today, especially for restoration.
The Maison Carrée is an example of monumental Roman religious architecture. Built on a platform dominating the public square, its outline and proportions (25 meters long, 12 meters wide, 17 meters high) are similar to the temple of Apollo in Rome. Its façade contains six columns and eleven embedded columns are located on its sides. The temple’s outline includes a colonnade, which gives access to the cella. This part of the temple housed a statue of the divinity and was accessible only to the priests. Rites and public processions were exclusively celebrated outside in front of an altar.
The entrance to the temple consists of 15 steps. In ancient times, it was very important to climb an uneven number of steps to enter a temple. Since the left foot was considered a sign of bad luck, you placed your right foot both on the first and the last step of the stairs.
Fluted columns don the elaborate Corinthian capitals. The frieze was decorated with foliage and birds, which symbolically acknowledged the benefits Augustus brought to the conquered Gauls. Underneath the sculpted coffered ceiling lies the door of the cella, which was made by the “Compagnons du Devoir”, a traditional French craftsmen’s association, in the early 19th century. The roof was restored in the late 20th century based on models of antique tiles found during excavation work. The interior of the Maison Carrée no longer contains any traces of its antique décor, but it is likely that the building was painted in the manner of antique temples.
The Maison Carré was a part of the forum, a vast square lined with porticoes and public buildings that served for a multitude of activities from religious and political life to trade and jurisdiction. The curia, the gathering center of the local Senate, was located on the northern end of the forum.
Not far from the Maison Carré on the main road was this statue of Emperor Antoninus Pius. It looks Roman, but it was sculpted in Carrara marble by a local, Auguste Bosc, in 1864. The city was preparing for a regional exhibition and decided to remove the insalubrious trough located on this spot, just across the street from the Jardin de la Fontaine canal. Architect Henri Révoil transformed this area into a small park surrounded by a wrought iron fence (created by iron smith Martius Nicolas). The statue was installed in the park in 1874.
Ramparts and Gates of Nimes
Ancient Nimes was a walled city and among the largest in Roman Gaul. The walls themselves were 9-10 meters high and more than two meters thick. The walls were six kilometers long with nearly 80 towers and 10 gates. A model of the wall around the city (left) shows major buildings, main gates, and towers. In the garden of the Musée de la Romanité (right) is a portion of the rampart.
Amphitheatre
The magnificent Arena, one of the best-preserved amphitheaters in the world, was built around 70 C.E. during the reign of Augustus and shortly after the Coliseum in Rome. It is still in use today with gladiator re- enactments, concerts, operas, bullfighting, and various other public events and exhibitions. A bronze matador sculpture is just outside the Arena to recognize the sport.
The oval-shaped stadium has perfect symmetry measuring 436.4 feet
and 331.4 feet, while the interior arena measures 223 feet by 124.7 feet.
Its exterior façade comprises two levels with 60 arches. All of the
arcades were originally on the ground floor with accessible entrances
and exits that prevented bottlenecks among the crowds. During Roman
times, the arena could hold 24,000 spectators who were spread over 34
rows of terraces divided into four separate areas.
Each area was accessed via a gallery and hundreds of stairwells and passages called "vomitories". Several galleries were located beneath the arena, and were accessed by trap doors and a hoist-lift system.
The citizens of Nemausus (its Roman name) would sit in the Arena according to their social status to watch the games played there ranging from animal hunts with lions, tigers, and elephants to the famous gladiator matches. Executions would also take place at the Arena with those condemned to death thrown to the animals.
Beginning in the third century C.E., barbarian invasions and epidemics began the slow decline of the Roman Empire and its traditions. In the 6th century, the Visigoths who had supplanted the Romans in Gaul, transformed the Arena from a sports stadium to a castle fortress where the town’s inhabitants could take refuge in the event of attack. A large moat also surrounded the Arena to help keep enemy forces out.
The Arena would go on to play an even more elaborate role in the 12th century when it became the seat of the Viscount of Nimes' chateau with a small residential neighborhood surrounding it. In the 18th century, around 150 houses remained inside the Nimes Arena until 1786 when they were demolished to revert to its original Roman grandeur.
Preservation of the Amphitheater
The amphitheater in Nimes has had ongoing preservation projects since antiquity. In 2009, France launched a massive reconstruction project on the building. Stonemasons, ironworkers, architects, materials engineers, archeologists, scholars and researchers began work on the 54-million-Euro project. On special occasions the restauration work accommodates festivals and Roman-style games. The real objective of the restauration is to combat water damage to the city. The Romans had constructed the amphitheater with the same intention, and they built canals, retention basins, and sewers to serve as a giant funnel to direct and control water both underground and above so that it wouldn’t stagnate.
Restoring the interior and exterior of a 2,000-year-old monument involves cleaning the surface of the stone, repairing degraded or missing parts, and, where appropriate, replacing weathered blocks with custom cut stones. The restoration includes the façades, the summit of the arena (the upper levels), the public gallery, the promenade and the terraces on the upper tiers. It is a matter of "eliminating water" from this building while consolidating the galleries and staircases with waterproofing, installing tie rods, creating gutters for water, etc.
The 25-year preservation project is due to be finished by 2034. Work areas are closed off to protect workers and the 30,000 visitors who come to the Arena annually. The objective is to restore the building's original beauty and preserve the harmony of its architectural lines. Fifteen of the 60 sections are already restored.
Restoring the Nimes amphitheater requires very specific know-how. Seven specialist trades are working together on this site. From stone cutting to lock-smithing, masonry, sculpture and lead work, the companies chosen are all specialized in restoring old buildings. The project especially unites fellow craftspersons who are passionate about old stonework. Driven by the desire to work for the preservation of French heritage and concerned with maintaining the collective memory, these "artisans of history" are working to preserve the ancient builders' work with respect for the old as well as contemporary techniques of construction.
Successive surveys all show that since ancient times, several factors, including destruction of the intermediate stands and filling of the discharge drains have exposed the amphitheater to the destructive effects of bad weather. In order to consolidate and repair each of the sections. They then seal points where water penetrates and replace any affected stones as necessary.
Temple of Diana
These ruins turned out to be the most moving for me in the whole city of Nimes. Even though this building has no connection to the goddess, I went along with its name and mused on one of my favorite mythological characters. Diana is the lone huntress who maintains her independence, rises above the scandals of Mount Olympus, invests herself in Nature, and gets the job done. She is a no-nonsense type of woman who is honest, matter-of-fact, and doesn't suffer fools lightly. (Ask Actaeon. He inadvertently caught sight of Diana bathing and was transformed into a deer. Hounds later tracked him down and killed him.)
Diana is goddess of the hunt, the moon, and the Underworld—a "triple-form deity". She is depicted here in her most iconic form as the Huntress. Men and women worshiped her for a successful hunt, however, she was also the goddess of wild animals and a lover of Nature. She is usually depicted wearing a short tunic for agility and posing with a deer or dog by her side in the midst of the hunt as she reaches over her shoulder to pull an arrow from her quiver. This sculpture stands in the Gallo-Roman Museum in Lyon.
According to Rachel A. Diana, the goddess oversees the transitions in the lives of her worshippers. Given that she is goddess of the moon (note the quarter-moon on her head), which orbits the earth, has its many phases in its waxing and waning, it is important to note that Diana never completely disappears. In fact, the ancients believed that these phases were metaphors for the way she gave life and took it away; from light to darkness and from death to life. This transitory nature is expressed as "trivia", an epithet for Diana which comes from the Latin word, trivium, and translates to "crossroads". So, Diana Trivia is the guardian of the crossroads and of the transition from one place to another, be it literal or metaphorical.
The Temple of Diana consists of a main room, the vaulted cella flanked by corridors. It is part of an Augusteum, a sanctuary devoted to the cult of the emperor and his family, and doubtless played a role in celebrations.
The left-over pieces of the temple elicit a kind of sadness of their long-ago greatness. They inspire a reflection on how once-dominant cultures and empires gradually decline, fall onto themselves, and disappear. Today, as we live during a time of changing values and structures that are rapidly being transformed into something else for some other purpose, perhaps Diana, the guardian of crossroads and transitions offers consolation and guidance as the values and mores of 20th century industrial society morph into new values and mores of 21st century technological society.
So, what will the world look like 2,000 years from now? How will we be regarded by those who will live then? What will be our legacy? Should we even care? Surely, we have made some great strides in our world with science and technology, globalization and cultural diversity, the futility of war, rights for women and minorities, and care for the unfortunate (at least through government and religious programs). However, we have far to go in taking care of the environment, saving our planet's dying species, eliminating unfairness and injustice discriminating against women and minorities, reducing the disparity between rich and poor, reducing violence and terrorism, and appreciating beauty over mere function. How will we evolve our brains and souls to meet these challenges? Maybe Diana can inspire us for managing these "crossroads."
The Temple of Diana--and Diana, the lover of Nature--reminds us that man-made structures can interact harmoniously with the natural environment, even one that is cultivated. Such structures are remarkably pleasing to the eye, and they emit a quality of tranquility that invites and spurs on contemplation and wonderment.
The builders paid attention to the beauty of artistic detail on carved stone, painted pillars, and a tunnel. The central hall of the building also illustrates the magnificence of a people and culture that existed two millennia ago and left an art and architecture that had to be derived from a depth of soul.
The Temple of Diana is tucked away on the periphery of the Jardin de la Fontaine in the northwestern part of the old city. The temple stones attest to the eternity of time and our small and brief place in its scheme. The stones endure—even as ruins. Nature endures, although in different forms. Time goes on without the ancient people in their day—and by extension, us in ours. Myths continue whether we realize them or not. What we take from history is usually selective and our interpretations influence our conceptions of truths. Nevertheless, in uncovering truth, we must seek to understand how history shapes us and makes us who we are.
Jardin de la Fontaine
The booming textile industry in Nimes also benefitted from the canal system by providing water for a new product called denim, (from the French “de” Nimes, meaning “from Nimes”) which eventually became material for blue jeans. Dyers' workshops relied on water but the flow from the spring was too irregular to be relied on at all times. The canals collected and stored large amounts of water that could be available anytime as needed.
The canals were laid out in the eighteenth century in an area that includes the Tour Magne, a watch tower that hovers on a hilltop above the garden, and the Temple of Diana, located on the west side of the garden. It is interesting that a public works project like this would exact such beauty and detail. It begs the question that if the canal were built today, would planners have taken such pains to design such a beautiful and accessible place instead of a functional water works project of steel and concrete?
The sculptures of the Nymphaeum were commissioned specifically for the Jardin de la Fontaine. The central figure representing the Nymph of Spring sits over the original spring.
The Nymphaeum pictured from the hill at the back of the garden (left) and series of arched bridges (right) provide dramatic views of this public works project.
Nimes underwent some major beautification projects during the eighteenth century, however, the Jardin de la Fontaine by Jacques-Philippe Mareschal, the king's military engineer, and Nimes' architect Pierre Dardailhon, was a major achievement (1740-1749). Although the city of Nimes continued after the Romans, the spring was abandoned during the Middle Ages until the Jardin was built to regulate the flow of the spring.
The park is a destination for many different publics like young people on a school track team (left).
The park is also a venue for concerts as indicated by the stage (right).
The statues and urns were purchased in 1747 when the Château de la Mosson near Montpelier was demolished.
Roman gods are placed around the Source including: Pluto (holding a cornucopia symbolizing the
underground world's wealth), Pan (fertility god), and Bacchus (god of wine).
The beautiful backdrop of the fountain provides symmetrical stairways that lead to Tower of Magne (right), which is a steep climb to the summit. The 32-meter Gallo-Roman structure was built in the third century AD for defensive purposes.
A statue of the poet, Antoine Bigot (1825-97), stands near the bottom of the grand staircase on the eastern side of the garden. He was the first French poet to write in the Languedoc or Occitan language, which is still spoken in southern France, Monaco, Italy's Occitan Valleys, Catalonia, and south.
The symbol of Nimes is an alligator and palm tree. It goes back to Roman times when the Emperor Augustus conquered his arch rival, Marc Antony and his lover, Cleopatra, Queen of Egypt. Here it tops the gates of the Jardin de la Fontaine, but the symbols are found everywhere in the city in various forms.
The canals snake through the northwestern part of the city and provide a walkway beside the canal that is a popular space for people of all ages. Downstream, the walkway is marked with a dedication to those who lost their lives in the flood of October 3, 1988, with the logo of Nimes: the alligator and palm tree.
Other Interesting Sites
One of the first things you see after you leave the Nimes train station and walk down the long promenade called Avenue Feuchères and an area called the Esplanade is the imposing figure of the Queen of Nimes. She stands tall and proud at the top of a fountain flanked by classical lithe female and muscular male bodies, again, reminiscent of the city's past as an important Roman city. This fountain was designed by James Pradier in 1851 as the new entry to Nimes via the train station. The Queen's crown is a replica of the Maison Carré. The figures surrounding the Queen symbolize the rivers and springs of this area that have generously nourrished Nimes over the centuries.
Both a residence and an administrative building, the Prefecture was a new type of design by 19th century architects. Léon Feuchère, for example, designed this prestigious building, a particularly large one, with a symmetrical pattern around a main courtyard. The front steps are topped by a porticoed bell tower that marks the main axis of the building with rich decorative features.
War memorials can be found in most French cities. This one was particularly moving as it highlighted major battles fought during World War I in a sunken circular mosaic presentation accompanied by names of fallen Nimois carved onto the walls surrounding the mosaic. This memorial has to be one of the most elaborate in southern France. References to World War II were also added to the memorial.
The modern Musée de la Romanité sits opposite the Arena on the main ring road of the old city of Nimes. According to the museum's website, “the two facing buildings complete each other harmoniously through their forms, lines and masses: the oval and the rectangle, the vertical and the horizontal, the density of stone and the lightness of glass. This dialogue continues inside the museum as both the façade and the glassed inner structure use transparency and a play of perspectives to show the rich heritage of Nimes.”
The sculptor and architect, Jean Mauric, designed this Protestant church. He drew inspiration from the buildings of the Catholic Reform in Italy, which were built by religious orders during the Middle Ages outside the walls of the city. The style is distinguished with a façade that has clearly differentiated levels such as the narrowness in the upper part, and a single, well-lit nave flanked by side chapels. The building has been used by the Reformed Church since 1792. The Bible on the façade (close-up) was added in 1843, clearly identifying with Protestantism’s emphasis on The Word of God.
St. Perpetua & Felicity
Tympanum (below the triangular entranceway)
This church was built in the 19th century to help accommodate the rising population of the city. It was on land that was once an island occupied by ancient people. It was inspired by northern French Gothic architecture. The large entry is framed by two spires. The tympanum depicts Christ surrounded by the symbols of the four Evangelists. A statue of St. Baudile, the first apostle of the church in Nîmes in the third century, stands beneath the canopy (above the main entrance).
French street life is never dull. There is always something going on, lots of people around, and a lot of things to look at. As I sat for an afternoon coffee at the Brasserie, a sidewalk café across from the Arena, a CGT demonstration suddenly appeared on the main street. The General Confederation of Labour (Confédération Générale du Travail, CGT) is a national trade union founded in 1895 in the city of Limoges (where they make the famous china). It was the first of five major French trade unions. According to historian M. Dreyfus, the direction of the CGT has been slowly evolving since the 1990s when it cut all organic links with the French Communist Party (PCF), in favor of a more moderate stance. Since the 1995 general strikes, the CGT has been concentrating its attention on trade-unionism in the private sector.
Some street theatre in the Centre Ville one evening. It was not at all clear what these characters were, but they were fun to watch. That's what the street is all about: spontaneity, fun, openness, and performance by anyone for anyone.
In 1892, after 3,000 coal miners in Carmaux went on strike, Jaurès became their advocate, which brought him to national prominence. He was an excellent orator and in 1894 together with Emile Zola, he advocated the release of Captain Alfred Dreyfus who had been falsely accused of treason by an anti-Semitic army clique. He continued to fight against militarism and anti-Semitism and even influenced anti-war sentiment before World War I. He founded the French socialist party, which in 1981 elected François Mitterand as president of the Republic. Jaurès was assassinated in 1914 in a Paris café by a right-wing fanatic for his anti-war beliefs.
My Airbnb apartment was located on the northern part of the old city. Giles, my host, met me on the street outside his Airbnb called "Le Nid" (the Nest) in front of this beautiful building. (The Nid's beautiful building highlighted these expressive sculptures that were encrusted on its exterior. Some fine artwork here!)
Nimes provides lots of food options with various prices and venues. I also discovered that there was some Italian influence in this area, but not as much as Nice. One night I bought the Sicilian dish called orangini, which I took home with me to eat.
One of my restaurant delights was Joe's Bar, which was right on the main street near the Maison Carré and a 10-minute walk from my Airbnb apartment. Joe's served food fairly early, which made it especially attractive because I don't like to be out in the dark alone. In mid-October, night falls around 7:30-8 p.m. While I waited for the 6:30 "dinner hour" with my huge chicken Cæsar salad and a rum&Coke.
Joe's is a sports bar and apparently a popular place among the young and for families on a night out. You order your drinks and food at the bar and then pick them up when your hand-held buzzer goes off. While I waited for my order, there happened to be a baseball game on the TV, which made me ecstatic. It's been four years since I've seen a game! This one was between the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox during the fall playoffs. It was good to see something very familiar after being away from home for three years. Lately I've been feeling a bit homesick since the prospects of going back will have to be put off for another year thanks to the coronavirus pandemic.
Many of France's cities have Middle Eastern restaurants. I ate at one that served me a huge plate of lamb kebab, French fries, and a salad. Fortunately, there was outdoor seating, which I prefer during these days of coronavirus. It's just a little safer. For lunch on another day I had eggplant parmesan.
When I travel I try to go as economically as possible so that I can go on more trips in the future. My trip to Nimes was no exception. I found an inexpensive Airbnb, ate simple meals, wrapped up dinner rolls for breakfast, walked or took buses, and found bargains for my train ride there and back. Occasionally, I'd splurge with a hazelnut crepe like this one that I bought from a street vendor outside the Jardin de la Fontaine. Mmmm-good! All in all, my trip to Nimes was, as the French say, SUPER.!!!
Sources
Nimes Office of Tourism
The Unknown South of France: A History Buff's Guide. Henry and Margaret Reuss (1991). Boston: The Harvard Common Press.
The Phases of Diana: Goddess in Flux -- https://commons.mtholyoke.edu/arth310rdiana/the-moon/
Jean-François Paillard, pp. 55-57 and Déborah Bertier, pp. 59-63 in GeoHistoire, June-July 2020 https://www.arenes-nimes.com/en/discovering-site/amphitheatre
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