Bibcode
Rodríguez-Antón, A.; Orfila Pons, M.; González-García, A. C.; Belmonte, J. A.
Referencia bibliográfica
Archaeoastronomy in the Roman World, Historical & Cultural Astronomy, ISBN 978-3-319-97006-6. Springer International Publishing AG, part of Springer Nature, 2019, p. 103
Fecha de publicación:
2019
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
Several works have tried either to demonstrate or reject the notion that
the orientation of the main axis of a Roman city was deliberate since
its choice might add an extra sacred dimension to the entire urban space
[González-García et al. (Mediterranean Archaeology and
Archaeometry 14(3):107-119, 2014; Magli (Oxford Journal of Archaeology
21(6):63-71, 2008)]. There exist ancient texts that support the
hypothesis of the existence of astronomical orientations, such as those
of Frontinus (De Agrimmensura, 27) or Hyginus Gromaticus (Constitutio,
I). In the case that these precepts were fulfilled: how to achieve it?
Besides the astronomical hypothesis, some scholars have pointed to the
use of a geometrical technique: the uaratio (Orfila et al. La
orientación de las estructuras ortogonales de nueva planta en
época romana. De la varatio y sus variaciones. 2014). By this,
the short sides of a regular triangle that are in ratios of integer
numbers (for example 1:2, 2:3) are laid along the cardinal axes. In this
work we present a comparison of the orientation of 81 Roman towns in the
Iberian Peninsula, measured in situ, with uaratio angles with aspect
ratios up to 12:12. By this exercise we want to discern whether the
orientations were astronomical, purely geometrical, or if geometry could
have fostered astronomical aims by using selected and well-known angles
to trace lines that fitted the desired astronomical purposes. It is
then, an attempt to shed more light to the issue of the orientation of
Roman towns by combining two hypotheses that, in contrast to what it
might seem, could be complementary but not contrary.