Rome (IT), Liceo classico statale «Giulio Cesare» [extant] - 1936
promis et celas aliusque et idem /
nasceris, possis nihil urbe Roma /
visere maius!
These inscriptions can be seen in the Liceo
Classico “Giulio Cesare” (Corso Trieste 48), built by the
Governorate and inaugurated on 28 October 1936.
The external inscription (1) is carved in square Roman capitals and retraced with red colouring (‘rubricated’) on the base
of a bronze replica of the statue of Julius Caesar placed at the entrance of
the school’s courtyard. The statue is identical to the one that was placed
along the Via dei Fori Imperiali. The two inscriptions are similar, but there are also some differences: in
the inscription at the school, the title of dictator
perpetuus remains unmentioned,
the Fascist dating is expressed in words rather than numbers (decimo quarto), and another date, counted
from the refoundation of the Empire (proclaimed on 9 May 1936), is
added. The inscription thus implicitly conveys the ideological link between
Caesar’s Rome and the Fascist empire.
The
inner inscription (2) is carved in relief on the longest wall of the aula magna of the school; the use of punctuation (commas
and exclamation mark) as well as the metrical layout are remarkable. It quotes
the entire third strophe of the Carmen
Saeculare (lines 9–12), written by Horace and commissioned by emperor Augustus in 17
BC in occasion of the Ludi Saeculares celebrating the Roman empire.
These verses achieved some notoriety in 1919 as they were used in Italian
translation as refrain of the Inno a Roma (“Hymn to Rome”) written by
the poet Fausto Salvatori (1870–1929) and set to music by Giacomo Puccini (1858–1924)
(Strobl 2015). Their popularity rose during the ventennio since the
exaltation of Rome’s greatness they contain resonated well with Fascist
propaganda. The quotation was also used as an inscription at Piazza della Vittoria
in Bozen (Strobl 2013: 94–101), inside the Mostra Augustea della Romanità (Giglioli
1938: 642), and over the Arch of the Philaeni in Libya, adapted in a shorter form
(Agbamu 2019), all dating to 1937 (Nastasi 2020: 180–87).
The building was designed by the architect Cesare
Valle (1902–2000). The
entrance was flanked by fasces and an Italian inscription (in relief)
which run as follows: Il popolo italiano ha creato / col suo sangue
l’impero, lo / feconderà col suo lavoro, / e lo difenderà contro
/ chiunque con le sue / armi. IX maggio XIV e(ra) f(ascista),
// M(ussolini)” (“The Italian people has created the empire with
their blood; they will make it fruitful with their work, and they will defend
it against anyone with their weapons”) (Mussolini 1959: 269) (see also Archivo Storico Istituto Luce, Balilla moschettieri con il mantello schierati sulla scalinata all'ingresso del Liceo Giulio Cesare, A00067458, 28/10/1936). This was
a quotation from the speech through which Mussolini proclaimed the Italian empire
in May 1936. After the Second World War, both the fasces and the inscription
were removed (Ferraironi 1953: 228).
Bibliography
Agbamu,
Samuel. 2019. ‘The Arco dei Fileni: A Fascist Reading of Sallust’s Bellum
Iugurthinum’, Classical Receptions Journal 11 (2): 157–77.
Anonymous.
1937. ‘Regio Liceo Ginnasio Giulio Cesare a Roma. Arch. Cesare Valle’, Architettura 16 (8), 455–64.
Ferraironi, Francesco 1953. ‘Iscrizioni ornamentali di Roma scomparse’,
Strenna dei Romanisti 14: 226–30.
[Giglioli, Giulio Quirino]. 1938. Mostra Augustea della Romanità. Catalogo,
4th ed. Rome: C. Colombo.
Mussolini,
Benito. 1959. Opera omnia. Dall’inaugurazione della
Provincia di Littoria alla Proclamazione dell’Impero: 19 dicembre 1934 – 9
maggio 1936,
Edoardo Susmel and Duilio Susmel. Vol 27. 35 vols. Florence: La Fenice.
Nastasi, Antonino. 2019. Le iscrizioni in latino
di Roma capitale (1870-2018). Rome: Quasar, 612–13.
———. 2020. ‘L’epigrafia in latino negli anni del fascismo. L’uso dei classici
tra continuità e fratture’. In Studies in the Latin Literature and Epigraphy
of Italian Fascism, edited by Han Lamers, Bettina Reitz-Joosse, and Valerio
Sanzotta, 175–97. Supplementa
Humanistica Lovaniensia 46. Leuven: Leuven University Press.
Strobl, Wolfgang. 2013. ‘Tu regere imperio populos, Romane, memento…
La ricezione di Virgilio e Orazio nell’Italia fascista: il caso di Piazza della
Vittoria a Bolzano’, Quaderni di Storia
78: 87–135.
———. 2015. ‘“Possis nihil urbe Roma visere maius”: Zur politischen und musikalischen Rezeption des Carmen saeculare im italienischen Faschismus und zu einer Vertonung Aldo Aytanos (1926/27)’, Latomus 74: 735–78.
Antonino Nastasi
Inscription in the great hall of the Liceo © A. Nastasi (Rome).
Inscription outside the Liceo © A. Nastasi (Rome).