In
ancient Rome, a
basilica was a rectangular building with a large central open space, and often a raised
apse at the far end from the entrance. Basilicas served a variety of functions, including a combination of a courthouse, council chamber and meeting hall. There might be, however, numerous statues of the gods displayed in
niches set into the walls. Under Constantine and his successors this type of building was chosen as the basis for the design of the larger places of Christian worship, presumably as the basilica form had fewer pagan associations than those of the designs of traditional Greco-Roman temples, and allowed large congregations. As a result of the building programmes of the Christian Roman emperors the term basilica later became largely synonymous with a large church or cathedral. .|alt= Construction began on the northern side of the forum under the emperor
Maxentius in 308 AD, and was completed in 312 by
Constantine I after his defeat of Maxentius at the
Battle of the Milvian Bridge. The building rose on the north side of the
Via Sacra, close to the
Temple of Peace, at that time probably neglected, and the
Temple of Venus and Rome, whose reconstruction was part of Maxentius' interventions. During the 6th century, the building was called "templum Romae". ==Architecture==