Roman remains Many of the main monumental buildings of the ancient city are visible at their site outside the modern city. The impressive Roman remains mainly date to the
Hadrianic period (built over earlier buildings) and consist of the: • theatre in
opus reticulatum •
aqueduct in
opus reticulatum, the
quoins of which are of various colours arranged in patterns to produce a decorative effect. A unique feature was that its
castellum aquae (distribution basin) was part of the central pier of the city gate. It was more than 11 km long from its source at the springs of Capodacqua. • thermal baths with large swimming pool • Two
Fora; Republican and Imperial. The imperial forum was built under the reconstruction by Augustus, opposite the republican forum. On its eastern side were later the most important public buildings: the
curia and the
basilica •
Appian Way as the
decumanus maximus with monumental colonnade though the centre of the city •
macellum (meat market) •
Capitolium, built in Italic style after 191 BC, on the south of the Republican forum next to the
Appian Way. It is similar to other Capitolia of this period at
Pyrgi and
Cosa and most likely was an affirmation of Roman loyalty and identity •
amphitheatre (now almost entirely demolished, but better preserved in the 18th century) Close to the mouth of the river, about 2 km distant, was the sacred grove of the Italic goddess
Marica.
Other sights • The baronial Castle (C. 9th century) housed famous figures such as
St. Thomas Aquinas,
Isabella Colonna and
Giulia Gonzaga • The church of St. Francis, built around 1360 by Roffredo III Caetani, nephew of
Pope Boniface VIII • The church of
Annunziata (c. 1300), damaged by the
Turks pirates in 1552, by the French-Polish troops in 1799 and by a fire in 1888. In 1930 a restoration removed all the Baroque additions and showed the presence of ancient frescoes. • The church of St. Peter (11th-12th centuries). The façade is preceded by a staircase and a porch with 4 arcades (14th century). The interior has a nave and two aisles divided by tall columns with ogival arcs. The right aisle houses the notable Baroque Sacrament Chapel (1587), decorated with polychrome marbles. Other art pieces include a candelabra (1264) with mosaic decoration, and the Pergagum, with antique columns and 13th-century mosaics. It has a three-floor belfry. • Ferdinandeo Bridge over the River Garigliano was the first iron catenary suspension bridge built in Italy, and one of the earliest in continental Europe. This bridge, which was technologically advanced for its age, was built in 1832 by the Bourbon Kingdom of Two Sicilies. The engineer who designed the bridge was Luigi Giura. The bridge has been rebuilt in recent time (1998), in fact was mined during the Second World War. The suburb of Scauri, on the
Gulf of Gaeta, may take its name from the Roman
consul Marcus Aemilius Scaurus, who had a sumptuous villa here. It has some notable ancient watchtowers, including the
Torre Saracena, at the mouth of the river Garigliano, erected between 961 and 981, commemorates a victory gained by
Pope John X and his allies over the Saracens in 915 (see
battle of Garigliano). It is built of
Roman materials from Minturnae, including several inscriptions and sculptures. ==Emigrants==