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Trajan's Column
Rome



Column in marble carved with representations of incidents in the Dacian campaigns of Trajan. Erected in A.D. 113.



Trajan's column was erected to commemorate the successful campaigns by the Emperor against Dacians of the Danube frontier (modern day Romanians) in A.D. 101-2 and 105-6. It stood at the focal point of the Emperor's Forum in Rome and takes the form of a hollow shaft built of Parian marble, 3.83 meters in diameter at the base and rising to a height 38 meters including the square plinth upon which it stands and the capital that surmounts it. The continuous frieze of low-relief depicting the history of Trajan's campaigns winds up and round the column for a total length of over 200 meters and shows 2,500 figures.



In antiquity, placed as it was between the two libraries of the Forum, the reliefs could be studied at close quarters up to a certain height and the whole sculpted surface was picked out in color and enriched with metal accessories.



Originally the column was topped by a colossal bronze statue of Trajan; this was replaced at the end of the 16th century by a bronze statue of Saint Peter, made by Bastiano Torrigiano.