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  1. The Theatre of Pompey (Latin: Theatrum Pompeii, Italian: Teatro di Pompeo), also known by other names, was a structure in Ancient Rome built during the latter part of the Roman Republican era by Pompey the Great. Completed in 55 BC, it was the first permanent theatre to be built in Rome.

  2. Nov 12, 2022 · No, if you want to see a gigantic ruin of a Roman theatre, you are about 1000 years too late. Pompey’s theatre may no longer exist, but here is what we know: 1. We know it was the first permanent theatre in the city of Rome. The construction violated a 154 BCE law, forbidding permanent theatres within the city of Rome.

  3. Completed in 55 BCE, the Theatrum Pompeii was the first permanent theatre to be built in Rome. It was commissioned by one of Rome's leading generals, Pompey the Great (Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, 106-48 BCE), who spared no expense in its construction, importi.

  4. …been built into and around Pompey’s Theatre, the first stone theatre building in Rome. Inspired by the Greek theatre of Mytilene, in which Pompey the Great had been so spectacularly entertained, it had a portico of 100 columns that was equipped to be a community centre almost as much as…

  5. Maintained throughout the Roman empire, the Theater of Pompey had fallen into ruins by the early 12th century. By 1762 its remains had been identified, and in 1835 the architect Luigi Canina produced a graphic reconstruction revised by Victoire Baltard in 1837.

  6. The first permanent theater in the city of Rome was the Theater of Pompey, dedicated in 55 B.C. by Julius Caesar’s rival, Pompey the Great. The theater, of which only the foundations are preserved, was an enormous structure, rising to approximately 45 meters and capable of holding up to 20,000 spectators.

  7. The Campus Martius as it may have appeared before the foundation of Rome. The Theater of Pompey stood on the southern section of ancient Rome’s Campus Martius, the Field of Mars.