Attica, celebrated for the quantity and excellence
of its honey. The rock on which the aromatic flowers
grew in such profusion for the bees, did not, however,
partake of the same delightful quality. In working
it a peculiar fetid odour of sulphuretted hydrogen,
somewhat like that of a stale onion, was emitted,
which gave rise to its modern Italian name—Marmo
Cipolla. This repulsive quality, however, disappeared
quickly on exposure. The finest specimens of
this marble in Rome are the forty-six columns in the
Church of St. Paul’s, outside the gate, which
belonged originally to the Basilica AEmilia in the
Forum, founded about forty-five years before Christ,
and were transferred to the new building when the
venerable old church, in which they had stood for fifteen
hundred years, was destroyed by fire. Nothing
too can be finer than the two rows of Ionic columns
of Hymettian marble which divide the immense nave
of Santa Maria Maggiore from the side aisles.
There are eighteen on either side, each upwards of
eight feet in circumference, and are supposed to have
been taken from the Temple of Juno Lucina, whose site
is assigned by antiquaries to the immediate vicinity.
Similar rows of fluted Doric columns of the same marble,
ten on each side, adorn the Church of St. Pietro in
Vincoli. They are ancient, and belonged to some
temple or basilica of the Forum. There are also
five ancient pillars of Hymettian marble in the upper
Church of San Clemente, taken from the same prolific
source. The wall which surrounds the unique choir
or presbytery of this most interesting old church is
also composed of great slabs of Hymettian marble,
taken from the original subterranean church and hastily
put together. Some of the ancient pillars of
Hymettian marble belonging to the peristyle of the
temple of Ceres and Proserpine, still as widely spaced
as they used to be, adorn the Church of Santa Maria
in Cosmedin, built on the foundation of that shrine;
while twenty-four remarkably fine fluted Corinthian
columns of the same material divide the triple nave
of Santa Sabina on the Aventine, and are supposed
to have belonged to the ancient Temple of Juno Regina,
erected by Camillus after the destruction of the Etruscan
city of Veii. Hymettian marble was one of the
first—if not actually the first—species
introduced into Rome. In the year of Rome 662,
Lucius Crassus the orator brought to the city six columns
of it, each twelve feet in height, with which he adorned
his house on the Palatine Hill, receiving, on account
of this circumstance, from Marcus Brutus the nickname
of the Palatine Venus. At the present day the
marble is used for corner-stones in the ordinary houses
of Athens.