Roman walls of Verona
| Roman walls of Verona | |
|---|---|
| Verona, Veneto in Italy | |
Republican-era brick masonry flanked by stone masonry from the Imperial period, near Porta Leoni. | |
| Site information | |
| Condition | Visible archaeological remains |
| Location | |
Roman walls of Verona | |
| Coordinates | 45°26′28.72″N 10°59′50.98″E / 45.4413111°N 10.9974944°E |
| Site history | |
| Fate | Large sections demolished or incorporated into medieval and modern buildings |
The Roman walls of Verona were an important defensive curtain wall equipped with numerous towers and monumental gates, built in several successive construction phases starting in the late Republican age and continuing through the early Roman-Germanic kingdoms.
The first phase of construction of the defenses began around the second half of the 1st century B.C., following Verona's attainment of the rank of Roman municipium. In the 3rd century, a second phase of renovation and enlargement of the city walls took place at the urging of Emperor Gallienus. In the early 6th century, Theodoric the Great had the Roman city defenses strengthened again, adding a second circle. Today few archaeological ruins of the walls remain, while the two main gates, Porta Borsari and Porta Leoni, are better preserved.