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Roma quanta fuit ipsa ruina docet
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Roma quanta fuit ipsa ruina docet : ウィキペディア英語版
Roma quanta fuit ipsa ruina docet
''Roma quanta fuit ipsa ruina docet'' is a Latin phrase which roughly translates to, "How great Rome was, its very ruins tell."
== Origin ==
The first known appearance of the maxim is in Francesco Albertini's ''Opusculum''. 〔Jill Burke, ''Rethinking the High Renaissance: The Culture of the Visual Arts in Early Sixteenth-Century Rome (Visual Culture in Early Modernity)'', (Source 1 ), 2012〕
Dutch painter Maarten van Heemskerck wrote the phrase on his drawing of the Septizonium. Architect and author Peter Murray theorized that Heemskerck's use of the phrase might have been the first, writing, "It is ironical that his drawings of the Septizonium are not only the most important documents for its appearance, but it was one of these very drawings that he chose to bear the mysterious epigram — perhaps invented by him — ''Roma quanta fuit ipsa ruina docet''."〔Peter Murray, ''Renaissance Architecture'', 1971〕

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