| The origins of the temple
dedicated to St. John the Baptist, later
patron saint of the city, are still uncertain. According
to tradition, it was founded in Roman times and dedicated
to the god Mars. Several sarcophagi have in fact been found
in this area, today in the Museum of the Opera del
Duomo, as was the famous statue of Mars, which
mediaeval chronacles tell us stood at the entrance to Ponte
Vecchio. However some scholars think that the building was
the Praetorium and the statue that of a barbarian king.
Dante himself declared that his "beautiful
San Giovanni" (Inferno, canto XIX) was a classical
Roman building; excavations carried out in this century
have in fact discovered remains of Roman constructions underneath
the Baptistery and the Cathedral, built in the north-eastern
area of the first ring of walls. The foundations of the
first Baptistery of San Giovanni, dated from 4th-5th century
circa, was certainly built on top of these ancient buildings.
Its octagonal shape, the two lower orders, the attic and
the springer of the cupola (in other words its basic architectural
structure), date from the early Christian construction,
which was possibly altered or completed in the early decades
of the 7th century during the Longobard rule.
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