Roman domestic architecture insula forum romanum the roman forum the roman forum.
Labeled roman insula floor plan.
Atrium cubiculum culina exedra peristylium taberna tablinum triclinium vestibulum.
If your browser does not support image maps click on this list.
The brick walls with a lighter colour to the left were built after the excavations 1982 1987 to support the floor of the church.
Click on the photo to see it in full size.
Dashed lines show the ribs of the vaulting overhead.
Introduction ancient roman society maintained a steadfast orbit around its powerful leaders.
The roman forum part iii.
In the roman port town of ostia antica.
You ll need to get familiar with floor plan symbols if you re looking at floor plans a floor plan is a picture of a level of a home sliced horizontally about 4ft from the ground and looking down from above.
By convention ecclesiastical floorplans are shown map fashion with north to the top and the.
An insula dating from the early 2nd century a d.
This reconstructed model of the house of the tragic poet in pompeii shows the exterior of the house from the front the back and one side.
These physical remains which tend to depict roman life.
The roman forum part ii.
Today the story of their succession provides a political narrative accompanied and informed by archeological evidence.
These figures owning incredible influence and authority were larger than life in their time and often deified after.
Part 1 of ruins in modern imagination.
In roman architecture an insula latin for island plural insulae was a kind of apartment building that housed most of the urban citizen population of ancient rome including ordinary people of lower or middle class status the plebs and all but the wealthiest from the upper middle class the equites.
The video starts off with what is known as the atrium section of the roman domus.
The forum romanum and archaeological context.
Click on the rooms in this plan for more information about each area of the roman house.
This central hall was the focal point of the entire house and was accessed from the fauces a narrow passageway connecting to the streets or the vestibulum now like its modern day counterpart of a living room the atrium was the semi public area pars urbana that was primarily used for entertaining the.
Views of past and present.
The third century ad.
A roman insula the third century roman building beneath san lorenzo in lucina rome.
Light double lines in perimeter walls indicate glazed windows.