Roman Houses

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Roman Houses

description

Roman Houses. Affordable Housing. “ Insulae ”: apartments that took up a city block Often 3-4 stories Bad construction could lead to collapse and fire Usually had a shared courtyard, sometimes running water The plebs (commoners) and equites (middle class) often lived in insulae. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Roman Houses

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Roman Houses

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Affordable Housing

• “Insulae”: apartments that took up a city block• Often 3-4 stories• Bad construction could lead to collapse and fire• Usually had a shared courtyard, sometimes

running water• The plebs (commoners) and equites (middle

class) often lived in insulae

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Insulae, continued

• Insulae ranged in price and apartment size• Usually utilized public latrines• Cooking was discouraged; most bought ready-

made food from alocal thermopolium.

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Toilets!!!

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Toilets Again!

Don’t forget your

sponge-on-a-stick!!!

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Domus

• Wealthy city home: domus• Wealthy country home was called a villa• Small country house: casa• Homes for patricians and senatorial class

citizens (upper class folks)• Best-preserved examples are in Pompeii and

Herculaneum

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Shops (tabernae)Shops opened to the street---paid rent to the homeowners.

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Atrium:an open, central courtyard, often used as a “living room”

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Compluvium and ImpluviumRain comes through the compluvium and is stored in the

impluvium.

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Cubiculum:small bedroom

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Tablinum:the main office room, usually behind the atrium

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Tablinum cont’d

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Culina:Kitchen (only in wealthy homes!)

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Triclinium:Dining room

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Peristylium:a garden (hortus) surrounded by a columned porch

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Other Rooms…

• Bibliotheca: library• Vestibulum: entryway (cf our word vestibule)• Latrina: toilet (cf our word latrine)• Some large homes had their own private bath

suites: warm bath, hot bath, cold bath (most people used the wonderful public baths)

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Domus Mea!

• Draw or sketch your house and label the rooms.

• By labeling a floor plan you already know, you’ll learn the Latin names for the rooms more quickly!