0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views8 pages

Roman Housing

The document discusses Roman housing, highlighting the evolution and types of homes such as Castellum, Insula, Domus, and Villa. It emphasizes the luxurious and functional aspects of Roman dwellings, which were designed for comfort and specific activities, reflecting social hierarchy. Innovations like glass windows and cement contributed to the elegance of Roman architecture as the empire expanded.

Uploaded by

Peter Wood
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views8 pages

Roman Housing

The document discusses Roman housing, highlighting the evolution and types of homes such as Castellum, Insula, Domus, and Villa. It emphasizes the luxurious and functional aspects of Roman dwellings, which were designed for comfort and specific activities, reflecting social hierarchy. Innovations like glass windows and cement contributed to the elegance of Roman architecture as the empire expanded.

Uploaded by

Peter Wood
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 8

ROMAN HOUSING

Introduction

• If the Orientals built huts of clay and stone, and the Celts built houses of
wood, reeds or twigs, the Greeks and Romans invented the concept of
"modern" housing built of various materials. Any ideal home should
provide shelter and comfort and have various rooms dedicated to specific
activities. As in modern society today, Roman homes were built according
to hierarchy.
• To the Romans, any dwelling was a temple dedicated to the goddess
Vesta. As the empire expanded and prospered, Roman homes became
more elegant and luxurious. Some of the big innovations have been the
introduction of glass windows or the use of cement.
Types of housing:

• Castellum

• Insula

• Domus

• Villa and rustic Villa


Castellum

• Castellum is a small, independent Roman fortification, which was


usually occupied by auxiliary units and used as a logistical base for
Roman legions, according to Vegetius. Its main role was as a
watchtower located along the Roman roads. The construction was
made of wood or stone and its base was square in shape, resembling
the towers within the Roman camps. In Latin, the word castellum is
the diminutive of the noun castrum ("camp").
• On the Romanian territory, such a fortification was discovered on the
territory of Bădeni locality from Harghita county.
Insula

• The commoners (lower and middle class Romans), but also members
of the equestrian classes lived in urban collective housing, apartment
blocks called the Island. These dwellings consisted of two parts: the
lower part which was used as a warehouse / tabernae where
commercial and business activities took place, and the upper part
which served as housing. The houses had access to water. They were
built of wood, clay bricks and cement, but were vulnerable to fires
and earthquakes. In a single island with 7 apartments, 40 Romans
could live on 330 m2. An island could reach a height of 17-20 meters.
Domus

• Domusera was an individual urban dwelling specific to the upper classes and traditional elites. The domusera consisted
of several rooms, courtyards, gardens and walls with meticulously made paintings. The houses were built of wood,
cement and bricks. The roof was made of tiles. He had access to water brought through underground pipes. The
entrance hall (vestibulum) led to a central room (atrium), which was the focal point of any domus and led to the
bedrooms (cubicle), dining room (triclinium), study living room (tablinum), kitchen (kitchen). ) and the warehouse
overlooking the street (tabernae). In the atrium was the statue / altar dedicated to the god of the house, and on the
walls were placed the mortuary masks of the ancestors. In the master bedroom was a wooden bed and a sofa. There
were three sofas around a table in the dining room. In the study room they studied or did business, being located
offices. Customers and guests were greeted in the atrium. Here is expensive furniture to impress guests and give the
feeling of sophistication. Above was an opening in the roof (compluvium), which provided natural light, and on rainy
days rainwater fell through the opening, filling the drainage basin (impluvium) made of marble decorated with mosaic.
• The kitchen was dark because there was no chimney. Only the slaves who prepared the food worked here. Each domus
also had a secret exit (posticum) through which family members could leave the house without being noticed.
Villa and rustic Villa
• Villa era locuinţa specifică patricienilor şi senatorilor. Erau două tipuri de villa: villa urbană care era
amplasată lângă oraş şi Villa Rustica, o fermă locuită de servitori şi sclavi. Stăpânii veneau acolo doar
pentru a-şi supraveghea producţia agricolă şi activităţile comerciale sau pentru a se relaxa. Villa era
tipul de locuinţa romană cel mai elegant, construit din mai multe materiale: ciment, cărămizi,
marmură. Podelele erau acoperite de mozaicuri, iar pereţii erau ornamentaţi cu fresce, iar acoperişul
era susţinut de coloane din marmură. Villa cuprindea iduri pictate, grădini şi statui. Un complex de
villa era alcătuit din „pars urbana”, unde locuia stăpânul şi familia sa, „pars rustica”, unde locuia şeful
sclavilor şi servitorilor ce îşi desfăşurau activităţile (de asemenea cuprindea şi grajduri pentru animale)
şi „villa fructuaria” (depozite şi magazii). O villa putea cuprinde birouri, un mic templu, băi, terme, săli
de mese şi o bucătărie şi era dotată cu hipocaust-sistem de încălzire în pardoseală pentru terme.
Etalarea rafinamentului şi a stilului de viaţă luxos era necesară pentru orice patrician căci îi asigura
prestigiul şi influenţa la nivel local.
Bibliography
• https://ro.wikipedia.org/
• https://www.historia.ro/

You might also like