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INTERIORS
                                 DURING
                      ROMAN PERIOD
                                                                                         1



Ar. S.H.R.Jawahar Benazir ……. School of Architecture & Interior Design, SRM University
                          History of Interior Design - I
Reconstructed Rome




                                                      2




                     History of Interior Design - I
Reconstructed Rome




                                                      3




                     History of Interior Design - I
E AR L Y R OM AN HOUSE S
• The earliest of Roman homes were round or oval shaped huts with thatched roof.
  Later Roman huts were oval in shape. In more advanced times came rectangular
  shaped house.
• Early Roman houses revolved around the primitive farm life of early times, when all
  members of the family lived in one large room together.
• Primitive Roman houses didn't have a chimney with the smoke escaping through a
  plain old hole in the roof.
• There were no windows and so all natural light came via the aforesaid hole in the
  ceiling.
• There was only one door and the space opposite the door was probably set aside
  as much as possible for the father and mother.
• Here was the heart of the room/house, the hearth, where the mother prepared the
  meals, and near it stood the implements employed for spinning and weaving; here       4

  also was the safe or strong box (the arca) in which the master of the house kept
  his valuables, and here the bed was spread.
                             Roman Period
L AT E R R OM AN HOUSE S
• As greater space and privacy were needed, ancient houses were added on to with
  small rooms opening out of the atrium at the sides.
• The arrangement and plans of the various rooms around the peristylium looks to
  have varied with the ideas and designs of builder or owner;
• According to the means of the owner there were Roman bedrooms, the triclinium
  ( dining room ), Roman libraries, drawing rooms, kitchen, scullery, closets, private
  baths, together with the simple rooms needed for housing slaves.
• But, whether there were a lot of rooms or few, they all faced the court, receiving
  from it light and air, and so did the rooms along the sides of the atrium.
• There was often a garden behind the peristylium.
• Example - Diocletian's palace in Croatia.
                                                                                         5




                             Roman Period
Various rooms

                                   PERISTYLUM


The central ATRIUM                     FOUNTAIN


                                   PERISTYLUM

                                  Various rooms
                                                   6


             Greco Roman House Plan.

                Roman Period
7



The Interior view of a Roman House
                       Roman Period
8




Roman Period
G R E E K INF L UE NC E
• From the influence of ancient Greek houses came the idea of a court at the back
  of the tablinum, open to the sky, surrounded by various rooms, and planted with
  flowers, trees, and shrubs.
• The open space in this type of house had columns around it and often a fountain
  in the middle. This court was called the peristylum or peristylium.
• Access to the peristylium from the atrium was gained through the tablinum,
  though this could be cut off from it by folding doors and by a narrow passage at
  one side.
• The passage would probably have been used by slaves and by others when they
  were not privileged to pass through the tablinum.
• Both passage and tablinum could be closed on the side of the atrium.

                                                                                     9




                            Roman Period
Atrium – Interior of a Villa




Roman Kitchen




                                                          10




Roman Dining Room - Diorama    Mosaic Flooring
                    Roman Period
• Roman houses varied depending not only on the era in which they were built, but
  also on their location.
AT R I U M
• The main room in the house was the Atrium – a multifunctional space which served
  various activities of the household.
• Inside the atrium, meals were prepared, the table laid out, indoor work was done,
  and sacrifices were offered to the gods ; by nightfall a space was cleared to spread
  the hard beds or pallets.
• There were four types of atrium:
     o Tuscan - in which the roof was supported by two pairs of beams that crossed
       each other at right angles,
     o Tetrastylon - in which four pillars supported the roof beams at the corners of
       the compluvium.                                                                   11
     o Displuviatum - in which the roof sloped to the out walls, and
     o Testudinatum - Later the atrium was reduced to being a reception room.

                              Roman Period
 C o m p l u vi u m – the atrium received its light from a
  central opening in Roman roofs, the compluvium, which got
  its name from the fact that rain, as well as air and light,
  could enter through it.
 I m p l u vi u m – Just beneath the compluvium, is a basin,
  called the impluvium, which was not only decorative but
  also useful since it caught the rainwater coming through
  the open roof and channeled it into underground water Compluvium in a
  storage tanks.                                                   Tuscan Atrium
 T a b l i n u m - It is the master's office or study, was where the master kept his
  arca (a heavy chest, sometimes chained to the floor, containing money and
  valuables). The tablinum was meant originally for only temporary purposes, being
  built of boards (tabulae), and with an outside door and no connection to the atrium.
 Ve s t i b u l u m - In larger houses, the open court in front of the door, with an    12
  ornamental pavement from the door to the street is the vestibulum. In small
  houses, it is the narrow space between the door and the inner edge of the
  sidewalk.
                              Roman Period
 Peristylum- It was an open court at the rear of the
  tablinum, planted with flowers, trees, and shrubs. In
  upper class houses, the peristyle was the center of
  household life.
 Culina- The culina or kitchen was the most important of
  the rooms around the peristyle.
 Alae- These were alcoves on either side of the atrium, in      The     roof of
  which wax bust of ancestors were kept.                         Peristylum
 Tricilinum - The dining room (triclinium) was not always close to the kitchen
  because slaves made carrying food fast and easy.
 Cubicula- small, scantily furnished sleeping rooms.
 Cubicula Diurna- used for rest in the daytime
 Cubicula Nocturna (or dormitoria). -nighttime bedrooms.
 Bibliotheca - In the houses of many educated Romans there was a library where    13
  papyrus rolls were kept in cases or cabinets around the walls.
 Sacrarium - room with a shrine
 Oeci - rooms for the entertainment of large groups
                            Roman Period
 Exedrae – rooms furnished with permanent seats, used for entertainments
 Solarium - a sun deck, and pantries, storerooms, and cellars etc., were also
  found in some houses.
 Taberna - If the house faced a business street the owner could build rooms in
  front of the atrium for commercial purposes without allowing the privacy of the
  interior rooms to be affected. A passageway to his door was of course
  maintained. If the house was situated on a corner, these additional rooms could
  be added on the side as well as in the front, and, as they had no necessary
  connection with the interior, they could be rented as living rooms, as separate
  rooms often are in modern times. These rooms were known as taberna.
 Insulae – these were apartments/small houses stacked together like
  apartements. These Apartments were build poorly and cheaply and were often in
  danger of fire and collapse. The building was looked after by an insularius, a
  slave of the the owner. These were sometimes six or seven stories high            14




                             Roman Period
A cubiculum in a villa at
                                        boscoreale, near pompeii




                                        A Tricilinum or Dining room

Part of a carved doorway from pompeii

                                                                      15




A mosaic threshold of pompeii
                          Roman Period
16




Roman Period
17



Reconstruction of a street in Pompeii
                           Roman Period
R O M AN D O O R S & WI N D O W S

• There were numerous terms for the door in Roman times.
• Ostium included both the doorway and the door.
• Fores and janua are more precise words for the door itself.
• Doors opened inward; outer doors were provided with bolts and bars.
•  Locks and keys were heavy and clumsy.
• In some houses a doorman or janitor was kept on duty.
• Inside houses, curtains were preferred to doors.
•  Sometimes mosaics adorned the threshold, reading salve (good heath), nihil
  intret mali (may no evil enter), or cave canem (beware of dog).
• Some windows were provided with shutters, which slid in a framework on the
  outer wall.
• If these were in two parts, so that they moved in opposite directions, they   18

  were said to be junctae (joined).

                           Roman Period
R O M AN F L O O R S & R O O F S

• The term for Roman floors was pavimentum - a name which originally referred
  to floors in small houses in which the ground in each room was smoothed,
  covered thickly with small pieces of stone, brick, tile or pottery, and pounded
  down solidly and smoothly with a heavy rammer.
• In better houses the floor was made of stone slabs fitted smoothly together.
• More elaborate houses had concrete floors, often with a mosaic surfaces.
• In the upper stories floors were made of wood, sometimes with a layer of
  concrete on top.
• Roman roofs varied, with some flat and some sloped.
• The earliest roof was a thatch of straw, later replaced by shingles and finally
  tiles.
                                                                                    19




                           Roman Period
R O M AN WA L L I N G

                                  Opus incertum was an
                                  ancient Roman construction
                                  technique, using irregular
                                  shaped and random placed
                                  uncut stones or fist-sized        Opus Testaceum
                                  tuff blocks inserted in a core   Opus Testaceum (Latin
 Opus Reticulatum                 of Opus caementicium.l           for "brick work") is an
                                                                   ancient Roman form of
Opus reticulatum (also known
                                                                   construction in which
as reticulated work) is a form
                                                                   coarse-laid brickwork is
of brickwork used in ancient
                                                                   used to face a core of
Roman architecture. It consists
                                                                   opus caementicium. This
of diamond-shaped bricks of
                                                                   was the dominant form 20
tuff placed around a core of
                                                                   of wall construction in
opus caementicium.
                                      Opus Incertum                the imperial era.

                              Roman Period
H E AT I N G & WA T E R S U P P L Y

• Roman houses had various methods for heating.
• In severe winter, portable stoves (braziers made of metal for holding hot coals)
  were used.
• Wealthy people sometimes had furnaces with chimneys. The fire was under the
  house, and warm air circulated in tile pipes or in hollow walls and floors without
  coming directy into the rooms. This heating arrangement was called a hypocaust.
• Water was brought to houses by aqueducts from the mountains, sometimes for a
  long distance.
• Often houses had a tank in the upper story. Not many rooms had plumbing - slaves
  carried water as needed.
• The Cloaca Maxima, Rome's great sewer said to have been build in the time of the
  kings, continued to serve Rome until early in the present century.                   21




                             Roman Period
B UIL D ING M AT E R IAL S
•   Wood was commonly used for temporary structures.
•   Permanent buildings were made of stone and unburned brick from early times.
•   Walls of dressed stone were laid in regular courses.
•   For ordinary houses, sun-dried bricks were largely used until the beginning of the
    first century BC. These were also covered with stucco.
•   In classical time, cement was invented.
•   Walls built of this durable, inexpensive material were called opus caementicium.
•   Cement was also combined with crushed terra cotta to make a waterproof lining
    (opus Signinum) for cisterns.
•   Although concerte walls were weatherproof, they were usually faced with stone or
    burned bricks.
•   Walls of this type were called opus incertum (irregular work) if they were faced
    with stones with no regular size or shape, or opus reticulatum (network) if they     22

    were faced with uniform tufa stones.
•   Bricks used for facing were triangular - no walls were built of brick alone.
                              Roman Period
INTERIOR DECORATION OF A

     ROMAN HOUSE

                           23




     Roman Period
• Houses changed greatly while Rome was growing. Until the last century of the
  Republic, houses were small and simple, with little decoration.
• Bright colours were used simply and appealingly to brighten interiors. Eventually,
  however, things became much more ornate.
• Ceilings were vaulted and painted in brilliant colours, or they were divided into
  panels by beams.
• These ceilings are sometimes imitated by modern architects.
• Doors were richly paneled and carved, or plated with bronze, or made of solid
  bronze. Doorposts were sheathed with beautifully carved marble.
• Floors were covered with contrasting marble tiles or with mosaic pictures.
• The most famous of these is "Darius at the Battle of Isus," measuring 16 feet by 8
  feet, with about a 150 separate pieces in each square inch.
                                                                                       24




                             Roman Period
R O M AN F U R N I T U R E

• Furniture in Roman houses tended to be sparse, since the occupants liked space
  and simplicity in their decor.
• Beauty was created by mosaics, frescos and water features and other features
  of Roman interiors rather than by use of elaborate furnishings.
• However, the few items of Roman Empire furniture were elegant and costly,
  using excellent materials and craftsmanship.
• Even wealthy homeowners had mostly essential articles: Beds or couches,
  chairs,stools, tables and lamps.
• There was an occasional chest, wooden cabinet with doors, brazier for coals,
  and a water clock (seldom).
• Pictures of ancient Roman furniture painted on frescos and other artworks,
  together with the few pieces still in existence today, have made it possible to   25

  reconstruct with accuracy the furniture in Roman times.

                             Roman Period
26



The Roman Furniture
Roman Period
COUCHES
• The couch (lectus, lectulus) was found everywhere
  in the Roman house, as a sofa by day, a bed by night.
• In its simplest form it consisted of a frame of wood
  with straps across the top on which was laid a
  mattress.
• At one end there was an arm, sometimes there was an arm at each end, and a back
  besides. The back seems to have been a Roman addition to the ordinary form of the
  ancient couch.
• The couch was always provided with pillows and rugs or coverlets. The mattress
  was originally stuffed with straw, but this gave place to wool and even feathers.
• The couches used for beds seem to have been larger than those used as sofas, and
  they were so high that stools or even steps were necessary accompaniments.
• As a sofa the lectus was used in the library for reading and writing.               27

• In the dining-room it had a permanent place.
• The legs and arms were carved or made of costly woods, or inlaid or plated with
  tortoise-shell, ivory, or the precious metals.
                            Roman Period
• Sometimes frames are of solid
                                                silver.
                                              • The coverings were often made
                                                of the finest fabrics, dyed in the
                                                most brilliant colors, and
                                                worked with figures of gold.
   Romans Reclining on Couches and
   Dining at a Table
S T O O L S & C H AI R S                           curule chair

• The primitive form of Roman seat was a four-
  legged stool or bench with no bench.
• Some could be folded. The famous curule chair,
  to which only high magistrates were entitled,                                      28

  was a folding stool with curved legs of ivory
  and a purple cushion.
                           Roman Period
• The first improvement on the stool, was the solium, a stiff,
  straight, high-backed chair with solid arms, so high that a
  footstool was necessary.
• This was the chair in which a patron sat when he received
  clients in the atrium.
• Poets represented it as a seat for
  gods and kings.
• After the solium came the cathedra,                          The Solium
  and armless chair with a curved
  back.
• A cathedra supina was a cathedra
  that had been fixed at an easy angle.
  At first used only by women, it
  eventually came into general use.                                         29

• Chairs were not upholstered, but
  cushions were used.                    Roman State chair The Sella
                          Roman Period
T AB L E S
• The tables were done with elaborate worksmanship.
• Their supports and tops were made of fine materials -
  stone or wood, solid or veneered, or even covered with
  thin sheets of precious metal.
• The most expensive were round tables made from cross
  sections of citrus wood, the African cedar.
• A monopodium was a table or stand with one supports,        The Monopodium
  used to hold a lamp or toilet articles.
• The abacus was a rectangular table with a raised rim,
  used as a sideboard to hold dishes.
• A mensa delphica - of bronze or marble - had three legs.
• Tables were often made with adjustable legs, so that
  they could be raised or lowered.                                             30

• A table of solid masonry, with a top of polished stone or
                                                              Mensa Delphica
  mosaic, was built in the dining room or peristyle.
                              Roman Period
CHE STS
• Chests were found in every house.
• They were usually made of wood and often bound with
  iron.
• Small chests, used as jewel cases, were sometimes
  made of silver or gold.
• Cabinets were made of the same materials as chests       Wooden Chest
  and were often beautifully decorated.
• They were frequently divided into compartments, but
  they had no sliding drawers and their wooden doors
  were without hinges or locks.
• The cabinets in the library held books, while those in
  the alae held wax masks of ancestors.
                                                                                31
• A Cinerarium is the cremation chest .
                                                           Marble Cremation Chest
                                                           (cinerarium)
                              Roman Period
L AM P S
• Romans had very simple & very ornate lamps: containers for olive
  oil or melted fat, with loosely twisted threads for the wick(s),
  drawn out through one or more holes in the cover or the top.
• There was also usually a hole through which the lamp was
  filled. As there was no chimney, the flame must have been
  uncertain and dim.
• Some lamps had handles. Some were suspended from
  ceilings with chains. Others were kept on stands.
              • For lighting public rooms there were tall stands
                like those of our floor lamps, from which
                numerous lamps could be hung. This was called a
                candelabrum. It must have originally been                             32
                intended for candles, but they were rarely used
                                                                     Base of a lamp
                as the Romans were not skilled candlemakers.

                              Roman Period
OTHE R FURNISHINGS

• The Romans produced heat with their charcoal stoves, or braziers.
  These were metal boxes which held hot coals. They were raised on legs
  and provided with handles.
• The clock, did not exist in Roman times. In the peristylum or garden
  there was sometimes a sundial, which measured the hours of the day
  by the shadow of a stick or pin. A sundial gives the correct time twice a Sun-dial
  year if it is calculated for the spot where it stands.
• A clepsydra was a water clock (a container
  filled with water, which escaped from it at
  a fixed rate, the changing level marking the
  hours on a scale). This was also borrowed
  from the Greeks.                                                                     33



                                                              Early water clock
                               Roman Period
Ancient Roman Bakery




                                      34
Wealthy Family’s Home

                       Roman Period
S YM B O L S & M O T I F S

• Some motifs found in Roman art and
  architecture are the human figure,
• acanthus, rosette, rinceau, swan,
  eagle, monopodium, lion, oxen,
  sphinx, griffin, grotesque, wave
  pattern, festoon, anthemion, fret,
                                                                   Acanthus Leaves
  and laurel wreath.




                                           Garland Motif
                                                       Laurel wreath
                                                       on the head               35

                                       Wall painting of a garden scene with
                                       fountain and birds, from Oplontis,
                                  Roman Period
R O M AN AR T & S C U L P T U R E

 Portraiture - Portraiture is a dominant genre of Roman
  sculpture, growing perhaps from the traditional Roman
  emphasis on family and ancestors; the entrance hall (atrium)
  of a Roman elite house displayed ancestral portrait busts.
 Religious and funerary art - Religious art was also a major
  form of Roman sculpture. Roman sarcophagus, offer examples
  of intricate reliefs that depict scenes often based on Greek Roman portraiture
  and Roman mythology or mystery religions that offered
  personal salvation, and allegorical representations.
                                         Funerary art - Roman funerary art also
                                           offers a variety of scenes from everyday
                                           life, such as game-playing, hunting, and 36
                                           military endeavors.
                                      Sarcophagus with battle scene between
                                      Romans and Germans. – in Marble.
                            Roman Period

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Roman (2)

  • 1. INTERIORS DURING ROMAN PERIOD 1 Ar. S.H.R.Jawahar Benazir ……. School of Architecture & Interior Design, SRM University History of Interior Design - I
  • 2. Reconstructed Rome 2 History of Interior Design - I
  • 3. Reconstructed Rome 3 History of Interior Design - I
  • 4. E AR L Y R OM AN HOUSE S • The earliest of Roman homes were round or oval shaped huts with thatched roof. Later Roman huts were oval in shape. In more advanced times came rectangular shaped house. • Early Roman houses revolved around the primitive farm life of early times, when all members of the family lived in one large room together. • Primitive Roman houses didn't have a chimney with the smoke escaping through a plain old hole in the roof. • There were no windows and so all natural light came via the aforesaid hole in the ceiling. • There was only one door and the space opposite the door was probably set aside as much as possible for the father and mother. • Here was the heart of the room/house, the hearth, where the mother prepared the meals, and near it stood the implements employed for spinning and weaving; here 4 also was the safe or strong box (the arca) in which the master of the house kept his valuables, and here the bed was spread. Roman Period
  • 5. L AT E R R OM AN HOUSE S • As greater space and privacy were needed, ancient houses were added on to with small rooms opening out of the atrium at the sides. • The arrangement and plans of the various rooms around the peristylium looks to have varied with the ideas and designs of builder or owner; • According to the means of the owner there were Roman bedrooms, the triclinium ( dining room ), Roman libraries, drawing rooms, kitchen, scullery, closets, private baths, together with the simple rooms needed for housing slaves. • But, whether there were a lot of rooms or few, they all faced the court, receiving from it light and air, and so did the rooms along the sides of the atrium. • There was often a garden behind the peristylium. • Example - Diocletian's palace in Croatia. 5 Roman Period
  • 6. Various rooms PERISTYLUM The central ATRIUM FOUNTAIN PERISTYLUM Various rooms 6 Greco Roman House Plan. Roman Period
  • 7. 7 The Interior view of a Roman House Roman Period
  • 9. G R E E K INF L UE NC E • From the influence of ancient Greek houses came the idea of a court at the back of the tablinum, open to the sky, surrounded by various rooms, and planted with flowers, trees, and shrubs. • The open space in this type of house had columns around it and often a fountain in the middle. This court was called the peristylum or peristylium. • Access to the peristylium from the atrium was gained through the tablinum, though this could be cut off from it by folding doors and by a narrow passage at one side. • The passage would probably have been used by slaves and by others when they were not privileged to pass through the tablinum. • Both passage and tablinum could be closed on the side of the atrium. 9 Roman Period
  • 10. Atrium – Interior of a Villa Roman Kitchen 10 Roman Dining Room - Diorama Mosaic Flooring Roman Period
  • 11. • Roman houses varied depending not only on the era in which they were built, but also on their location. AT R I U M • The main room in the house was the Atrium – a multifunctional space which served various activities of the household. • Inside the atrium, meals were prepared, the table laid out, indoor work was done, and sacrifices were offered to the gods ; by nightfall a space was cleared to spread the hard beds or pallets. • There were four types of atrium: o Tuscan - in which the roof was supported by two pairs of beams that crossed each other at right angles, o Tetrastylon - in which four pillars supported the roof beams at the corners of the compluvium. 11 o Displuviatum - in which the roof sloped to the out walls, and o Testudinatum - Later the atrium was reduced to being a reception room. Roman Period
  • 12.  C o m p l u vi u m – the atrium received its light from a central opening in Roman roofs, the compluvium, which got its name from the fact that rain, as well as air and light, could enter through it.  I m p l u vi u m – Just beneath the compluvium, is a basin, called the impluvium, which was not only decorative but also useful since it caught the rainwater coming through the open roof and channeled it into underground water Compluvium in a storage tanks. Tuscan Atrium  T a b l i n u m - It is the master's office or study, was where the master kept his arca (a heavy chest, sometimes chained to the floor, containing money and valuables). The tablinum was meant originally for only temporary purposes, being built of boards (tabulae), and with an outside door and no connection to the atrium.  Ve s t i b u l u m - In larger houses, the open court in front of the door, with an 12 ornamental pavement from the door to the street is the vestibulum. In small houses, it is the narrow space between the door and the inner edge of the sidewalk. Roman Period
  • 13.  Peristylum- It was an open court at the rear of the tablinum, planted with flowers, trees, and shrubs. In upper class houses, the peristyle was the center of household life.  Culina- The culina or kitchen was the most important of the rooms around the peristyle.  Alae- These were alcoves on either side of the atrium, in The roof of which wax bust of ancestors were kept. Peristylum  Tricilinum - The dining room (triclinium) was not always close to the kitchen because slaves made carrying food fast and easy.  Cubicula- small, scantily furnished sleeping rooms.  Cubicula Diurna- used for rest in the daytime  Cubicula Nocturna (or dormitoria). -nighttime bedrooms.  Bibliotheca - In the houses of many educated Romans there was a library where 13 papyrus rolls were kept in cases or cabinets around the walls.  Sacrarium - room with a shrine  Oeci - rooms for the entertainment of large groups Roman Period
  • 14.  Exedrae – rooms furnished with permanent seats, used for entertainments  Solarium - a sun deck, and pantries, storerooms, and cellars etc., were also found in some houses.  Taberna - If the house faced a business street the owner could build rooms in front of the atrium for commercial purposes without allowing the privacy of the interior rooms to be affected. A passageway to his door was of course maintained. If the house was situated on a corner, these additional rooms could be added on the side as well as in the front, and, as they had no necessary connection with the interior, they could be rented as living rooms, as separate rooms often are in modern times. These rooms were known as taberna.  Insulae – these were apartments/small houses stacked together like apartements. These Apartments were build poorly and cheaply and were often in danger of fire and collapse. The building was looked after by an insularius, a slave of the the owner. These were sometimes six or seven stories high 14 Roman Period
  • 15. A cubiculum in a villa at boscoreale, near pompeii A Tricilinum or Dining room Part of a carved doorway from pompeii 15 A mosaic threshold of pompeii Roman Period
  • 17. 17 Reconstruction of a street in Pompeii Roman Period
  • 18. R O M AN D O O R S & WI N D O W S • There were numerous terms for the door in Roman times. • Ostium included both the doorway and the door. • Fores and janua are more precise words for the door itself. • Doors opened inward; outer doors were provided with bolts and bars. • Locks and keys were heavy and clumsy. • In some houses a doorman or janitor was kept on duty. • Inside houses, curtains were preferred to doors. • Sometimes mosaics adorned the threshold, reading salve (good heath), nihil intret mali (may no evil enter), or cave canem (beware of dog). • Some windows were provided with shutters, which slid in a framework on the outer wall. • If these were in two parts, so that they moved in opposite directions, they 18 were said to be junctae (joined). Roman Period
  • 19. R O M AN F L O O R S & R O O F S • The term for Roman floors was pavimentum - a name which originally referred to floors in small houses in which the ground in each room was smoothed, covered thickly with small pieces of stone, brick, tile or pottery, and pounded down solidly and smoothly with a heavy rammer. • In better houses the floor was made of stone slabs fitted smoothly together. • More elaborate houses had concrete floors, often with a mosaic surfaces. • In the upper stories floors were made of wood, sometimes with a layer of concrete on top. • Roman roofs varied, with some flat and some sloped. • The earliest roof was a thatch of straw, later replaced by shingles and finally tiles. 19 Roman Period
  • 20. R O M AN WA L L I N G Opus incertum was an ancient Roman construction technique, using irregular shaped and random placed uncut stones or fist-sized Opus Testaceum tuff blocks inserted in a core Opus Testaceum (Latin Opus Reticulatum of Opus caementicium.l for "brick work") is an ancient Roman form of Opus reticulatum (also known construction in which as reticulated work) is a form coarse-laid brickwork is of brickwork used in ancient used to face a core of Roman architecture. It consists opus caementicium. This of diamond-shaped bricks of was the dominant form 20 tuff placed around a core of of wall construction in opus caementicium. Opus Incertum the imperial era. Roman Period
  • 21. H E AT I N G & WA T E R S U P P L Y • Roman houses had various methods for heating. • In severe winter, portable stoves (braziers made of metal for holding hot coals) were used. • Wealthy people sometimes had furnaces with chimneys. The fire was under the house, and warm air circulated in tile pipes or in hollow walls and floors without coming directy into the rooms. This heating arrangement was called a hypocaust. • Water was brought to houses by aqueducts from the mountains, sometimes for a long distance. • Often houses had a tank in the upper story. Not many rooms had plumbing - slaves carried water as needed. • The Cloaca Maxima, Rome's great sewer said to have been build in the time of the kings, continued to serve Rome until early in the present century. 21 Roman Period
  • 22. B UIL D ING M AT E R IAL S • Wood was commonly used for temporary structures. • Permanent buildings were made of stone and unburned brick from early times. • Walls of dressed stone were laid in regular courses. • For ordinary houses, sun-dried bricks were largely used until the beginning of the first century BC. These were also covered with stucco. • In classical time, cement was invented. • Walls built of this durable, inexpensive material were called opus caementicium. • Cement was also combined with crushed terra cotta to make a waterproof lining (opus Signinum) for cisterns. • Although concerte walls were weatherproof, they were usually faced with stone or burned bricks. • Walls of this type were called opus incertum (irregular work) if they were faced with stones with no regular size or shape, or opus reticulatum (network) if they 22 were faced with uniform tufa stones. • Bricks used for facing were triangular - no walls were built of brick alone. Roman Period
  • 23. INTERIOR DECORATION OF A ROMAN HOUSE 23 Roman Period
  • 24. • Houses changed greatly while Rome was growing. Until the last century of the Republic, houses were small and simple, with little decoration. • Bright colours were used simply and appealingly to brighten interiors. Eventually, however, things became much more ornate. • Ceilings were vaulted and painted in brilliant colours, or they were divided into panels by beams. • These ceilings are sometimes imitated by modern architects. • Doors were richly paneled and carved, or plated with bronze, or made of solid bronze. Doorposts were sheathed with beautifully carved marble. • Floors were covered with contrasting marble tiles or with mosaic pictures. • The most famous of these is "Darius at the Battle of Isus," measuring 16 feet by 8 feet, with about a 150 separate pieces in each square inch. 24 Roman Period
  • 25. R O M AN F U R N I T U R E • Furniture in Roman houses tended to be sparse, since the occupants liked space and simplicity in their decor. • Beauty was created by mosaics, frescos and water features and other features of Roman interiors rather than by use of elaborate furnishings. • However, the few items of Roman Empire furniture were elegant and costly, using excellent materials and craftsmanship. • Even wealthy homeowners had mostly essential articles: Beds or couches, chairs,stools, tables and lamps. • There was an occasional chest, wooden cabinet with doors, brazier for coals, and a water clock (seldom). • Pictures of ancient Roman furniture painted on frescos and other artworks, together with the few pieces still in existence today, have made it possible to 25 reconstruct with accuracy the furniture in Roman times. Roman Period
  • 27. COUCHES • The couch (lectus, lectulus) was found everywhere in the Roman house, as a sofa by day, a bed by night. • In its simplest form it consisted of a frame of wood with straps across the top on which was laid a mattress. • At one end there was an arm, sometimes there was an arm at each end, and a back besides. The back seems to have been a Roman addition to the ordinary form of the ancient couch. • The couch was always provided with pillows and rugs or coverlets. The mattress was originally stuffed with straw, but this gave place to wool and even feathers. • The couches used for beds seem to have been larger than those used as sofas, and they were so high that stools or even steps were necessary accompaniments. • As a sofa the lectus was used in the library for reading and writing. 27 • In the dining-room it had a permanent place. • The legs and arms were carved or made of costly woods, or inlaid or plated with tortoise-shell, ivory, or the precious metals. Roman Period
  • 28. • Sometimes frames are of solid silver. • The coverings were often made of the finest fabrics, dyed in the most brilliant colors, and worked with figures of gold. Romans Reclining on Couches and Dining at a Table S T O O L S & C H AI R S curule chair • The primitive form of Roman seat was a four- legged stool or bench with no bench. • Some could be folded. The famous curule chair, to which only high magistrates were entitled, 28 was a folding stool with curved legs of ivory and a purple cushion. Roman Period
  • 29. • The first improvement on the stool, was the solium, a stiff, straight, high-backed chair with solid arms, so high that a footstool was necessary. • This was the chair in which a patron sat when he received clients in the atrium. • Poets represented it as a seat for gods and kings. • After the solium came the cathedra, The Solium and armless chair with a curved back. • A cathedra supina was a cathedra that had been fixed at an easy angle. At first used only by women, it eventually came into general use. 29 • Chairs were not upholstered, but cushions were used. Roman State chair The Sella Roman Period
  • 30. T AB L E S • The tables were done with elaborate worksmanship. • Their supports and tops were made of fine materials - stone or wood, solid or veneered, or even covered with thin sheets of precious metal. • The most expensive were round tables made from cross sections of citrus wood, the African cedar. • A monopodium was a table or stand with one supports, The Monopodium used to hold a lamp or toilet articles. • The abacus was a rectangular table with a raised rim, used as a sideboard to hold dishes. • A mensa delphica - of bronze or marble - had three legs. • Tables were often made with adjustable legs, so that they could be raised or lowered. 30 • A table of solid masonry, with a top of polished stone or Mensa Delphica mosaic, was built in the dining room or peristyle. Roman Period
  • 31. CHE STS • Chests were found in every house. • They were usually made of wood and often bound with iron. • Small chests, used as jewel cases, were sometimes made of silver or gold. • Cabinets were made of the same materials as chests Wooden Chest and were often beautifully decorated. • They were frequently divided into compartments, but they had no sliding drawers and their wooden doors were without hinges or locks. • The cabinets in the library held books, while those in the alae held wax masks of ancestors. 31 • A Cinerarium is the cremation chest . Marble Cremation Chest (cinerarium) Roman Period
  • 32. L AM P S • Romans had very simple & very ornate lamps: containers for olive oil or melted fat, with loosely twisted threads for the wick(s), drawn out through one or more holes in the cover or the top. • There was also usually a hole through which the lamp was filled. As there was no chimney, the flame must have been uncertain and dim. • Some lamps had handles. Some were suspended from ceilings with chains. Others were kept on stands. • For lighting public rooms there were tall stands like those of our floor lamps, from which numerous lamps could be hung. This was called a candelabrum. It must have originally been 32 intended for candles, but they were rarely used Base of a lamp as the Romans were not skilled candlemakers. Roman Period
  • 33. OTHE R FURNISHINGS • The Romans produced heat with their charcoal stoves, or braziers. These were metal boxes which held hot coals. They were raised on legs and provided with handles. • The clock, did not exist in Roman times. In the peristylum or garden there was sometimes a sundial, which measured the hours of the day by the shadow of a stick or pin. A sundial gives the correct time twice a Sun-dial year if it is calculated for the spot where it stands. • A clepsydra was a water clock (a container filled with water, which escaped from it at a fixed rate, the changing level marking the hours on a scale). This was also borrowed from the Greeks. 33 Early water clock Roman Period
  • 34. Ancient Roman Bakery 34 Wealthy Family’s Home Roman Period
  • 35. S YM B O L S & M O T I F S • Some motifs found in Roman art and architecture are the human figure, • acanthus, rosette, rinceau, swan, eagle, monopodium, lion, oxen, sphinx, griffin, grotesque, wave pattern, festoon, anthemion, fret, Acanthus Leaves and laurel wreath. Garland Motif Laurel wreath on the head 35 Wall painting of a garden scene with fountain and birds, from Oplontis, Roman Period
  • 36. R O M AN AR T & S C U L P T U R E  Portraiture - Portraiture is a dominant genre of Roman sculpture, growing perhaps from the traditional Roman emphasis on family and ancestors; the entrance hall (atrium) of a Roman elite house displayed ancestral portrait busts.  Religious and funerary art - Religious art was also a major form of Roman sculpture. Roman sarcophagus, offer examples of intricate reliefs that depict scenes often based on Greek Roman portraiture and Roman mythology or mystery religions that offered personal salvation, and allegorical representations.  Funerary art - Roman funerary art also offers a variety of scenes from everyday life, such as game-playing, hunting, and 36 military endeavors. Sarcophagus with battle scene between Romans and Germans. – in Marble. Roman Period