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A Roman villa was typically a farmhouse or country house in the territory of the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire, sometimes reaching extravagant proportions. Nevertheless, the term "Roman villa" generally covers buildings with the common features of being extra-urban (i.e. located outside urban settlements, unlike the domus which was inside ...
Plan showing later farm building overlay. The Villa Romana del Tellaro is a large, elaborate Roman villa dating from the late Roman Empire. [1] It is also known (in English) as the villa of Caddeddi, the name of the locality. [2] It is located south of Noto in the province of Syracuse, Sicily in southern Italy.
The extensive, luxurious Roman villa Palazzi di Casignana is located on the seashore and near the ancient road linking ancient Locri and Rhegion in today's province of Calabria, Italy. [1] It was discovered in 1964. [2] It reached its zenith during the late empire of the 4th c. AD, a period of turbulence elsewhere.
the village which includes the now-disused 17th century Villa Valadier overlooking the lake, built on the remains of the Roman villa or vicus (village). about 1 km to the north the remains of the (mainly public) baths next to the natural springs, the Aquae Apollinares, which had also been a healing sanctuary to Apollo since Etruscan times as ...
Villa of Maxentius and Mausoleum of Romulus. The Villa of Maxentius is an imperial villa in Rome, built by the Roman emperor Maxentius.The complex is located between the second and third miles of the ancient Appian Way, and consists of three main buildings: the palace, the circus of Maxentius and the dynastic mausoleum, designed in an inseparable architectural unit to honor Maxentius.
The Roman Villa of Desenzano Villa romana di Desenzano del Garda, is in the town of Desenzano del Garda on the shore of Lake Garda. It is located in the comune of the province of Brescia, in Lombardy, Italy. It is one of the most important late antiquity Roman villas in northern Italy. [1]
Archaeologists conducted a geophysical survey using magnetometer research and uncovered two previously unknown Roman villas, a roadside cemetery, farmsteads, and a web of roads that all provide a ...
The Gardens of Lucullus (Latin: Horti Lucullani) were the setting for an ancient villa on the Pincian Hill on the edge of Rome; they were laid out by Lucius Licinius Lucullus about 60 BC. The Villa Borghese gardens still cover 17 acres (6.9 ha) of green on the site, now in the heart of Rome, above the Spanish Steps .