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  2. Cavaedium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cavaedium

    It also daylit, passively cooled and passively ventilated the house. The atrium was the most important room of the ancient Roman house. The main entrance led into it; patrones received their clientes there, and marriages, funerals, and other ceremonies were conducted there. In earlier and more modest homes, the atrium was the common room used ...

  3. Atrium (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atrium_(architecture)

    A late 19th-century artist's reimagining of an atrium in a Pompeian domus Illustration of the atrium in the building of the baths in the Roman villa of "Els Munts", close to Tarraco. In a domus, a large house in ancient Roman architecture, the atrium was the open central court with enclosed rooms on all sides.

  4. Domus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Domus

    Thus a wealthy Roman citizen lived in a large house separated into two parts, and linked together through the tablinum or study or by a small passageway. Surrounding the atrium were arranged the master's family's main rooms: the small cubicula or bedrooms, the tablinum , which served as a living room or study, and the triclinium , or dining-room.

  5. House of the Vestals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_the_Vestals

    The Atrium Vestae was a three-story 50-room palace in the ancient Roman Forum built around an elegant elongated atrium or court with a double pool. To the very east is an open vaulted hall with a statue of Numa Pompilius, the mythological founder of the cult. [3]

  6. House of Marcus Lucretius Fronto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Marcus_Lucretius...

    Atrium and south wall of the tablinum. The House of Marcus Lucretius Fronto (Italian: Casa di Marco Lucrezio Frontone, [1] V.4.a) is a Roman house in Pompeii with well-preserved wall paintings in both the late Third Style as well as the Fourth Style.

  7. Atrium Libertatis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atrium_Libertatis

    The Atrium Libertatis (Latin for "House of Freedom") was a monument of ancient Rome, the seat of the censors' archive, located on the saddle that connected the Capitolium to the Quirinal Hill, [1] a short distance from the Roman Forum.

  8. Tablinum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tablinum

    Architectural details of a Domus italica with the tablinum marked number 5.. In Roman architecture, a tablinum (or tabulinum, from tabula, board, picture) was a room generally situated on one side of the atrium and opposite to the entrance; it opened in the rear onto the peristyle, with either a large window or only an anteroom or curtain.

  9. House of Sallust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/House_of_Sallust

    The House of Sallust (also known in earlier excavation reports as the House of Actaeon) was an elite residence in the ancient Roman city of Pompeii and among the most sumptuous of the city. The oldest parts of the house have been dated to the 4th century BCE, but the main expansions were built in the 2nd century BCE during the Roman period.