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Mosaics of The Villa Romana del
Casale Piazza Armerina
The
Villa Romana del Casale is located about 5km outside the town of Piazza
Armerina it is the richest, largest and most complex collection of late
Roman mosaics in the world. The Villa Romana del Casale is a UNESCO World
Heritage Site.
The Villa Romana del Casale was constructed on the remains of an older
villa in the first quarter of the fourth century, probably as the centre
of a huge latifundium covering the entire surrounding area. How long the
villa kept this role is not known, maybe for less that 150 years, but
the complex remained inhabited and a village grew around it, named Platia,
derived from palatium. It was damaged, maybe destroyed during the domination
of the Vandals and the Visigoths, but the buildings remained in use, at
least in part, during the Byzantine and Arab period. The site was finally
abandoned for good when a landslide covered the villa in the 12th century
CE, and remaining inhabitants moved to the current location of Piazza
Armerina
The existence of the villa was almost entirely forgotten (some of the
tallest parts have always been above ground) and the area used for cultivation.
Pieces of mosaics and some columns were found early in the 19th century,
and some excavations were carried out later in that century, but the first
serious excavations were performed by Paolo Orsi in 1929, and later by
Giuseppe Cultrera in 1935-39. The latest major excavations were in the
period 1950-60 by Gino Vinicio Gentile after which the current cover was
build. A few very localised excavations have been performed in the 1970s
by Andrea Carandini. .
In late antiquity most of the Sicilian hinterland was partitioned into
huge agricultural estates called "latifundia" (sing. "latifundium").
The size of the villa and the amount and quality of the artwork indicate
that the villa was the main centre of such a latifundium, whose owner
was probably a member of senatorial class if not of the imperial family
itself, i.e., the absolute upper class of the Roman Empire.
The villa has served several purposes. The villa contained some rooms
that were clearly residential, others that certainly had representative
purposes and a number of rooms whose intended use cannot be discerned
today, though they are definitely not for production purposes. As such
the villa would probably have been the permanent or semi-permanent residence
of the owner; it would have been where the owner, in his role as patron,
would receive his local clients; and it would have been the administrative
centre of the latifundium.
Currently only the manorial parts of the complex have been excavated.
The ancillary structures, housing for the slaves, workshops, stables etc,
have not yet been located.
The villa was a single-story building, centred around the peristyle, around
which almost all the main public and private rooms were organised. Entrance
to the peristyle is via the atrium from the W., with the thermal baths
to the NW., service rooms and probably guest rooms to the N., private
apartments and a huge basilica to the E., and rooms of unknown purpose
to the S. Somewhat detached, almost as an afterthought, is the separate
area to the S. with the elliptical peristyle, service rooms and a huge
triclinium.
For additional informations about Piazza Armerina visit
http://www.villaromanadelcasale.net
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