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Villa Boscoreale

Villa Boscoreale is a name given to any of several Roman villas discovered in the district of Boscoreale,[1] Italy. They were all buried and preserved by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD, along with Pompeii and Herculaneum.[2] The only one visible in situ today is the Villa Regina, the others being reburied soon after their discovery. Although these villas can be classified as "rustic" (villae rusticae) rather than of otium due to their agricultural sections and sometimes lack of the most luxurious amenities, they were often embellished with extremely luxurious decorations such as frescoes, testifying to the wealth of the owners. Among the most important finds are the exquisite frescoes from the Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor and the sumptuous Boscoreale Treasure of the Villa della Pisanella, which is now displayed in several major museums.

Villa Regina at Boscoreale
Villa Regina, view from above
LocationBoscoreale, Province of Naples, Campania, Italy
RegionMagna Graecia
Coordinates40°45′41″N 14°28′17″E / 40.761389°N 14.471389°E / 40.761389; 14.471389
TypeDwelling
Site notes
ManagementSoprintendenza Speciale per i Beni Archeologici di Pompei, Ercolano e Stabia
WebsiteSito Archeologico di Boscoreale (in Italian)

In Roman times this area, like the whole of Campania, was agricultural despite its proximity to cities including Pompeii, and specialised in wine and olive oil.[3]

Information on, and objects from, the villas can also be seen in the nearby Antiquarium di Boscoreale.

Other Villas in Boscoreale edit

Many other Roman villas were discovered in the vicinity, often by "treasure" hunters towards the end of the 19th century after which they were reburied, including notably the villas:

  • in "d'Acunzo property", Piazza. Stazione FF.SS.[4]
  • of N. Popidius Florus, from which frescoes were taken
  • in via Casone Grotta (found in 1986)
  • of M. Livius Marcellus[5]
  • of fondo Prisco[6]
  • of Asellius
  • in contrada Giuliana, Fondo Zurlo.[7]
  • in contrada Cività, Fondo Brancaccio[8]
  • of Piazza. Mercato, Proprietà Cirillo[9]
  • in contrada Centopiedi-al Tirone, Proprietà Vitiello[10]

Villa Regina edit

 
Villa Regina interior view
 
The wine cellar with "dolia"
 
Pig found in a room of the villa Regina

This rustic villa was discovered more recently in 1977 and therefore has been preserved in its complete state as buried 8m below ground level. The villa is a comfortable working farm rather than a luxurious estate that others nearby were. Nonetheless, an elegant central courtyard is colonnaded on three sides with columns of red and white stucco.

Large quantities of pottery and farm implements were found. Plaster casts of the original entrance doors were made from the hollow spaces left. A plaster cast of a pig found here and killed in the catastrophe was also made.

It also includes preserved parts of a wine press.[11] Near the centre of the villa is the wine cellar in which 18 dolia, of total capacity 10,000 litres, were buried for storing the must from the adjoining press.

An unusual find was an oil lamp dating from the 3-5th c. AD showing that the place was tunnelled into in the later Roman era.

Plants at Villa Regina edit

Pollen analysis conducted at Villa Regina identified various species of cultivated plant life. Tree varieties included Birch, Hazelnut, Cypress, Ash, Walnut, Pine and Olive. Flowers at the Villa included Anemone, Borage, Dianthus, Amaranth, Aster, Sedge, Geranium, Buttercup, Mallow.[12] Pollen samples additionally confirmed the cultivation of grapes at Villa Regina, likely pressed into wine on site. The holes in the ground left by the roots of the Roman vines were found and vines have again been planted in them.[citation needed]

Villa of P. Fannius Synistor edit

 
Plan of Villa of P. Fannius Synistor
 
Transparent glass bowl of fruit. Detail from wall painting in Bedroom M of the Villa of P. Fannius Synistor

Although the villa was of relatively modest size compared to others in the area and had no atrium, pool or sculpture collection, its frescoes were exceptional in their beauty and quality.[13]

Evidence in tablets and graffiti shows that the house was probably built around 40-30 BC.[14] The villa was privately discovered, excavated, partially dismantled and reburied in 1900.

The villa had three stories, complete with a bath suite and an underground passage to a stable and agricultural buildings, the latter not excavated. The central ground floor of the living quarters consisted of over thirty rooms or enclosures surrounding a peristyle. The building featured an impressive main entrance approached by five broad steps leading to a colonnaded forecourt rather than the typical atrium.

Ownership of the villa has been contested. While there is no doubt P. Fannius Synistor did reside there, excavated bronze tablets show another name, that of Lucius Herennius Florus. Many things were marked with seals in ancient Rome to indicate possession. It is believed that since the tablet with the letters "L. HER. FLO" on it was found inside the villa, it must serve as a mark of villa ownership.[15] These two are the only confirmed owners in the early 1st century BC and 1st century AD, though there may have been earlier owners.

Art edit

 
Wall fresco of a seated woman with a kithara, 40-30 BC, from the Villa Boscoreale of P. Fannius Synistor; Late Roman Republic, but most likely representing Berenice II of Ptolemaic Egypt wearing a stephane (i.e. royal diadem) on her head[16]
 
Roman fresco from Boscoreale, Metropolitan Museum of Art

The Villa is most notable for its works of art, especially its highly skilled buon fresco paintings, said to be the highest quality Roman frescoes ever found[17] and which are now scattered around the world after being auctioned following removal.

Most of the figures in the frescoes have characteristics of Greek Hellenism or Classicism. For instance, those found in the living room appear to be depictions of either philosophers, such as Epicurus, Zeno or Menedemus, or possibly old kings, like King Kinyras of Cyprus.[18] Similarly, the bedrooms of the Second Style also evoke Hellenistic qualities, such as are seen at the Tomb of Lyson or at Kallikles.[19] At a time when the Roman Republic was ending and classicism somewhat fading, this is considered as an interesting comment on style and taste. Seemingly, Greek representations in the home were considered acceptable, even admired and sophisticated. The images survived the quick succession of Vesuvian cataclysms because of the skill of the fresco work and the absence of organic materials such as indigo, murex purple, red madder among its pigments. The reddening of some of its yellow ochre shows temperatures to have exceeded 300 °C.[20]

The Metropolitan Museum of Art, together with King's College, London, is building a virtual model of the Villa, linking the scattered frescoes, based on the notes and plan drawn at the time of excavation by archaeologist Felice Barnabei (1902), photographs taken of the excavation, the research of Phyllis W. Lehmann (1953) and axonometric drawings of the plan, locating the images on the walls, by Maxwell Anderson (1987).[21]

Metropolitan Museum cubiculum reconstruction edit

 
Bacchus and Silenus, British Museum

The fullest reconstruction from original frescoes at present is of a bedroom (cubiculum diurnum), one of the holdings of the Metropolitan Museum since 1903, and since 2007 a feature of the new Roman Gallery. It consists of most of a newly cleaned and reconstructed set of walls entirely painted in highly accomplished fresco.[22] These spacious Roman II Style murals represent their walls as open above socle or dado height, except for the architraves above and a few columns that, together with those other features, frame vividly coloured architectural views of buildings, columns, landscape, garden scenes, religious statues, beyond, emphasizing expansion and grandeur, but including no humans and only a few birds on the short, window wall. This is also the technique in other unreconstructed rooms. For example, In another bedroom, known as Room M, the frescoes depict columns that appear to expand into another room, giving the sense of a much larger, almost unending, space. The facing long walls (19 ft or 5.8 m) of the Metropolitan cubiculum are mirror images of each other, possibly by transfer, with variations. In addition, each is divided into four panels by painted columns.

Distance in these paintings is built up through a series of orthogonal architectural surfaces, and indicated by overlap occlusion, foreshortening, diminution, pronounced aerial perspective, but without consistent vanishing points.[23] Modelling is indicated by side-shading with slight, selective cast shadow. Pompeian red in front planes, contrasting with the blue tone of the fainter, further planes, provides an additional effective cue for depth. The room had one, north-facing, outside window, through which pyroclastic flows from Vesuvius appear to have entered. As part of the sophisticated depictive scheme, the dado or lower parts of the walls are depicted as themselves, but in First Style. Ledges and niches there show near objects: "metal and glass vases on shelves and tables appearing to project out from the wall", playfully belying the common impression that perspective is always for depicting recession from the picture plane.[24] In other parts of the Villa there are brightly coloured non-figurative walls, in First Style, some of which are on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Louvre Museum.

Gallery edit

Villa della Pisanella edit

 
Plan of Villa della Pisanella: A - courtyard, atrium, B - kitchen, C-G - bath with tepidarium, caldarium, etc., H - stables (?), E - larder, K and L - living rooms, N - dining room, M - anteroom, O - bakery, P - wine press, Q - corridor, R - wine storehouse, T - threshing floor, U - pluvial, VVV - living rooms, X - hand mill, Z - oil mills

The villa was first unearthed by the landowners over several seasons from 1876.

In 1894 excavations brought to light a villa rustica covering 1000 m2 with clearly defined residential sector with baths and a pars rustica' with farm buildings and warehouses. The breeding of farmyard animals was practiced and most of the rooms on the ground floor were used for processing and conservation of oil, wine and cereals.

Everything was still in place and arrangement of the objects was exactly as they would normally have been: furnishings, bronze bathtubs decorated with masks in the shape of lion heads seemed to be ready for use. In a large chest were fifty keys and silver tableware; in the kitchen the skeleton of a dog on a chain; in the stable the bones of several tethered horses, one of which had managed to wriggle out and escape. In the olive pressing-room (torcularium[25]) the first three human skeletons came to light, including that of a woman, probably the mistress of the house, who wore splendid gold earrings with topaz jewels[26] and was probably the last owner, named Maxima, a name written on many of the silver vessels. The previous owner of the villa was probably L. Caecilius Lucundus, a banker from Pompeii, who inherited the wealth of the Julio-Claudian dynasty in Campania, who was the father of Maxima.[27]

In 1895 in the torcularium the magnificent so-called Boscoreale Treasure was found in a chest and consisted of 102 items: silver tableware, bracelets, earrings, rings, a double gold chain. A thousand gold coins were still in the remains of a leather bag. At the time of the eruption it was probably one of the safest rooms in the villa where the owner gave the order to a trusted man to hide it for better times. All the treasures were smuggled out to France and sold.

The excavations of the villa were resumed in 1896 by Angiolo Pasqui.[28]

References edit

  1. ^ "Villas in Pompeii and in the area between Vesuvius and Stabia". Pompeiiinpictures.com. 24 October 2021. Retrieved 14 May 2022.
  2. ^ "Boscoreale - AD79eruption". sites.google.com.
  3. ^ Hornblower, Simon and Antony Spawforth. Oxford Classical Dictionary. London: Oxford University Press, 1996. 254.
  4. ^ "Boscoreale. La villa del Fondo Acunzo. Villa rustica in fondo D'Acunzo. Excavated by Sig. Ferruccio De Prisco in 1903. Reburied after excavation". pompeiiinpictures.com. 12 October 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  5. ^ "Boscoreale, Villa Rustica di Marcus Livius Marcellus. Excavated in 1928, but only in part". pompeiiinpictures.com. 13 October 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  6. ^ "Boscoreale now Pompeii, Villa rustica nel Fondo di Antonio Prisco". pompeiiinpictures.com. 12 October 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  7. ^ "Pompeii (formerly Boscoreale), Villa del fondo Ippolito Zurlo". pompeiiinpictures.com. 6 October 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  8. ^ "Pompeii (formerly Boscoreale). Villa rustica nel fondo di Raffaele Brancaccio". pompeiiinpictures.com (in Italian). 12 October 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  9. ^ "Boscoreale, Villa rustica in proprietà del Vito Antonio Cirillo near piazza Mercato". pompeiiinpictures.com. 6 October 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  10. ^ "Boscoreale, Villa rustica nel fondo Pasquale Vitiello. Excavated 1901 -1902". pompeiiinpictures.com. 11 October 2021. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  11. ^ "Boscoreale, Villa Regina. Villa rustica in Contrada Villa Regina, not far from the Sarno Canal". pompeiiinpictures.com. 10 September 2023. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  12. ^ Grüger, Eberhard (13 March 2002). Pollen analysis of soil samples from the A.D. 79 level at station Boscoreale. Pangaea. OCLC 899273360.
  13. ^ "Roman Frescoes from Boscoreale: The Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor in Reality and Virtual Reality" Bergmann et al., The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin Spring 2010
  14. ^ "The Villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale." The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin Winter 1987-88: 17-36.
  15. ^ Milne, Margerie J. "A Bronze Stamp from Boscoreale." The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 09. 1930: 188-190.
  16. ^ Pfrommer, Michael; Towne-Markus, Elana (2001). Greek Gold from Hellenistic Egypt. Los Angeles: Getty Publications (J. Paul Getty Trust). ISBN 0-89236-633-8, pp. 22–23.
  17. ^ "Roman Frescoes from Boscoreale: The Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor in Reality and Virtual Reality" Bergmann et al., The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin Spring 2010, p 14
  18. ^ "The Villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale" p. 29
  19. ^ "The Villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale" p. 31
  20. ^ Rudolf Meyer, "The Conservation of the Frescoes from Boscoreale in the Metropolitan Museum, in Roman Frescoes from Boscoreale.
  21. ^ Bettina Bergmann et al., Roman Frescoes from Boscoreale: The Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor in Reality and Virtual Reality (Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 62.4 [Spring 2010]). This, the most recent work on the Villa, is the main source for information not otherwise attributed.
  22. ^ "The Villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale" p. 17
  23. ^ Hurt, Carla (9 August 2013). "Romans paint better perspective than Renaissance artists". Found in Antiquity. Retrieved 4 October 2020.
  24. ^ "The Villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale" p. 21
  25. ^ "Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Torcularium". www.perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  26. ^ Egon Caesar Conte Corti, The Destruction and Resurrection of Pompeii and Herculaneum Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1951
  27. ^ "Exhibition "Silver from the Louvre. Boscoreale Treasure" - National Archaeological Institute with Museum". naim.bg. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  28. ^ Mazzocco, Luca. "Angiolo Pasqui, Etru a Casa - Protagonista". www.museoetru.it (in Italian). Retrieved 21 March 2023 – via Museo Nazionale Etrusco.

Sources edit

  • Hornblower, Simon; Antony Spawforth (1996). Oxford Classical Dictionary. London: Oxford University Press. p. 254. ISBN 0-19-866172-X.
  • Milne, Margerie J. (1930). "A Bronze Stamp from Boscoreale". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin. 25 (9). The Metropolitan Museum of Art: 188–190. doi:10.2307/3255709. JSTOR 3255709.
  • "The Villa of P. Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale". The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin. 45 (3): 17–36. Winter 1987–1988. doi:10.2307/3269140. JSTOR 3269140.
  • Bettina Bergmann et al., Roman Frescoes from Boscoreale: The Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor in Reality and Virtual Reality (Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 62.4 [Spring 2010])

Further reading edit

  • Pasqui, Angiolo & Nocca, Giuseppe (2021). La villa pompeiana detta della Pisanella a Boscoreale : un esempio di villa rustica di epoca romana. Roma: Arbor Sapientiae. ISBN 978-8831341332[1]
  • de Montebello, Philippe & Howard, Kathleen (1994). The Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide (2nd ed.). New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 978-0-87099-710-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

External links edit

  Media related to Archaeology of Boscoreale at Wikimedia Commons

  • Official Pompeii site of the SANP
  • Antiquarium of Pompeii
  • Villa Regina
  • Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor
  • The Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide, works of art selected by Philippe de Montebello, a collection catalogue from The Metropolitan Museum of Art containing information on Villa Boscoreale (page 325)
  • Official site of the National Archaeological Museum in Naples: themed collections for Pompeii, Herculaneum, Boscoreale, Stabiae
  • Some of the best illustrations of art and artistic small finds many put back into their original find locations on pompeiiinpictures
  • Romano-Campanian Wall-Painting
  1. ^ "La villa pompeiana detta della Pisanella a Boscoreale : un esempio di villa rustica di epoca romana | WorldCat.org". www.worldcat.org (in Dutch). Retrieved 21 March 2023.

villa, boscoreale, name, given, several, roman, villas, discovered, district, boscoreale, italy, they, were, buried, preserved, eruption, mount, vesuvius, along, with, pompeii, herculaneum, only, visible, situ, today, villa, regina, others, being, reburied, so. Villa Boscoreale is a name given to any of several Roman villas discovered in the district of Boscoreale 1 Italy They were all buried and preserved by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD along with Pompeii and Herculaneum 2 The only one visible in situ today is the Villa Regina the others being reburied soon after their discovery Although these villas can be classified as rustic villae rusticae rather than of otium due to their agricultural sections and sometimes lack of the most luxurious amenities they were often embellished with extremely luxurious decorations such as frescoes testifying to the wealth of the owners Among the most important finds are the exquisite frescoes from the Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor and the sumptuous Boscoreale Treasure of the Villa della Pisanella which is now displayed in several major museums Villa Regina at BoscorealeVilla Regina view from aboveLocationBoscoreale Province of Naples Campania ItalyRegionMagna GraeciaCoordinates40 45 41 N 14 28 17 E 40 761389 N 14 471389 E 40 761389 14 471389TypeDwellingSite notesManagementSoprintendenza Speciale per i Beni Archeologici di Pompei Ercolano e StabiaWebsiteSito Archeologico di Boscoreale in Italian Wikimedia Commons has media related to Archaeology of Boscoreale In Roman times this area like the whole of Campania was agricultural despite its proximity to cities including Pompeii and specialised in wine and olive oil 3 Information on and objects from the villas can also be seen in the nearby Antiquarium di Boscoreale Contents 1 Other Villas in Boscoreale 2 Villa Regina 2 1 Plants at Villa Regina 3 Villa of P Fannius Synistor 3 1 Art 3 2 Metropolitan Museum cubiculum reconstruction 3 3 Gallery 4 Villa della Pisanella 5 References 5 1 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksOther Villas in Boscoreale editMany other Roman villas were discovered in the vicinity often by treasure hunters towards the end of the 19th century after which they were reburied including notably the villas in d Acunzo property Piazza Stazione FF SS 4 of N Popidius Florus from which frescoes were taken in via Casone Grotta found in 1986 of M Livius Marcellus 5 of fondo Prisco 6 of Asellius in contrada Giuliana Fondo Zurlo 7 in contrada Civita Fondo Brancaccio 8 of Piazza Mercato Proprieta Cirillo 9 in contrada Centopiedi al Tirone Proprieta Vitiello 10 Villa Regina edit nbsp Villa Regina interior view nbsp The wine cellar with dolia nbsp Pig found in a room of the villa Regina This rustic villa was discovered more recently in 1977 and therefore has been preserved in its complete state as buried 8m below ground level The villa is a comfortable working farm rather than a luxurious estate that others nearby were Nonetheless an elegant central courtyard is colonnaded on three sides with columns of red and white stucco Large quantities of pottery and farm implements were found Plaster casts of the original entrance doors were made from the hollow spaces left A plaster cast of a pig found here and killed in the catastrophe was also made It also includes preserved parts of a wine press 11 Near the centre of the villa is the wine cellar in which 18 dolia of total capacity 10 000 litres were buried for storing the must from the adjoining press An unusual find was an oil lamp dating from the 3 5th c AD showing that the place was tunnelled into in the later Roman era Plants at Villa Regina edit Pollen analysis conducted at Villa Regina identified various species of cultivated plant life Tree varieties included Birch Hazelnut Cypress Ash Walnut Pine and Olive Flowers at the Villa included Anemone Borage Dianthus Amaranth Aster Sedge Geranium Buttercup Mallow 12 Pollen samples additionally confirmed the cultivation of grapes at Villa Regina likely pressed into wine on site The holes in the ground left by the roots of the Roman vines were found and vines have again been planted in them citation needed Villa of P Fannius Synistor edit nbsp Plan of Villa of P Fannius Synistor nbsp Transparent glass bowl of fruit Detail from wall painting in Bedroom M of the Villa of P Fannius Synistor Although the villa was of relatively modest size compared to others in the area and had no atrium pool or sculpture collection its frescoes were exceptional in their beauty and quality 13 Evidence in tablets and graffiti shows that the house was probably built around 40 30 BC 14 The villa was privately discovered excavated partially dismantled and reburied in 1900 The villa had three stories complete with a bath suite and an underground passage to a stable and agricultural buildings the latter not excavated The central ground floor of the living quarters consisted of over thirty rooms or enclosures surrounding a peristyle The building featured an impressive main entrance approached by five broad steps leading to a colonnaded forecourt rather than the typical atrium Ownership of the villa has been contested While there is no doubt P Fannius Synistor did reside there excavated bronze tablets show another name that of Lucius Herennius Florus Many things were marked with seals in ancient Rome to indicate possession It is believed that since the tablet with the letters L HER FLO on it was found inside the villa it must serve as a mark of villa ownership 15 These two are the only confirmed owners in the early 1st century BC and 1st century AD though there may have been earlier owners Art edit nbsp Wall fresco of a seated woman with a kithara 40 30 BC from the Villa Boscoreale of P Fannius Synistor Late Roman Republic but most likely representing Berenice II of Ptolemaic Egypt wearing a stephane i e royal diadem on her head 16 nbsp Roman fresco from Boscoreale Metropolitan Museum of Art The Villa is most notable for its works of art especially its highly skilled buon fresco paintings said to be the highest quality Roman frescoes ever found 17 and which are now scattered around the world after being auctioned following removal Most of the figures in the frescoes have characteristics of Greek Hellenism or Classicism For instance those found in the living room appear to be depictions of either philosophers such as Epicurus Zeno or Menedemus or possibly old kings like King Kinyras of Cyprus 18 Similarly the bedrooms of the Second Style also evoke Hellenistic qualities such as are seen at the Tomb of Lyson or at Kallikles 19 At a time when the Roman Republic was ending and classicism somewhat fading this is considered as an interesting comment on style and taste Seemingly Greek representations in the home were considered acceptable even admired and sophisticated The images survived the quick succession of Vesuvian cataclysms because of the skill of the fresco work and the absence of organic materials such as indigo murex purple red madder among its pigments The reddening of some of its yellow ochre shows temperatures to have exceeded 300 C 20 The Metropolitan Museum of Art together with King s College London is building a virtual model of the Villa linking the scattered frescoes based on the notes and plan drawn at the time of excavation by archaeologist Felice Barnabei 1902 photographs taken of the excavation the research of Phyllis W Lehmann 1953 and axonometric drawings of the plan locating the images on the walls by Maxwell Anderson 1987 21 Metropolitan Museum cubiculum reconstruction edit nbsp Bacchus and Silenus British Museum The fullest reconstruction from original frescoes at present is of a bedroom cubiculum diurnum one of the holdings of the Metropolitan Museum since 1903 and since 2007 a feature of the new Roman Gallery It consists of most of a newly cleaned and reconstructed set of walls entirely painted in highly accomplished fresco 22 These spacious Roman II Style murals represent their walls as open above socle or dado height except for the architraves above and a few columns that together with those other features frame vividly coloured architectural views of buildings columns landscape garden scenes religious statues beyond emphasizing expansion and grandeur but including no humans and only a few birds on the short window wall This is also the technique in other unreconstructed rooms For example In another bedroom known as Room M the frescoes depict columns that appear to expand into another room giving the sense of a much larger almost unending space The facing long walls 19 ft or 5 8 m of the Metropolitan cubiculum are mirror images of each other possibly by transfer with variations In addition each is divided into four panels by painted columns Distance in these paintings is built up through a series of orthogonal architectural surfaces and indicated by overlap occlusion foreshortening diminution pronounced aerial perspective but without consistent vanishing points 23 Modelling is indicated by side shading with slight selective cast shadow Pompeian red in front planes contrasting with the blue tone of the fainter further planes provides an additional effective cue for depth The room had one north facing outside window through which pyroclastic flows from Vesuvius appear to have entered As part of the sophisticated depictive scheme the dado or lower parts of the walls are depicted as themselves but in First Style Ledges and niches there show near objects metal and glass vases on shelves and tables appearing to project out from the wall playfully belying the common impression that perspective is always for depicting recession from the picture plane 24 In other parts of the Villa there are brightly coloured non figurative walls in First Style some of which are on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Louvre Museum Gallery edit nbsp Cubiculum bedroom from the Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp Cubiculum bedroom from the Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale Fresco Roman Republican period Date ca 50 40 B C nbsp Architectural detail of 2D panel Cubiculum bedroom from the Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale Fresco Roman Republican period Date ca 50 40 B C Metropolitan Museum nbsp Cubiculum bedroom from the Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale Fresco Roman Republican period Date ca 50 40 B C nbsp Architectural detail of 2D panel Cubiculum bedroom from the Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale Fresco Roman Republican period Date ca 50 40 B C Metropolitan Museum nbsp Architectural detail of 2D panel of original east wall Cubiculum bedroom from the Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale Fresco Roman Republican period Date ca 50 40 B C Metropolitan Museum nbsp Closer detail showing treatment of orthogonal edges and color nbsp A winged genius from the peristyle nbsp Silenus mask from garland in exedraVilla della Pisanella edit nbsp Plan of Villa della Pisanella A courtyard atrium B kitchen C G bath with tepidarium caldarium etc H stables E larder K and L living rooms N dining room M anteroom O bakery P wine press Q corridor R wine storehouse T threshing floor U pluvial VVV living rooms X hand mill Z oil mills Further information Boscoreale Treasure The villa was first unearthed by the landowners over several seasons from 1876 In 1894 excavations brought to light a villa rustica covering 1000 m2 with clearly defined residential sector with baths and a pars rustica with farm buildings and warehouses The breeding of farmyard animals was practiced and most of the rooms on the ground floor were used for processing and conservation of oil wine and cereals Everything was still in place and arrangement of the objects was exactly as they would normally have been furnishings bronze bathtubs decorated with masks in the shape of lion heads seemed to be ready for use In a large chest were fifty keys and silver tableware in the kitchen the skeleton of a dog on a chain in the stable the bones of several tethered horses one of which had managed to wriggle out and escape In the olive pressing room torcularium 25 the first three human skeletons came to light including that of a woman probably the mistress of the house who wore splendid gold earrings with topaz jewels 26 and was probably the last owner named Maxima a name written on many of the silver vessels The previous owner of the villa was probably L Caecilius Lucundus a banker from Pompeii who inherited the wealth of the Julio Claudian dynasty in Campania who was the father of Maxima 27 In 1895 in the torcularium the magnificent so called Boscoreale Treasure was found in a chest and consisted of 102 items silver tableware bracelets earrings rings a double gold chain A thousand gold coins were still in the remains of a leather bag At the time of the eruption it was probably one of the safest rooms in the villa where the owner gave the order to a trusted man to hide it for better times All the treasures were smuggled out to France and sold The excavations of the villa were resumed in 1896 by Angiolo Pasqui 28 References edit Villas in Pompeii and in the area between Vesuvius and Stabia Pompeiiinpictures com 24 October 2021 Retrieved 14 May 2022 Boscoreale AD79eruption sites google com Hornblower Simon and Antony Spawforth Oxford Classical Dictionary London Oxford University Press 1996 254 Boscoreale La villa del Fondo Acunzo Villa rustica in fondo D Acunzo Excavated by Sig Ferruccio De Prisco in 1903 Reburied after excavation pompeiiinpictures com 12 October 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2024 Boscoreale Villa Rustica di Marcus Livius Marcellus Excavated in 1928 but only in part pompeiiinpictures com 13 October 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2024 Boscoreale now Pompeii Villa rustica nel Fondo di Antonio Prisco pompeiiinpictures com 12 October 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2024 Pompeii formerly Boscoreale Villa del fondo Ippolito Zurlo pompeiiinpictures com 6 October 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2024 Pompeii formerly Boscoreale Villa rustica nel fondo di Raffaele Brancaccio pompeiiinpictures com in Italian 12 October 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2024 Boscoreale Villa rustica in proprieta del Vito Antonio Cirillo near piazza Mercato pompeiiinpictures com 6 October 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2024 Boscoreale Villa rustica nel fondo Pasquale Vitiello Excavated 1901 1902 pompeiiinpictures com 11 October 2021 Retrieved 7 January 2024 Boscoreale Villa Regina Villa rustica in Contrada Villa Regina not far from the Sarno Canal pompeiiinpictures com 10 September 2023 Retrieved 7 January 2024 Gruger Eberhard 13 March 2002 Pollen analysis of soil samples from the A D 79 level at station Boscoreale Pangaea OCLC 899273360 Roman Frescoes from Boscoreale The Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor in Reality and Virtual Reality Bergmann et al The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin Spring 2010 The Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin Winter 1987 88 17 36 Milne Margerie J A Bronze Stamp from Boscoreale The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 09 1930 188 190 Pfrommer Michael Towne Markus Elana 2001 Greek Gold from Hellenistic Egypt Los Angeles Getty Publications J Paul Getty Trust ISBN 0 89236 633 8 pp 22 23 Roman Frescoes from Boscoreale The Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor in Reality and Virtual Reality Bergmann et al The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin Spring 2010 p 14 The Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale p 29 The Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale p 31 Rudolf Meyer The Conservation of the Frescoes from Boscoreale in the Metropolitan Museum in Roman Frescoes from Boscoreale Bettina Bergmann et al Roman Frescoes from Boscoreale The Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor in Reality and Virtual Reality Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 62 4 Spring 2010 This the most recent work on the Villa is the main source for information not otherwise attributed The Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale p 17 Hurt Carla 9 August 2013 Romans paint better perspective than Renaissance artists Found in Antiquity Retrieved 4 October 2020 The Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale p 21 Harry Thurston Peck Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities 1898 Torcularium www perseus tufts edu Retrieved 21 March 2023 Egon Caesar Conte Corti The Destruction and Resurrection of Pompeii and Herculaneum Routledge amp Kegan Paul 1951 Exhibition Silver from the Louvre Boscoreale Treasure National Archaeological Institute with Museum naim bg Retrieved 6 November 2015 Mazzocco Luca Angiolo Pasqui Etru a Casa Protagonista www museoetru it in Italian Retrieved 21 March 2023 via Museo Nazionale Etrusco Sources edit Hornblower Simon Antony Spawforth 1996 Oxford Classical Dictionary London Oxford University Press p 254 ISBN 0 19 866172 X Milne Margerie J 1930 A Bronze Stamp from Boscoreale The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 25 9 The Metropolitan Museum of Art 188 190 doi 10 2307 3255709 JSTOR 3255709 The Villa of P Fannius Synistor at Boscoreale The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 45 3 17 36 Winter 1987 1988 doi 10 2307 3269140 JSTOR 3269140 Bettina Bergmann et al Roman Frescoes from Boscoreale The Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor in Reality and Virtual Reality Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin 62 4 Spring 2010 Further reading editPasqui Angiolo amp Nocca Giuseppe 2021 La villa pompeiana detta della Pisanella a Boscoreale un esempio di villa rustica di epoca romana Roma Arbor Sapientiae ISBN 978 8831341332 1 de Montebello Philippe amp Howard Kathleen 1994 The Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide 2nd ed New York Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 978 0 87099 710 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link External links edit nbsp Media related to Archaeology of Boscoreale at Wikimedia Commons Official Pompeii site of the SANP Antiquarium of Pompeii Villa Regina Villa of Publius Fannius Synistor The Metropolitan Museum of Art Guide works of art selected by Philippe de Montebello a collection catalogue from The Metropolitan Museum of Art containing information on Villa Boscoreale page 325 Official site of the National Archaeological Museum in Naples themed collections for Pompeii Herculaneum Boscoreale Stabiae Some of the best illustrations of art and artistic small finds many put back into their original find locations on pompeiiinpictures Romano Campanian Wall Painting La villa pompeiana detta della Pisanella a Boscoreale un esempio di villa rustica di epoca romana WorldCat org www worldcat org in Dutch Retrieved 21 March 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Villa Boscoreale amp oldid 1194185171, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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