Stanford Digital Forma Urbis Romae Project

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     ID AND LOCATION
    Stanford # 271
    AG1980 # 271
    PM1960 # 271
    Slab # unknown
    Adjoins none

     CONDITION
    Located false
    Incised true
    Surviving true
    Subfragments 1
    Plaster Parts 0
    Back Surface smooth
    Slab Edges 0
    Clamp Holes 0
    Tassello no

     TECHNICAL INFO
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     BIBLIOGRAPHY

    Photograph (14 KB)
    Note about photographs

    PM 1960 Plates: 43
    AG 1980 Plates: 44
     
    IDENTIFICATION
    Passageway separating rows of rooms?
    INSCRIPTION
    None

    3D Model Full model
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    ANALYSIS
    Description On the left, what seems to be a row of vertical rooms opens onto a vertical alley or corridor in the center of the fragment. On the right, a wall traverses the piece, parallel to the front of the row of rooms. A dividing wall emerges at an oblique angle on the right side of this wall.

    Identification The fragment is too small to allow an identification of the architecture. It seems to depict a row of tabernae on the left.

    Significance 3D digital matching may allow us to join this tiny piece to larger identified and located areas of the Map.

    HISTORY OF FRAGMENT
    Like the majority of FUR fragments, this piece was discovered in 1562 in a garden behind the Church of Saints Cosmas and Damian. From here, it was transferred to the Palazzo Farnese and stored there. The fragment was later used as building material in the 17th c. construction of the Farnese family’s Giardino Segreto (“Secret Garden”) near the Via Giulia, and was rediscovered in 1888 or 1898 when the walls of the garden were demolished. Since then, it has been stored with the other known FUR fragments in various places: the storerooms of the Commissione Archeologica (1888/1898-1903), the Antiquarium Comunale (1924-1939), the Capitoline Museums (1939-1955), the Palazzo Braschi (1955-1998), and since 1998 in the Museo della Civiltà Romana in EUR under the auspices of the Sovraintendenza ai Beni Culturali del Comune di Roma. (This fragment’s history corresponds to Iter E’’ as summarized in PM 1960, p. 56.) N.B. PM 1960 does not reveal the whereabouts of the fragment between 1903 and 1924.

    Text by Tina Najbjerg

    KEYWORDS
    tabernae

    Stanford Graphics | Stanford Classics | Sovraintendenza ai Beni Culturali del Comune di Roma

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