Stanford Digital Forma Urbis Romae Project

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     ID AND LOCATION
    Stanford # 326
    AG1980 # 326
    PM1960 # 326
    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 (43 KB)
    Note about photographs

    PM 1960 Plates: 45
    AG 1980 Plates: 46
     
    IDENTIFICATION
    Two intersecting streets flanked by rooms
    INSCRIPTION
    None

    3D Model Full model
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    ANALYSIS
    Description A horizontal street is intersected by a vertical street from the top. They divide the depicted architecture into three sections. At bottom, the front of a row of rooms is visible. In the top right corner are three small, square rooms. Top left, parts of two rooms are visible.

    Identification Some of these rooms are probably tabernae. Each shop would have consisted of a single room with a wide opening towards the street that could be screened off a night. Some owners probably resided with their families on a wooden platform in the back of theirs shops, although the small size of the tabernae in the rop right corner of this fragment may indicate they were strictly for commercial use.

    Significance This fragment is typical of non-identified fragments of the Plan. No monumental buildings are represented, and the fragment instead provides a view of the lesser known structures that made up the urban fabric of Rome: the residential and commercial buildings.

    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. It was not among the fragments that were reproduced in the Renaissance drawings that are now kept in the Vatican, but Giovanni Pietro Bellori included it in his 1673 publication. In 1742, the fragment was moved to the Capitoline Museums and exhibited with some of the other known fragments in wooden frames along the main staircase. Since then, it has been stored with the other FUR fragments in various places: the storerooms of the Capitoline Museums (1903-1924), the Antiquarium Comunale (1924-1939), the Capitoline Museums again (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.)

    Text by Tina Najbjerg

    KEYWORDS
    tabernae, street

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

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