Tuesday, May 12, 2020

What Were Ancient Roman Apartments

In the city of ancient Rome, only the wealthy could afford to live in a domus—in this case, house, like a mansion. For most,  Rome apartments—or the back rooms of their ground floor shops—were the affordable alternative, making Rome the first urban, apartment-based society. The Rome apartments were often in buildings called insulae (sg. insula,  literally, island). Some Rome apartments may have been in buildings 7-8 stories high. Lodging houses were diversoria, where residents (hospites or diversitores) lived in cellae rooms. Also Known As:  Cenacula, Insulae, Aediculae (Frier) Roman Apartment Terminology Generally, insula is treated as a synonym for a Roman apartment building, although sometimes it can refer to the Rome apartments themselves or tabernae (shops), etc. The individual apartments in the insula were called cenacula (sg. cenaculum) at least in Imperial records known as the Regionaries. The Latin that seems closest to Rome apartments, cenacula, is formed from the Latin word for a meal, cena, making cenaculum signify a dining area, but the cenacula were for more than dining. Hermansen says the balcony and/or windows of the Rome apartments were major centers of social life in Rome. Upper-story windows (on the buildings outsides) were illegally used for dumping. The Rome apartments may have contained 3 types of rooms: cubicula (bedrooms)exedra (sitting room)medianum corridors facing the street and like the atrium of a domus. Wealth Through Property Romans, including  Cicero, could become wealthy through property. One of the ways property equated with wealth was the income property generated when it was rented out. Slumlord or otherwise, landlords of the Rome apartments could develop the capital needed to enter the Senate and live on the  Palatine Hill. Sources Regionaries-Type Insulae 2: Architectural/Residential Units at Rome, by Glenn R. Storey  American Journal of Archaeology  2002.The Medianum and the Roman Apartment, by G. Hermansen.  Phoenix, Vol. 24, No. 4 (Winter, 1970), pp. 342-347.The Rental Market in Early Imp

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