House of the Surgeon

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Ground plan (Mau 1902)
Pompeii map
Woman painting a herm of Dionysus
House of the surgeon, late 19th-century painting by Tivadar Kosztka Csontváry.

The House of the Surgeon[1] is one of the most famous houses in the ancient Roman city of Pompeii and is named after ancient surgical instruments that were found there. Along with the rest of the city it was buried and largely preserved under 4 to 6 m of volcanic ash and pumice in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79.

It was excavated in 1770 by .

It is modest in size and has little ornament or decoration externally but is strong and sturdy in build with its opus quadratum ashlar façade in Sarno stone, and opus africanum construction of the atrium courtyard. It was an elite residence as evidenced by the atrium being surrounded by rooms on all four sides and its rather exclusive vestibulum.[2]

For a long time the house was thought to be one of the oldest examples in Pompeii with a date of the fourth–third century BC derived from the wall construction.[3] However, in 1926 A. Maiuri[4] made some excavations[5] beneath the atrium which revealed an earlier layer of building rubble in which a late third century BC (214/212 BC) coin was found, which with the third–second century BC date of the earlier wall beneath the tablinum, suggests that the house is dated to no earlier than c.200 BC.[6]

In the final years of Pompeii, unlike its neighbour, the House of the Vestals, which had blossomed into one of the more luxurious homes in the area. the house seems to have been allowed to fallen derelict as the floor between the atrium and tablinum had fallen into a large cistern below, wooden posts were inserted into the floors of many rooms to support a damaged roof, and one room was used as a lime-storage tank.

References[]

  1. ^ https://sites.google.com/site/ad79eruption/pompeii/regio-vi/reg-vi-ins-1/house-of-the-surgeon
  2. ^ The World of Pompeii, Edited by John J. Dobbins and Pedar W. Foss, ISBN 0-203-86619-3, p. 383
  3. ^ Bouwkundige studies van huizen in Pompeii. Muurwerk, maatvoering en ontwerp, Nijmegen, 1993: K. Peterse, Steinfachwerk in Pompeji. Bautechnik und Architektur, Amsterdam, 1999.
  4. ^ A. Maiuri, "Saggi nella 'Casa del Chiurgo' (Reg. VI, Ins. 1, n. 10)”, NSc, 1930, pp. 381–95
  5. ^ "Interactive Dig Pompeii-Field Notes". Retrieved 28 November 2007.
  6. ^ The World of Pompeii, Edited by John J. Dobbins and Pedar W. Foss, ISBN 0-203-86619-3, p. 281

Coordinates: 40°45′06″N 14°28′55″E / 40.7516°N 14.4819°E / 40.7516; 14.4819

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