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The Roman Villa of Bagnoli is located in contrada Bagnoli-San Gregorio, near the town of Capo d'Orlando, Sicily.[1]
Location | Sicily, Italy |
---|---|
Coordinates | 38°09′N 14°44′E / 38.150°N 14.733°E |
Type | Roman villa |
History | |
Founded | early 3rd century AD |
Cultures | Roman |
Site notes | |
Ownership | Public |
History and description
editThe site was discovered in 1986 during the construction of a carpark, and subsequent archaeological excavations unearthed part of a luxurious seaside villa dating from the early third century AD.
The rooms explored so far belonged to thermal baths decorated with floor mosaics. Much of the villa remains buried beneath buildings and a road.
Six rooms have been excavated, including a tepidarium (room 4) and a caldarium (rooms 5-6). These rooms have the traditional Roman hypocaust heating system.
The polychrome mosaics of the villa are geometric designs, stylistically close to North African mosaics, and damaged areas suggest figures were also included.
References
edit- ^ "Late antique villas in Sicily | Villa Romana del Casale". Archived from the original on 2019-03-13. Retrieved 2017-07-13.
Sources
edit- U. SPIGO, Prime considerazioni sui mosaici geometrici del complesso termale di Bagnoli S. Gregorio a Capo d’Orlando, in AttiIV Colloquio AISCOM [Palermo 1996], Ravenna 1997, p. 259-272)