Urban planning The republican
castrum at the core of the settlement had a typical rectangular plan built on two main roads that crossed at right angles in the centre: the
cardo and the
decumanus maximus, the latter on the route of the Via Ostiense coming from Rome. The cardo and the decumanus exited the walls of the
castrum through four gates. Its walls are just over 1.5 m thick in square blocks of Fidene tuff arranged irregularly. Sections of the walls have been reused on the eastern side as a back wall of a building with taverns (I,I,4) and inside the Small Market (I,VIII,1), the Horrea epagathiana (I,VIII,3) and the building at (I,VIII,10). Immediately outside the southern gate the cardo turned southwest on the route of the ancient coastal road towards
Laurentum (which later became a section of the Via Severiana). Immediately after the western gate, the decumanus turned southeast, heading directly towards the beach then not far away. The subsequent expansion of the city outside the walls of the castrum followed these routes, giving a disorderly appearance to the urban plan. Inside the city, another important road was the Via Semita dei cippi , from the
cippi (stones) on which was the Semitic inscription hor(reorum) (warehouses) where the grain was stored; the road directly connected the decumanus maximus to the Laurentina gate (its continuation on the opposite side of the decumanus towards the river has the modern name of Via dei Molini). From the 1st century AD, the area between the walls of Porta Marina and the nearby sea coast had much multifunctional construction so that next to religious buildings, such as the sanctuary of Bona Dea, there are the Domus Fulminata, the mausoleum of the Gamala and commercial premises, such as the Caupona of the god Pan. In the Trajan and Hadrianic eras this area was divided into lots and, among other buildings, the Terme della Marciana and the Terme del Sileno were built; this entire coastal area was served by a coastal road used for local traffic which was paved in the Severan era.
City walls In 63 BC the city walls were started during the consulate of
Cicero and completed by
Publius Clodius Pulcher, tribune of the plebs in 58 BC. They were built with tuff blocks from Monteverde. At the base they are approximately 1.5 m thick and are made up of recessed bands of about 2 feet in height; on the internal face they must have been supported by an embankment. The walls enclosed the city in an irregular path and enclosed an area of approximately 69 ha. Only a few sections are preserved and it is not known whether they continued along the river, where they would have hindered port operations. It is possible that they ended with two square towers near the river, the remains of which are preserved outside the current archaeological area: the Aldobrandini Mithraeum was later built against one of them (I,I,3). Buildings arose against the walls as early as the Augustan age and with Vespasian the walls were used to support an aqueduct. Their defensive function was not restored even in the late ancient period when the city was subjected to external attacks, but the city was then of reduced importance having lost its commercial and economic functions in favour of Portus and the theatre was used as a fortress. In the walls were three gates known by modern names: • the Porta Romana at the eastern end of the decumanus maximus in the direction of Rome, is built in square blocks of tuff, with the entrance arch further back from the walls, and flanked by two square towers. In the Domitian era it was rebuilt at a higher level, with architectural decoration in marble and with a statue of Minerva as winged Victory. Immediately outside the gate there is a base for a statue to the health of the emperor by a member of the family of the
Acili Glabrioni, patrons of the colony. A little further south a secondary gate was found, perhaps built at the same time as the reconstruction of the Porta Romana. • Porta Laurentina at the end of the southern section of the cardo maximus. consists of a rectangular structure in tuff blocks, flanked by square towers 5.85 m high. With a single room, it retains the grooves for the portcullis and the recess used to close the door. • The Porta Marina was towards the beach, at the west end of the decumanus maximus. Built in tuff blocks with a recessed archway and flanked by square towers. It was razed to the ground in the 1st century and replaced by an arch further south with marble decoration. In the first half of the 3rd century, the
caupona of Alexander was built on top of the remains (IV,VII,4).
The Forum The Forum is narrow and elongated in shape and at the centre of the ancient castrum. It was laid out in the Augustan age and transformed under Hadrian. It is flanked by porticoes and at one end is dominated by Hadrian's Capitolium, while opposite is the temple of Rome and Augustus erected under Tiberius. The Basilica and the Curia, seat of the
decurions, also overlook the western side of the forum. Along the southern side of the decumanus maximus which crosses the forum are other monumental buildings, including the porticoed Forum of the Heroic Statue (mid-4th century) and the so-called Round Temple with a courtyard in front, (3rd century). To the south-east of the Forum stand the large Forum Baths complex erected under
Antoninus Pius.
Residential Buildings ==== Appartment blocks (
Insulae) ==== These were multi-storey buildings split into appartments (
cenacula) for multiple occupancy, and distributed over the city. On the ground floor were normally many
tabernae (shops) opening onto the street, sometimes fronted by porticos. When part of the ground floor was occupied by more prestigious apartments or workshops, entrances to the private internal areas were often flanked by tabernae. In some cases, for example in the Lararium building (I,IX,3), tabernae also fronted the internal courtyards. Access to cheaper apartments on the upper floors was almost always via separate stairs entered from the outside. In the more expensive apartments, internal stairs led to the second floor. In some cases there could be common services, accessible from the internal courtyard and some insulae were perhaps used as an inn (
caupona). Sometimes the tabernae had mezzanines, accessible by an internal staircase and lit by a window above the door and which also could serve as a residence for the merchant, or the mezzanine or back room could serve as a warehouse for goods. They often underwent modifications over time and in some cases were changed to appartments or workshops, reducing the external doors. The Basilical house (I,IX,I) has a series of shops along the road and internal rooms overlooking a courtyard while on the upper floor a bridge crossed the courtyard, creating a central covered passage.
Apartments with a medianum More luxurious apartments often have a central room (
medianum), at either side of which are large living and reception rooms, while smaller rooms (
cubicula or bedrooms) are opposite the entrance, including service rooms (kitchen and latrine). The most luxurious apartments may also have an upper floor accessed by an internal staircase and in these cases the reception rooms may be of greater height, spanning both floors. Apartments on upper floors accessed by private staircases often have similar layouts. • The House of the Child Bacchus (I,IV,3) and House of the Paintings (I,IV,4) are two-storey apartments with double-height reception rooms and internal staircase, with double entrance and windows onto Via dei Dipinti and onto the internal garden on the opposite side, shared with the house of Jupiter and Ganymede (I,IV,2). On the higher floors were other dwellings, reachable by independent staircases from the Via dei Dipinti and from the internal garden. • Apartment of building (I, XIV, 9): accessible from a corridor between the shops facing the street with a separate staircase to the upper floors. The entrance features an architectural brick portal. The corridor has a niche with a fountain at the end: this opens onto a passage to one of the shops, a small vestibule to the north, which opens onto a smaller and a larger room, from which the northernmost tavern is in turn accessible. On the opposite side of the corridor, another small corridor provides access to two more small rooms and a larger room at the end. The floor plan is similar to that of medianum apartments, but bisected by the corridor. • two apartments in Via dei Vigili (II,III,3-4) dating to the Hadrianic period are arranged side by side and accessible from a corridor that opened onto Via dei Vigili, with an independent staircase to the upper floors; two other staircases to the upper apartments are found at the end of the corridor and in a corner of the southern apartment, with traces of doors; latrines were created in the internal understairs areas. Both apartments have windows opening onto the street and the northern one also on the north side, opposite the entrance. From the entrance corridor one enters the medianum which receives light from the windows on the street, and on the side opposite the entrance is a large room divided into two parts by pillars; two cubicula (bedrooms) open at the end of the medianum and another small room next to the entrance corridor. The northern apartment, which is larger, has another small room opening onto the entrance corridor, and a corridor in front of the reception room opposite the entrance. Both apartments retain traces of floor mosaics and frescoes with red and yellow panels. • House of the Child Hercules (II,VI,3-4) is in a building from the Hadrianic period with shops overlooking Via della Fortuna and an apartment overlooking Via delle Corporazioni, on the opposite side, accessible from a transverse corridor which connected the two streets. The apartment had the usual plan with an open medianum with windows overlooking Via delle Corporazioni, reception rooms at the ends and bedrooms on the rear opposite the windows. Next to the reception room to the north is a staircase to the upper floors. During the excavation, paintings depicting mythological scenes were found including a child Hercules strangling serpents which gave the house its name. Small troves of coins were also found there, the latest of which is dated around 425. • House of the Painted Ceiling (II,VI,5-6) is a building similar to the previous one, from the Hadrianic era, with an apartment along Via della Fontana which was accessed from a corridor to the south. It was divided into an entrance corridor next to a small reception room, flanked also by an internal staircase to the upper floor. The corridor led to the medianum, open with windows along the street and with spaces separated by partitions at the end; at the opposite end was a larger reception room. In the age of Commodus the apartment was reduced and the reception room to the north with the adjacent section of the medianum became a separate appartment, accessible from the north; the internal staircase was closed and a small room was built at the end of the medianum. The frescoed walls of the rooms of the house belong to this phase, with red and yellow panels and small figures in an architectural framework. ==== Town houses (
Domus) ==== The layout of the domus changed over time: in the Imperial age rooms were arranged around an open courtyard (
atrium), often with upper floors integrated into the same housing unit, for example: • Domus of Apuleius (II,II,8) (Trajan era 98 - 117 AD) • House of Jupiter and Ganymede (I,IV,2) from the Hadrianic period (117 - 138 AD) on two floors with an internal staircase, arranged around a courtyard overlooking an internal garden, shared with the House of the Paintings (I,IV,4) and the House of the Child Bacchus (I,IV,3); during the time of Commodus it underwent changes with some rooms on the street used as shops, and was decorated with frescoes (including the Birth of Venus, Jupiter and Ganymede, Leda and the Swan ). It was perhaps used as a hotel and/or brothel. In the 3rd century workshops were established in the garden. In the late ancient period, the most luxurious houses were often adapted from previous ones with courtyards (
atria), fountains and rooms with marble coverings and mosaics; often the reception room had an apse and was slightly raised, with columns at the entrance. • The House of the Round Temple (I, XI, 2-3), built between the late 3rd and early 4th centuries has an entrance vestibule paved in monochrome mosaic opening to the south onto Via del Tempio Rotondo and framed by pillars with travertine bases. Alongside are two shops with a mezzanine (the internal staircases remain) and a separate staircase leading to the upper floors. The vestibule leads to another staircase leading to the upper floor of the house, also accessible from the street. The interior is arranged around a courtyard surrounded on three sides by a corridor paved in black and white geometric mosaic, with a central fountain clad in marble. At the back, opening directly onto the courtyard, aligned with the entrance, is the main room with opus sectile marble and a raised entrance with two columns. The rooms opening onto the corridor to the west are clad in marble and heated, perhaps from a room with a lower floor. At the back is a kitchen. Other rooms open onto the opposite side, one of which with a brick counter and niche may have been a shrine. • Domus of Cupid and Psyche (I,XIV,5) (second quarter of the 4th century) occupies a site of the 2nd century. Its rooms still have walls covered in marble panels and floors paved with expensive
opus sectile arranged around a central hallway which takes light from a small internal garden with
nymphaeum. • Domus della Fortuna Annonaria (V, II, 8), built in the 2nd century over earlier shops, underwent building works until the 5th century, is a luxurious house embellished with marble and artistic works, with an internal porticoed courtyard onto which the main apsidal reception room, with a heated master bedroom, overlooks. ==Surroundings==