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Villa dei Sette Bassi

The Villa dei Sette Bassi was the second-largest ancient Roman villa or monumental palace in the suburbs after the Villa of the Quintilii.

The Site
The original access to the villa must have been in the south-west area, where there are remains of richly decorated rooms near the byway coming from the Via Latina. The residential area consists of three contiguous parts, dating to three different periods in rapid succession. The parts are rectangular and are arranged aligned from east to west. There were also gardens and a main park onto which the buildings looked. The easternmost building was built between 134 and 139 at the beginning of the reign of Antoninus Pius following a traditional structure of 50 m on each side and a peristyle in the northwest of about 45 m per side. The plan is compact, with no windows facing outward. The second building was constructed to the southwest of the previous peristyle, between 140 and 150. It measures 45 x 25 m and includes a panoramic south-facing rotunda. It is a structure linked to luxury, without any functional character. The third structure is believed to have been constructed at the end of the reign of Antoninus Pius, and is the most elaborate with large spa rooms. The large rectangular circus or hippodrome-garden, similar in concept to those at the imperial residences of the Villa of Domitian and the Palace of Domitian, was 95 x 327 m, terraced and surrounded by a cryptoporticus, and must have contained mirrors of water, avenues, ornamental buildings, statues, fountains. The water requirement was satisfied by a branch from the Anio Novus aqueduct which fed a complex system of cisterns, one of which with two floors. Remains of one of the cisterns form the foundations of a farmhouse on the property. To the northwest of the villa was the pars rustica of the villa, a series of houses where the service staff lived with warehouses, temples and cisterns and where most of the domestic and agricultural activities took place. The area has not been the subject of archaeological investigation but remains of a small temple identified with a nymphaeum are clearly visible. This was rectangular and constructed of brick, had vaulted ceilings and was gabled. It contained a rectangular apse for the Divine Statue. The condition of these ruins is poor. In February 2014 a buttress collapsed. This was attributed to heavy rain but excavations have shown that the building materials used were of low quality. Also the area was subjected to some bombing during the Second World War. ==Gallery==
Gallery
File: Exhibition- The Torlonia Marbles. Collecting Masterpieces, Rome (2021) - 51287550385.jpg|Nymph from the villa, 90-110 AD replica of Greek original of 2nd c. BC, Torlonia collection File: Satiro, replica dell'invito alla danza, I secolo dc da orig. del II sec. ac., dalla villa dei sette bassi a roma vecchia, MT21, 01.jpg|Satyr, 1st c. AD replica of Greek original of 2nd c. BC, Torlonia collection == See also ==
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