Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Date Range
200 BC – 79

Seasons

  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2007
    During its first full field season in 2007, the Via Consolare Project carried out extensive geophysical research within both _Insula_ VII 6 and the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico between the 21st of June and 29th of July 2007, with the permission of the Soprintendenza Archeologica di Napoli e Pompei and with the kind support of Professore Guzzo and dottore D’Ambrosio. These analyses were carried out using two different geophysical techniques. The first method involved readings taken along eight ‘pseudo-sections’ via electric-resistive tomography. Each of these provided a view through the subsurface, allowing for the identification of buried structures, voids, floors, and surviving stratigraphy, to a depth of up to 2.5 metres. The second employed a magnetometer to examine all open areas for metal objects, areas of burning, and/or other geophysical anomalies in the subsurface deposits. In addition, this method would have also identified the location of any unexploded bombs (fortunately none were observed). These analyses were performed in order to answer specific questions which evolved from our analysis of the standing remains and to test important hypotheses related to our research on the early Via Consolare and the development of Pompeii. In addition to geophysical investigations, roughly 70% of the standing structures in the area of VII 6 were examined, including detailed study of visible construction events and mortar differences. Sequencing was augmented by initial photo documentation. In combination with 3D topographic survey of the area, this has allowed for initial recording and study of standing stratigraphy.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2008
    Il progetto “Via Consolare” esamina lo sviluppo urbano e la crescita di Pompei attraverso un’attiva ricerca sul campo che include scavo archeologico, ricognizione topografica 3-D, analisi delle tecniche edilizie, archiviazione di fotografia rettificata e indagini geofisiche. Con il progetto si tenta di spiegare il processo di urbanizzazione che ha portato alla composizione e all’organizzazione della parte nord-occidentale della città dal momento della sua originale fondazione fino alla distruzione del 79 d.C. A questo fine la ricerca si concentra su due aree separate della città antica: l’Insula VII 6 e la Villa delle Colonne a mosaico insieme alla lunga fila di taberne che si sviluppano lungo il suo lato occidentale. L’esame congiunto di queste aree permette di raggiungere conclusioni non solo circa la ricca e varia storia dell’uso e riuso che ogni area conserva, ma anche circa le priorità di cambiamento nel paesaggio urbano dell’antica città nel suo insieme. Data la loro differente prossimità al foro e alle mura della città, l’Insula VII 6 e la Villa delle Colonne a mosaico offrono informazioni sui rinvenimenti urbani e suburbani – due contesti pompeiani che ci si potrebbe aspettare essere stati molto diversi tra loro in termini di sviluppo storico e uso domestico degli spazi. Comunque lo studio delle strutture emergenti in entrambe le aree rivelano una rimarchevole somiglianza di composizione specialmente durante gli anni finali di Pompei, consistenti in strutture domestiche, piccole iniziative imprenditoriali, attività industriali, fondazioni sacre, spazi regolamentati dallo stato e aree che testimoniano un grande traffico pedonale e su ruote. Stabilire se queste somiglianze esistevano nella storia di Pompei o se rappresentino uno sviluppo relativamente recente riveste una grande importanza nell’interpretazione della distinzione tra la città romana e le zone suburbane. Dovrà essere valutato anche il potenziale ruolo della Via Consolare nel facilitare o creare questa situazione. Gli scavi designati a chiarire tali importanti questioni iniziati nel 2008 sul lato meridionale dell’Insula VII 6 tra il passaggio 26 e 27 hanno rivelato fondazioni e cronologie della facciata in tufo di Nocera della taverna che fronteggia quest’area. Inoltre si è aggiunta la pulizia preliminare della domus VII 6, 30. Per il futuro si stanno pianificando ulteriori scavi e analisi al fine di rivelare il ruolo di queste aree e delle loro specifiche relazioni con la Via Consolare nella storia della pianificazione della città.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2009
    In 2009 the Via Consolare Project continued to uncover a great deal of important information on the southern side of _Insula_ VII 6 and the development and excavation history of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico. Between the 24th of June and the 4th of August 2009, with the permission of the Soprintendenza Archeologica di Napoli e Pompei and with the ongoing support of Professore Guzzo and dottore D’Ambrosio, the members of the Via Consolare Project expanded the test trench from 2008 to produce more details on the final occupation phases of the shop and _tabernae_ at _Insula_ VII 6, 26-27. This produced further information on the precise condition of these shops at the time of the eruption and revealed evidence of an apparently comprehensive programme of restoration and refurbishment that seems to have been in progress during the last days of the city’s life. Excavation revealed a system of channels and holes conceivably intended to provide an extensive new drainage system, which were interrupted by the AD 79 eruption itself. The resolution of the data was so precise that it is possible to restore not only the disposition of the individual diggers, but also the locations of their soil heaps. This provides an important window onto not only the condition of this particular part of the city at that moment, but also provides further evidence on the types of building activities which were underway during the seventeen years between the earthquake of AD 62 and the eruption. Especially significant is that the large-scale nature of these changes not only would have influenced the potential use of the Vico dei Soprastanti but might easily be characterised as ‘municipal’ in scale. Furthermore, this provides new information on the manner in which Roman/Pompeian builders conceptualised and executed individual work projects. These results therefore tie directly into our expressed research goals and reveal much of the nature of urban development along the course of the Via Consolare. At the moment, the southern side of _Insula_ VII 6 has yet to produce comparable traces of especially early chronology such as revealed by Dott. Ribera, in _Insula_ VII 4, so further excavation in this area will be necessary in the future to explain this absence. Our excavations in the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico revealed important and poorly published information on the precise disposition of early ‘Samnite-Oscan’ graves uncovered in the pre-war campaigns of A. Maiuri in the _viridarium_ and _sacellum_ of the Villa. Though no ancient material was still extent in the majority of these areas, the information we uncovered is nevertheless extremely valuable both to the study of early burial practices but also in regards to the pre-existing alignments in the area, especially as they related to the original construction of the Villa. The second trench excavated in the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico was even more productive. Here, the area of Maiuri’s previous excavations were quickly identified and removed, revealing a number of primary earthen deposits relating to the final uses of the Villa and its spatial disposition. Such preservation is especially remarkable given the number of years during which the Villa has been exposed since its original excavation and the extent of subsequent plant growth. During the 2009 season the Via Consolare Project also continued to refine our recording and documentation methodology so as to be able to integrate fully all types of archaeological data into a 3-D spatial database. Primary topographic survey was completed in Insula VII 6 including important underground portions of the cisterns of the Terme del Foro and its access corridors and also continued in the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico including the _viridarium_ and _sacellum_. In both areas, wall sequence analysis continued as in previous years and several groups of walls that were studied in 2007 and 2008 were brought together into broad, overall phasing sequences, providing a guideline for future cleaning and stratigraphic excavation. These intensive studies were followed by complete photo documentation via stitched-rectified photography – a method that was presented earlier this year at an important international conference on computer applications in archaeology (CAA 2009) (cf. Anderson, M. 2010). Overall, investigations conducted by the Via Consolare Project have provided significant data to the understanding of the sequence and history of the development of the city of Pompeii as well as the social, environmental, and ecological framework through which this development took place. The results of our 2009 field season emphasize especially the importance of continued archaeological research in _Insula_ VII 6 and the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, and the value of the data they yet preserve.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2010
    The 2010 field season of the Via Consolare Project was dedicated to the preparation and finalisation the results of the previous two seasons of excavation in preparation for publication. To this end, the materials recovered during the summers of 2008 and 2009 were examined, recorded, and analysed. Between the 16th of June and the 4th of August 2010, with the kind permission the Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali, Soprintendenza Speciale per i Beni Archeologici di Napoli e Pompei, and with the kind support of Professoressa. Salvatore, Professore Proietti and dottore Varone, the members of the Via Consolare Project continued our ongoing research in the areas of _Insula_ VII 6, the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, and the route of the Via Consolare. Specialists in pottery, numismatics, animal bone, charcoal, and ecofacts examined the materials that our excavations of the last two seasons had produced. As a result of these efforts, the majority of all finds have now been studied. All soil samples floated in previous years have now been sorted thoroughly and accessioned. In addition, all animal bone recovered has been washed and preliminary sorting of taxa has begun. The precise of identification of charcoal remains has commenced. All pottery recovered has now been processed for the provision of spot dates, which will be refined and finalised during the following months. Records of all coins recovered have been made and the stratigraphic sequence discernable in the standing remains has been finalised pending further excavation. In short, all backlog of materials or post-processing has been completed. The Via Consolare Project is committed to making our results available to the community of Pompeian scholars and the Soprintendenza Archeologica di Pompei with as little delay as possible between excavation and publication. For this to be possible, it is vital that the processes of finds analysis and publication go hand in hand with on-going excavation. The successful completion of our target goals for finds analysis and post-processing in 2010 means that our publications are well on track to maintaining this commitment.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2011
    In 2011, the Via Consolare Project continued excavation in the southern side of _Insula_ VII 6, 26 and VII 6, 27 to continue to clarify the nature of the ancient activities identified in previous field seasons and to finalise the sub-surface investigations initiated in 2008. The area of the eastern half of Archaeological Area 001, measuring roughly four by five metres, was reopened and backfill from the 2009 field season was removed. Stratigraphic excavation was then undertaken to the level of natural soils in the majority of this area, bringing subsurface examination in AA001 to a close. As a result, it is now possible to present a complete stratigraphic sequence for the southern rooms of properties 26 and 27, and to connect the associated chronology to the relative development of much of _Insula_ VII 6. A long history of urban transformation might be expected in _Insula_ VII 6 given the proximity of this area to the Forum, the so-called ‘altstadt’, and the Terme del Foro. Indeed, excavations have confirmed a complicated sequence of development, long-term use, and re-use in the south-eastern corner of the block, illustrating the transformation of the area from elite domestic space of the mid-2nd c. BC into a group of purpose-built commercial structures at the beginning of the 1st c. BC and finally into a construction zone during the final years prior to the eruption of Vesuvius. It is also clear that the evolving utilisation of these areas frequently involved the widespread removal of soils and floors, presenting a highly-interwoven archaeological record preserved completely only in the combination of data from both soil deposits and architectural remains. The documentation of the complete chronological sequence in AA001 has also yielded information in support of the insula-wide phasing carried out through analysis of the standing architecture. In 2011, the construction phases identified and studied in the walls of the _insula_ were coordinated with the subsurface evidence and a working geographical information system (GIS) database was created serving to coordinate all data produced by the project. The use of structure-from-motion 3D point capture using consumer grade digital cameras has revolutionized all aspects of the project’s research methodology and has permitted the creation of rich, highly-detailed, three-dimensional surface models of standing remains and sub-surface deposits. During the final weeks of the 2011 field season, preliminary investigations were undertaken in a 4 by 5 metre area at the north-west corner of the _Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus_ (VII 6, 28), situated against one of the earliest walls of the _insula_ built in _opus africanum_ (type A). Removal of modern build-up was undertaken in order to establish the degree of preservation of the AD 79 surface, to examine the relationship of the walls below the levels with the greatest amount of modern debris, and to compare this information against geophysical research undertaken in 2007. The clean uncovered the continuation of a wall that was obliterated in the allied bombing in 1943, but produced few traces of intact flooring. Further excavation in the future will serve to clarify the chronology and development of this area.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2012
    The Via Consolare Project focused its 2012 research on sub-surface excavation in the centre of Insula VII 6. Further analysis of standing structures, including topographic survey of the northern side of the Terme del Foro, was also undertaken, while Structure from Motion (SfM) based 3D surface capture was employed to produce a digital model of all excavated deposits and trench features. A trench measuring 11m by 5m (AA006) was opened in the north-western corner of the peristyle of the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus (VII 6, 28.19.20) where this property adjoined the Casa di Pamphilus Felix (VII 6, 38). This area is now nearly devoid of standing remains with the exception of two short lengths of wall, one of which is distinguished by traces of construction in opus africanum (type A). Stratigraphic excavation proceeded to the level of natural soils in all areas available for excavation, producing 90 stratigraphic units (SUs) and completing investigations in AA006. These investigations have revealed much regarding the development of the central area of Insula VII 6, especially concerning the interactions of three properties in the area: the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus, the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix, and the Casa della Diana, from its earliest identifiable human activities to the years immediately prior to the 79 AD eruption. The earliest traces of activity help to confirm the supposed antiquity of the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix and testify to an early presence in the area, possibly related to other ‘pappamonte’ phase features in the city. It is possible that these predate the final stage of interplinian eruptions, which were also identified at depth in AA006. At the moment, precise dating of the opus africanum (type A) wall has also proven elusive, but excavation in 2012 clearly proved that this earlier phase in the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix was once much more extensive than had previously been thought, and further exploration may yet provide a solid date for its earliest surviving construction phase. The most important discoveries of the 2012 field season were a suite of rooms underlying the later peristyle of the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus that, prior to the early 1st c. AD, had belonged to the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix, probably when it was also joined with the Casa della Diana. Preserved pavements and two phases of earlier wall plasters documented not only the initial addition of the rooms to the earlier property in the early 1st c. BC, but also subsequent modifications in the time of Augustus. The annexation of property from one house to another, likely early in the reign of Tiberius and contemporary with the separation of the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix and the Casa della Diana, documents a shift in financial primacy between the house owners in the Insula. This interconnects neatly with the sequence of development in the block and may represent the tangible benefits of engagement in business and commerce. Excavation also provided considerable data on changes that occurred throughout the 1st c. AD in the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus, possibly related to earthquake repairs or renovations in the house’s final years. Overall, the 2012 field season has provided an important and deeply-revealing glimpse into the development of Insula VII 6 and its building history. In turn, these changes inform observations that may be made about Pompeian society, economy, and social organisation from the 3rd c. BC until the 1st c. AD.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2013
    In June and July of 2013, the Via Consolare Project conducted stratigraphic excavations in the garden of Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus (VII 6, 28.19.20) and in a shop (VII 6, 16) on the northern side of the so-called ‘Great Cistern.’ The first trench (AA007), measuring 11m by 5m, encompassed the southern half of the central garden space and the southeast corner of the colonnade of the peristyle of the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus (Room 4). The second (AA008) measured 9m by 3m and was placed against the northern wall of the ‘Great Cistern,’ exposing approximately half of the area of the shop associated with the northern side of this structure (Rooms 64, 65, 66). Excavation proceeded to the level of natural soils in both areas, producing 49 and 59 stratigraphic units (SU, US) respectively. Though ancient pit cutting and modern bomb damage to AA007 meant that the original layout of the centre of the insula and the precise date of its first creation has remained elusive, it was nevertheless possible to hypothesize the probable location of a boundary wall in the area between two early properties. It was also possible to reconstruct much of the original decoration of this boundary wall, since the later pit cuts appear to have been filled with many elements from the features they destroyed. The date implied by this decorative plaster suggests that a transfer of space from the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix and the Casa della Diana to the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus took place probably about a generation after the beginning of the reign of Tiberius. This also appears to have included elements from a now-invisible property that had once extended from the centre of the block to the Vicolo delle Terme, the eastern end of which was later truncated by the ‘Great Cistern.’ Recovery in AA008 of an earlier shop floor through which the ‘Great Cistern’ was cut may serve to explain this earlier property as one of a row of similar shops or row-houses that once faced the Vicolo delle Terme. The removal of these shops would have freed up space to the west that was taken over by the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus for the creation of a peristyle, triclinium, and a suite of service rooms. Although excavation in AA008 is not yet completed, it is clear that after the construction of the ‘Great Cistern,’ the area witnessed numerous transformations and alterations in use. Several phases of opus signinum floors were recovered overlying partially preserved cisterns or cess pits, which were themselves filled with primary fills from the eruption of AD 79. Overall, the 2013 field season has done much to clarify one of the major phases of development in Insula VII 6 and to facilitate the participation of this block in the discussion of Pompeian public infrastructure, domestic economy, and urban organisation from the 3rd c. BC until the 1st c. AD.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2014
    In June and July of 2014, the Via Consolare Project conducted stratigraphic excavations and removal of modern debris in the front room of a shop at VII 6, 14, in the atrium of the next-door house (VII 6, 10.11.16), and in the pavement directly outside of doorway VII 6, 11. The first trench (AA009), measuring 6m by 5m, occupied the majority of the front room (Room 73) of the north-eastern shop on the block. The second (AA010), covering the majority of the atrium (Room 61) and fauces (Room 60) of the property accessed by doorway VII 6, 11, measured 7m by 5m. The final trench (AA011), was 4m by 1m running between two brick piers that define this same entrance, exposing the northward continuation of features recovered within AA010. Excavation produced 33, 49, and 20 stratigraphic units respectively, but only reached natural soils via small sondages through pre-existing holes in an otherwise well-preserved _opus_ _signinum_ floor of AA 010. Excavation in AA009 neither reached full depth nor produced natural soils due to the recovery of a preserved AD 79 cellar under a partially collapsed final-phase floor. The creation of the cellar removed virtually all traces of earlier phases. Nevertheless, it was possible to identify preexisting property walls that had been reused in the creation of the shop. The shop appears to have been part of a sizeable, multi-story apartment complex that included construction of the ‘Great Cistern’ on its southern side at the same time. That the walls were designed to bear considerable loads is clear from their massive foundations and the reuse of blocks of tufo di Nocera as ashlar quoins. Excavation of eruptive material suggests the collapsed upper stories of this structure were decorated in relatively high quality decoration. Further investigation into the contents of the cellar and its state at the time of the eruption will await future field seasons. Cleaning of modern debris in AA010, produced a previously excavated but largely undocumented impluvium covered and surrounded by a mosaic of large tesserae in four different coloured stones. The sequence of building in the structure makes it plausible that the impluvium represents the reuse of earlier decorative surfaces in an otherwise relatively diminutive dwelling. Subsequent alterations to the property include the addition and removal of upper stories, the cutting of a new drain capped with tiles, one of which was stamped with the name ‘Holconius,’ and the creation of a small vaulted sacellum. Excavation of AA011 recovered evidence of modern piping running along the northern sidewalk of the block, but also the continuation of the drain from AA010. At depth, evidence of a charcoal rich, ritual foundation deposit, possibly related to a change in the insula frontage or sidewalk kerbing awaits further investigation. Overall, the 2014 field season augmented the understanding of changes related to the creation of the ‘Great Cistern’ and situated the development of this block into its wider urban context between the 3rd c. BC and the 1st c. AD.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2015
    In June and July of 2015, the Via Consolare Project conducted stratigraphic excavations and analysis of standing remains in the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico as a part of on-going research into the chronology, urban development, and utilization of the properties along the Via Consolare, from Pompeii’s surburbium to its forum. Excavation involved the continuation a trench initiated but not completed in 2009 (AA005). This trench, measuring 10.5m by 2.5m, was situated within the raised platform upon which the Villa sits, between the core of the Villa proper and a row of six columns on its southern side. Running centrally through the trench, an apparently unpublished earlier sondage had removed ancient stratigraphy but for the western and northern sides of the area. This permitted relatively deep excavation to be undertaken via stepped removal of the modern backfill. Excavation produced 58 stratigraphic units, recovering traces in section of a volcanic sand deposit that likely overlies natural soils. The general phases of activity recovered in the excavation began with a relatively deep natural topography, and some early levelling deposits. Phase 2 witnessed the primary construction of the central Villa core with walls and use surfaces more than a meter below the current Villa thresholds. Phase 3 saw the addition of a raised platform and six columns on the southern side of the Villa along with several additional columns inside the core structure and a drain running southward from its centre. Evidence of the construction process for the western retaining wall were preserved in the form of layout lines scored directly into the Villa's exterior. At a point after this, the Villa was hemmed in by the construction or reconstruction of a row of shops and associated back rooms to the west, which perhaps shortly thereafter received a water pipe that ran through the portico. At this point too, another drain was added, putting the previous drain out of use. These changes appear to relate to the addition or modification of upper stories to the Villa and the transformation of the core of the Villa into a service wing, activities which may be provisionally and circumstantially dated to roughly the Claudian period. Continued floor raising and related modifications to the second drain characterised the final ancient phase observed in AA005 (Phase 6), a period that throughout the Villa witnessed the creation of some of its most distinctive characteristics, including the large viridarium that occupied the backs of the tombs and the eponymous mosaic columns. A final phase of change visible in these walls involving yet more upper storey access, was not reflected in the deposits of AA005. Overall, investigations in 2015 have revealed important information about the surprising depth of the original topography of the area, suggesting that much of what is now observed is the result of large-scale levelling activities. Traces of further 'Oscan' burials such as were found in the area of the viridarium, have not yet been recovered in the area of the Villa.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2016
    This season involved the initiation of two new trenches, both situated in areas outside of the Villa core. The first, measuring 6 by 5 meters (AA012), spanned the area between the shops along the east side of the Via dei Sepolcri and the core of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, including parts of two rooms located where the southwest corner of the early Villa core met with the later additions of vaulted supporting structures. Excavation produced 31 stratigraphic units and revealed that this part of the structure had not been fully excavated of eruptive material. Removal of layers of lapilli and ash produced extensive information about both the eruption, revealed the final phase condition of these rooms, and uncovered evidence of several phases of development during the latter part of the life of the area. It is clear that during the construction of the shops to the west of the Villa (Phase 4), the zone in between them also received a series of vaulted corridors with adjoining rooms, likely in two stories, which served to raise the elite elements of the Villa on a raised platform. Subsequently, the area was outfitted with a drain and opus signinum catchment designed to evacuate large quantities of liquid from an as yet unidentified source. In a change possibly to be associated with the earthquake(s) of 62 CE, the area was then downgraded and filled with rubbish and a large dolium for water storage. Rooms previously belonging to the Villa became elements of the western shops at this time. The eruption itself first carried elements of domestic material into the area, then caused the vaulting above it to collapse. The second trench (AA013), measuring roughly 9 by 5 meters, was located against a row of tombs south of the Villas entrances in a triangular space of uncertain function. Here, excavation revealed many levels of deposited soil, the final layers of which were clearly the result of the construction of the tombs themselves. Three of these tombs may now be sequenced as a roughly contemporary. A surprisingly municipal-scale drain was found also to have been constructed in concert with these tombs. A single cremation burial in a pottery urn was recovered from one of the few areas not disturbed by Maiuri’s interventions of 1935. Natural soils and the earliest phases in the area were not encountered owing to the significant depth of deposits, but the final phase clearing and/or rebuilding of the drain was also apparent in the form of a final-phase open trench filled with eruptive material.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2017
    In June and July of 2017, the Via Consolare Project continued stratigraphic excavations in the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico as a part of its on-going research into the chronology, urban development, and utilization of the properties along the Via Consolare, from Pompeii’s surburbium to its forum. Two trenches from 2016 were reopened and brought to conclusion, while two further subsurface investigations were undertaken to establish the extent of previous excavation in the area and to clarify features that had only been published cursorily. The first reopened trench (AA012) included as much as possible of a room adjoining to the western cryptoporticus that had been uncovered in the previous season. This room similarly was filled with eruption debris that had only been partially explored during the initial excavations. Further excavation in this area produced a further 18 stratigraphic units, revealing that during the final years of the city, the lower storey of this space had been filled from top to bottom with complete and largely complete fragments of amphorae and other pottery, putting it entirely out of use. Thereafter, a cistern head and drain were built at the level of the first floor, the latter draining into the former lower storey of the cryptoporticus of the Villa situated to its east. Such dramatic alterations served to transform the nature of these areas, and are analogous to the changes that took place within the cryptoporticus that were described in the Scheda of 2016. It is likely that they were motivated by damage caused by the earthquake(s) of 62/3 CE. The second reopened trench (AA013) reached deeper levels of deposits uncovered in 2016 and served to connect these activities with the northern-most tomb in the area (tomb 6). A series of thick, extremely hard-packed deposits were likely related to this tomb’s construction and later modification since they were filled with chips of Nocera tuff from the tomb itself. The remaining tombs in the area (7, 8, and 9) were also confirmed to date from the final years of the site, while the municipal-scale trench recovered last year remained enigmatic. The two new trenches, undertaken in the centre of the viridarium (AA014) and within the decorated fauces (N.12) (AA015), provided a window onto the degree of previous modern sub-surface excavation that the Villa has experienced – first in the search for Oscan/Samnite graves and subsequently for the removal of the mosaic columns themselves. Such explorations appear to have removed a massive layer of ancient fills, even undermining drains and other features. Nevertheless traces of a thick ancient fill that served to raise the elevation of the Villa in these areas and to bury the earlier cemetery was recovered. A deposit of ash and pigment recovered below this might have related to activities intended to ritually put the area out of use. It was also confirmed that the expansion of the Villa into these areas was a late phenomenon. Overall, excavation in 2017 has produced valuable new data on the development of the Villa, its chronology, and the changing sub-urban environment during the final years of the city.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2018
    In June and July of 2018, the Via Consolare Project continued stratigraphic excavations in the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico as a part of its on-going research into the chronology, urban development, and utilization of the properties along the Via Consolare, from Pompeii’s surburbium to its forum. The four trenches in the Villa core were opened (AA016, AA017, AA018, AA020), intended to provide material dating the earliest phases of Villa construction and to explore the nature of the final-phase utilisation of space. That in the north-eastern corner (AA016) produced evidence of a broad conduit draining water into a deep cistern, with evidence that the first phase of the Villa had included an interior colonnade of brick columns previously thought to be a secondary addition. This cistern and drain went out of use in the final phases as the Villa’s vertical expansion came to be supported by several large piers. The trench to the west (AA018) examined the central court and a small room to the south. This uncovered a lead pipe (fistulum) that ran laterally across the courtyard, originating in a large, above-ground cistern to the west of the core. Further traces of the brick-column colonnade and a thin opus signinum floor provided evidence of the changes to surrounding rooms that had attended the addition of upper stories to the Villa. This area also established that the Villa core does not actually represent an earlier phase of the Villa, but instead is a massive square platform, nearly 2 m deep that had been built during the initial construction in order to elevate it above its local surroundings. Excavations intended to recover the destination of the fistulum (AA020) revealed that it had not reached the final phase water features that are located in the south-eastern corner of the core, but rather ran towards the bath-suite situated to the east of the core. These also provided evidence of final phase changes including the probable removal of elements of the lead pipe. Exceptionally, in the area of two cooking platforms (AA017) a final phase build-up of cooking debris was recovered, producing a laminate of charcoal, ash, and lime above a packed earth floor, that documented the use of space in the area until the eruption itself. At depth in this area the base of the Villa platform was recovered, displaying a thick sequence of fills and building debris that provisionally date the Villa to the early 1st c. CE. Removal of modern debris (AA018) in the area of the northern entrance corridor produced evidence of extensive early modern exploration, likely in pursuit of underlying Oscan graves, but also revealed sufficient surviving ancient stratigraphy to reveal a beaten earth track with repairs, and several late period changes to the walls and door closure system. This area is to be explored more fully in 2019. Excavation in 2018 has dramatically altered the chronology of the Villa, the motivations of its builders, and the role it played in the urban fabric of the area outside of the Porta Ercolano.
  • AIAC_1983 - Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico - 2019
    In June and July of 2019, the Via Consolare Project undertook stratigraphic excavations and archaeological research in both the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico and Insula VII 6 as a part of on-going research into the chronology, urban development, and utilization of the properties along the Via Consolare, from Pompeii’s periphery to its forum. Four trenches were excavated within the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico. The first involved two small sondages (AA019w, and AA019e) at either end of long driveway for cart access to the centre of the villa. At the entrance, levels of beaten earth were recovered with the fixtures for two different phases of doorway closure, demonstrating a change from a single door to a bi-valve system. Below these, a thick layer of silt-bonded rubble and mortar may have been the only surviving traces of a feature removed with the expansion of the villa into this area - possibly the footing of a small altar tomb. Excavations at the eastern end of the corridor revealed a substantial drain running under a later stairway. Presumably this drain connected to the drain found exiting the villa in 2015 (AA005). The deposits into which the surrounding walls were cut were identified in an additional trench (AA021) that was near to the courtyard sacellum altar. These have reinforced the conclusion that the sacellum courtyard and viridarium had been extended over an area of the site that had remained largely unoccupied after its use as an Oscan-Samnite cemetery. A final trench excavated within the eastern core of the villa (AA022) in an area thought originally to have been a bath suite, produced evidence consistent with that hypothesis. Elements of a surface or podium paved with tiles, lead piping and a drain running S-E out of the room are suggestive of its use for bathing. Changes to the area involving strengthening piers were related to the upward expansion of the villa complex, while final-phase alterations, including the excavation of a new, but unused channel possibly intended for the placement of a new lead pipe were probably intended to repair damage to the system sustained in the earthquake(s) of 62/3 CE and onwards. Two trenches were also undertaken in two shops at the south-western corner of Insula VII 6 (AA023, AA024). While these were not completed in 2019, traces of opus africanum in blocks of Sarno stone and pappamonte, make it clear that in the earliest phase, these shops were areas that pertained to the Casa di Petutius Quintio (VII 6, 30.37) to the north and did not open to the south. Later changes related to the creation of the shops involved the lowering of the level in the area and the creation of cisterns, drains, and toilets. Planned completion of these trenches in 2020 will undoubtedly provide more valuable information regarding the sequence and chronology of these areas of the insula. Excavation in 2019 has therefore served to provide important new information about these areas and their development, providing further windows on the processes of urban growth and change that influenced the structures along the Via Consolare.

FOLD&R

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2007
Summary
en During its first full field season in 2007, the Via Consolare Project carried out extensive geophysical research within both _Insula_ VII 6 and the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico between the 21st of June and 29th of July 2007, with the permission of the Soprintendenza Archeologica di Napoli e Pompei and with the kind support of Professore Guzzo and dottore D’Ambrosio. These analyses were carried out using two different geophysical techniques.

The first method involved readings taken along eight ‘pseudo-sections’ via electric-resistive tomography. Each of these provided a view through the subsurface, allowing for the identification of buried structures, voids, floors, and surviving stratigraphy, to a depth of up to 2.5 metres. The second employed a magnetometer to examine all open areas for metal objects, areas of burning, and/or other geophysical anomalies in the subsurface deposits. In addition, this method would have also identified the location of any unexploded bombs (fortunately none were observed). These analyses were performed in order to answer specific questions which evolved from our analysis of the standing remains and to test important hypotheses related to our research on the early Via Consolare and the development of Pompeii. In addition to geophysical investigations, roughly 70% of the standing structures in the area of VII 6 were examined, including detailed study of visible construction events and mortar differences. Sequencing was augmented by initial photo documentation. In combination with 3D topographic survey of the area, this has allowed for initial recording and study of standing stratigraphy.
it Durante la prima campagna del 2007, il progetto Via Consolare ha condotto una ricerca geofisica estensiva all’interno Insula VII 6 e nell’area della Villa delle Colonne, tra il 21 giugno e il 29 luglio con il permesso della Soprintendenza Archeologica di Napoli e Pompei e con il cortese Supporto del Prof. Guzzo e il dott. D’Ambrosio. L’analisi è stata condotta usando due differenti tecniche geofisiche.

Il primo metodo ha comportato letture prese lungo 8 pseudo sezioni, con tomografia a resistività elettrica. Ognuna di queste ha fornito una visione del sottosuolo, consentendo l’identificazione di strutture sepolte, vuoti, pavimenti e stratigrafia sopravvissuta, ad una profondità superiore a 2.5 m.

Il secondo metodo ha usato un magnetometro per esaminare tutte le aree aperte per gli oggetti metallici, aree di bruciato e/o altre anomalie geofisiche nei depositi sepolti. Inoltre questo metodo avrebbe anche identificato la localizzazione di bombe inesplose (fortunatamente nessuna è stata ritrovata). Queste analisi sono state effettuate al fine di rispondere a questioni specifiche sorte in base alla nostra analisi delle strutture emergenti e per testare importanti ipotesi relative alla ricerca sulla più antica Via Consolare e sviluppo di Pompeii.

In aggiunta alle indagini geofisiche, sono state esaminate circa il 70% delle strutture emergenti nell’area VII 6 ed è stato effettuato uno studio dettagliato degli eventi costruttivi visibili e della differenza tra le malte. La sequenza è stata arricchita da una prima documentazione fotografica. In combinazione con la ricognizione topografica 3D dell’area, questa ha permesso la registrazione iniziale dei dati e lo studio della stratigrafia emergente.
Summary Author
Michael A. Anderson
Team
Archaeologist - Claire Weiss
Archaeologist - Clare O’Bryen
Archaeologist - Daniel Jackson
Archaeologist - Victoria Keitel
Archaeologist - Megan Gorman
Archaeologist - Erin Pitt
Archaeologist - Stephanie Pearson
Archaeologist - Dane Lutes-Kothes
Archaeologist - Aurora Tucker

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2008
Summary
it Il progetto “Via Consolare” esamina lo sviluppo urbano e la crescita di Pompei attraverso un’attiva ricerca sul campo che include scavo archeologico, ricognizione topografica 3-D, analisi delle tecniche edilizie, archiviazione di fotografia rettificata e indagini geofisiche. Con il progetto si tenta di spiegare il processo di urbanizzazione che ha portato alla composizione e all’organizzazione della parte nord-occidentale della città dal momento della sua originale fondazione fino alla distruzione del 79 d.C. A questo fine la ricerca si concentra su due aree separate della città antica: l’Insula VII 6 e la Villa delle Colonne a mosaico insieme alla lunga fila di taberne che si sviluppano lungo il suo lato occidentale. L’esame congiunto di queste aree permette di raggiungere conclusioni non solo circa la ricca e varia storia dell’uso e riuso che ogni area conserva, ma anche circa le priorità di cambiamento nel paesaggio urbano dell’antica città nel suo insieme.

Data la loro differente prossimità al foro e alle mura della città, l’Insula VII 6 e la Villa delle Colonne a mosaico offrono informazioni sui rinvenimenti urbani e suburbani – due contesti pompeiani che ci si potrebbe aspettare essere stati molto diversi tra loro in termini di sviluppo storico e uso domestico degli spazi. Comunque lo studio delle strutture emergenti in entrambe le aree rivelano una rimarchevole somiglianza di composizione specialmente durante gli anni finali di Pompei, consistenti in strutture domestiche, piccole iniziative imprenditoriali, attività industriali, fondazioni sacre, spazi regolamentati dallo stato e aree che testimoniano un grande traffico pedonale e su ruote. Stabilire se queste somiglianze esistevano nella storia di Pompei o se rappresentino uno sviluppo relativamente recente riveste una grande importanza nell’interpretazione della distinzione tra la città romana e le zone suburbane.

Dovrà essere valutato anche il potenziale ruolo della Via Consolare nel facilitare o creare questa situazione. Gli scavi designati a chiarire tali importanti questioni iniziati nel 2008 sul lato meridionale dell’Insula VII 6 tra il passaggio 26 e 27 hanno rivelato fondazioni e cronologie della facciata in tufo di Nocera della taverna che fronteggia quest’area. Inoltre si è aggiunta la pulizia preliminare della domus VII 6, 30. Per il futuro si stanno pianificando ulteriori scavi e analisi al fine di rivelare il ruolo di queste aree e delle loro specifiche relazioni con la Via Consolare nella storia della pianificazione della città.
en The Via Consolare Project examines the urban development and growth of Pompeii through active field research including archaeological excavation, 3-D topographic survey, wall construction analysis, rectified photographic recording, and geophysical remote sensing. The Project seeks to explain the processes of urbanization that produced the composition and layout of the north-western part of city from the time of its original foundation until its destruction in 79 CE. To this end, research focuses on two separate areas of the ancient city: Insula VII 6, and the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico together with the long row of shops on its western side. The examination of these areas in tandem permits conclusions to be drawn not only about the rich and varied history of use and re-use that each area preserves, but also about changing priorities in the urban landscape of the ancient city as a whole.

Given their differing proximities to both the forum and the city wall, VII 6 and the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico present information on both urban and surburban environments – two Pompeian contexts that might be expected to have been strikingly different in terms of their historical development and daily use of space. However, study of the extant remains in both areas reveals a remarkably similar composition, especially during Pompeii’s final years, consisting of domestic structures, small business ventures, industrial activities, sacred foundations, government-regulated spaces, and areas that experienced high-volume pedestrian and wheeled traffic. Whether these similarities existed throughout Pompeii’s history or were relatively recent developments has great significance for the interpretation of the distinction between Roman urban and suburban zones.

The potential role of the Via Consolare in facilitating or creating this situation must also be considered. Excavations designed to clarify these important questions commenced in 2008 on the southern side of Insula VII 6 between doorways 26 and 27, revealing the foundations and chronology of the Nocera tuff faced shop frontages in this area. These were augmented by preliminary cleaning in house VII 6, 30. Further excavation and analysis is planned for the future in order to reveal the role of these areas and their specific relationships with the Via Consolare in the history of city planning at the site.
Summary Author
Michael A. Anderson
Team
Archaeologist - Clare O’Bryen
Archaeologist - Daniel Jackson
Archaeologist - Jessica Self
Archaeologist - Megan Gorman
Archaeologist - Erin Pitt
Archaeologist - Stephanie Pearson
Archaeologist - Dane Lutes-Kothes
Archaeologist - Aurora Tucker
Archaeologist - Victoria Keitel
Supervisor - Claire Weiss

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2009
Summary
en In 2009 the Via Consolare Project continued to uncover a great deal of important information on the southern side of _Insula_ VII 6 and the development and excavation history of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico. Between the 24th of June and the 4th of August 2009, with the permission of the Soprintendenza Archeologica di Napoli e Pompei and with the ongoing support of Professore Guzzo and dottore D’Ambrosio, the members of the Via Consolare Project expanded the test trench from 2008 to produce more details on the final occupation phases of the shop and _tabernae_ at _Insula_ VII 6, 26-27.

This produced further information on the precise condition of these shops at the time of the eruption and revealed evidence of an apparently comprehensive programme of restoration and refurbishment that seems to have been in progress during the last days of the city’s life. Excavation revealed a system of channels and holes conceivably intended to provide an extensive new drainage system, which were interrupted by the AD 79 eruption itself. The resolution of the data was so precise that it is possible to restore not only the disposition of the individual diggers, but also the locations of their soil heaps. This provides an important window onto not only the condition of this particular part of the city at that moment, but also provides further evidence on the types of building activities which were underway during the seventeen years between the earthquake of AD 62 and the eruption. Especially significant is that the large-scale nature of these changes not only would have influenced the potential use of the Vico dei Soprastanti but might easily be characterised as ‘municipal’ in scale. Furthermore, this provides new information on the manner in which Roman/Pompeian builders conceptualised and executed individual work projects. These results therefore tie directly into our expressed research goals and reveal much of the nature of urban development along the course of the Via Consolare. At the moment, the southern side of _Insula_ VII 6 has yet to produce comparable traces of especially early chronology such as revealed by Dott. Ribera, in _Insula_ VII 4, so further excavation in this area will be necessary in the future to explain this absence.

Our excavations in the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico revealed important and poorly published information on the precise disposition of early ‘Samnite-Oscan’ graves uncovered in the pre-war campaigns of A. Maiuri in the _viridarium_ and _sacellum_ of the Villa. Though no ancient material was still extent in the majority of these areas, the information we uncovered is nevertheless extremely valuable both to the study of early burial practices but also in regards to the pre-existing alignments in the area, especially as they related to the original construction of the Villa. The second trench excavated in the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico was even more productive. Here, the area of Maiuri’s previous excavations were quickly identified and removed, revealing a number of primary earthen deposits relating to the final uses of the Villa and its spatial disposition. Such preservation is especially remarkable given the number of years during which the Villa has been exposed since its original excavation and the extent of subsequent plant growth.

During the 2009 season the Via Consolare Project also continued to refine our recording and documentation methodology so as to be able to integrate fully all types of archaeological data into a 3-D spatial database. Primary topographic survey was completed in Insula VII 6 including important underground portions of the cisterns of the Terme del Foro and its access corridors and also continued in the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico including the _viridarium_ and _sacellum_. In both areas, wall sequence analysis continued as in previous years and several groups of walls that were studied in 2007 and 2008 were brought together into broad, overall phasing sequences, providing a guideline for future cleaning and stratigraphic excavation. These intensive studies were followed by complete photo documentation via stitched-rectified photography – a method that was presented earlier this year at an important international conference on computer applications in archaeology (CAA 2009) (cf. Anderson, M. 2010).

Overall, investigations conducted by the Via Consolare Project have provided significant data to the understanding of the sequence and history of the development of the city of Pompeii as well as the social, environmental, and ecological framework through which this development took place. The results of our 2009 field season emphasize especially the importance of continued archaeological research in _Insula_ VII 6 and the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, and the value of the data they yet preserve.
it Nel 2009 il progetto Via Consolare ha continuato a mettere in luce una gran quantità di informazioni importanti riguardati la zona sud dell’Insula VII 6, nonché lo sviluppo e storia dello scavo della villa delle Colonne a Mosaico.

Tra il 24 Giugno e il 4 Agosto 2009, con il permesso della Soprintendenza Archeologica di Napoli e Pompei e con il costante supporto del Prof. Guzzo e del Dott. D’Ambrosio, il team del progetto Via Consolare ha esteso il saggio di verifica del 2008, al fine di ottenere maggiori informazioni sulle fasi finali della frequentazione delle tabernae nell’Isula VII 6, 26-27.

Il lavoro ha permesso di ottenere maggiori informazioni sull’esatto assetto di questi spazi al tempo dell’eruzione del Vesuvio e ha rivelato evidenze di un vasto programma di restauro e rinnovamento che sembra essere stato in corso durante gli ultimi giorni di vita della città.

Lo scavo ha svelato un sistema di canali e fori, con la probabile funzione di consentire un vasto e nuovo sistema di drenaggio, interrotto dopo l’eruzione del 79 d.C.
Il risultato di questi nuovi dati è stato così preciso da permettere l’esatta individuazione della disposizione dei singoli scavatori e la localizzazione dei loro cumuli di terreno. Ciò getta una luce sulle condizioni di questa specifica parte della città in quel momento e fornisce ulteriori indizi sui tipi di attività costruttive in corso durante i diciassette anni tra il terremoto del 62 d.C. e l’eruzione del Vesuvio.

Particolarmente significativo è che la natura di vasta scala di questi cambiamenti non solo avrebbe influenzato il potenziale uso del Vico dei Soprastanti ma potrebbe facilmente aver caratterizzato anche l’intera città.

Questi dati forniscono nuove informazioni sul modo in cui i costruttori Romani/Pompeiani teorizzarono ed eseguirono singoli progetti di lavoro. Inoltre, i risultati emersi si legano direttamente agli obbiettivi della ricerca delineati e forniscono molte informazioni sullo sviluppo urbano lungo il corso della via Consolare.

Al momento, la parte sud dell’Insula VII 6 deve ancora restituire tracce cronologiche precedenti, come quelle messe in luce dal Dott. Ribera nel caso dell’Insula VII 4; si rende necessario in futuro un ulteriore scavo in quest’area per spiegare questa assenza.

I nostri scavi nella Villa delle Colonne a mosaico hanno rivelato informazioni importanti e scarsamente pubblicate sulla precisa disposizione delle prime tombe 'osco-sannite', scoperte durante le campagne di A. Maiuri condotte nel periodo pre-guerra nel viridarium e nel sacello della Villa.

Anche se il materiale antico non era numericamente consistente nella maggior parte di queste aree, le informazioni che abbiamo ricavato sono, comunque, estremamente importanti sia per lo studio delle prime pratiche di sepoltura, sia per gli allineamenti preesistenti nella zona, in quanto legati alla costruzione originaria della Villa.

La seconda trincea scavata nella Villa delle Colonne a mosaico è stata ancora più produttiva.
Qui, l'area degli scavi precedenti condotti da Maiuri è stata rapidamente identificata e indagata, rivelando un consistente numero di depositi di terra legati alla frequentazione finale della Villa e alla sua disposizione spaziale.
Tale conservazione è particolarmente notevole, visto il numero di anni trascorsi dal primo scavo della Villa e la successiva crescita delle piante.

Nel corso nel 2009, il Progetto Via Consolare ha inoltre continuato ad affinare la nostra metodologia di registrazione e documentazione, in modo da essere in grado di integrare pienamente tutti i tipi di dati archeologici in un database spaziale 3-D.

Nell’Insula VII 6 è stato ultimato il rilievo topografico, che ha incluso importanti porzioni sotterranee delle cisterne delle Terme del Foro e dei suoi corridoi di accesso, interessando anche la Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, con il viridarium e sacello.

Come negli anni precedenti, è stata effettuata in entrambe le aree un’analisi della sequenza dei muri; diversi gruppi di muri studiati nel 2007 e nel 2008 sono stati disposti in fasi ampie e complessive, offrendo così una linea guida per la pulizia e il futuro scavo stratigrafico.

Questi studi approfonditi sono stati seguiti da documentazione fotogrammetrica completa tramite fotografia rettificata – una metodologia presentata in un importante convegno internazionale sulle applicazioni informatiche in archeologia, tenutosi all'inizio di quest'anno (CAA 2009) (cf. Anderson, M. 2010).

Nel complesso, le indagini condotte dal Progetto Via Consolare hanno fornito dati significativi per la comprensione della sequenza e storia dello sviluppo della città di Pompei, così come il quadro sociale, ambientale ed ecologico attraverso il quale questo sviluppo ha avuto luogo.
I risultati della nostra stagione 2009 evidenziano soprattutto l'importanza di una ricerca archeologica continuativa nell’Insula VII 6 e nell'area della Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, unitamente al valore dei dati che ancora conservano.
Summary Author
Michael A. Anderson
Team
Archaeologist - Claire Weiss
Archaeologist - Clare O’Bryen
Archaeologist - Daniel Jackson
Archaeologist - Megan Gorman
Archaeologist - Erin Pitt
Archaeologist - Victoria Keitel
Archaeologist - Dane Lutes-Kothes
Archaeologist - Stephanie Pearson
Archaeologist - Aurora Tucker

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2010
Summary
en The 2010 field season of the Via Consolare Project was dedicated to the preparation and finalisation the results of the previous two seasons of excavation in preparation for publication. To this end, the materials recovered during the summers of 2008 and 2009 were examined, recorded, and analysed. Between the 16th of June and the 4th of August 2010, with the kind permission the Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali, Soprintendenza Speciale per i Beni Archeologici di Napoli e Pompei, and with the kind support of Professoressa. Salvatore, Professore Proietti and dottore Varone, the members of the Via Consolare Project continued our ongoing research in the areas of _Insula_ VII 6, the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, and the route of the Via Consolare. Specialists in pottery, numismatics, animal bone, charcoal, and ecofacts examined the materials that our excavations of the last two seasons had produced. As a result of these efforts, the majority of all finds have now been studied.

All soil samples floated in previous years have now been sorted thoroughly and accessioned. In addition, all animal bone recovered has been washed and preliminary sorting of taxa has begun. The precise of identification of charcoal remains has commenced. All pottery recovered has now been processed for the provision of spot dates, which will be refined and finalised during the following months.

Records of all coins recovered have been made and the stratigraphic sequence discernable in the standing remains has been finalised pending further excavation. In short, all backlog of materials or post-processing has been completed. The Via Consolare Project is committed to making our results available to the community of Pompeian scholars and the Soprintendenza Archeologica di Pompei with as little delay as possible between excavation and publication. For this to be possible, it is vital that the processes of finds analysis and publication go hand in hand with on-going excavation. The successful completion of our target goals for finds analysis and post-processing in 2010 means that our publications are well on track to maintaining this commitment.
it La stagione 2010 del Progetto via Consolare è stata dedicata all’organizzazione e al completamento dei risultati delle due stagioni di scavo precedenti, in vista della pubblicazione.

A tal fine, i materiali recuperati durante l’estate 2008 e 2009 sono stati vagliati, registrati e analizzati. Tra il 16 giugno e il 4 agosto 2010, su gentile concessione del Ministero per i Beni e le Attività Culturali, Soprintendenza Speciale per i Beni Archeologici di Napoli e Pompei, e con il gentile sostegno di Mariarosaria Salvatore, Giuseppe Proietti e Antonio Varone, i membri del Progetto Via Consolare hanno continuato le nostre ricerche in corso sui settori dell’Insula VII 6, l'area della Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, e sul percorso della Via Consolare.

Specialisti di ceramica, numismatica, ossa di animali, carbone ed ecologia, hanno esaminato i materiali acquisiti dagli scavi delle due ultime stagioni.
Come risultato di questi sforzi, è stata accuratamente indagata la maggior parte di tutti i reperti.
Tutti i campioni di suolo non studiati negli anni precedenti, sono stati accuratamente selezionati e registrati. Inoltre, tutte le ossa di animali recuperate sono stata lavate e se ne è iniziata una organizzazione in taxa. Ha preso avvio la precisa identificazione di resti di carbone.
Tutta la ceramica recuperata è stata elaborata in vista della determinazione di spot-date, che sarà perfezionata e conclusa nei mesi successivi.

Sono state documentate tutte le monete recuperate e si è stabilita la sequenza stratigrafica di ciò che è ancora sul posto, in attesa di ulteriori scavi. In breve, sono stati ultimati lo studio di materiale degli anni passati e la successiva elaborazione.

Il Progetto Via Consolare si impegna a rendere fruibili i risultati alla comunità degli studiosi di Pompei e alla Soprintendenza Archeologica di Pompei, con un piccolo ritardo ammissibile tra scavo e pubblicazione.

Affinché questo sia possibile, è fondamentale che il momento di analisi dei reperti e la pubblicazione vadano di pari passo con gli scavi in corso.
Sono stati raggiunti con successo gli obiettivi stabiliti nel 2010 per l'analisi di reperti e la successiva elaborazione; questo indica che le nostre pubblicazioni sono sulla buona strada per il mantenimento di questo impegno
Summary Author
Michael A. Anderson
Team
Archaeologist - Claire Weiss
Archaeologist - Victoria Keitel
Archaeologist - Clare O’Bryen
Archaeologist - Daniel Jackson
Archaeologist - Megan Gorman
Archaeologist - Erin Pitt
Archaeologist - Stephanie Pearson
Archaeologist - Dane Lutes-Kothes
Archaeologist - Aurora Tucker

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2011
Summary
en In 2011, the Via Consolare Project continued excavation in the southern side of _Insula_ VII 6, 26 and VII 6, 27 to continue to clarify the nature of the ancient activities identified in previous field seasons and to finalise the sub-surface investigations initiated in 2008. The area of the eastern half of Archaeological Area 001, measuring roughly four by five metres, was reopened and backfill from the 2009 field season was removed. Stratigraphic excavation was then undertaken to the level of natural soils in the majority of this area, bringing subsurface examination in AA001 to a close. As a result, it is now possible to present a complete stratigraphic sequence for the southern rooms of properties 26 and 27, and to connect the associated chronology to the relative development of much of _Insula_ VII 6.

A long history of urban transformation might be expected in _Insula_ VII 6 given the proximity of this area to the Forum, the so-called ‘altstadt’, and the Terme del Foro. Indeed, excavations have confirmed a complicated sequence of development, long-term use, and re-use in the south-eastern corner of the block, illustrating the transformation of the area from elite domestic space of the mid-2nd c. BC into a group of purpose-built commercial structures at the beginning of the 1st c. BC and finally into a construction zone during the final years prior to the eruption of Vesuvius. It is also clear that the evolving utilisation of these areas frequently involved the widespread removal of soils and floors, presenting a highly-interwoven archaeological record preserved completely only in the combination of data from both soil deposits and architectural remains.

The documentation of the complete chronological sequence in AA001 has also yielded information in support of the insula-wide phasing carried out through analysis of the standing architecture. In 2011, the construction phases identified and studied in the walls of the _insula_ were coordinated with the subsurface evidence and a working geographical information system (GIS) database was created serving to coordinate all data produced by the project. The use of structure-from-motion 3D point capture using consumer grade digital cameras has revolutionized all aspects of the project’s research methodology and has permitted the creation of rich, highly-detailed, three-dimensional surface models of standing remains and sub-surface deposits.

During the final weeks of the 2011 field season, preliminary investigations were undertaken in a 4 by 5 metre area at the north-west corner of the _Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus_ (VII 6, 28), situated against one of the earliest walls of the _insula_ built in _opus africanum_ (type A). Removal of modern build-up was undertaken in order to establish the degree of preservation of the AD 79 surface, to examine the relationship of the walls below the levels with the greatest amount of modern debris, and to compare this information against geophysical research undertaken in 2007. The clean uncovered the continuation of a wall that was obliterated in the allied bombing in 1943, but produced few traces of intact flooring. Further excavation in the future will serve to clarify the chronology and development of this area.
it Nel 2011, il Via Consolare Project ha continuato lo scavo del lato sud Insula_ VII 6, 26 e VII 6, 27 al fine di chiarire la natura delle attività antiche, identificate nella precedente stagione di scavo e completare le indagini di superficie iniziate nel 2008. La metà est dell’area archeologica 001, che misura approssimativamente dai 4 ai 5 metri, è stata riaperta e il riempimento del 2009 è stato rimosso. E’ stato intrapreso lo scavo stratigrafico della maggior parte dell’area fino al livello del terreno naturale, portando a termine l’indagine al disotto della superficie di AA001. E’ ora possibile, come risultato, presentare una sequenza stratigrafica completa degli ambienti a sud delle proprietà 26 e 27, e connettere la cronologia ad essi associate al relativo sviluppo di gran parte dell’insula VII_6.

Considerando la vicinanza all’area del Foro, ci aspettavamo dall’indagine dell’insula VII_6 una lunga storia di trasformazione urbana. Nell’angolo sud-est del complesso, gli scavi hanno effettivamente confermato una complessa sequenza di sviluppo, utilizzo a lungo termine, e riuso, attestando la trasformazione dell’area da spazio destinato all’élite domestica del II a.C. a gruppo di strutture commerciali appositamente costruite agli inizi del I a.C. e infine a cantiere edile negli anni prima dell’eruzione del Vesuvio. Si è inoltre chiarito che l’utilizzo crescente di queste aree ha spesso comportato una estesa rimozione di terra e piani pavimentali, determinando una complessa documentazione archeologica, che si è conservata solo nella combinazione dei dati con i depositi del terreno e i resti architettonici.

La documentazione di tutta la sequenza cronologica di AA001 ha inoltre fornito informazioni a supporto della messa in fase dell’insula condotta attraverso analisi dell’architettura rimasta in situ. Nel 2011, le fasi della costruzione identificate e studiate nei muri dell’insula sono state messe in connessione con ciò che rimane sotto il livello della superficie e inoltre è stato creato un database correlato a un GIS con lo scopo di coordinare tutti i dati generati dal progetto. L’utilizzo della structure-from-motion 3D point capture, usando camere digitali consumer grade, basa la ricostruzione tridimensionale sull'analisi dello spostamento di un oggetto attraverso il tempo; questo ha rivoluzionato tutti gli aspetti metodologici della ricerca del progetto e ha permesso la creazione di modelli di superficie ricchi e altamente dettagliati delle strutture emergenti e dei depositi sottostanti.

Durante le settimane finali della stagione 2011, sono state intraprese ricerche preliminari in una area di m4x5 a nord ovest dell’angolo della casa di Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus_ (VII 6, 28), situata contro uno dei primi muri dell’insula costruita in _opus africanum_ (type A). Si è svolta la rimozione degli accumuli moderni, al fine di stabilire il grado di conservazione della superficie precedente al 79 d.C., per esaminare la relazione dei muri al di sotto livelli contenenti la maggior parte dei detriti moderni e confrontare questa informazione con le ricerche geofisiche intraprese nel 2007. La pulizia ha svelato la continuazione del muro che era stato obliterato durante il bombardamento alleato nel 1943, ma ha fornito poche tracce di pavimentazione integra. Successivi scavi in future saranno utili per chiarire la cronologia e lo sviluppo di quest’area.
Team
Archaeologist - Daniel Jackson
Archaeologist - Erin Pitt
Archaeologist - Megan Gorman
Archaeologist - Stephanie Pearson
Archaeologist - Victoria Keitel
Archaeologist - Amy Bower

FOLD&R

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2012
Summary
en The Via Consolare Project focused its 2012 research on sub-surface excavation in the centre of Insula VII 6. Further analysis of standing structures, including topographic survey of the northern side of the Terme del Foro, was also undertaken, while Structure from Motion (SfM) based 3D surface capture was employed to produce a digital model of all excavated deposits and trench features. A trench measuring 11m by 5m (AA006) was opened in the north-western corner of the peristyle of the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus (VII 6, 28.19.20) where this property adjoined the Casa di Pamphilus Felix (VII 6, 38). This area is now nearly devoid of standing remains with the exception of two short lengths of wall, one of which is distinguished by traces of construction in opus africanum (type A). Stratigraphic excavation proceeded to the level of natural soils in all areas available for excavation, producing 90 stratigraphic units (SUs) and completing investigations in AA006.

These investigations have revealed much regarding the development of the central area of Insula VII 6, especially concerning the interactions of three properties in the area: the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus, the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix, and the Casa della Diana, from its earliest identifiable human activities to the years immediately prior to the 79 AD eruption. The earliest traces of activity help to confirm the supposed antiquity of the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix and testify to an early presence in the area, possibly related to other ‘pappamonte’ phase features in the city. It is possible that these predate the final stage of interplinian eruptions, which were also identified at depth in AA006. At the moment, precise dating of the opus africanum (type A) wall has also proven elusive, but excavation in 2012 clearly proved that this earlier phase in the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix was once much more extensive than had previously been thought, and further exploration may yet provide a solid date for its earliest surviving construction phase.

The most important discoveries of the 2012 field season were a suite of rooms underlying the later peristyle of the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus that, prior to the early 1st c. AD, had belonged to the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix, probably when it was also joined with the Casa della Diana. Preserved pavements and two phases of earlier wall plasters documented not only the initial addition of the rooms to the earlier property in the early 1st c. BC, but also subsequent modifications in the time of Augustus. The annexation of property from one house to another, likely early in the reign of Tiberius and contemporary with the separation of the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix and the Casa della Diana, documents a shift in financial primacy between the house owners in the Insula. This interconnects neatly with the sequence of development in the block and may represent the tangible benefits of engagement in business and commerce.

Excavation also provided considerable data on changes that occurred throughout the 1st c. AD in the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus, possibly related to earthquake repairs or renovations in the house’s final years. Overall, the 2012 field season has provided an important and deeply-revealing glimpse into the development of Insula VII 6 and its building history. In turn, these changes inform observations that may be made about Pompeian society, economy, and social organisation from the 3rd c. BC until the 1st c. AD.
it Il Via Consolare Project ha focalizzato la ricerca del 2012 sullo scavo della parte centrale dell’Insula VII 6. Inoltre, sono state intraprese ulteriori analisi delle strutture superstiti, inclusa una ricognizione topografica del lato nord delle Terme del Foro, mentre è stato utilizzato il sistema Structure from Motion (SfM) basato sulla "cattura" della superficie 3D per produrre un modello digitale dei depositi scavati e dei resti del saggio. Nell’angolo nord-ovest del peristilio della Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunato (VII 6, 28.19.20), contiguo alla casa di Pamphilus Felix (VII 6, 38), è stato aperto un saggio di 11x5m (AA006). Le uniche rimanenze di tale area sono ad oggi solo due lacerti di muro, uno dei quali è distinguibile da tracce di costruzione in _opus africanum_ (tipo A). Lo scavo stratigrafico è proceduto fino al livello del terreno vergine in tutte le aree di scavo, producendo 90 unità stratigrafiche e completando l’indagine di AA006.

Tali indagini hanno rivelato molti dati sullo sviluppo dell’area centrale dell’Insula VII, 6, soprattutto riguardo alle interazioni delle tre proprietà dell’area: la casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus, la Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix e la Casa di Diana, dalle sue prime fasi agli anni immediatamente prima del 79 d.C. Le prime tracce di attività aiutano a confermare la supposta antichità della Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix e testimoniano una presenza precoce nell’area, probabilmente legata alle altre tracce di “pappamonte” in città. Al momento rimane vaga la precisa datazione del muro in _opus africanum_, ma lo scavo del 2012 ha chiaramente dimostrato che questa prima fase nella casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix è stata più lunga di quanto si credeva. Ulteriori indagini potranno fornire dati attendibili riguardo alla sua prima fase costruttiva.

La scoperta più importante della stagione di scavo 2012 è stata il rinvenimento di alcuni ambienti sottostanti il più tardo peristilio della casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus che, prima del I sec. d.C., era appartenuto alla casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix, probabilmente quando fu anche unito alla Casa di Diana. Resti pavimentali e due fasi di un muro precedente documentano non solo l’aggiunta degli ambienti alla proprietà nel I sec. a.C. ma anche le successive modifiche avvenute in età Augustea. L’annessione della proprietà da una casa all’altra, probabilmente con il regno di Tiberio e contemporaneamente con la separazione della Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix e della Casa della Diana, documenta un cambiamento di supremazia finanziaria tra i proprietari della casa nell’Insula. Tale dato si connette chiaramente con la sequenza dello sviluppo del complesso e può essere una testimonianza dei benefici provenienti da un impegno in ambito finanziario e commerciale.

Lo scavo ha inoltre permesso di acquisire dati considerevoli sui cambiamenti che avvennero nel corso del I sec. d.C. nella Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus, probabilmente legati a riparazioni o restauri avvenuti in seguito al terremoto negli anni finali della vita della casa. Nel complesso, la stagione 2012 ha consentito di gettare luce sullo sviluppo dell’Insula VII 6 e la sua storia costruttiva. Tali cambiamenti permettono di fare osservazioni sulla società Pompeiana e sulla sua economia e organizzazione sociale dal III a.C. al I d.C.
en The Via Consolare Project focused its 2012 research on sub-surface excavation in the centre of Insula VII 6. Further analysis of standing structures, including topographic survey of the northern side of the Terme del Foro, was also undertaken, while Structure from Motion (SfM) based 3D surface capture was employed to produce a digital model of all excavated deposits and trench features. A trench measuring 11m by 5m (AA006) was opened in the north-western corner of the peristyle of the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus (VII 6, 28.19.20) where this property adjoined the Casa di Pamphilus Felix (VII 6, 38). This area is now nearly devoid of standing remains with the exception of two short lengths of wall, one of which is distinguished by traces of construction in opus africanum (type A). (1) Stratigraphic excavation proceeded to the level of natural soils in all areas available for excavation, producing 90 stratigraphic units (SUs) and completing investigations in AA006.


These investigations have revealed much regarding the development of the central area of Insula VII 6, especially concerning the interactions of three properties in the area: the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus, the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix, and the Casa della Diana, from its earliest identifiable human activities to the years immediately prior to the 79 AD eruption. The earliest traces of activity help to confirm the supposed antiquity of the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix and testify to an early presence in the area, possibly related to other ‘pappamonte’ phase features in the city. It is possible that these predate the final stage of interplinian eruptions, (2) which were also identified at depth in AA006. At the moment, precise dating of the opus africanum (type A) wall has also proven elusive, but excavation in 2012 clearly proved that this earlier phase in the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix was once much more extensive than had previously been thought, and further exploration may yet provide a solid date for its earliest surviving construction phase.

The most important discoveries of the 2012 field season were a suite of rooms underlying the later peristyle of the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus that, prior to the early 1st c. AD, had belonged to the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix, probably when it was also joined with the Casa della Diana. Preserved pavements and two phases of earlier wall plasters documented not only the initial addition of the rooms to the earlier property in the early 1st c. BC, but also subsequent modifications in the time of Augustus. The annexation of property from one house to another, likely early in the reign of Tiberius and contemporary with the separation of the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix and the Casa della Diana, documents a shift in financial primacy between the house owners in the Insula. This interconnects neatly with the sequence of development in the block (3) and may represent the tangible benefits of engagement in business and commerce.
Excavation also provided considerable data on changes that occurred throughout the 1st c. AD in the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus, possibly related to earthquake repairs or renovations in the house’s final years. Overall, the 2012 field season has provided an important and deeply-revealing glimpse into the development of Insula VII 6 and its building history. In turn, these changes inform observations that may be made about Pompeian society, economy, and social organisation from the 3rd c. BC until the 1st c. AD.
Summary Author
Michael A. Anderson
Team
Archaeologist - Claire J. Weiss
Archaeologist - Erin Pitt
Archaeologist - Megan Gorman
Archaeologist - Victoria Keitel
Archaeologist - Amy Bower
Archaeologist - Caitlin Callahan

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2013
Summary
en In June and July of 2013, the Via Consolare Project conducted stratigraphic excavations in the garden of Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus (VII 6, 28.19.20) and in a shop (VII 6, 16) on the northern side of the so-called ‘Great Cistern.’

The first trench (AA007), measuring 11m by 5m, encompassed the southern half of the central garden space and the southeast corner of the colonnade of the peristyle of the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus (Room 4). The second (AA008) measured 9m by 3m and was placed against the northern wall of the ‘Great Cistern,’ exposing approximately half of the area of the shop associated with the northern side of this structure (Rooms 64, 65, 66). Excavation proceeded to the level of natural soils in both areas, producing 49 and 59 stratigraphic units (SU, US) respectively.


Though ancient pit cutting and modern bomb damage to AA007 meant that the original layout of the centre of the insula and the precise date of its first creation has remained elusive, it was nevertheless possible to hypothesize the probable location of a boundary wall in the area between two early properties. It was also possible to reconstruct much of the original decoration of this boundary wall, since the later pit cuts appear to have been filled with many elements from the features they destroyed. The date implied by this decorative plaster suggests that a transfer of space from the Casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix and the Casa della Diana to the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus took place probably about a generation after the beginning of the reign of Tiberius. This also appears to have included elements from a now-invisible property that had once extended from the centre of the block to the Vicolo delle Terme, the eastern end of which was later truncated by the ‘Great Cistern.’

Recovery in AA008 of an earlier shop floor through which the ‘Great Cistern’ was cut may serve to explain this earlier property as one of a row of similar shops or row-houses that once faced the Vicolo delle Terme. The removal of these shops would have freed up space to the west that was taken over by the Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus for the creation of a peristyle, triclinium, and a suite of service rooms. Although excavation in AA008 is not yet completed, it is clear that after the construction of the ‘Great Cistern,’ the area witnessed numerous transformations and alterations in use. Several phases of opus signinum floors were recovered overlying partially preserved cisterns or cess pits, which were themselves filled with primary fills from the eruption of AD 79.

Overall, the 2013 field season has done much to clarify one of the major phases of development in Insula VII 6 and to facilitate the participation of this block in the discussion of Pompeian public infrastructure, domestic economy, and urban organisation from the 3rd c. BC until the 1st c. AD.
it A Giugno e a Luglio 2013, il "Via Consolare Project" ha portato avanti scavi stratigrafici nel giardino della Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus (VII 6, 28.19.20) e nella taberna (VII 6, 16) sul lato nord della così detta “Grande Cisterna”.

Il primo saggio (AA007), 11m x 5, ha incluso la metà sud dello spazio giardino centrale e l’angolo sud-est del colonnato del peristilio della casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus (stanza 4). Il secondo saggio (AA008), 9m x 3, è stato posizionato contro il muro nord della “Grande Cisterna”, mettendo in luce approssimativamente la metà dell’area del negozio associate con il lato nord della struttura (stanze 64, 65, 66). Lo scavo è proceduto a livello del suolo naturale in entrambe le aree, producendo rispettivamente 49 e 59 unità stratigrafiche.

Nonostante la presenza di una fossa e di una danno dovuto ad una esplosione significassero che l’assetto originale dell’insula e la data precisa della sua prima creazione fossero vaghi, tuttavia è stato possibile ipotizzare la probabile posizione del muro di confine nell’area tra due proprietà precedenti. E’ stato, inoltre, possibile ricostruire molto dell’originaria decorazione di questo muro di confine, dal momento che la fossa più tarda sembra essere stata riempita con molti elementi provenienti da strutture andate distrutte. La data connessa a tale intonaco dipinto suggerisce che un trasferimento di spazio dalla casa di Cipius Pamphilus Felix e dalla Casa della Diana alla Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus si verificò probabilmente una generazione dopo l’inizio del regno di Tiberio. Ciò sembra aver incluso elementi provenienti da una attualmente non visibile proprietà che una volta si estendeva dal centro dell’isolato fino al Vicolo delle Terme, il limite est del quale è stato successivamente troncato della “Grande Cisterna”.

L’individuazione nel saggio AA008 di un precedente pavimento della taberna nel quale fu tagliata la “Grande Cisterna”, può servire a interpretare questa precedente proprietà come uno di una serie di negozi simili o case che un tempo si affacciavano sul Vicolo delle Terme. La rimozione di questi negozia avrebbe liberato lo spazio ad ovest che era stato occupato dalla Casa di Secundus Tyrannus Fortunatus per la creazione del peristilio, del triclinio e di un ambiente con stanze di servizio. Sebbene lo scavo in AA008 non sia ancora complete, è chiaro che dopo la costruzione della “Grande Cisterna”, l’area abbia assistito a numerose trasformazioni e cambiamenti d’uso. Si sono messe in luce numerose fasi pavimentali in _opus signinum_ che coprivano parzialmente le cisterne conservate o le fogne. Queste ultime erano riempite dai materiali dell’eruzione del 79 d.C.

Nel complesso la stagione 2013 ha fatto molto per chiarire una della maggiori fasi di sviluppo dell’Insula VII 6 e per facilitare la partecipazione di questo isolato nella discussione sulle pubbliche infrastrutture di Pompei, l’economia domestica e l’organizzazione urbana dal III a.C. fino al I d.C.
Summary Author
Michael A. Anderson
Team
Archaeologist - Claire J. Weiss
Archaeologist - Erin Pitt
Archaeologist - Amy Bower
Archaeologist - Caitlin Callahan
Archaeologist representing the Soprintendenza - Vincenzo Sabini – Soprintendenza Archeologica di Pompei

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2014
Summary
en In June and July of 2014, the Via Consolare Project conducted stratigraphic excavations and removal of modern debris in the front room of a shop at VII 6, 14, in the atrium of the next-door house (VII 6, 10.11.16), and in the pavement directly outside of doorway VII 6, 11.

The first trench (AA009), measuring 6m by 5m, occupied the majority of the front room (Room 73) of the north-eastern shop on the block. The second (AA010), covering the majority of the atrium (Room 61) and fauces (Room 60) of the property accessed by doorway VII 6, 11, measured 7m by 5m. The final trench (AA011), was 4m by 1m running between two brick piers that define this same entrance, exposing the northward continuation of features recovered within AA010. Excavation produced 33, 49, and 20 stratigraphic units respectively, but only reached natural soils via small sondages through pre-existing holes in an otherwise well-preserved _opus_ _signinum_ floor of AA 010.

Excavation in AA009 neither reached full depth nor produced natural soils due to the recovery of a preserved AD 79 cellar under a partially collapsed final-phase floor. The creation of the cellar removed virtually all traces of earlier phases. Nevertheless, it was possible to identify preexisting property walls that had been reused in the creation of the shop. The shop appears to have been part of a sizeable, multi-story apartment complex that included construction of the ‘Great Cistern’ on its southern side at the same time. That the walls were designed to bear considerable loads is clear from their massive foundations and the reuse of blocks of tufo di Nocera as ashlar quoins. Excavation of eruptive material suggests the collapsed upper stories of this structure were decorated in relatively high quality decoration. Further investigation into the contents of the cellar and its state at the time of the eruption will await future field seasons.

Cleaning of modern debris in AA010, produced a previously excavated but largely undocumented impluvium covered and surrounded by a mosaic of large tesserae in four different coloured stones. The sequence of building in the structure makes it plausible that the impluvium represents the reuse of earlier decorative surfaces in an otherwise relatively diminutive dwelling. Subsequent alterations to the property include the addition and removal of upper stories, the cutting of a new drain capped with tiles, one of which was stamped with the name ‘Holconius,’ and the creation of a small vaulted sacellum.

Excavation of AA011 recovered evidence of modern piping running along the northern sidewalk of the block, but also the continuation of the drain from AA010. At depth, evidence of a charcoal rich, ritual foundation deposit, possibly related to a change in the insula frontage or sidewalk kerbing awaits further investigation.

Overall, the 2014 field season augmented the understanding of changes related to the creation of the ‘Great Cistern’ and situated the development of this block into its wider urban context between the 3rd c. BC and the 1st c. AD.
it A Giugno e Luglio 2014 il Via Consolare Project ha condotto scavi stratigrafici ed ha rimosso lo strato di depositi moderno situato di fronte al negozio nell’insula VII 6, 14, nell’atrio della casa accanto (VII 6, 10.11.16), e nel pavimento direttamente al di fuori dell’accesso VII 6, 11.

Il primo saggio (AA009), di m 6x5, ha occputa la maggioranza dell’ambiente sulla fronte (stanza 73) del negozio situato all’estremità nord-est del complesso. Il secondo saggio (AA010), ha coperto la maggioranza dell’atrio (stanza 61) e delle _fauces_ (stanza 60) della proprietà accessibile dall’ingresso VII 6, 11 e misurante m 7x5. L’ultimo saggio (AA011), di m 4x1, è stato aperto tra due pilastri che definiscono la stessa entrata, esponendo la continuazione verso nord degli elemeni rinvenuti in AA010. Lo scavo ha prodotto rispettivamente 33, 49 e 20 US, ma ha raggiunto il terreno vergine solo attraverso sondaggi tramite preesistenti aperture all’interno del pavimento in _opus signinum_ di AA010.

Lo scavo di AA009 non ha raggiunto tutta la profondità e non ha neanche terreno vergine a casua del ritrovamento di un deposito situato al di sotto di una fase finale del pavimento parzialmente crollato. La crezione del deposito ha virtualmente rimosso tutte le tracce di una precedente fase. Tuttavia, è stato possibile identificare mura di una preestistente proprietà fu riutilizzzata nella creazione del negozio. Il negozio sembra essere stato parte di un complesso a più piani che ha incluso la construzione della Grande Cisterna nel suo lato sud. E’ evidente dall’analisi delle massiccie fondzioni e dal riuso di blocchi di tufo di Nocera per i blocchi dell’ammorsatura, che le mura furono progettate per sostenere un notevole peso. Lo scavo di materiale eruttivo suggerisce che i piani superiori di questa struttura, crollati, fossero decorati con una decorazione di alta qualià. Ulteriori indagini del contenuto del deposito e del suo stato al tempo dell’eruzione sono previste per le successive campagne di scavo.

La pulizia degli strati moderni in AA010 ha messo in luce un _impluvium_ già scavato ma prevalentemente non documentato, circondato da un mosaico a larghe tessere in quattro differenti pietre colorate. La sequenza dell’edificio nella struttura rende plausivile che l’impluvium rapresenti il riuso di superfici decorative precedenti all’interno di una dimora relativamente minuscola. Seguenti alterazioni alla proprietà includono l’aggiunta e la rimozione di piani superiori, il tagli di un nuovo condotto coperto con tegole, una delle quali reca il nome Holoconius, e la crezione di un piccolo sacello coperto a volta.

Lo scavo di AA011 ha portato in luce una guarnizione lungo il lato nord del marciapiede e la continuazione del canale da AA010. Ad una certa profondità, tracce di carbone, deposito rituale di fondazione, probababilmente riferibile all’insula o al marciapiede, aspettano ulteriori studi.

Nel complesso, la stagione 2014 ha aumentato la comprensione dei cambiamenti relativi alla crezione della Grande Cisterna e ha situato lo sviluppo di questo complesso all’interno del più ampio contesto urbano tra il III a.C. e il I sec d.C.
Summary Author
Michael A. Anderson

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2015
Summary
en In June and July of 2015, the Via Consolare Project conducted stratigraphic excavations and analysis of standing remains in the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico as a part of on-going research into the chronology, urban development, and utilization of the properties along the Via Consolare, from Pompeii’s surburbium to its forum.

Excavation involved the continuation a trench initiated but not completed in 2009 (AA005). This trench, measuring 10.5m by 2.5m, was situated within the raised platform upon which the Villa sits, between the core of the Villa proper and a row of six columns on its southern side. Running centrally through the trench, an apparently unpublished earlier sondage had removed ancient stratigraphy but for the western and northern sides of the area. This permitted relatively deep excavation to be undertaken via stepped removal of the modern backfill. Excavation produced 58 stratigraphic units, recovering traces in section of a volcanic sand deposit that likely overlies natural soils.

The general phases of activity recovered in the excavation began with a relatively deep natural topography, and some early levelling deposits. Phase 2 witnessed the primary construction of the central Villa core with walls and use surfaces more than a meter below the current Villa thresholds. Phase 3 saw the addition of a raised platform and six columns on the southern side of the Villa along with several additional columns inside the core structure and a drain running southward from its centre. Evidence of the construction process for the western retaining wall were preserved in the form of layout lines scored directly into the Villa's exterior. At a point after this, the Villa was hemmed in by the construction or reconstruction of a row of shops and associated back rooms to the west, which perhaps shortly thereafter received a water pipe that ran through the portico. At this point too, another drain was added, putting the previous drain out of use. These changes appear to relate to the addition or modification of upper stories to the Villa and the transformation of the core of the Villa into a service wing, activities which may be provisionally and circumstantially dated to roughly the Claudian period. Continued floor raising and related modifications to the second drain characterised the final ancient phase observed in AA005 (Phase 6), a period that throughout the Villa witnessed the creation of some of its most distinctive characteristics, including the large viridarium that occupied the backs of the tombs and the eponymous mosaic columns. A final phase of change visible in these walls involving yet more upper storey access, was not reflected in the deposits of AA005.


Overall, investigations in 2015 have revealed important information about the surprising depth of the original topography of the area, suggesting that much of what is now observed is the result of large-scale levelling activities. Traces of further 'Oscan' burials such as were found in the area of the viridarium, have not yet been recovered in the area of the Villa.
it A Giugno e Luglio 2015, il Via Consolare Project ha condotto scavi stratigrafici e analisi dei resti di ciò che rimane in piedi nell'area della Villa delle Colonne a mosaico come parte di una ricerca di corso sulla cronologia, sviluppo urbano ed utilizzazione delle proprietà lungo la Via Consolare, dal suburbio di Pompei fino al foro.

Lo scavo ha implicato la continuazione di un sondaggio iniziato ma non completato nel 2009 (AA005). Questo sondaggio, misurante 10.5m x 2.5m, era situato all'interno della piattaforma rialzata sulla quale si imposta la villa, tra il centro della Villa e una fila di sei colonne sul suo lato sud. Un sondaggio precedentemente non pubblicato, che correva al centro del sondaggio, aveva rimosso antica stratigrafia in tutta l’area tranne nella parte ovest e nord del saggio. Ciò ha permesso l’esecuzione di uno scavo profondo attraverso la rimozione di terra di riporto moderna. Lo scavo ha prodotto 58 unità stratigrafiche, recuperato tracce in sezione di un deposito sabbioso che copre il suolo naturale.

La fase di attività registrata durante lo scavo è iniziata con una topografia relativamente alta e alcuni depositi di livellazione. La fase n.2 è consistita nella costruzione del nucleo della Villa con muri e superfici di utilizzo a più di un metro sotto le soglie attuali della Villa. La fase n.3 ha visto l’aggiunta di una piattaforma rialzata e sei colonne lungo il lato sud della Villa, alcune colonne all'interno del nucleo della struttura, e un canale che correva sud-ovest dal suo centro. All'interno della facciata esterna della Villa si conservano linee collegabili al processo di costruzione del muro di contenimento ovest. Ad un certo punto la villa venne circondata dalla costruzione o ricostruzione di una fila di negozi e ambienti posteriori ad essi associali, che probabilmente ricevevano acqua dal canale che correva attraverso il portico. A questo punto, un altro canale venne aggiunto e quello precedente andò fuori uso. I cambiamenti sembrano essere collegati all'aggiunta o modifica dei piani superiori della Villa e alla trasformazione del nucleo della Villa in un'ala di servizio, attività che possono essere provvisoriamente datate intorno all'età di Claudio.

Il continuo rialzamento del pavimento e le relative modifiche al secondo canale hanno caratterizzato la fase finale osservata in AA006 (fase 6). In questo periodo la Villa ha assistito alla creazione di alcune delle sue più distintive caratteristiche, tra cui il grande viridarium, che occupava la parte posteriore delle tombe e delle colonne del mosaico eponimo. La fase finale di cambiamento visibile in questi muri ha comunque coinvolto maggiormente il piano superiore e non si e’ riflessa nei depositi di AA005.


In generale, le indagini del 2015 hanno rivelato importanti informazioni riguardo la profondità dell’originale topografia dell’area, suggerendo che gran parte di ciò che si osserva ora sia il risultato di attività di livellamento su larga scala. Tracce di ulteriori sepolture Osche come quella trovata nell'area del viridarium non sono state ancora rinvenute nell'area della Villa.

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2016
Summary
en This season involved the initiation of two new trenches, both situated in areas outside of the Villa core. The first, measuring 6 by 5 meters (AA012), spanned the area between the shops along the east side of the Via dei Sepolcri and the core of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, including parts of two rooms located where the southwest corner of the early Villa core met with the later additions of vaulted supporting structures. Excavation produced 31 stratigraphic units and revealed that this part of the structure had not been fully excavated of eruptive material. Removal of layers of lapilli and ash produced extensive information about both the eruption, revealed the final phase condition of these rooms, and uncovered evidence of several phases of development during the latter part of the life of the area. It is clear that during the construction of the shops to the west of the Villa (Phase 4), the zone in between them also received a series of vaulted corridors with adjoining rooms, likely in two stories, which served to raise the elite elements of the Villa on a raised platform. Subsequently, the area was outfitted with a drain and opus signinum catchment designed to evacuate large quantities of liquid from an as yet unidentified source. In a change possibly to be associated with the earthquake(s) of 62 CE, the area was then downgraded and filled with rubbish and a large dolium for water storage. Rooms previously belonging to the Villa became elements of the western shops at this time. The eruption itself first carried elements of domestic material into the area, then caused the vaulting above it to collapse.

The second trench (AA013), measuring roughly 9 by 5 meters, was located against a row of tombs south of the Villas entrances in a triangular space of uncertain function. Here, excavation revealed many levels of deposited soil, the final layers of which were clearly the result of the construction of the tombs themselves. Three of these tombs may now be sequenced as a roughly contemporary. A surprisingly municipal-scale drain was found also to have been constructed in concert with these tombs. A single cremation burial in a pottery urn was recovered from one of the few areas not disturbed by Maiuri’s interventions of 1935. Natural soils and the earliest phases in the area were not encountered owing to the significant depth of deposits, but the final phase clearing and/or rebuilding of the drain was also apparent in the form of a final-phase open trench filled with eruptive material.
it Durante questa stagione di scavo sono state aperti due nuovi saggi, entrambi situati in aree fuori dal centro della Villa. Il primo saggio, 6x5 m (AA012), venne aperto nell’area tra i negozi lungo il lato est della via dei Sepolcri e il centro della Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, che includeva parte di due ambienti localizzati dove l’angolo SO della prima villa incontrava le successive strutture voltate di sostegno.

Lo scavo ha prodotto 31 unità stratigrafiche e rivelato che da questa parte della struttura il materiale eruttivo non era stato pienamente rimosso. La rimozione degli strati di lapilli e cenere ha fornito informazioni sull’eruzione, rivelato le condizioni della fase finale di queste stanze. E’ chiaro che durante la costruzione dei negozi ad O della Villa (fase 4) anche la zona dei negozi ricevette una sistemazione con corridoi voltati con ambienti adiacenti, probabilmente su due livelli, che servì ad alzare gli elementi dell’elite della Villa su una piattaforma rialzata. Successivamente, l’area venne equipaggiata con un canale di scarico e un bacino idrico in _opus signinum_ progettato al fine di smaltire grandi quantità di liquidi provenienti da una fonte non ancora individuate.

In seguito ai cambiamenti probabilmente apportati dal terremoto del 62 d.C, l’area diminuì in importanza e venne riempita con rifiuti e un grande _dolium_ per l’immagazzinamento dell’acqua. Gli ambienti che appartenevano alla Villa divennero elementi dei negozi ovest durante questo periodo. L’eruzione stessa portò elementi di materiale domestico nell’area, che comportarono il crollo delle volte superiori.

Il secondo saggio (AA013), di 9x5m, venne aperto a ridosso di una fila di tombe a S dell’ingresso della villa, in uno spazio triangolare di funzione incerta. Qui lo scavo ha rivelato numerosi livelli di terra, di cui gli ultimi erano chiaramente il risultato della costruzione delle tombe stesse. Tre di queste tombe possono ora essere considerate all’incirca contemporanee. Insieme a queste tombe venne costruito anche un canale per l’acqua. Da una delle poche aree non intaccate dagli interventi del Maiuri proviene una sepoltura singola a cremazione all’interno di un’urna ceramica.

A causa della notevole profondità dei depositi, non è stato possibile arrivare al livello del terreno vergine e delle prime fasi dell’area. La fase finale di pulizia e/o ricostruzione del canale è risultata evidente sotto forma di una trincea riempita con material eruttivo.

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2017
Summary
en In June and July of 2017, the Via Consolare Project continued stratigraphic excavations in the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico as a part of its on-going research into the chronology, urban development, and utilization of the properties along the Via Consolare, from Pompeii’s surburbium to its forum. Two trenches from 2016 were reopened and brought to conclusion, while two further subsurface investigations were undertaken to establish the extent of previous excavation in the area and to clarify features that had only been published cursorily.

The first reopened trench (AA012) included as much as possible of a room adjoining to the western cryptoporticus that had been uncovered in the previous season. This room similarly was filled with eruption debris that had only been partially explored during the initial excavations. Further excavation in this area produced a further 18 stratigraphic units, revealing that during the final years of the city, the lower storey of this space had been filled from top to bottom with complete and largely complete fragments of amphorae and other pottery, putting it entirely out of use. Thereafter, a cistern head and drain were built at the level of the first floor, the latter draining into the former lower storey of the cryptoporticus of the Villa situated to its east. Such dramatic alterations served to transform the nature of these areas, and are analogous to the changes that took place within the cryptoporticus that were described in the Scheda of 2016. It is likely that they were motivated by damage caused by the earthquake(s) of 62/3 CE.

The second reopened trench (AA013) reached deeper levels of deposits uncovered in 2016 and served to connect these activities with the northern-most tomb in the area (tomb 6). A series of thick, extremely hard-packed deposits were likely related to this tomb’s construction and later modification since they were filled with chips of Nocera tuff from the tomb itself. The remaining tombs in the area (7, 8, and 9) were also confirmed to date from the final years of the site, while the municipal-scale trench recovered last year remained enigmatic.

The two new trenches, undertaken in the centre of the viridarium (AA014) and within the decorated fauces (N.12) (AA015), provided a window onto the degree of previous modern sub-surface excavation that the Villa has experienced – first in the search for Oscan/Samnite graves and subsequently for the removal of the mosaic columns themselves. Such explorations appear to have removed a massive layer of ancient fills, even undermining drains and other features. Nevertheless traces of a thick ancient fill that served to raise the elevation of the Villa in these areas and to bury the earlier cemetery was recovered. A deposit of ash and pigment recovered below this might have related to activities intended to ritually put the area out of use. It was also confirmed that the expansion of the Villa into these areas was a late phenomenon.

Overall, excavation in 2017 has produced valuable new data on the development of the Villa, its chronology, and the changing sub-urban environment during the final years of the city.
it Nel giugno del 2017, il progetto Via Consolare ha continuato lo scavo nell'area della Villa delle Colonne a mosaico, che rientra all'interno del progetto in corso sulla cronologia, lo sviluppo urbano e l'utilizzo delle proprietà lungo la Strada Consolare, dal suburbio di Pompei al foro. Sono stati riaperti due saggi del 2016 con l’obbiettivo di investigare l´estensione dei precedenti scavi nell'area e chiarire elementi che sono stati solamente pubblicati sommariamente.

Il primo saggio riaperto (AA012) ha incluso l'ambiente appoggiato al criptoportico ovest messo in luce nel 2016. Questo ambiente era riempito con detriti vulcanici che sono stati solo parzialmente esplorati nella precedente campagna di scavo. Lo scavo ha prodotto 18 aggiuntive unitá stratigrafiche e ha rivelato che durante gli anni finali della cittá, il livello inferiore di questo ambiente era stato riempito con frammenti completi di anfore e ceramica di vario tipo, mettendolo fuori uso. Dopo quel momento,una cisterna e un canale vennero costruiti al livello del primo piano. Tali alterazioni hanno trasformato la natura di queste aree, e sono analoghe ai cambiamenti che ebbero luogo all'interno del criptoportico descritti nella scheda del 2016. È verosimile che tali cambiamenti fossero motivati dai danni causati dal terremoto del 62/3 d.C.

Il secondo saggio riaperto nel 2017 (AA013) ha raggiunto livelli piú profondi ed è servito a connettere queste attivitá con la tomba piú a nord dell'area (tomba 6). Una serie di depositi molto compatti e spessi sono probabilmente legati alla costruzione di questa tomba e a successive modifiche, dal momento che erano riempite con schegge di tufo di Nocera provenienti dalla tomba stessa. Le rimanenti tombe nell'area (7, 8 e 9) sono state confermate appartenere agli anni finali della vita del sito, mentre il saggio di scala municipale rinvenuto l'anno scorso rimane di difficile interpretazione.

Due nuovi saggi, aperti al centro del _viridarium_ (AA014), e all'interno delle _fauces_ (N.12) (AA015), hanno gettato luce sul livello dei precedenti scavi della villa, con l’intento iniziale di cercare tombe Osco/Sannitiche e successivamente di rimuovere le colonne a mosaico. Tali scavi sembrano aver rimosso un notevole strato di riempimento antico che ha intaccato le canalizzazioni ed altri elementi. Nonostante questo, sono state rinvenute tracce del riempimento antico che sono servite ad elevare il livello della villa e a ricoprire il precedente cimitero. Un deposito di ceneri e pigmento è stato rinvenuto al di sotto di questo strato e potrebbe essere riferibile alle attivitá rituali che misero l'area fuori uso. È inoltre stato confermato che l'espansione della villa in queste aree fu un fenomeno tardo.

La stagione di scavo 2017 ha prodotto notevoli nuovi dati sullo sviluppo della villa, la sua cronologia e il cambiamento sub-urbano che avvenne negli anni finali di vita della cittá.

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2018
Summary
en In June and July of 2018, the Via Consolare Project continued stratigraphic excavations in the area of the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico as a part of its on-going research into the chronology, urban development, and utilization of the properties along the Via Consolare, from Pompeii’s surburbium to its forum.

The four trenches in the Villa core were opened (AA016, AA017, AA018, AA020), intended to provide material dating the earliest phases of Villa construction and to explore the nature of the final-phase utilisation of space. That in the north-eastern corner (AA016) produced evidence of a broad conduit draining water into a deep cistern, with evidence that the first phase of the Villa had included an interior colonnade of brick columns previously thought to be a secondary addition. This cistern and drain went out of use in the final phases as the Villa’s vertical expansion came to be supported by several large piers. The trench to the west (AA018) examined the central court and a small room to the south. This uncovered a lead pipe (fistulum) that ran laterally across the courtyard, originating in a large, above-ground cistern to the west of the core. Further traces of the brick-column colonnade and a thin opus signinum floor provided evidence of the changes to surrounding rooms that had attended the addition of upper stories to the Villa. This area also established that the Villa core does not actually represent an earlier phase of the Villa, but instead is a massive square platform, nearly 2 m deep that had been built during the initial construction in order to elevate it above its local surroundings. Excavations intended to recover the destination of the fistulum (AA020) revealed that it had not reached the final phase water features that are located in the south-eastern corner of the core, but rather ran towards the bath-suite situated to the east of the core. These also provided evidence of final phase changes including the probable removal of elements of the lead pipe. Exceptionally, in the area of two cooking platforms (AA017) a final phase build-up of cooking debris was recovered, producing a laminate of charcoal, ash, and lime above a packed earth floor, that documented the use of space in the area until the eruption itself. At depth in this area the base of the Villa platform was recovered, displaying a thick sequence of fills and building debris that provisionally date the Villa to the early 1st c. CE.

Removal of modern debris (AA018) in the area of the northern entrance corridor produced evidence of extensive early modern exploration, likely in pursuit of underlying Oscan graves, but also revealed sufficient surviving ancient stratigraphy to reveal a beaten earth track with repairs, and several late period changes to the walls and door closure system. This area is to be explored more fully in 2019.

Excavation in 2018 has dramatically altered the chronology of the Villa, the motivations of its builders, and the role it played in the urban fabric of the area outside of the Porta Ercolano.
it Nei mesi di giugno e luglio 2018, il Progetto Via Consolare ha proseguito gli scavi stratigrafici nell'area della Villa delle Colonne a mosaico come parte della sua continua ricerca sulla cronologia, lo sviluppo urbano e l'utilizzo degli immobili lungo la Via Consolare, dal surburbium di Pompei al suo forum.

I quattro saggi nel nucleo della Villa furono aperti (AA016, AA017, AA018, AA020),con lo scopo di fornire materiale risalente alle prime fasi della costruzione della Villa e di esplorare la natura dell'utilizzo finale dello spazio. Quello nell'angolo nord-orientale (AA016) ha fornito la prova di un ampio condotto che drena l'acqua in una profonda cisterna, dimostrando che la prima fase della Villa aveva incluso un colonnato interno in mattoni che in precedenza si pensava fosse un'aggiunta secondaria. Questa cisterna e lo scarico sono andati in disuso nelle fasi finali in quanto l'espansione verticale della Villa è stata sostenuta da diversi pilastri di grandi dimensioni. La trincea ad ovest (AA018) ha esaminato la corte centrale e una piccola stanza a sud. Questo ha portato alla luce un tubo di piombo (fistulum) che correva lateralmente attraverso il cortile, dando origine ad una grande cisterna in superficie ad ovest del nucleo. Altre tracce del colonnato in mattoni e di un sottile pavimento in opus signinum sono state prava delle modifiche avvenute nelle stanze circostanti con l'aggiunta di piani superiori alla Villa. Quest'area stabilì anche che il nucleo della Villa non rappresenta in realtà una prima fase, ma invece è una massiccia piattaforma quadrata, profonda circa 2 metri, che era stata costruita durante la costruzione iniziale per elevarla al di sopra dell’aera circostante. Gli scavi determinati a recuperare la destinazione della fistula (AA020) hanno rivelato che essa non aveva raggiunto la fase finale che si trova nell’anglo S-E del nucleo, ma piuttosto correva verso i bagni situati ad est del nucleo. Questi hanno anche evidenziato le modifiche della fase finali inclusa la probabile rimozione di parte del tubo di piombo. Eccezionalmente, nell'area delle due piattaforme di cottura (AA017) è stato recuperato un ultimo strato di residui di cottura, producendo un laminato di carbone, cenere e calce sopra un pavimento di terra compatta, che ha documentato l'uso dello spazio nella zona fino all'eruzione stessa. In profondità, in questa zona, fu scoperta la base della piattaforma della Villa, mostrando una spessa sequenza di riempimenti e detriti di costruzione che datano provvisoriamente la Villa agli inizi del I sec.

La rimozione di detriti moderni (AA018) nell'area del corridoio d'ingresso settentrionale ha evidenziato le prime estensive esplorazioni moderne, probabilmente alla ricerca delle sottostanti tombe osche, ma ha anche rivelato una sufficiente stratigrafia antica sopravvissuta mostrando una traccia di battuto con riparazioni, e diverse modifiche in periodo tardo alle pareti e al sistema di chiusura delle porte. Quest'area sarà esplorata in maniera più approfondita nel 2019.

Lo scavo nel 2018 ha notevolmente modificato la cronologia della Villa, le motivazioni dei suoi costruttori e il ruolo che ha svolto nel tessuto urbano dell'area fuori Porta Ercolano.

Media

Name
Regio VII, insula VI and Villa delle Colonne a mosaico
Year
2019
Summary
en In June and July of 2019, the Via Consolare Project undertook stratigraphic excavations and archaeological research in both the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico and Insula VII 6 as a part of on-going research into the chronology, urban development, and utilization of the properties along the Via Consolare, from Pompeii’s periphery to its forum.

Four trenches were excavated within the Villa delle Colonne a mosaico. The first involved two small sondages (AA019w, and AA019e) at either end of long driveway for cart access to the centre of the villa. At the entrance, levels of beaten earth were recovered with the fixtures for two different phases of doorway closure, demonstrating a change from a single door to a bi-valve system. Below these, a thick layer of silt-bonded rubble and mortar may have been the only surviving traces of a feature removed with the expansion of the villa into this area - possibly the footing of a small altar tomb. Excavations at the eastern end of the corridor revealed a substantial drain running under a later stairway. Presumably this drain connected to the drain found exiting the villa in 2015 (AA005). The deposits into which the surrounding walls were cut were identified in an additional trench (AA021) that was near to the courtyard sacellum altar. These have reinforced the conclusion that the sacellum courtyard and viridarium had been extended over an area of the site that had remained largely unoccupied after its use as an Oscan-Samnite cemetery. A final trench excavated within the eastern core of the villa (AA022) in an area thought originally to have been a bath suite, produced evidence consistent with that hypothesis. Elements of a surface or podium paved with tiles, lead piping and a drain running S-E out of the room are suggestive of its use for bathing. Changes to the area involving strengthening piers were related to the upward expansion of the villa complex, while final-phase alterations, including the excavation of a new, but unused channel possibly intended for the placement of a new lead pipe were probably intended to repair damage to the system sustained in the earthquake(s) of 62/3 CE and onwards.

Two trenches were also undertaken in two shops at the south-western corner of Insula VII 6 (AA023, AA024). While these were not completed in 2019, traces of opus africanum in blocks of Sarno stone and pappamonte, make it clear that in the earliest phase, these shops were areas that pertained to the Casa di Petutius Quintio (VII 6, 30.37) to the north and did not open to the south. Later changes related to the creation of the shops involved the lowering of the level in the area and the creation of cisterns, drains, and toilets. Planned completion of these trenches in 2020 will undoubtedly provide more valuable information regarding the sequence and chronology of these areas of the insula.

Excavation in 2019 has therefore served to provide important new information about these areas and their development, providing further windows on the processes of urban growth and change that influenced the structures along the Via Consolare.
it A giugno e luglio del 2019, il Progetto Via Consolare ha intrapreso scavi stratigrafici e ricerche archeologiche sia nella Villa delle Colonne a mosaico che nell'Insula VII 6 come parte della ricerca in corso sulla cronologia, lo sviluppo urbano e l'utilizzo delle proprietà lungo la via Consolare, dalla periferia di Pompei al suo foro.

Quattro saggi furono aperti all'interno della Villa delle Colonne a mosaico. Il primo riguardava due piccoli sondaggi (AA019w e AA019e) alle due estremità del lungo vialetto per l’accesso dei carri alla villa. All'ingresso, nei livelli di terra battuta sono stati individuati gli infissi per due diverse fasi di chiusura della porta, dimostrando il passaggio da una singola porta a un sistema bi-valvola. Al di sotto di questi, uno spesso strato di macerie e malta legate al limo potrebbe essere l’unica traccia sopravvissuta di un’evidenza successivamente rimossa con l'espansione della villa in quest'area - forse il luogo di una piccola tomba con altare. Gli scavi all'estremità orientale del corridoio hanno rivelato un canale che correva sotto una scala successiva. Presumibilmente questo scarico si collegava allo scarico trovato all’uscita dalla villa nel 2015 (AA005).

Gli strati in cui furono tagliati i muri circostanti furono identificati in un’altra trincea (AA021) vicina all'altare sacellum del cortile. Questi hanno rafforzato la conclusione che il cortile sacellum e il viridarium erano stati estesi in un'area del sito che era rimasta in gran parte non occupata dopo il suo uso come necropoli osco-sannita. Un ultimo saggio scavato nel nucleo orientale della villa (AA022) in una zona che originariamente si pensava fosse stata una sala termale, ha prodotto prove coerenti con tale ipotesi. Elementi di una superficie o di un podio, pavimentati con mattoni, tubature di piombo e un canale di scarico che corre a S-E dalla stanza suggeriscono il suo uso termale. Modifiche dell'area comportarono il rafforzamento dei pilastri che erano legati all'espansione verso l'alto del complesso della villa, mentre le modifiche della fase finale, incluso lo scavo di un nuovo canale, ma inutilizzato, probabilmente destinato al posizionamento di un nuovo tubo di piombo, erano probabilmente dovuti alla riparazione dei danni al sistema causati dai terremoti del 62/3 e successivi.

Sono stati inoltre intrapresi due saggi in due tabernae nell'angolo sud-occidentale dell’Insula VII 6 (AA023, AA024). Sebbene questi non siano stati completati nel 2019, tracce di opus africanum in blocchi di pietra di Sarno e pappamonte, chiariscono che nella prima fase, queste tabernae erano aree che appartenevano alla Casa di Petutius Quintio (VII 6, 30.37) a nord e non si aprivano a sud. Le modifiche successive relative alla creazione delle tabernae hanno comportato l'abbassamento del livello nell'area e la creazione di cisterne, scarichi e servizi igienici. Il completamento pianificato di questi saggi nel 2020 fornirà indubbiamente informazioni più preziose sulla sequenza e la cronologia di queste aree dell'insula.
Lo scavo nel 2019 è quindi servito a fornire importanti nuove informazioni su queste aree e sul loro sviluppo, fornendo ulteriori vie ai processi di crescita e di cambiamento urbani che hanno influenzato le strutture lungo la Via Consolare.

Media

  • Anderson 2010
    M. Anderson, 2010, Precision Recording of Pompeian Standing Remains via Stitched Rectified Photography, in B. Frischer, J. Crawford, D. Koller (eds), Making History Interactive. Proceedings of the 37th International Conference on Computer Applications and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology (CAA). Williamsburg, Virginia, March 22-26, 2009, Oxford: 363-372.

Location

Ancient Site Name
Pompeii
Location
Pompeii
Easting
14.483681
Northing
40.756111