The Roman house
The Roman empire covered such a vast geographical area and
lasted such a long time that the range of housing was
correspondingly varied. However, in Italy two main types of housing
emerge from the literary sources and from archaeological remains in
cities such as Pompeii, Ostia and Rome itself.
The mass of the urban populace lived in high rise tenement
blocks, called insulae, often of four or five storeys and
grouped around a central courtyard. The apartments of the poorest
families might consist of just one or two rooms, with essential
services such as cooking and bathing provided at communal
facilities outside the insulae. The insulae were
often hastily and shoddily built and were terrible fire-hazards,
though some emperors tried to pass laws restricting the number of
storeys and regulating materials used.
Wealthier Romans generally lived in single occupancy, low-rise
dwellings of one or two storeys. Although varied in plan these
houses usually comprised an entrance area or atrium, onto
which opened several rooms, including bedrooms. Beyond the
atrium was an open, colonnaded courtyard, often containing
an ornamental garden with plants, water features and sculpture.
Rooms opening onto the courtyard included the triclinium
(literally 'three couches') or dining room, and tablinum
or office/records room. Beyond these were service areas such as the
kitchen, store rooms and toilets. Well-appointed houses were
decorated with mosaic floors, painted walls and ceilings, and
bronze and marble statuary of gods and ancestors.