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According to SAP, this is the oldest of the public baths in Pompeii.
Aside from initial superficial excavations under Sogliano in 1882, the first systematic investigations of the Republican Baths were carried out under Amedeo Maiuri in 1950 who documented the layout.
See Maiuri A., Notizie degli Scavi di Antichità, 1950,
pp. 116-136
Following this research, the building remained largely forgotten for several decades and the standing remains were visible, but largely obscured by covering vegetation.
New excavations began in 2015 by Freie Universität Berlin - Institut für Klassische Archäologie in collaboration with University of Oxford and Parco Archeologico di Pompeii.
According to Fagan, this small establishment occupies the south-east corner of insula VIII.5, with an entrance at 36. It was advantageously situated near the entrance to the triangular forum and the theatre. It was a double building with a palaestra like the other two baths, but on a much smaller scale, occupying only a section of the insula in which it stood. In 1999 it was overgrown and inaccessible.
Maiuri postulated a construction date of c. 90-80 B.C. This was based on the building materials and the primitive form of the hypocaust – whereby the floor was raised not on pillars but on continuous walls broken by diagonal openings. Maiuri thought it had been a privately-owned facility as, unlike the Stabian and Forum Baths, no public inscriptions have been found, if any ever existed. It seems to have been abandoned in Augustan times, after half a century of operation, perhaps put out of business by the improvements in the comfort and amenities of the Stabian Baths in the Augustan extension. Seneca condemns a fickle public that abandoned older baths as more luxurious ones became available.
According to the Parco
Archeologico di Pompeii website, the [recent]
excavations in the Republican Baths have allowed them to obtain new important
results for the knowledge of the urban development of Pompeii, since the whole
area has been used since the Archaic period. The thermal complex was built
during the II century BC, on an area previously occupied by industrial plants.
The building has two stages of modification, which demonstrate the effort made
by builders to adapt the building to new technological standards. Despite this,
the building was abandoned by the end of the 1st century BC to be merged with
the neighbouring Casa della Calce, of which it came to constitute a second
garden. In the last phase, just before the eruption of 79 AD, the whole area
seems to have been converted into a sort of building materials deposit, where
building materials were extracted and selected.
See Terme Repubblicane on SAP web site
See Fagan G. G., 1999. Bathing in Public in the Roman World. Ann Arbor: Univ Michigan, p. 59-60 and note 64.
See Seneca Ep. 86.8-9. Moral letters to Lucilius (Epistulae morales ad Lucilium) - Letter 86 - on Wikisource
See Maiuri A., Notizie degli Scavi di Antichità, 1950,
p. 116-136.
The project is a research collaboration
between the Freie Universität Berlin and the
University of Oxford.
Archaeological levels can be traced back to
the Mercato Eruption (Pomici di Mercato) of Vesuvius around 7000 BC.
The earliest traces of human activity, in the shape of isolated sherds, date
back to the Bronze age. More regular use of the area can be traced to the Iron
Age, for which occupation evidence in the form of isolated postholes and a
hearth could be identified. Before the mid-2nd century BC, the site was used
for some form of industrial activity as indicated by several water features and
dumps of fuel ash. The baths themselves were not constructed until the middle
or latter half of the 2nd century BC and underwent several modifications until
there abandonment and demolition in the late 1st century BC. The area then
became part of the Casa della Calce and was used as a garden surrounded by
porticoes and rooms. In the last period of use, probably post-dating the
earthquake of AD 62, several large quarry pits were dug across the site, some
of which were refilled with building waste once they were no longer used.
All excavated areas had been affected by
trenches dug by Maiuri, resulting in incomplete or disturbed stratigraphic
sequences. Nonetheless, it was possible to identify and reconstruct a
substantial overall Matrix of contexts reaching from the Bronze Age through to
79AD. While most data remains preliminary at present and requires further
analysis, some interesting observations can already be made: the laconicum
(identified as room 30) appears to have been constructed by the 2nd century BC,
probably during its the earliest years. It underwent a major phase of reconstruction
from an initially rectangular space to its current rounded interior shape. This
is likely also to have occurred during the 2nd century BC. A further phase of
rebuilding and modification dates to the 1st century BC. The development of the
various identified phases of the praefurnium (identified as room 17) remains
far more problematic: created originally as a rectangular space with six
heating ducts for the two sets of caldaria and immersion pools, it was
repeatedly modified, reduced in extent and reconstructed in order to modify
heat flow and firing accessibility, as well as in response to the changing
needs of the modified baths complex as a whole in its various phases.
In March and April 2019, a field season of
the project “Bathing Culture and the Development of Urban Space: Case Study
Pompeii”, was carried out in the Republican Baths (VIII 5, 36) at Pompeii.
The season was focused on studying the
finds and cleaning some areas to clarify specific questions.
The ceramics team completed the study of
the material from the Republican Baths.
Cleaning served to clarify two major
questions: first, characteristics and function of certain water management
features, which Thomas Heide investigates for his dissertation at the Freie Universität Berlin. Cleaning included: a double
drainage hole in the southwestern corner of the men’s tepidarium; a large, deep
settling basin in the southeastern corner of the
men’s apodyterium; and the part of the baths’ drainage channel that is located
in taberna 35 of the Casa della Calce (VIII, 5, 28).
Second, the design and development of the
southwestern corner of the baths, which Maiuri had excavated but barely mentioned
in his report from 1950, were investigated. The chronology of the southwestern
room of the baths (room 34, numbering system of project) could be clarified, correlating
well with the development of the entire lot, as established in previous seasons:
1) service corridor with entrance from the street for the baths (c. 150-30/20
BC); 2) room decorated with Second Style wall paintings, accessible only from
the new garden peristyle of the Casa della Calce (30/20 BC); 3) installation of
a latrine along the south wall of the room, when the garden peristyle
was remodelled and provided with more rooms
(sometime between 30/20 BC and AD 62); 4) room used as a dump site for debris
after AD 62. In the room to the north of this room (room 26, numbering system
of project) a limekiln, which Maiuri had excavated but not identified and described,
was rediscovered. This limekiln was installed for one of the remodelling phases
in the early Imperial period, but destroyed already
before the eruption of Vesuvius and filled with debris.
Author: Monika Trümper
See Freie
Universität Berlin - Institut für Klassische Archäologie
See FastiOnline folder fastionline.org Pompeii Republican Baths VIII.5.36
See Bathing Culture and the Development of Urban Space: Case Study Pompeii Freie Universität Berlin - Institut für Klassische Archäologie
VIII.6, Pompeii, on left. September 2015.
Vicolo delle Pareti Rosse looking west. VIII.5.36 side wall, on right.
VIII.6, Pompeii, on left. December 2004. Vicolo delle Pareti Rosse looking west. VIII.5.36 side wall, on right.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. 1950 Maiuri plan of Terme repubblicane or Republican Baths.
Maiuri describes this as “free of later construction”.
See Notizie degli Scavi di Antichità, 1950,
p. 117, fig. 1.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. 1950 Maiuri plan of phase II of Terme repubblicane or Republican Baths.
According to Maiuri, with the closure of the baths, the area came into the hands of the owner of the adjacent "Casa della Calce" and was transformed into a dwelling area, by demolishing at least 2/3 of the high wall of the thermal baths and the raising of a little less or a little more than a meter on the floor of the rooms of the original building. After the first transformation follows a second that mutates and alters completely the character and the plan of the first dwelling, intersecting and overlapping the walls of the baths, it is not easy to untangle and determine the limits, the nature and the character of the two houses. You could still recognize three periods: a first transformation occurred in the Augustan age shortly after the baths were closed; a second in the Claudian era before the year of the earthquake; a third in the last years of the city with a few adaptations related to the use of the area as a garden.
See Notizie degli Scavi di Antichità, 1950,
p. 133-4, fig. 11.
See Notizie degli Scavi di Antichità, 1947,
p. 157.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. 1950 Maiuri plan of phase III of Terme repubblicane or Republican Baths.
According to Maiuri, after this first transformation, which for the entire Augustan age and perhaps also Tiberian, gave the closed baths a distinctly noble character not unbecoming to the rest of the nearby home, there was a subsequent transformation inspired by a more practical use of space: inspired by family reasons, more than anything else. At the large oecus or triclinium hall (n. 1) another minor oecus of the eastern side was added (4) overlapping one of the walls on the last five intercolumns of the garden portico (t1-t2), also equipped with an access threshold towards the peristyle of the "Casa della Calce". The date of this second transformation can be fixed to the Claudian or Neronian age on the basis above all to the many elements of the 4th style wall decoration found in the remains.
See Notizie degli Scavi di Antichità, 1950,
p. 135, fig. 12.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. 1950 Plan of Terme repubblicane or Republican Baths.
P
Photo courtesy of Freie Universität
Berlin.
See Bathing Culture and the Development of Urban Space: FU Berlin
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. September 2015. Entrance doorway in south-west corner, looking west.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. September 2015. Looking north along west side of Via dei Teatri.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. September 2015. Looking south-west along wall on west side of Via dei Teatri.
VIII.5.36, Pompeii. June 1962.
Looking west towards entrance doorway, from outside the Triangular Forum. Photo courtesy of Rick Bauer.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. December 2004. Entrance doorway.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. October 2022. Looking west from entrance doorway. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. October 2022. Looking west along rooms on south side, from entrance doorway. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. December 2006. Looking west from entrance.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. October 2022. Looking north-west across rooms on south side. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. October 2022. Looking north-west from entrance. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. October 2022. Looking north-west. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. December 2006. Looking north-west from entrance.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. December 2006. Looking north-west from entrance.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. December 2006. Looking north-west from entrance.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. December 2006. Looking north-west from entrance.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. December 2006. Looking north-west from entrance.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. December 2006. Looking north-west from entrance.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. December 2006. Looking north-west from entrance.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. October 2022. Looking north from Vicolo delle Pareti Rosse. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. October 2022. Looking north from Vicolo delle Pareti Rosse. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. October 2022. Looking north-east from Vicolo delle Pareti Rosse. Photo courtesy of Klaus Heese.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. March 2009. Taken from VIII.5.28. Looking south towards entrance in corner, centre left.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. March 2009. Looking south towards Triangular Forum. Taken from VIII.5.28.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. March 2009. Taken from VIII.5.28. Looking south.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. March 2009. Taken from VIII.5.28. Looking south.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. March 2009. Taken from VIII.5.28. Looking south.
VIII.5.36 Pompeii. March 2009. Taken from VIII.5.28. Looking south-west.