Bibliography edit

Anderson, Maxwell L. “The Portrait Medallions of the Imperial Villa at Boscotrecase.” American Journal of Archaeology 91, no. 1 (1987): 127-135

Blanckenhangen, Peter Heinrich von. The Paintings from Boscotrecase. Heidelberg: F.H. Kerle, 1962.

Cassius, Dio. Roman History. Translated by Earnest Cary and Herbert B. Foster. Loeb Classical Library.

Clarke, John R. “Augustan Domestic Interiors: Propaganda or Fashion?” In The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Augustus. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005.

D’Arms, John H. Romans on the Bay of Naples: A Social and Cultural Study of the Villas and Their Owners from 150 B.C. to A.D. 400. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1970.

Della Corte, Matteo. "Pompeii" Notizie Degli Scavi di Antichità 19 (1922): 459-485.

Fantham, Elaine, Helene Peet Foley, Natalie Boymel Kampen, Sarah B. Pomeroy, and H. A. Shapiro. Women in the Classical World: Image and Text. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994.

Giesecke, Annette Lucia. “Beyond the Garden of Epicurus: The Utopics of the Ideal Roman Villa.” Utopian Studies12, no. 2 (2001): 13-32.

Grant, Michael. Art in the Roman Empire. New York: Routledge, 1995.

Knauer, Elfriede R. “Roman Wall Paintings from Boscotrecase: Three Studies in the Relationship Between Writing and Painting.” Metropolitan Museum Journal 28 (1993): 13-46.

Leach, Eleanor Winsor. The Social Life of Painting in Ancient Rome and on the Bay of Naples. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004.

Leach, Eleanor Winsor. Vergil’s Eclogues: Landscapes of Experience. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1974.

Ling, Roger. Roman Painting. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.

Mattusch, Carol. Pompeii and the Roman Villa: Art and Culture around the Bay of Naples. New York: Thames and Hudson, 2008.

Pappalardo, Umberto. Splendor of Roman Wall Painting. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2008.

Seutonius. Lives of the Caesars, II: The Deified Augustus. Translated by J. C. Rolfe. Loeb Classical Library.

Tacitus. Annals. Translated by John Jackson. Loeb Classical Library.

Wallace-Hadrill, Andrew. Houses and Society in Pompeii and Herculaneum. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1994.

The Year One: Art of the Ancient World East and West. Edited by Elizabeth Johnson Milleker. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art in association with Yale University Press, 2000. Exhibition catalogue.

List of Contributions to Wikipedia edit

Listed below is a summary of edits made to various articles on Wikipedia:

  • Added multiple paragraphs and new sections to the Boscotrecase article. The added sections include a history of the villa as well as detailed descriptions of the frescoes that were excavated from the villa in 1903-1905. See "Boscotrecase Article Draft" section for the text and information that was added to the Wikipedia article. Also added images of the frescoes themselves and a plan of the villa. Some of the images of the frescoes were already a part of the article. I added more and placed the ones that were already a part of the article near the sections that described them, so readers could see what was being discussed.
  • Copyedited a few sentences of the Ara Pacis Wikipedia article to clarify the information.
  • Edited the grammar of The Orator article on Wikipedia.
  • Added a citation to the Augustus Prima Porta article on Wikipedia to support the claim that the statue presents Augustus as divine.

Boscotrecase Article Draft edit

Boscotrecase (Italian pronunciation: [ˌbɔskotre(k)ˈkaːse, -aːze]; Neapolitan: Vuoschetreccàse) is a comune (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Naples in the Italian region Campania, located about 20 km southeast of Naples.[1]

Boscotrecase, which many considered a resort, sat on the southern slopes of Mt. Vesuvius and was home to many villas and farmhouses.[2] One of these villas was the villa at Boscotrecase, a villa owned by Agrippa, general and right-hand man of Emperor Augustus, and his wife Julia. The villa at Boscotrecase, also known as the Villa of Agrippa Postumus, the Imperial Villa, and the Villa of Augusta, was buried by an eruption of Vesuvius in 79 A.D. The villa is best known for its ancient Roman works of art, especially its frescoes. Because the ash from Mt. Vesuvius's eruption preserved the frescoes, they were able to be excavated between 1903-1905.[3] The frescoes come from various cubicula, bedrooms that served as places of sociability and business, along the villa’s southern hallway that overlooks the bay of Naples.[4]

The frescoes that were excavated are now shared between the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the National Archaeological Museum of Naples.[1]

History of the Villa edit

It is commonly accepted that the villa itself was built between 21 and 16 B.C.[5] The excavation of the villa uncovered a roof tile inscribed "Papillus Agrippae Tuberi Fabio consulibus."[2] The names of two consuls who ruled in 11 B.C., Tuberones and FabiusIt, mentioned in this inscription have caused art historians to date the cubicula's decorations to the same year.[6] The question surrounding the paintings, however, is who commissioned them since Agrippa, the supposed builder and owner of the villa, died in 12 B.C., leaving the villa to his infant son, Agrippa Postumus.[3] Some scholars such as Umberto Pappalardo argue that Julia would have been in charge of the villa after her husband’s death since as an infant Agrippa Postumus could not take on the responsibilities of maintaining the villa.[2] The inscription "Caesaris Augusti femina mater erat" carved on a column shaft alludes to Julia.[7][2] Many aristocratic women owned and managed villa properties in the Bay of Naples, so it would have been feasible for Julia to be the villa's proprietor during her son's infancy.[8] While Julia is often seen as the patron of the cubicula’s paintings, Elfriede Knauer presents the possibility that Agrippa commissioned the rooms’ decorations while he was governing in the eastern Roman provinces.[9]

Augustus is also often associated with having control over and ownership of the villa at Boscotrecase. When Agrippa died, Augustus became the owner of many of Agrippa's properties.[10] Augustus's will also supports the claim that he had some ownership of the villa at Boscotrecase. Augustus's will stated that he would give any inheritances he received to the child of the deceased if they were of age. If the child was not of age, Augustus would hold onto the property until the child finally reached adulthood or got married.[11] Similarly, Dio discusses Agrippa Postumus's anger at Augustus for not giving him his rightful inheritance as Agrippa's son and heir, which would have included the villa at Boscotrecase.[12]

The villa was passed down through the imperial family. John D'Arms suggests that Tiberius became the owner of the villa at Boscotrecase upon Agrippa Postumus’s death.[13] While Tacitus does mention in his Annals that Tiberius conducted business in a villa that overlooked a cliff, he does not specify which villa Tiberius used, leaving D'Arms's argument regarding Tiberius's ownership of the villa up for debate.[14] It is, however, commonly accepted that the last owner and administrator of the villa was Euthyeus, a freedman of Claudius, since bronze seals inscribed with the name "Tiberius Claudius Eutychi Caesaris Liberati" were discovered during the villa's excavation. [6]

Frescoes edit

 
Floor plan of the Villa at Boscotrecase. The cubicula where the frescoes were originally located are labeled.

The materials of the rooms explain the gap between when the villa was built and when the cubicula were decorated. The walls were made of soluble sand- and marble-dust plaster, which meant that paint could be applied anytime after the final layer of plaster was applied as long as the plaster remained slightly damp.[15]   

The surviving frescoes come from four cubicula along the villa’s southern hallway[4] around the villa’s central peristyle,[2] where social and business activities occurred.[16] The paintings are from cubiculum 15, 16, and 19, also known as the Black Room, the Red Room, and the Mythological Room, respectively, for the paintings that were in those specific rooms. A few panels were also excavated from cubiculum 20.   

The Black Room edit

 
Frescoes on the north wall of the Black Room in the Villa at Boscotrecase. Includes candelabra and a pavilion. Shows a rendering of what the floor would have looked like.

Located at the east end of the hallway, the Black Room, cubiculum 15, had a doorway in the south wall leading to a terrace with a view of the sea.[17][18] In the fresco on the northern wall opposite the doorway, thin columns support a pavilion structure. Portrait medallions of either Agrippa and another male member of the imperial family or Julia and Livia sit at the top of the columns supporting the pavilion’s roof.[19] In between the pavilion’s columns floats a sacro-idyllic landscape, a landscape that contains architectural elements, votive statues or decoration, trees, and people.[20] This sacro-idyllic includes a small building with a porch decorated with garlands, grapes, and patrea.[20] On either side of the pavilion are two candelabras. In the middle of each candelabra, two swans, symbols of Apollo, Augustus’s patron god, hold fillets in their beaks while perching on protruding spirals.[21] At the top of each candelabra is a yellow framed picture, or pinakes, of Egyptian deities, such as Isis, and symbols of the crocodile god Sobek, Hathor, or Apis, with leaders worshipping them.[22] The pinakes on the right candelabrum show a ruler kneeling and offering an olive branch, a symbol of peace, to the shrine of Amubis.[23] Some argue that these pinakes show Agrippa and Julia in the guise of the Egyptian leader and Isis.[9]

The eastern and western walls were mirror images of one another, decorated with candelabra, a pavilion-like structure known as an aedicula,[24] and sacro-idyllic landscapes in the open space of the central aedicula. The landscape on the eastern wall contains a gate supporting a statue, a porch decorated with a goat’s head, a woman and child entering the area, and a shepherd.[25] The western wall’s landscape is similar to the one on the northern wall detailed above.[25]

The floor of the Black Room was made up of black and white mosaic tiles.[17]

The Red Room edit

 
Fresco from the north wall of the Red Room in the Villa at Boscotrecase

The Red Room, cubiculum 16, like its eastern neighbor the Black Room, had a southern entryway that led to the southern terrace of the villa.[2] Also similar to its neighbor, the walls of the Red Room were decorated with aedicula and sacro-idyllic landscapes.

The fresco on the northern wall is a large sacro-idyllic landscape of a tomb with an altar and statue of a seated deity floating on a white background.[9][26] This sacred scene takes up the majority of the central aedicula and has more iconic columns and entablatures flanking it on both sides.[9] Two ibises perch at the corners of the central aedicula.[27] In the upper portion of the northern fresco, various plants, including ivy and oleander shrubs sprout from thin shafts sitting on the entablatures, and a flower candelabrum and its shafts fall in organized and symmetrical curves.[27] The upper right- and left-hand corners of the fresco include two lectern boxes.[27] On the black dado, figs lie beneath the sacro-idyllic landscapes.[28] 

In the center of the eastern and western walls are two more large sacro-idyllic landscapes on white backgrounds surrounded by iconic columns. The eastern wall’s landscape includes a semi-circular wall decorated with statuettes, vases, a tree with a shield and cone on it, a building complex and cliffs in the background, and a priestess, shepherd, and traveler.[29] The western landscape contains a tree surrounded by four columns, a tertrastylon, decorated with a goat’s head, a fountain, three statues, and a temple with rocks in the background.[30]


The Mythological Room edit

 
Painting of Polyphemus and Galatea from the west wall of the Mythological Room in the Villa at Boscotrecase.
 
Painting of Perseus and Andromeda from the eastern wall of the Mythological Room in the Villa at Boscotrecase.

On the west side of cubiculum 17, the room that connected the central peristyle of the villa to the southern terrace, was the Mythological Room, cubiculum 19. Two mythological scenes, one of Polyphemus and Galatea, the other of Perseus and Andromeda, on the center of the western and eastern walls, respectively, survive from this room.[31] Both mythological scenes show multiple events from each story simultaneously. In the scene of Polyphemus and Galatea, Polyphemus admires Galatea from a rock while attending his goats in the foreground while in the background, Polyphemus throws rocks at Odysseus’s boat.[32] In the scene of Perseus and Andromeda, Perseus flies to the rock where Andromeda is chained in order to rescue her, and in the background, Perseus asks Andromeda’s father, Cepheus, for her hand in marriage.[32]


The remainder of the room was painted red and decorated with thin candelabras. These candelabras contain two Sirens at the center holding swags that are connected to columns at the sides of the panel.[33] Above the candelabra is a yellow frieze containing Egyptian-themed images, including deities, griffins, and comic masks, in small black-background shapes.[6][33] Similar panels with this type of decoration flanked the two mythological paintings on the east and west walls of the room.[34]




Cubiculum 20 edit

This room was only partially excavated, leaving behind two fragmented images of candelabra. The thin candelabras have garlands, flowers, twigs, and leaves sprouting from them in symmetrical curves and spirals.[33] The candelabra sit on a black dado decorated with a bird and some berries in the panels that survive.[33]

Discovery edit

This large villa was accidentally discovered during the construction of the Circumvesuviana railway line in 1903.[3] The landowner excavated the villa with the help of the Italian archaeologist, Matteo Della Corte, from 1903 to 1905. However, an eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in April 1906, reburied the villa, preventing a complete excavation of the villa.[1]

  1. ^ a b c "Boscotrecase", Wikipedia, 2019-10-11, retrieved 2019-10-27
  2. ^ a b c d e f Pappalardo, Umberto (2009). The Splendor of Roman Wall Painting. J. Paul Getty Museum. p. 132. ISBN 9780892369584. OCLC 642285099.
  3. ^ a b c Milleker, Elizabeth Johnston. (2000). The Year One: Art of the Ancient World East and West. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 45. ISBN 0870999613. OCLC 884668332.
  4. ^ a b Leach, Eleanor Winsor. (2004). The Social Life of Painting in Ancient Rome and on the Bay of Naples. Cambridge University Press. p. 144. ISBN 1107690463. OCLC 939787728.
  5. ^ Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von. (1962). The Paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. p. 11. OCLC 459562599.
  6. ^ a b c Pappalardo, Umberto (2009). The Splendor of Roman Wall Painting. J. Paul Getty Museum. p. 134. ISBN 9780892369584. OCLC 642285099.
  7. ^ Della Corte, Matteo (1922). "Pompei". Notizie Degli Scavi di Antichità. 19: 478.
  8. ^ Fantham, Elaine; Foley, Helene Peet; Kampen, Natalie Boymel; Pomeroy, Sarah B.; Shapiro, H. A. (1994). Women in the Classical World: Image and Text. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 331.
  9. ^ a b c d Knauer, Elfriede R. (1993). "Roman Wall Paintings from Boscotrecase: Three Studies in the Relationship between Writing and Painting". Metropolitan Museum Journal. 28: 18. doi:10.2307/1512917. ISSN 0077-8958 – via JSTOR.
  10. ^ Cary, Earnest; Foster, Herbert B. "Dio Cassius, Roman History". Loeb Classical Library.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. ^ Rolfe, J. C. "Seutonius, Lives of the Caesars, II. The Deified Augustus". Loeb Classical Library.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  12. ^ Cary, Earnest; Foster, Herbert B. "Dio Cassius, Roman History". Loeb Classical Library.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  13. ^ D' Arms, John Haughton (1970). Romans on the Bay of Naples. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. p. 85. OCLC 164612741.
  14. ^ Jackson, John. "Tacitus, Annals". Loeb Classical Library.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  15. ^ Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von. (1962). The Paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. p. 65. OCLC 459562599.
  16. ^ Leach, Eleanor Winsor. (2004). The Social Life of painting in Ancient Rome and on the Bay of Naples. Cambridge University Press. p. 48. ISBN 1107690463. OCLC 939787728.
  17. ^ a b Anderson, Maxwell L. (1987). "The Portrait Medallions of the Imperial Villa at Boscotrecase". American Journal of Archaeology. 91 (1): 135. doi:10.2307/505462. ISSN 0002-9114 – via JSTOR.
  18. ^ Milleker, Elizabeth Johnston. (2000). The Year One: Art of the Ancient World East and West. The Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 46. ISBN 0870999613. OCLC 884668332.
  19. ^ Anderson, Maxwell L. (1987). "The Portrait Medallions of the Imperial Villa at Boscotrecase". American Journal of Archaeology. 91 (1): 127. doi:10.2307/505462. ISSN 0002-9114 – via JSTOR.
  20. ^ a b Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von. (1962). The Paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. p. 18. OCLC 459562599.
  21. ^ Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von. (1962). The Paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. p. 14. OCLC 459562599.
  22. ^ Knauer, Elfriede R. (1993). "Roman Wall Paintings from Boscotrecase: Three Studies in the Relationship between Writing and Painting". Metropolitan Museum Journal. 28: 13–15. doi:10.2307/1512917. ISSN 0077-8958 – via JSTOR.
  23. ^ Knauer, Elfriede R. (1993). "Roman Wall Paintings from Boscotrecase: Three Studies in the Relationship between Writing and Painting". Metropolitan Museum Journal. 28: 17. doi:10.2307/1512917. ISSN 0077-8958 – via JSTOR.
  24. ^ Clarke, John R. (2005), "Augustan Domestic Interior: Propaganda or Fashion?", The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Augustus, Cambridge University Press, p. 268, ISBN 9780521003933
  25. ^ a b Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von. (1962). The Paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. p. 20. OCLC 459562599.
  26. ^ Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von. (1962). The Paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. p. 22. OCLC 459562599.
  27. ^ a b c Knauer, Elfriede R. (1993). "Roman Wall Paintings from Boscotrecase: Three Studies in the Relationship between Writing and Painting". Metropolitan Museum Journal. 28: 20. doi:10.2307/1512917. ISSN 0077-8958 – via JSTOR.
  28. ^ Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von. (1962). The Paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. p. 15. OCLC 459562599.
  29. ^ Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von. (1962). The Paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. pp. 22–23. OCLC 459562599.
  30. ^ Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von, (1909-1990), Auteur. (1962). The paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. p. 23. OCLC 489759241.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  31. ^ Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von. (1962). The Paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. p. 38. OCLC 459562599.
  32. ^ a b Ling, Roger. (1991). Roman Painting. Cambridge University Press. p. 114. ISBN 0521306140. OCLC 898697417.
  33. ^ a b c d Blanckenhagen, Peter Heinrich von. (1962). The Paintings from Boscotrecase. F.H. Kerle. p. 17. OCLC 459562599.
  34. ^ Knauer, Elfriede R. (1993). "Roman Wall Paintings from Boscotrecase: Three Studies in the Relationship between Writing and Painting". Metropolitan Museum Journal. 28: 29. doi:10.2307/1512917. ISSN 0077-8958 – via JSTOR.