Home of Emperor Augustus Opens to Public

Ancient Roman Emperor Augustus’s first house opens in Rome

(Xinhua) Four http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=1090 opened to the public for the first time on Sunday.

Italian experts believe the rooms, found in the 1970s below the ruins of Augustus’s sprawling imperial palace, were part of a smaller house where he lived when he was still just Julius Caesar’s adoptive son Octavian and not http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=613’s first emperor.

The four surviving rooms from the two storey house are a dining room, a bedroom and a large entrance hall on the ground floor, and a small study on the floor above.

The windowless rooms received light from the entrance, which once looked out onto extensive gardens but is now blocked off by a wall dating to the reign of http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=3405 (37-68 AD).

Fragments of the rooms’ frescoes found by Italian archaeologists on the floor have been painstakingly pieced back together during a 1.5 million euro restoration of the house. Experts say the frescoes are among the most splendid surviving examples of Roman wall painting, on a par with those currently housed in the National Museum of Rome at Palazzo Massimo and those found in the house of Augustus’s wife Livia.

Guided tours of the house will be covered by a new single ticket offering access to the Roman Forums, the Colosseum and the Palatine.

But only five people at a time will be allowed in to see the rooms due to their small dimensions and the fragility of the frescoes.

Augustus’s House has been revealing new finds for years, although most of the digs are off-limits to visitors.

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2008-03-11