Villa_of_the_Papyri Villa_of_the_Papyri

Villa of the Papyri - Definition and Overview

The "Villa of the Papyri" is an enormous private house of ancient Herculaneum owned by Julius Caesar's father-in-law, Lucius Calpurnius Piso Caesoninus, and first excavated in 1785 by Karl Weber. Its name derives from the discovery of a library in the house containing 1,800 carbonized papyrus scrolls.

The 800 feet (245 m) long sea side villa had four levels and was the most luxurious house in all of Herculaneum and Pompeii. It was complete with swimming pools, fountains and water features.

Many of the scrolls were by the philosopher Philodemus, a client of Piso. The villa of the Papyri is said to contain a second library full of papyrus scrolls. The villa of the papyri also housed a large collection of privately owned sculptural art. The house contained 80 sculptures of magnificent quality and craftsmanship. Lucius Piso was a highly educated man and was a patron for both philosophers and poets. There is still 30,000 square feet (2,800 m²) left to be excavated of this grand estate.

External link

  • Philodemus Project Home Page [1] (http://www.humnet.ucla.edu/humnet/classics/philodemus/philhome.htm)

Example Usage of Papyri

GentlemanAdmn: @DaintyBallerina I was like that at end of my MA, except with aramaic Papyri and egyptian jews. Now problem is don't have enough tim in 17c
wwwkarentyrrell: @Papyri Hang in there, Jenny. Only a few weeks to go ... Karen
alphabetsoupmag: @Papyri PS Send icecream.
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