Villa Armira (Thrace) Ivaylovgrad

Villa Armira, excavated 1st c. CE Roman villa with important mosaics near Armira river, Bulgaria
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Latitude: 41.499100
Longitude: 26.106300
Confidence: High (20180111)

Place ID: 415261BArm
Time period: R
Region: Thrace
Country: Bulgaria
Department: Haskovo
Mod: Ivaylovgrad

- Pleiades
- DARE

Modern Description: Villa Armira lies some 4 kilometres (2.5 mi) southwest of Ivaylovgrad. It was named after the Armira River, a minor tributary of the Arda. One of the largest and most richly decorated Ancient Roman villas excavated in Bulgaria, it features rich marble decoration and complex floor mosaics, some geometric and some depicting animals and plants. The villa dates to the second half of the 1st century AD and originally belonged to a noble of Roman Thrace who is thought to have been the governor of the surrounding area. The two-storey U-shaped villa spreads over 3,600 square metres (39,000 sq ft) amidst a garden, with an impluvium in the middle. Villa Armira had 22 separate rooms on the ground floor alone in addition to a panorama terrace. The entire ground floor was covered in elaborately decorated white marble. The villa's floor mosaics display features typical of Ancient Roman art. The mosaics in the master's chamber depict the 2nd century AD owner with his two children: these are the only Roman-era mosaic portraits to be discovered in Bulgaria. A common theme in the villa's decoration is the gorgon Medusa. In the 3rd century AD, Villa Armira was expanded eastward with a triclinium and a hypocaust.
Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_Armira
Wikidata ID: Q1892609
Trismegistos Geo: 61186
DARE: 35693

Info: Wikipedia.org

(Wikipedia)


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