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Hadrian frescoes were presented at the baths of ancient Rome

AuthorAuthor: Livia BorgheseJeevan Ravindran, CNN

FrescoDating back about 2,000 years to the time of the Roman emperorHadrianis open to the public when visiting the ancientBaths of Caracallain Rome.

"Visitors can now see part of the frescoes for the first time from the ceiling of the second room of the collapsed Domus (house)," said a spokesman for the Roman special director. One Luca del Hula says.

Dionysus, the god of wine, also known as Bacchus, depicted against a red background.

Also known as the god of wine, Dionysus, Bacchus, is painted on a red background. Credits:Fabio Caricchia

"This was a triclinium ceiling-ancient Roman dining room-and archaeologists Dio on a red background The part that reflects Nussius. "

The frescoes are older than the bath itself and decorate the house that was part of the neighborhood destroyed to accommodate the bath. The house was founded in 216 AD and is named after Marco Aurélio Antonio Bassiano, known as Caracara. The son of Emperor Septimius Severus.

The bathhouse follows the plan of the "Great Empire Bathhouse", and the central block is dedicated to hot baths, and there are a series of caldarium, tepidarium, frigidarium, and natatio with different temperatures and purposes. Natatio, an open-air bath, was about the size of an Olympic pool.

Detail of a human figure.

Person details. Credits:Fabio Caricchia

Other parts of the building were used for walking, studying and sports.

The two frescoes are from different eras. The first frescoes are typical of the Hadrian era and recreate the architectural perspective of people, statues and rampant felines.

The second, produced about 50 years later, depicts the Greco-Roman style and the sacred figures of the Egyptian Pantheon together. Frescoes suggest that they were owned by a wealthy family.

Anubis, the Egyptian god of death and the afterlife.

Anubis, the god of death and the afterlife in Egypt. Credits:Fabio Caricchia

"There are one or two separate Pantheon or divine groups from the Greek and Roman traditions. Is amazing (Jupiter, Juno, Minerva) from Egyptian traditions (Anubis, Isis, and perhaps Serapis), "Delfra told CNN. "This may indicate that the family that owned the Domus had a close relationship with Egypt."

The Greek-Roman tradition is represented by the sky. The god of Egypt, Jupiter, his spouse, Juno, the guardian and goddess of marriage, and the goddess of wisdom, Minerva. On the Egyptian side is Anubis, the god of death and death, Isis, the goddess of fertility and motherhood, and potentially the Greek-Egyptian sun god used to connect the Greeks and Egyptians in Egypt. There is a therapy.

Meanwhile, the director of the Baths of Caracalla, Millera Cell Lorenzi, said that the existence of two different traditional gods in the same artwork was "a religious practice typical of ancient Rome since its inception." Said that it is a feature.