Els Munts (Roman villa) explained

The villa of "Els Munts" is a residential Roman villa built during the 2nd century C.E.[1] The villa is located 12 km away from Tarraco in the municipality of Altafulla in Spain. Scholars have regarded the villa of Els Munts as noteworthy for its mosaics[2] and exceptional state of preservation.[3] As a part of Tarraco, the villa of Els Munts is a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Architecture

The villa of Els Munts contains several components including a bath, gardens, and temple. In total the villa had a garden, semi-basement corridor with cistern for Caius Valerius Avitus, peristyle, water cistern known locally as "La Tartana", a more extensive water reservoir, dining room (triclinium), the Mithraeum—a temple dedicated to the god Mithras, porticoed corridor. The baths had a reception with an atrium and alcover stone slab floor. There were heated rooms: caldaria, tepidaria, and furnaces with hypocaustum, and cold rooms (frigidaria). A furnace, praefurnia, heated the hot rooms from below. Lastly, there were latrines which excess water from the baths used to remove the excrement.[4] [5]

History

The ancient people known as the Iberians were early inhabitants of the region. The Roman historian Livy mentions Tarraco in describing part of the origins of the Second Punic War.[6] The villa was initially built in the 1st century CE, on top of which the remains preserved today were built in the middle of the 2nd century CE. Sometime after 175 CE but before 200 CE, a fire burned at villa of Els Munts, and the inhabitants abandoned it.

The owner of the villa was Caius Valerius Avitus, a duumvir for the Roman province of Tarraco. A wall painting at the site indicates this information.[7]

Location and Geography

The villa of Els Munts is located in the municipality of Altafulla.[8] Approximately 12 kilometers from Tarraco, modern day Tarragona and near the mouth of the Gayá River, the villa of Els Munts sits atop the western slope of a coastal hill which is part of Cap Roig, the origin of which is the Miocene era. It overlooks the Mediterranean Ocean and is near the Via Augusta.

Accessibility

The villa of Els Munts is part of a museum open to the public.[9]

Notes and References

  1. Guiral Pelegrín . Carmen . La decoración pintada del "cubículo de las estaciones" de la Villa Romana dels Munts (Altafulla, Tarragona) . The painting of the «Seasons cubiculum» of the Roman villa of Els Munts (Altafulla, Tarragona) . es . Espacio Tiempo y Forma. Serie I, Prehistoria y Arqueología . 2010 . 3 . 127–143 . . 10.5944/etfi.3.2010.1968 . free .
  2. Web site: Durán Peneda, Mercedes . Nuevos mosaicos de la villa dels Munts en Altafulla, Tarragona. Apreciaciones iconográficas / Mercedes Durán Penedo . Biblioteca Virtual . 20 June 2023 . es . 2000.
  3. Web site: Archaeological Ensemble of Tarraco . 2023-06-15 . UNESCO World Heritage Centre.
  4. Web site: Vila romana de Els Munts . 2023-06-15 . www.catalunya.com.
  5. Web site: Josep Anton Remolà Vallverdú . La vil· la romana dels Munts (Altafulla, Tarragonès) . academia.com . January 2009 . 20 June 2023.
  6. Livy. 21.61. https://gutenberg.org/cache/epub/10907/pg10907-images.html#c61
  7. Arbulo . Joaquín Ruiz de . 2014 . El signaculum de Caius Valerius Avitus, duoviro de Tarraco y propietario de la villa de Els Munts (Altafulla) . Pyrenae . 45 . 1 . 125–151 . 2339-9171.
  8. Web site: Catalunya . Agència Catalana del Patrimoni, Generalitat de . Villa romana de Els Munts . 2023-06-15 . Visitmuseum· Catalonia museums . es.
  9. Web site: The Roman Villa of Els Munts Site . 2023-06-15 . mnat.cat.