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Pompeii: Bathing Culture and the Development of Urban Space

GOAL

The development of a public collective bathing culture in Antiquity impacted directly on the formation of urban space and the socio-cultural function and perception of cities. The existence, location, accessibility, architectural context and infrastructure of public baths reflect changing standards and priorities of urban planning and lifestyle.

The first public baths (ca. 450 BC onwards) focused on individual bathing and cleansing aspects. In the Hellenistic period (3rd century BC onwards), there was a general trend towards more luxurious, innovative, collective, relaxing bathing forms. In the 2nd century BC, bathing programs were focused entirely on providing facilities for social and relaxing bathing. This final step required crucial innovations in technology and social concepts usually connected with Roman culture.

While the development of a specific Roman bathing culture in the Late Republican period currently is much debated, this topic is largely neglected in Pompeii, although the city includes three large baths dated to this period (Republican Baths, Stabian Baths, Forum Baths). This project examines the development, function, and cultural and sociohistorical context of the Republican Baths and Stabian Baths at Pompeii and their role in the urban development.

With its comprehensive reassessment of two key areas of Pompeii and its overarching focus on the multifaceted phenomenon of cityscaping, this project aims at contributing, beyond Pompeii and bathing culture, to current debates on the urbanization of Italy and the sociocultural, economic and political conditions, influences, and agents of this process. 

FIELDWORK

So far, nine field seasons were carried out jointly with the University of Oxford and since 2021 with the Università degli Studi di Napoli L’Orientale; four seasons focused on the Republican Baths (fig. 1: 2015, 2016, 2019) and five focused on the Stabian Baths (fig. 2: 2016, 2017, 2018, 2021, 2022). Seasons comprised new stratigraphic excavations, investigations in archives and magazines, and detailed assessments of all standing remains, including the newest available 3D documentation and modelling techniques as well as traditional documentation methods.

This project was begun within the framework of the Excellence Cluster Topoi, group C-6 on “Cityscaping” and was generously funded by Topoi (2015–2018), by the Freie Universität (2019), and by the German Research Foundation (DFG, 2021–2022). Fieldwork on site was carried out with generous permission and support of the Parco Archeologico di Pompei with its directors Massimo Osanna and Gabriel Zuchtriegel.

RESULTS

The Stabian Baths are a key area for reconstructing the urban development of Pompeii and for studying the development of ancient bathing culture. According to Hans Eschebach (1979), the area was first occupied by an Archaic Altstadtmauer and from the 5th century BC onwards by a Greek palaestra with individual bathing cells that was gradually transforming, in five phases, into a Roman-type bath. Our excavations have shown that there is no trace of an early city wall at all, and that the Stabian Baths were only built after 130/120 BC and from the outset as Roman-type public bath. The complex was three times remodeled in line with new trends (after 80 BC, in the early 1st century AD, and between AD 41 and 79), and remained in use until the end of Pompeii in AD 79.

The Republican Baths received little attention after their excavation and preliminary publication in 1950, although the area is central for the urban development of Pompeii. The project achieved two major goals: for the first time, the Republican Baths, have been fully documented and analyzed using both traditional and state of the art digital approaches. Second, the barely examined and debated construction date and history of the complex as well as the functioning of its technology (water management, heating system) could be clarified. The Republican Baths developed as a private complex in the mid-2nd century BC and underwent several changes, which seem to have been mainly driven by practical necessities and less by new trends. While the Stabian Baths profited from the introduction of piped water into the city in the early Imperial period, the Republican Baths were abandoned around 30/20 BC and taken over by the owner of an adjacent house. The new owner used the terrain of the baths for a garden peristyle complex, which was once remodeled before it was significantly destroyed in the earthquake of AD 62. After this date, the terrain of the former baths was largely left in ruins and transformed into a building yard for quarrying volcanic ash and possibly for dumping building debris (fig. 3).

The project has shown that current understanding of the early phases of urban development in Pompeii must be revised, and has identified a direct link between urban development and the development of bathing culture: key points in the city’s development such as the transformation into a Roman colony in 80 BC and particularly the connection to the Serino aqueduct in the early Imperial period directly impacted on the baths studied – positively in the case of the Stabian Baths, negatively in the case of the Republican Baths.

REPORTS (pdf)

RESEARCH TEAM (2015-2022)

  • Dr. Clemens Brünenberg; Fachbereich Architektur, Fachgebiet Klassische Archäologie, Technische Universität Darmstadt
  • Prof. Dr. Jens-Arne Dickmann, Institut für Archäologische Wissenschaften, Klassische Archäologie, Universität Freiburg
  • Dr. Domenico Esposito, Deutsches Archäologisches Institut Berlin
  • Dr. Antonio Ferrandes, Facoltà di Lettere e Filosofia, Sapienza Università di Roma
  • Dr. Marco Giglio, Dipartimento Asia Africa e Mediterraneo, Università degli Studi di Napoli L’Orientale
  • Thomas Heide, MA, Doktorand, Institut für Klassische Archäologie, FU Berlin
  • Prof. Dr. Dominik Lengyel, Architektur und Visualisierung, Brandenburgische Technische Universität Cottbus-Senftenberg
  • Dr. Asja Müller, Institut für Klassische Archäologie, FU Berlin
  • Dr. Giacomo Pardini, Dipartimento di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale/DISPAC, Università degli Studi di Salerno
  • Prof. Dr. Cees Passchier, Institut für Geowissenschaften, Universität Mainz
  • Dr. Alessandra Pegurri, Rome
  • Prof. Dr. Mark Robinson, Environmental Archaeology, University of Oxford
  • Jennifer Robinson, Environmental Archaeology, Oxford
  • Dr. Christoph Rummel, Römisch-Germanische Kommission, Frankfurt am Main
  • Martin Strauß, MA Student, Wasserbau/ Ingenieurswissenschaften, Technische Hochschule Lübeck
  • Dr. Gül Sürmelihindi, Institut für Geowissenschaften, Universität Mainz
  • Catherine Toulouse, Selbständige Architektin
  • Prof. Dr. Monika Trümper, Institut für Klassische Archäologie, FU Berlin
  • Dr. Kai Wellbrock, Wasserbau/ Ingenieurswissenschaften, Technische Hochschule Lübeck

PUBLICATIONS

Brünenberg, C. – C. Rummel – M. Trümper, Use and Application of SfM-based Documentation in Excavation and Standing Remains Assessment of the Stabian Baths, Pompeii, in: Proceedings of Conference the European Association of Archaeologists 2019, Bern (forthcoming 2022)

Esposito, D., Decorative Principles Between the Public and Private Sphere in Pompeii, in: A. Haug – T. Lauritsen (eds.), Principles of Decoration in the Roman World (Berlin 2021) 53–69

Heide, T., Der Brunnen der Republikanischen Thermen in Pompeji. Architektonische Analyse und Rekonstruktion des antiken Wasserhebemechanismus, RM 127, 2021, 221–253

Heide, T., Public Deep Wells of Pompeii: Processes of Construction, in: D. Maschek – M. Trümper (eds.), Architecture and the Ancient Economy (Rome 2022) 173–190

Robinson, M. – M. Trümper – C. Brünenberg – J.-A. Dickmann – D. Esposito – A. F. Ferrandes – G. Pardini – A. Pegurri – C. Rummel, Stabian Baths Pompeii: New Research on the Altstadt Defenses, AA 2020, 83–119

Trümper, M., South Baths at Morgantina: Assessment of the Heating System in the Context of Graeco-Roman Public Baths, in: L. Maniscalco (ed.), Morgantina Duemilaquindici. La ricerca archeologica a sessant’anni dall’avvio degli scavi (Palermo 2015) 102-114

Trümper, M., Curare se stessi. Bagni e terme a Pompei, in: M. Osanna – C. Rescigno (eds.), Pompei e i Greci (Milano 2017) 262–267

Trümper, M., Water Management of the Stabian Baths at Pompeii: A Reassessment, in: G. Wiplinger (ed.), Wasserwesen zur Zeit des Frontinus. Bauwerke – Technik – Kultur, Frontinus Symposion Trier Mai 2016 (Leuven 2017) 257–272

Trümper, M., Gymnasium, Palaestra, Campus and Bathing in Late Hellenistic Pompeii: A Reassessment of the Urban Context of the Republican Baths (VIII 5, 36), in: U. Mania – M. Trümper (eds.), Development of Gymnasia and Graeco-Roman Cityscapes (Berlin 2018) 87–113

Henzel, R. – M. Trümper, Crowded or Empty Spaces? The Statuary Decoration of the ‘Palaestrae’ in Pompeii and Herculaneum, in: U. Mania – M. Trümper (eds.), Development of Gymnasia and Graeco-Roman Cityscapes (Berlin 2018) 115–142

Trümper, M., Development of Bathing Culture in Hellenistic Sicily, in: M. Trümper – G. Adornato – Th. Lappi (eds.), Cityscapes of Hellenistic Sicily (Rome 2019) 347–391

Trümper, M. – C. Brünenberg – J.-A. Dickmann – D. Esposito – A. F. Ferrandes – G. Pardini – A. Pegurri – M. Robinson – C. Rummel, Stabian Baths in Pompeii: New Research on the Development of Ancient Bathing Culture, RM 125, 2019, 1–56

Trümper, M., Logistics of Building Processes: the Stabian Baths in Pompeii, in: C. Recko – M. Heinzelmann (eds.), Quantifying Ancient Building Economy. Part 3.24 of the 19th International Congress of Classical Archaeology, Cologne/Bonn, May 2018 (Heidelberg 2020) 5–18

Trümper, M., Republican Baths to Casa della Calce. A Radical Transformation Process in Pompeii, in: K. Piesker - U. Wulf-Rheidt [†] (eds.), Umgebaut. Umbau-, Umnutzungs- und Umwertungsprozesse in der antiken Architektur. DiskAB 13 (Regensburg 2020) 11–28

Trümper, M., Water Management of Late Republican Baths, in: S. Bouffier – I. Fumadó Ortega (eds.), L'eau dans tous ses états. Perceptions antiques (Aix-en-Provence 2020) 141–159

Trümper, M. – D. Esposito, Le Terme Stabiane dopo il terremoto del 62 d.C., in: H. Dessales (ed.), Ricostruire dopo un terremoto. Riparazioni antiche a Pompei (Naples 2022) 221–242

Trümper, M., Baths and Bathing in Pompeii, in: J. Berry – R. Benefiel (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Pompeii and Environs (Oxford 2022)

Trümper, M., Late Republican Baths in Italy: Urban Context and Ownership, RM 128, 2022

Trümper, M. – C. Brünenberg – D. Esposito – Th. Heide – K. Zielke, The Men’s Tepidarium of the Stabian Baths at Pompeii: Quantification of its Construction and Remodeling Processes, in: D. Maschek – M. Trümper (eds.), Architecture and the Ancient Economy (Rome 2022) 219–256

FASTI ONLINE REPORTS

Republican Baths
Fasti Online: Pompeii, Republican Baths (VIII 5, 36)

- Fasti OnLine - Season 2015.pdf
- Fasti OnLine - Season 2016.pdf
- Fasti OnLine - Season 2019.pdf
- Plan Trenches 2015-2019.pdf

Stabian Baths
Fasti Online: Pompeii, Stabian Baths (VII 1, 8)

- Fasti OnLine - Season 2015.pdf
- Fasti OnLine - Season 2016.pdf
- Fasti OnLine - Season 2017.pdf
- Fasti OnLine - Season 2018.pdf
- Fasti OnLine - Season 2021.pdf
- Plan Trenches 2016-2018.pdf

 

PUBLIC OUTREACH

ZDF Terra X Verlorenes Wissen: Sonnenpillen und Superbeton der Antike; 30.6.2019; https://www.zdf.de/dokumentation/terra-x/verlorenes-wissen-mit-harald-lesch-sonnenpillen-und-der-superbeton-der-antike-100.html

Forschergeist FG041 Klassische Archäologie; Podcast: Interview des Stifterverbandes mit Monika Trümper; Dezember 2016; https://fyyd.de/episode/1499194

Antike Badefreuden: Tagesspiegel-Beilage, 23.9.2016; https://www.fu-berlin.de/presse/
publikationen/ tsp/2016/tsp-september-2016/forschung/antike-badefreuden/index.html

Der mannigfaltigste Lärm umrauscht mich von allen Seiten: Fundiert, Wissenschaftsmagazin der FU Berlin, 13.10.2016; https://www.fu-berlin.de/presse/publikationen/fundiert/2016_01/10-baeder/index.html

Water and Bathing, Archaeology magazine July/August 2019; https://www.archaeology.org/issues/344-1907/features/7717-pompeii-water-bathing