Abstract
The article is based on the research conducted by the authors. The houses from the ancient town discovered in 1985 on the Mediterranean coast at the location of today’s Marina el-Alamein, are among the rare remains of Egyptian residential buildings from Hellenistic and Roman times. There are few remains of houses from this period in major cities, including the capital of Alexandria. The ancient town, which functioned under the influence of nearby Alexandria, developed from the second century BC to the sixth century AD. Various types of buildings, relatively well preserved here, provide information on a reduced scale about the architecture of Alexandria, as well as the lives of its inhabitants. This also applies in particular to residential houses, their décor and colours. The ancient town of Marina el-Alamein can be seen as demonstrating solutions that are more common. The present article aims to analyse the preserved remains of painting decoration in the main spaces of houses and attempts to reconstruct forms and the principles of their creation on the background of better-known solutions from other regions. Houses in Marina generally implemented layouts defined by flagstone-paved portico courtyards, sporadically taking the form of an incomplete peristyle, and reception halls oikos, which could be accompanied by smaller adjoining rooms. Both the columns and entablature with the cornices of the porticoes as well as the walls of the main rooms were painted. Wall decoration was organised by geometric partitions, filled in variously. The aedicula that served religious purposes, placed centrally in the rear walls of the main reception rooms, was also polychrome. The painted decoration can be reconstructed from the preserved remains, as rich and intensely colourful, similar to Hellenistic and Roman layouts from other regions, but differing in details.
Highlights
The houses of an ancient town discovered on the Mediterranean coast 96 km west of Alexandria at the site of what is today Marina el-Alamein represent rare, well-preserved remains of Egyptian residential buildings from the Graeco-Roman period (Figure 1)
The analysis of the results of these works, the remains uncovered as well as comparative studies constitute the main research method and the basis for discovering the architecture of former residential houses in this town, in particular, their painting decoration and colour scheme, which is the subject of this study
Whenthe thedecoration decorationofof aedicula was transformed in second the second phase, the coland pilasters were covered with new stucco flutes, this time classically concave, in parts umns and pilasters were covered with new stucco flutes, this time classically concave, in recessed in black
Summary
The houses of an ancient town discovered on the Mediterranean coast 96 km west of Alexandria at the site of what is today Marina el-Alamein represent rare, well-preserved remains of Egyptian residential buildings from the Graeco-Roman period (Figure 1). Arts 2022, 11, 2 modesty of the remains of residential houses is noticeable regarding the capital city of Alexandria, where the most representative buildings featuring the most advanced technology be located. In the context of the poorly preserved remnants of the buildings that once stood in the ancient capital, centres once under its influence can, by analogy, provide valuable information for the study of a non-existent city For studies on this topic, related to Alexandria and Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt in general, the analogy of the nearby settlement of Marina el-Alamein, heavily influenced by the metropolis, offers some unique and valuable information, albeit on a reduced scale
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