PompeiiinPictures

I.3.2 Pompeii. September 2010. Looking east towards entrance doorway from Via Stabiana.
Photo courtesy of Drew Baker.
I.3.2 Pompeii. May 2005. Entrance doorway, looking east from Via Stabiana.

I.3.2 Pompeii. September 2010.
Looking east across counter, from entrance doorway on Via Stabiana.
Photo courtesy of Drew Baker.

I.3.2 Pompeii. September 2010.
Looking north along west side of the counter showing three of the four embedded
dolia, with Via Stabiana on the left.
Photo courtesy of Drew Baker.

I.3.2 Pompeii. December
2005. Counter, with four large terracotta dolia and display shelves.
Looking north. According
to Boyce, there was a niche in the north wall but it was in a ruinous state.
See Boyce G. K., 1937.
Corpus of the Lararia of Pompeii. Rome: MAAR 14. (p.23)

I.3.2 Pompeii. 1935
photograph by Tatiana Warscher.
Looking north along
west side of the counter showing four embedded dolia, with Via Stabiana on the
left.
The niche, as
mentioned by Boyce above, can be seen in the north wall.
According to Warscher,
quoting Fiorelli – “I.3.2,
Bottega con podio, in cui stanno infisse quattro grandi urne di terracotta, avendo a destra una
gradinata.
Nel muro nord si
trovano i resti della
nicchia
dei penati”.
See Warscher, T, 1935:
Codex Topographicus
Pompejanus, Regio I, 3: (no. 3), Rome, DAIR, whose copyright it remains.

I.3.2 Pompeii. September 2010. Looking towards the north wall. Photo courtesy of Drew Baker.

I.3.2 Pompeii. September 2010. Looking towards the south wall. Photo courtesy of Drew Baker.

I.3.2 Pompeii. September 2010. Detail of stone steps against the south wall in
south-west corner.
Photo courtesy of Drew Baker.
According to Fiorelli, on the right of the
entrance doorway was a staircase similar to the one in the preceding shop.
He described that one as a wooden stepladder,
presumably reached by similar three stone steps.
See Pappalardo, U.,
2001. La Descrizione di Pompei per
Giuseppe Fiorelli (1875). Napoli: Massa Editore. (p.38)

I.3.3 Pompeii. September 2010.
Looking west over wall from I.3.3, into I.3.2 towards via Stabiana.
Photo courtesy of Drew Baker.

Photo taken in the late 1800’s, showing insula I.3 after excavation.
I.3.2 is in the
centre, at the lower side of the picture.
Courtesy of the Society of Antiquaries, Fox Collection.
In Codex Topographicus Pompeianus: Regio I.3, (the copy at DAIR), Warscher included a description of
the insula.
This description is included at the end in all parts of
I.3 on the website.
“L’isola 3
della
Regio I apparteneva ai quartieri piuttosto poveri, ad’esenzione della casa
no. 3 tutto le case sono di
dimensioni non grandi.
La casa no. 3 presenta un interesse dal
punto di vista della costruzione:
il
peristilio si trova ad un livello più alto di
quello dell’atrio:
questa
particolarità
si riscontra solamente in questa casa.
Noi
abbiamo
un esempio inverso nella casa dell’Ancora nera ove l’atrio si
trova ad un livello più alto di
quello del peristilio.
Si sente bene nell’isola in questione la vicinanza dell’anfiteatro da una parte e delle caserme dei gladiatori dall’altra.
Non c’è dubbio che
le case nos 23, 25 siano
state abitato da gladiatori.
(translation:
“Insula 3 of Region I belonged to a rather poor neighborhood,
with the exception of house No. 3 all the houses were not large in size.
The house at no. 3
had a special interest from the point of view of construction: the peristyle
sits at a level higher than that of the atrium: this particularity was found
only in this house. We have a contrary example in the House of the Black Anchor
where the atrium was located at a higher level than that of the peristyle.
The nearness of the
amphitheatre on one side and the gladiators' barracks on the other suited well
the inhabitants of the insula in question.
There was no doubt
that the houses numbered 23, 25 had been inhabited by gladiators.”).