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  • The complex lay at the foot of the Palatine Hill, where a sacred grove that was slowly encroached upon lingered into Imperial times, when all was swept away by the Fire of Rome in 64. The House of the Vestals was rebuilt several times in the course of the Empire. After the dissolution of the College of the Vestals in the late 4th century AD, the House of the Vestals continued to serve as a residence building.
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  • After the dissolution of the College of the Vestals in the late 4th century AD, the House of the Vestals continued to serve as a residence building.
  • The Atrium Vestae, the most prominent part of the House of the Vestals, was an opulent three-storey palace that spanned over 50 rooms in total.
  • We can consider this house of the Vestals as having been the ancestor of the convents: it was built around a large atrium surrounded by a double portico.
  • Before the 64 CE Fire Before the great fire of Rome during the reign of emperor Nero the house of the vestals had a different shape, size, floor plan and orientation.
  • The House of the Vestals is a collection of short stories by American author Steven Saylor, first published by St. Martin's Press in 1997.
  • Beautifully built, the House of Vestal had decorations including a statue of Numa Pompilius, who was the founder of the Vestal cult.
  • The Temple of Vesta in the Roman Forum. The adjacent House of the Vestals was one of the most lavish in all of Rome, and unfolded around a beautiful central...
  • As you can still see, the House of the Vestals was part of a unified complex connected to the Temple of Vesta and the Regia.
  • The House of Vestals (the only female priesthood in Ancient Rome), on the south side of the Via Sacra, was a complex including the Temple of Vesta and the...
  • Between the Regia and Palatine hills lies the House of the Vestals, the place of residence in Rome of the Vestal Virgins, who lived just behind the Temple of Vesta.