Roman Villa Desenzano
The Roman Villa of Desenzano Villa romana di Desenzano del Garda, is in the town of Desenzano del Garda on the shore of Lake Garda. It is located in the comune of the province of Brescia, in Lombardy, Italy. It is one of the most important late antiquity Roman villas in northern Italy.
it is possible that the person who ordered the final stage of the building works of the villa was Flavius Magnus Decentius, brother of the Emperor Magnentius, from whom the city of Desenzano takes its name today.
History of discovery
The building, built at the end of the first century BCE, has known several building phases: what is visible today, however, dates back to the first half of the fourth century AD.The villa was discovered in 1921, when during the ground construction for the foundations of a house, polychrome mosaics came to light. It was therefore decided to suspend the work and the authorisation of the Italian Ministry of Education was obtained that the whole area be expropriated and the excavation began.
Structure overview
The excavations revealed the existence of four areas:In addition, subsequently, a fifth space was built: the Antiquarium. The museum of the Villa, which houses the materials found during the excavations, was carefully built over this area and the hypercaust can still be seen.
Area A
Area A is organised along the east–west axial direction. To the east, overlooking the lake, there is an octagonal vestibule paved with geometric mosaics, which was used as a place of entertainment for the guests of the Villa. The neighbouring peristyle was bounded by portries with more than twenty columns distributed along the perimeter, of which only a couple have survived. From the peristyle you enter the sumptuous three-apse triclinium, which has the better preserved floor.The depictions consist of hunting scenes inscribed in octagonal spaces, harvest and fruit picking scenes in square spaces and finally crosses depicting flowering branches starting from craters. From the triabsided room you could access a garden closed by a nymphaeo, that is, a fountain that was enriched by seven niches that were used for the collection of water. This part of the villa was restored between 1928 and 1930 when the structures and mosaics had now suffered a major deterioration.