Skip to main content
Goddess of the Garden: Evidence of Everyday Life and Worship in the Gardens of Pompeii

Abstract

Gardens were an integral part of daily living in Pompeii before the eruption of Vesuvius in 79 CE. Scholars have discovered that family meals and household production were a regular part of the garden experience. While much academic work has been devoted to the garden spaces excavated within the city, there has not been, as of yet, a focused look at the ways religion may have been practiced in the garden. Venus was an important deity to the Romans, but multiple strands of evidence suggests the people of Pompeii had a special relationship with Venus as a nature goddess. This research focusses on the pervasiveness of the Venus cult in the gardens of Pompeii, in addition to exploring the ways religion was practiced in the garden by studying archaeological, textual, and iconographic data gathered from the garden spaces of Pompeii.

How to Cite

Carver, K., (2014) “Goddess of the Garden: Evidence of Everyday Life and Worship in the Gardens of Pompeii”, Capstone, The UNC Asheville Journal of Undergraduate Scholarship 27(1).

Downloads

Download PDF

0

Views

0

Downloads

Share

Author

Downloads

Issue

Publication details

Licence

Peer Review

This article has been peer reviewed.

File Checksums (MD5)

  • PDF: b9aac6eaf545dcbd4ec00792b4574137