Showing posts with label piazza armerina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label piazza armerina. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 20, 2016

The Bikini Girls Of Sicily


Villa Romana Del Casale

I dream about Sicily.
If you have been following this blog then you already know that I am obsessed with this spectacular island.
If I could spend every day for the rest of my life exploring Sicily I still wouldn’t get to see it all.

People are always asking me about things to do in Sicily, so I decided to do some posts about random fascinating things to see and do when you are there.

 One completely intriguing spot to visit away from all the tourists is the incredible Villa Romana del Casale.


Piazza Armerina, Sicily

Located about 5km from a picturesque little town in central Sicily called Piazza Armerina, the villa is not only one of the very best preserved villas from anywhere in the Roman Empire, it also has much of it’s decoration still intact, most famously the extensive mosaics.


aerial view of Villa Romana del Casale

The villa which is assumed to have been a hunting lodge, was built in the early 4th Century AD, at one time it was thought for the emperor Maximian, but now it is thought to have been built for a senatorial aristocrat. 
(At that time marble was the flooring of choice for Roman emperors, and Villa Romana del Casale only has marble for the floor of the basilica, which suggests that the owner did not belong to imperial Roman society.)
It’s hard to believe that the mosaics we value so highly now were at the time considered second rate!

mosaic-sicily


But back to the mosaics. This is the single greatest collection of Roman era mosaics anywhere in the world, and they are essentially completely intact. Covering 38 000 square feet, vibrant and brilliant they depict mythological scenes, scenes of daily life, and the famous “bikini girls”.


bikini-girls-sicily
The famous Bikini Girls

The Bikini Girls are a group of 10 young women dressed in shorts and a bandeau, performing various acts of athleticism such as discus throwing, long jump with weights in their hands, running and playing some form of handball. 
And you thought the bikini was invented in the 20th century? Not quite - it was alive and well in the early 300's AD, and probably long before that.


villa-romana-del-casale-mosaic

There is a girl wearing a transparent golden dress holding a crown over the head of an athlete, presenting her with a victory palm. Creating a dress and making it look transparent by using little stones and pieces of colored glass is nothing short of miraculous.

The Corridor Of The Hunt is a walkway that runs the width of the villa, and is a mosaic explosion of hunting scenes, featuring animals, fruit and flowers, fish and cupids, everyday scenes and mythology.
It takes your breath away.

roman-mosaics-sicily


The floora were probably created by North African craftsmen who were known for their incredible skill with mosaics. The mosaics themselves are still incredibly vivid, especially when you consider the villa was inhabited or in use for 8 centuries (from the 4th century until the 12th century), by the Romans, the Byzantines, the Arabs and the Normans.

sicily-mosaics
A mosaic scene from the master bedroom

A landslide in the 12th Century almost completely covered the villa, and it was only partly discovered in the 19th Century, but it wasn’t until the 20th Century that excavations revealed the magnitude of what lay beneath and the absolute magnificence of the villa.

sicily-mosaics


Villa Romana del Casale is approximately an hour and a half drive from Catania, 2 hours drive from Siracusa, and 45 minutes drive from Enna.

Check out these amazing videos of Villa Romana del Casale.
Remember all 42 of these floors are made of mosaics, hand-laid by artisans somewhere between 310 and 340 AD, with no machines or modern technology to help them to perfection.





Sicily takes my breath away.

Disclaimer: these images are not my own

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bikini-girls-sicily