It depends. The rich lived in detached houses (the domus) with the rooms arranged around an inner courtyard (atrium) without a roof which collected rain water and with an inner garden surrounded by a portico.
The poor lived on the top floors of apartment block (insulae). They lived in overcrowded rooms with no running water of cooking facilities. They went there only to sleep. They ate outdoors, went to outdoors public toilets and went to the public baths.
The noddle classes lived on the lower floors of the insulae and had apartments with running water.
Ther are paintings on the walls,mosaics on the floor and are made out of mud-bricks
There was very little furniture and no carpeting
Yes, I can in fact one intresting fact is when he was a full grown man he was five foot ten inches tall! That`s as tall as an NBA player!
v
You need to be more specific. The five difficulties that the Roman Empire WHAT?
M represents a thousand and the C one hundred, v a five and i for one. That is the roman numeral for 904.
yes it is the largest coliseum
It has five lakes that surround it. And the first or second largest fresh water lake.
The amount of tourists it attracts is five times its own population! The third largest barrier reef is found there.
five in the roman numerals is "V"
Yes, I can in fact one intresting fact is when he was a full grown man he was five foot ten inches tall! That`s as tall as an NBA player!
The equivalent of 5 as a Roman numeral is V
Their goalkeeper played for five world cups in a row. And another goalkeeper Jorge Campos would change position from a goalie to a midfielder.
The Roman numeral for the number five is "V".
It's a well known fact that the US, being isolated from the WW 2 battlefronts was able to produce war weapons without any dangers. An interesting fact of US war production was that between 1943 to 1944, the US was producing one ship per day and one aircraft every five minutes.
About five
Five = V
Five facts that I thought were interesting about Roman mosaics are that the design of how the tesserae will be laid out is scratched into a thin layer of mortar first, then the tesserae were placed on the mortar, following the pattern. Also, sometimes to make the mosaics very strong, they made a foundation out of broken stones and gravel, then put the mortar down and laid the tesserae out. Another fact I thought was interesting is that the way they designed mosaics is they had books called "pattern books" that had some designs to choose from. Sadly, none have survived. A fourth fact is that Roman mosaic artists almost never signed their work. Lastly, some of the first mosaics were made from colored rocks and pebbles instead of tesserae.
it sleeps.A LOT.