The ATRIUM
The ATRIUM
A patrician's house was called a domus, the same as any other Roman house. In ancient Rome, a house was a house, its size didn't give it a special name. The only special indication of housing was the "insulae" or apartment houses, which connoted multi-family dwellings rather than private homes for one family.
Domus.
Domus or domum.
If someone were wealthy enough to live in a free standing house (domus), they usually had a slave to do the cooking.
You need to specify what is it that is symbolic.
Roman housing blocks are called "insulae" from the Latin word for island.
Domus Galilei is a building that houses a theological seminar for priests of the Roman Catholic Church. The word 'domus' is Latin for 'house'. The building also carries the name 'Galilei', because it's located near the Israeli sea of the same name.
a heart
The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.
The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.The heart of Roman society was the family.
TYhe wealthy Romans lived in a domus in the city and a villa if they were in the country.