[LAUGH] [MUSIC] >> Hello, everybody and welcome back. After the Great Fire of 1864, Nero created his huge incredible palace, including the Domus Aurea. Due to this fact, the northern slope of the hill was totally changed and a new urban layout was created. As you can see in the scheme here and in this plan, with the overlay of the Blue Republican structure and the Red Neronian structure. At this moment, a new house for the vestal virgins was built, as we've already seen reoriented along the axis of the new sacred way with rooms opening onto a courtyard. This is the Neronian and Flavian phase, and this is the late Flavian phase. We've already seen this building before. In the second century, AD, the house of the vestal virgins was enlarged. This new area is enclosed in the building, and the six rooms for the six vestal virgins are opened. Now, here three and three once again open onto a small area here, a small courtyard like a tablinum of the Roman house. Once again, it was a very imposing building with more than one storey and a small bath in this area here. This is the area where the rooms of the vestal virgins were. In this section you can appreciate the layout of this building. This is the courtyard inside the area with the doors to the rooms, the small area with the doors and the entrance to the rooms of the vestal virgins, the upper floor with the bath and the colonnade inside. This is once again the tablinum, where the vestal virgins were living. These are the doors of the upper floor with a small bath had been arranged. In the fourth century AD, the last changes occur, and possibly the building was already redecorated at the beginning of the third century AD. The layout, the general layout stayed the same. We have maybe just new columns here and this addition here. So in this section you can see the difference between the levels from the sacred way here. The Neronian Porticoes, the courtyard inside the building and the upper way, the so called nova via. Here once again, we see the porticoes with the colonnade, the basin inside and this huge structure here we've seen in the previous plan. Thanks to the remains of marble columns, we can envision how the layout of this Spartacus was with green marble at the first order and yellowish marble at the second order divided by this large attic here, maybe with windows opening onto it. This is how we can envision this structure in the center of the courtyard. This is a very common feature of very luxurious Roman palaces. We have seen one possible cenatio, a dining room in the Imperial Palace. It was a round basin with a small insula in the middle. This is more or less the same thing. This is the basin divided into six smaller basins supporting a small island where we can imagine this kind of structure. More than one element of the house of the vestal virgins is recreated. Now, for example, this cult place here outside the house but inside the sacred precinct has been restored. This was a small aedicula dedicated to the Lares, the gods we've seen as being worshipped in the area since at least the eighth century BC. Thanks to this coin, we can envision the sacred image located in this shrine with the two Lares and the dog, the sacred animal to these gods inserted in it. After the collapse of the Roman Empire, the house of the vestal virgins was still there. Possibly men related to the administration of the Imperial Palace had been housed in it. A small clue indicating the use of the building is once again the upgrading of the small bath that was created on the third floor of the building in this corner we have already seen in the second century AD. Here we have basins you can see here and here, facing onto the courtyard where the rooms of the vestal virgins were with heated water and cold water. The Roman Empire didn't exist anymore at this point. But the landscape of Rome still preserved an image of what was. This is the landscape that was uncovered at the end of the 19th century, when the archaeologists, for the first time, brought to light these ruins. This is what we see today if we go to the Roman Forum. This is the courtyard of the house of the vestal virgins, with its wonderful statues replaced here when the archaeological park was opened to the public. We have already seen that in the recreation of the new landscape earlier elements connected to the memory of Rome were preserved. Also in this phase, in this late antique phase, when the house of the vestal virgins was upgraded once again, this temple here was rebuilt. This is where possibly a statue of Jupiter starter was worshipped since the fire of 64 AD. We've seen a very small temple at the end of the first century AD that now is turned into a round chamber with this small holly on both sides. This is how we can imagine the structure. This is once again the clue indicating the will of the Roman people not to forget important elements, landmarks of the collective memory of the city. Thank you very much. >> [LAUGH]