Tomb 20

Tombs 20 and 21 form a couple. The facades of both graves are unique. They are decorated with three brick semi-columns on a marble foot and with marble semi-capitals. Like tomb 19, tomb 20 has lost its view on the Via Severiana after the erection of tomb 24. The inscription above the entrance has disappeared as well.

From the once rich decoration in the burial chamber little has been left. However, fragments of a mosaic floor, below which four burial places were located, have been found.
On a covering plate of a sarcophagus the following text was written:
D(is) M(anibus) TV QVI LEGES SPONDEO [------ A]MICE QVOT ME
DISCVMBENTE BIBENTE VIDES
HOC QVANDIV VIXI [------]TIMA FECI IDEM ET TIBI DII FACIANT
You, friend (...) who shall read this, while I am lying down, and who will see this alive, I have done this (...) when I was alive, and may the gods do this also to you.


The burial chamber has been built for a mixed form of burial; arcosolia for inhumation in the lower part of the walls and above smaller niches for urns. In the back wall we find a large apsis-like niche flanked by two small windows. Both the right and the left wall have a semicircular niche with a triangular tympanum above. In the large niches traces of stucco shells can still be seen. There are also niches in the wall with the entrance.
Tomb 20 originates from 160-170 AD.
- Sources
- Russel Meigs - Roman Ostia, At the Clarendon Press 1973
- Guido Calza - Necropoli nell'Isola Sacra'(1940)
- Dr. Jan Theo Bakker.
- Hilding Thylander - Inscriptions du port d'Ostie (Lund C W K Gleerup 1952).
- Ida Baldassarre, Irene Bragantini, Chiara Morselli and Franc Taglietti - Necropoli di Porto, Isola Sacra (Roma 1996).
- Notes
- 1:According to Ida Baldassarre the elder gentleman should be the husband of the married couple and the young deceased, the horseman. She points also to the name of the family of Quirina, which tells us that we have to do with a family of freedmen. In that case the young man could not be a charioteer. Therefore the painting is meant perhaps synbolically as a victory over the death. I, Baldassarre, I. Bragantini, Ch. Morselli and F. Taglietti: “Necropoli di Porto” 1996
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