. Pompeii; its history, buildings and antiquities : an account of the destruction of the city, with a full description of the remains, and of the recent excavations and also an itinerary for visitors . Door-handles. Not a single wooden door has been preserved in Pompeii. Thepanelling of that which we give, as restored by Mazois, istaken from a marble door in the Street of Tombs, togetherwith the ring which served as a handle. Almost all the door-ways in Pompeii are nearly of the same size and form, a littlemore or less care in the execution of capitals and entablatures 266 Door of a


. Pompeii; its history, buildings and antiquities : an account of the destruction of the city, with a full description of the remains, and of the recent excavations and also an itinerary for visitors . Door-handles. Not a single wooden door has been preserved in Pompeii. Thepanelling of that which we give, as restored by Mazois, istaken from a marble door in the Street of Tombs, togetherwith the ring which served as a handle. Almost all the door-ways in Pompeii are nearly of the same size and form, a littlemore or less care in the execution of capitals and entablatures 266 Door of a private dwellmg restored. DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE OF ITALY. 267 making all tlie dilBference between them. They seem usuallyto have been bivalve, to have turned on pivots, not on hinges,and to have been closed by one or two large bolts, such asthat above rej)resented, received into the threshold. Wemay infer from a number of false doors painted on walls, thattheir colour was generally dark. Their carpentry seems tohave been very simple; often beams were not even carbonized timbers discovered seem to intimate that fir-wood was in most general use. Doors were sometimesadorned with large nails having gilt heads. They hadknockers, or perhaj^s more generally bells, as may be inferredfrom a passage of Suetonius, in which he alludss to an ideaof Augustus, to make Jupiter Tonans, whose temple was onthe ascent to the Capitol, appear as the porter of the CapitolineJove, by affixing bells to it.* Eoman doors always openedinside, or into the house; to have a door that opened ou


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookidpompeiiitshi, bookyear1887