Roman cities in Italy and Dalmatia . o en 5 o>> o o Q O c/:. I eg •4-1 o c/i Plate Liv / . TTTK TiTEw ro^r ROMAN CITIES 313 Aside from these two gates there are fourprincipal architectural masterpieces inside thewalls: the arcaded court, the mausoleum of Dio-cletian, the temple of JSsculapius, and thevestibule of the throne room. The northern half of the palace, facing inland,was given up to the rank and file of the largeimperial household and to stores, in the sameway as this part of the camp was assigned to thecommon soldiery. In the southern half of thecamp the praetorium stood, the h


Roman cities in Italy and Dalmatia . o en 5 o>> o o Q O c/:. I eg •4-1 o c/i Plate Liv / . TTTK TiTEw ro^r ROMAN CITIES 313 Aside from these two gates there are fourprincipal architectural masterpieces inside thewalls: the arcaded court, the mausoleum of Dio-cletian, the temple of JSsculapius, and thevestibule of the throne room. The northern half of the palace, facing inland,was given up to the rank and file of the largeimperial household and to stores, in the sameway as this part of the camp was assigned to thecommon soldiery. In the southern half of thecamp the praetorium stood, the headquartersand administrative buildings, and the quartersfor the staff, the imperial guard and other selecttroops. In the palace plan this scheme was car-ried out: the vestibule and imperial throne roomstand at the end of the avenue where the prae-torium would be and beyond it the dining andreception halls flanked on either side by the apart-ments for the emperor and his suite and the large central hall one reached thelong covered gallery or cry


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectarchitectureroman