File:Vetusta Monumenta Plate 1.50 Elegantissimum Pavimentu Tessellatum apud Wellow.jpg

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Latina: N°. I. Elegantissimum Pavimentu[m] Tessellatum apud Wellow prope Aquas S[u]lis in agro Somersetensi An°. MDCCXXXVII. repertum aeri incidi curavit Societas Antiquar. Lond. An°. 1738. Scala pedum.
English:
Caption: No. 1: An exquisite floor mosaic from Wellow near Aquas Sulis [Bath] in Somerset County, examined in the year 1737 and engraved on copperplate by the Society of Antiquaries of London in the year 1738. Scale in [English] Feet.


An engraving of the first of three large Roman mosaics at a villa at Wellow, first recorded in John Aubrey's Monumenta Britannica, who reported it was first discovered in the manor of Edward Hungerford, knight of the Bath, in 1683. Aubrey's partial account of the mosaic was taken from William Holder's copy of the draft made by the surveyor Hugh May on site. Aubrey's version was then poorly copied and reprinted in Thomas Gale's 1709 Antonini Iter Britanniarum. Aubrey's drawing showed a central scene with figures and a side panel with a cantharus flanked by multiple birds. Based on similarities between Aubrey's drawing and Orphic mosaics at Littlecote, Woodchester, and Withington, the scene may have depicted a scene from the myths about Orpheus.

Edmund Prideaux, two friends, and their servants visited in June 1737 and were allowed to dig at the site, finding the rest of the mosaic under about 2 feet of dirt. Prideaux or James West then had James Vertue draw it and James's brother George then engraved it at the expense of the SAL. Local interest in the discovery was great, with the land's owners making about ₤50 from visitors. The mosaic and another nearby were reported already "quite destroyed" by a visitor writing 20 October 1737. It may have been already destroyed by the time of the Vertue's drawing, as Aubrey's figures and multiple birds have been replaced by a single peacock and geometric patterns within a guilloche frame. It was further damaged by an antiquarian visitor in 1787. Colonel Leigh excavated the site again in 1807, when it was owned by Col. Gore Langton. Richard Colt Hoare noted "I was present at the uncovering of this fine mosaic pavement, and saw with astonishment an engraving made from it, at the point of its first discovery, which differed so totally from the original, that I could almost fancy it had been done from memory", although Leigh's annotated drawing of the mosaic largely matches Vertue's.

The SAL debated whether the mosaics were from a villa or military encampment prior to the discovery of the villa's ruins during an 1822 excavation by John Skinner. About 40 villas have been discovered in the area around Bath, most either country homes or the estates of the spa's upper class rather than self-sufficient agricultural concerns.
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Plates 1.50–1.52: Three Roman Pavements Found at Wellow, Vetusta Monumenta: Ancient Monuments, a Digital Edition, hosted by the University of Missouri.

Vetusta Monumenta, Vol. 1–3, published by the Society of Antiquaries of London from 1718–1796
Author James Vertue, artist
George Vertue (1684–1756), engraver
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This work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 70 years or fewer.


This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

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current08:29, 7 November 2023Thumbnail for version as of 08:29, 7 November 20238,870 × 6,000 (43.87 MB)Sebastian Wallroth (talk | contribs)rotated
21:39, 1 June 2023Thumbnail for version as of 21:39, 1 June 20238,870 × 6,000 (18.45 MB)LlywelynII (talk | contribs)Uploaded a work by James Vertue & James West (1703{{ndash}}1772), artists<br>George Vertue (1684{{ndash}}1756), engraver from [https://scalar.missouri.edu/vm/vol1plates50-52-roman-pavements-wellow Plates 1.50{{ndash}}1.52: Three Roman Pavements Found at Wellow], [https://scalar.missouri.edu/vm/index Vetusta Monumenta: Ancient Monuments, a Digital Edition], hosted by the University of Missouri.<br> ''Vetusta Monumenta'', Vol. 1{{ndash}}3, published by the Society of Antiquaries of London from...

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