Alae [[p. 258]]: Vitr. VI. IV (III), 4, 6.

Peristyle [[p. 260]]: Vitr. VI. IV (III), 7; Nissen, Pomp. Studien, pp. 645-668; Bie, Zur Geschichte des Hausperistyls, Jahrb. des. Inst., vol. 6 (1891), pp. 1-9.

Triclinium [[p. 262]]: Vitr. VI. V. I. Trimalchio's dining rooms (cenationes): Petr. Sat. LXXVII.

Lares, Genius, and Penates in house paintings [[p. 268]]: Helbig, Wandgemälde, nos. 31-95; Sogliano, Le pitture murali Campane, nos. 9-46, 63-71. Serpents: ibid., nos. 47-62; see also de Marchi, Il culto privato di Roma antica, vol. 1 (Milan, 1896), pp. 27-144; Jordan, De Larum imaginibus atque cultu, Ann. dell' Inst., vol. 34 (1862), pp. 300-339; Reifferscheid, De larum picturis Pompeianis, Ann. dell' Inst., vol. 35 (1863), pp. 121-134; Jordan, De Genii et Eponae picturis Pompeianis nuper detectis, Ann. dell' Inst., vol. 44 (1872), pp. 19-47, and pl. B, C; Wissowa, Die Ueberlieferung über die römischen Penaten, Hermes, vol. 22 (1887), pp. 29-57.

Genius of a woman as Juno [[p. 270]]: Mau, Röm. Mitth., vol. 2 (1887), p. 114. Jupiter and Venus: Helbig, Wandgemälde, no. 67. Two genii (Ins. IX. viii. 13): Mau, Röm. Mitth., vol. 5 (1890), pp. 244-245.

Shop fronts [[p. 276]]: cf. Middleton, Remains of Ancient Rome (2 vols., London, 1892), vol. 1, pp. 192-194.

Pergula [[p. 277]]: Mau, Sul significato della parola pergula nell' architettura antica, Röm. Mitth., vol. 2 (1887), pp. 214-220. Natus in pergula: Petr. Sat. LXXIV.

CHAPTER XXXIV. THE HOUSE OF THE SURGEON

Excavation (1770): Fiorelli, Pomp. ant. hist., vol. 1, pt. 1, pp. 245-246, 248, 253 et seq. (p. 254, discovery of the instruments from which the house takes its name).

Plan, construction, restoration: Piranesi, Antiquités de Pompéi, vol. 1, pl. 14-21; Mazois, Les ruines de Pompéi, vol. 2, p. 51, and pl. 13 (plan); Fiorelli, Gli scavi di Pompei dal 1861 al 1872, pp. 79, 83; Nissen, Pomp. Studien, pp. 402-412; Mau, Pomp. Beiträge, 37-41, 49-51 (proof that the measurements of the house conform to the Oscan standard); Overbeck-Mau, Pompeji, pp. 279-281; Greenough, Harvard Studies in Classical Philology, vol. 1 (1890), pp. 10-11 (plan showing conformity of the chief measurements to the proportions recommended by Vitruvius).