The Villa of Diomedes (excavated in 1771-1774): Fiorelli, Pomp. ant. hist., vol. 1, pt. 1, pp. 249-278; Mazois, Les ruines de Pompéi, p. 89, pl. 47-53; Ivanoff, Architektonische Studien, Heft. 2 (mit Elaeuterungen von August Mau, Berlin, 1895), pl. 4-6; Overbeck-Mau, Pompeji, pp. 369-376; Mau, Pomp. Beiträge, p. 151; Helbig, Wandgemälde, see Topogr. Index, p. 483.

Bedroom in Pliny's villa [[p. 358]]: Plin. Ep. II. XVII. 23.

CHAPTER XLV. THE VILLA RUSTICA AT BOSCOREALE

Excavation, plan, remains: Mau, Röm. Mitth., vol. 9 (1894), pp. 349-358, vol. 11 (1896), pp. 131-140; Pasqui, La villa pompeiana della Pisanella presso Boscoreale, Mon. dei Lincei, vol. 7 (1897), pp. 397-554. For the collection of silverware, see references on [p. 538]. Part of the objects of bronze found in the villa are in Berlin; see Pernice, Bronzen aus Boscoreale, Archäologischer Anzeiger, Beiblatt zum Jahrb. des Inst., vol. 15 (1900), pp. 177-181. Others are in the Field Columbian Museum, Chicago; see Tarbell, American Journal of Archaeology, vol. 3 (1899), Second Series, p. 584.

Sleeping room of the overseer near the entrance [[p. 363]]: Varro, R.R. I, xiii, 2.

Small open cistern [[p. 366]]: As the establishment was not connected with an aqueduct, rain water was carefully saved.

The villa as a country residence [[p. 366]]: In the farmhouses about Rome and Naples to-day rooms over the quarters of the tenant are reserved for the use of the owner.

CHAPTER XLVI. HOUSEHOLD FURNITURE

Nearly all the articles of furniture and of the toilet referred to in this chapter are figured and described, with many others, in the Real Museo Borbonico. For detailed reference, see the Index, near the end of vol. 16 (pp. 96-97, Ori; pp. 97-98, Argenti; pp. 99-112, Suppellettile), and our List of Illustrations, [pp. xxi]-[xxiii]. Most of them are reproduced by Roux, Herculanum et Pompéi, vol. 7; a number are figured by Piranesi in the volume, Oggetti di uso civile, militare e religioso, trovati a Pompeia e ad Ercolano (= vol. 27 of his Opera). See also the references on the Pompeian and the Roman house [[pp. 531]-[532]], and Becker, Gallus (eighth English edition, London, 1886), pp. 285-301; Guhl and Koner, Life of the Greeks and Romans, §§ 86-93, 97; Friedlaender, Sittengeschichte Roms, Edit. 5, vol. 3, pp. 100-112, Edit. 7, vol. 2, pp. 210-220; Marquardt, Röm. Privatleben (Edit. 2), pp. 607-768. Cf. Mau, Fornelli antichi, Röm. Mitth., vol. 10 (1898), pp. 38-46.

Silver cups found in the Casa dell' Argenteria [[p. 379]]: Fiorelli, Pomp. ant. hist., vol. 2, p. 305.