The villa of "Els Munts" is a residential Roman villa built during the 2nd century C.E.[1] The villa is located 12 km away from Tarraco in the municipality of Altafulla in Spain.[1] Scholars have regarded the villa of Els Munts as noteworthy for its mosaics[2] and exceptional state of preservation.[3] As a part of Tarraco, the villa of Els Munts is a UNESCO World Heritage site.[3]
The villa of Els Munts contains several components including a bath, gardens, and temple. In total the villa had a garden, semi-basement corridor with cistern for Caius Valerius Avitus, peristyle, water cistern known locally as "La Tartana", a more extensive water reservoir, dining room (triclinium), the Mithraeum—a temple dedicated to the god Mithras, porticoed corridor. The baths had a reception with an atrium and alcover stone slab floor. There were heated rooms: caldaria, tepidaria, and furnaces with hypocaustum, and cold rooms (frigidaria). A furnace, praefurnia, heated the hot rooms from below. Lastly, there were latrines which excess water from the baths used to remove the excrement.[4][5]
The ancient people known as the Iberians were early inhabitants of the region. The Roman historian Livy mentions Tarraco in describing part of the origins of the Second Punic War.[6] The villa was initially built in the 1st century CE, on top of which the remains preserved today were built in the middle of the 2nd century CE.[1][5] Sometime after 175 CE but before 200 CE, a fire burned at villa of Els Munts, and the inhabitants abandoned it.[5]
The owner of the villa was Caius Valerius Avitus, a duumvir for the Roman province of Tarraco. A wall painting at the site indicates this information.[7]
The villa of Els Munts is located in the municipality of Altafulla.[8] Approximately 12 kilometers from Tarraco, modern day Tarragona and near the mouth of the Gayá River, the villa of Els Munts sits atop the western slope of a coastal hill which is part of Cap Roig, the origin of which is the Miocene era.[5] It overlooks the Mediterranean Ocean and is near the Via Augusta.[5]
The villa of Els Munts is part of a museum open to the public.[9]
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