Bird Mosaic after Restoration (2006-12) by Edwin C. BrockAmerican Research Center In Egypt (ARCE)
The Villa of the Birds
This early Roman villa, located in Alexandria, Egypt, gets it's nickname from this charming bird mosaic. Each panel showcases a different type of bird.
The Villa of the Birds
This room was a bedroom, or cubiculum. The floor mosaic combines animal motifs, a braided border, and geometric shapes along the edge.
Mosaic with Panther (2008-01) by Robert K. VincentAmerican Research Center In Egypt (ARCE)
This room, which was accessed from the courtyard, also used both geometric and animal designs.
At the center is an elegant panther. It is made up small red, blue, purple, black, and white pieces of stone.
Discover More:
Putting Together the Pieces
Can You Name These Birds?
There's No Place Like Home
Kom el Dikka
Stroll Through the Villa of the Birds
The conservation of the Villa of the Birds was carried out from February 1998 to June 1999 financed by ARCE, through the Egyptian Antiquities Project (EAP), and funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). Supplemental work including landscaping and construction of visitors’ roads was carried out by Polish Egyptian Preservation Mission sponsored jointly by the Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities and the Polish Center of Archeology. Read more at arce.org.
Story Created by Tessa Litecky, ARCE