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===Triumphal paintings=== [[File:Roman fresco from Boscoreale, 43-30 BCE, Metropolitan Museum of Art.jpg|thumb|upright|Roman fresco from the [[Villa Boscoreale]], 43β30 BC, [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]]] [[File:Pompeii - Casa dei Casti Amanti - Banquet.jpg|thumb|Roman fresco with a banquet scene from the Casa dei Casti Amanti, [[Pompeii]]]] From the 3rd century BC, a specific genre known as ''Triumphal Paintings'' appeared, as indicated by Pliny (XXXV, 22).<ref name="Pliny">[[Natural History (Pliny)]] [https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.02.0137&query=head%3D%232431&chunk=book online at the Perseus Project]</ref> These were paintings which showed triumphal entries after military victories, represented episodes from the war, and conquered regions and cities. Summary maps were drawn to highlight key points of the campaign. [[Josephus]] describes the painting executed on the occasion of [[Vespasian]] and [[Titus]]'s [[Destruction of Jerusalem|sack of Jerusalem]]: <blockquote>There was also wrought gold and ivory fastened about them all; and many resemblances of the war, and those in several ways, and variety of contrivances, affording a most lively portraiture of itself. For there was to be seen a happy country laid waste, and entire squadrons of enemies slain; while some of them ran away, and some were carried into captivity; with walls of great altitude and magnitude overthrown and ruined by machines; with the strongest fortifications taken, and the walls of most populous cities upon the tops of hills seized on, and an army pouring itself within the walls; as also every place full of slaughter, and supplications of the enemies, when they were no longer able to lift up their hands in way of opposition. Fire also sent upon temples was here represented, and houses overthrown, and falling upon their owners: rivers also, after they came out of a large and melancholy desert, ran down, not into a land cultivated, nor as drink for men, or for cattle, but through a land still on fire upon every side; for the Jews related that such a thing they had undergone during this war. Now the workmanship of these representations was so magnificent and lively in the construction of the things, that it exhibited what had been done to such as did not see it, as if they had been there really present. On the top of every one of these pageants was placed the commander of the city that was taken, and the manner wherein he was taken.<ref>Josephus, ''The Jewish Wars'' VII, 143-152 (Ch 6 Para 5). Trans. William Whiston [http://www.ccel.org/j/josephus/works/war-7.htm Online] accessed 27 June 2006</ref></blockquote> These paintings have disappeared, but they likely influenced the composition of the historical reliefs carved on military [[sarcophagus|sarcophagi]], the [[Arch of Titus]], and [[Trajan's Column]]. This evidence underscores the significance of landscape painting, which sometimes tended towards being perspective plans. [[Ranuccio Bianchi Bandinelli|Ranuccio]] also describes the oldest painting to be found in Rome, in a tomb on the [[Esquiline Hill]]: {{blockquote|It describes a historical scene, on a clear background, painted in four superimposed sections. Several people are identified, such Marcus Fannius and Marcus Fabius. These are larger than the other figures ... In the second zone, to the left, is a city encircled with [[Crenellation|crenellated]] walls, in front of which is a large warrior equipped with an oval buckler and a feathered helmet; near him is a man in a short tunic, armed with a spear...Around these two are smaller soldiers in short tunics, armed with spears...In the lower zone a battle is taking place, where a warrior with oval buckler and a feathered helmet is shown larger than the others, whose weapons allow to assume that these are probably Samnites.}} This episode is difficult to pinpoint. One of Ranuccio's hypotheses is that it refers to a victory of the consul [[Fabius Maximus Rullianus]] during the second war against [[Samnites]] in 326 BC. The presentation of the figures with sizes proportional to their importance is typically Roman, and finds itself in plebeian reliefs. This painting is in the infancy of triumphal painting, and would have been accomplished by the beginning of the 3rd century BC to decorate the tomb.
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