The Forma Urbis Romae Fragment Database




list of the 435 fragments
in the public database
clickable map showing how the wall
is divided into marble slabs
web page for fragment #010g
with links to color photographs and 3D models

Click on any of these screenshots to jump into our public database at the indicated web page.


The Forma Urbis Romae, also known as the Severan Marble Plan, is a giant marble map of ancient Rome. One of the primary goals of Stanford's Digital Forma Urbis Romae Project has been to build a publically-accessible, web-browsable, relational database of the 1,186 known fragments of this famous map. As of June 2005, we have assembled 3D models for all the fragments, representing about 8 billion polygons, and we've built a database giving scholars access to these models and a corresponding set of color photographs. Our database was built using mySQL and PHP, two industry-strength, open-source web database tools.

There are actually two versions of our database, one for scholars and one for the public. The scholar's version contains high-resolution color photographs and downloadable 3D models. These models are typically stored as PLY files (extension .ply), a Stanford-invented format for storing dense polygon meshes. These files can be displayed using Scanalyze, our system for aligning, merging, and manipulating range data. For faster display on PCs and Macs, these models are also available as QSplat files (extension .qs), based on our QSplat multi-resolution point-based rendering system. Access to this version of the database requires a free license, obtainable by writing to us, but is available only to archaeologists and other scholars who work on the Forma Urbis Romae. The public version of the database contains half-resolution color photographs and 3D models stored as ScanView files (extension .svm). These can be interactively viewed (but not downloaded) using ScanView, our remote rendering system for visualizing scanned models. Access to this version of the database requires no license. For a technical description of the ScanView system, read our SIGGRAPH 2004 paper or the June 2005 issue of CACM.

The pictures above are screenshots from the public version of our database. Here is a brief description of each screenshot:

Click on any of the screenshots above to connect to the public database. Also available is an extensive bibliography of books and articles about the map and a glossary of terms used in the database. Finally, click here for a a detailed explanation of how to use the database, and here for the home page of the Classic's Department's web site about the Forma Urbis Romae Project. This web site provides an alternate entry point for the database.


Notice: The photographic images and computer renderings of individual fragments of the Severan Marble Plan of Rome (a.k.a. the Forma Urbis Romae) that appear in this database are the property of Stanford University and the Sovraintendenza ai Beni Culturali del Comune di Roma. Aside from the ephemeral downloading and copying associated with browsing the web and personal research, the images and models of individual fragments may not be copied, downloaded and stored, forwarded, reproduced or published in any form, including electronic forms such as e-mail or the web, without express written permission from both the Sovraintendenza in Rome and the project directors at Stanford, Professors Marc Levoy and Jennifer Trimble. Click here for the full copyright notice. The email addresses to contact are info.museicapitolini@comune.roma.it (attention Dott.ssa Laura Ferrea), levoy@cs.stanford.edu, and trimble@stanford.edu, respectively.
Copyright © 2004-5 Natasha Gelfand, David Koller, Marc Levoy
Last update: February 19, 2006 10:45:33 PM