Fragmenta.
How It WorksPricingTodayBlogESDownload for iOS
ES
Today›Fact
Fact·Ancient Rome·Imperial Rome, 1st–3rd c. CE

Pet Cemeteries in Ancient Rome

Archaeologists in Rome have uncovered entire cemeteries for beloved family pets—dogs, monkeys, even birds, buried with care and tokens of affection.

Pet Cemeteries in Ancient Rome

Unknown — "Marble torso of Eros" (1st or 2nd century CE), public domain

Romans Buried Their Pets With Love

Archaeologists have unearthed pet cemeteries outside ancient Rome: orderly rows of animal graves, some complete with toys, collars, or dishes. These sites held everything from lapdogs to monkeys and songbirds—each showing signs of careful, individual burial.

Grief Etched in Stone, Not Just for Humans

Many tomb markers bear personal inscriptions: 'To little Margarita, my dove.' Some even feature carved likenesses of the lost pet. For Roman families, animal companions weren't just property—they were mourned, remembered, and given a place beside human graves.

Romans mourned their animals, leaving inscribed tiles and offerings at their graves. Some epitaphs read like heartfelt goodbyes: 'To Helena, the sparrow, sweetest in the world.' Love for animals wasn’t just a modern invention; grief was etched in stone, two thousand years ago.

Continue reading in the app

Daily fragments of ancient history, designed for your morning routine.

Download for iOS
5.0 on the App Store

Keep reading

Story · Late Republican Rome

Clodia, the Poison Trial, and Cicero’s Spin

In a packed Roman court, Clodia stood accused of poisoning her own lover—while the crowd waited for Cicero to tear her reputation to shreds.

Quote · Imperial Rome

Musonius Rufus on Anger

"He is most powerful who has himself in his own power." — Musonius Rufus, the hard-edged Stoic, taught: «Κρατιστεῖ δ' ἀνὴρ ὁ ἑαυτοῦ κύριος» — "The mightiest man is master of himself."

On This Day · Late Republic and Empire

On This Day: The Ludi Florales Bloom in Rome

April 28: Rome bursts alive with the first day of the Ludi Florales—flower petals, crude comedies, and dancers in nothing but garlands.

Fact · Classical Athens

Athenians Fined for Pooping in Public

In 4th-century BC Athens, you could be fined for letting your donkey—or yourself—relieve itself on a public path.

Fragmenta.

Made with care for history that deserves it.

App Store

Product

How It WorksDaily FragmentsFeaturesToday in HistoryBlogDownload

Legal

Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceEULASupportPress

Connect

TikTok
© 2026 Fragmenta. All rights reserved.