Build Like a Roman

Roman Woodworkers


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In this episode of Build Like a Roman, we look at the Roman carpenter and the wider world of ancient woodworkers.


From the faber tignarius, or structural carpenter, to joiners, furniture makers, shipwrights, and military craftsmen, we explore how timber shaped Roman buildings even when the wood itself has long disappeared.


This episode covers tools, training, collegia, timber supply, joinery, centring, roofs, and the technical knowledge behind Roman carpentry. 


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Glossary – Episode 17: Roman Woodworkers

Adze / Ascia

A shaping tool with the blade set at right angles to the handle. Roman carpenters used it to square logs, trim beams, and work timber across the grain.

Carpentarius

Originally linked to carpentum, a two-wheeled wagon. It gives us the English word “carpenter,” but was closer to wagon-maker than structural carpenter.

Carpentum

A Roman two-wheeled carriage or wagon.

Centring

Temporary timber framework used to support arches, vaults, or domes while masonry or concrete was being built and setting.

Clavi Lignei

Wooden pegs or “wooden nails” used to fasten heavy timber joints.

Collegia

Roman associations with professional, social, religious, and funerary roles. They were not exactly the same as medieval guilds.

Collegia Fabrorum

Associations of skilled builders and makers, including carpenters and other technical artisans.

Dowel

A wooden peg used to connect or reinforce pieces of timber.

Equisetum / Horsetail

A silica-rich plant used as a natural abrasive for smoothing and polishing wood.

Faber

A skilled maker or technical artisan. The term could apply to several trades, not only carpentry.

Faber Tignarius

A structural carpenter: literally a “maker of beams,” from tignum, meaning structural timber.

Faber Intestinarius

An interior joiner responsible for doors, windows, panelling, stairs, ceilings, and fitted woodwork.

Faber Lectarius

A furniture maker, especially associated with couches, beds, and fine domestic woodwork.

Faber Navalis

A shipwright or ship-builder. Publius Longidienus of Ravenna is an example mentioned in the episode.

Fabri

Plural of faber: skilled makers, craftsmen, or technical workers.

Frame Saw / Sega a Telaio

A saw with a thin blade tensioned inside a wooden frame, allowing straighter and more controlled cuts.

Freedman

A formerly enslaved person who had been manumitted. Many Roman artisans were freedmen.

Funerary Stele

A stone grave marker. Some Roman artisans used these monuments to display their tools and professional identity.

Kerf

The cut made by a saw blade. Setting the saw teeth wider than the blade helped prevent jamming.

Libella

An A-frame level with a plumb line, used to check whether a surface was level.

Mortise-and-Tenon Joint

A strong joint where a projecting tenon fits into a matching mortise hole.

Norma

The carpenter’s square, used for marking and checking right angles.

Officina

A workshop.

Plane / Runcina

A tool used to smooth and level timber surfaces. Roman planes could have iron soles and wedge-held blades.

Plumb Bob

A hanging weight used to establish a vertical line.

Putlog Holes

Holes left in walls where scaffold beams were inserted during construction.

Securis

An axe, distinct from an adze. The axe cuts more directly with or into the grain.

Spring-Pole Lathe

A lathe powered by a flexible pole and cord, used for turning wooden objects.

Tignum

Structural timber or beam. It is the root of faber tignarius.

Tornator

A woodturner who shaped timber on a lathe.

Tree-Nail / Trenail

A large wooden peg used in heavy carpentry and shipbuilding.

Veneer

A thin sheet of valuable wood glued onto a cheaper or more stable timber base.

Vigiles

Rome’s official fire and night-watch service, organised under Augustus.

Wattle and Daub

A walling system of woven rods covered with earth, clay, or lime-based material.

Wood Turner

A specialist who shaped wood on a lathe; in Latin, a tornator.


Vitruvius. De Architectura 

Adam, J-P. (1994). Roman Building: Materials and Techniques.


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Build Like a RomanBy Darren McLean