Urban Dreams and Realities in Antiquity

Urban Dreams and Realities in Antiquity
Author: Anonim
Publsiher: BRILL
Total Pages: 547
Release: 2014-11-20
Genre: History
ISBN: 9789004283893

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Urban Dreams and Realities is a collection of articles on cities in ancient cultures, both their physical and conceptual aspects. A wide range of subjects and disciplinary perspectives are represented, especially the archaeology, epigraphy and literature of the Roman Empire.

Urban Religion in Late Antiquity

Urban Religion in Late Antiquity
Author: Asuman Lätzer-Lasar,Emiliano Rubens Urciuoli
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 307
Release: 2020-11-23
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 9783110641271

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Urban Religion is an emerging research field cutting across various social science disciplines, all of them dealing with “lived religion” in contemporary and (mainly) global cities. It describes the reciprocal formation and mutual influence of religion and urbanity in both their material and ideational dimensions. However, this approach, if duly historicized, can be also fruitfully applied to antiquity. Aim of the volume is the analysis of the entanglement of religious communication and city life during an arc of time that is characterised by dramatic and even contradicting developments. Bringing together textual analyses and archaelogical case studies in a comparative perspective, the volume zooms in on the historical context of the advanced imperial and late antique Mediterranean space (2nd–8th centuries CE).

Neighbourhoods and City Quarters in Antiquity

Neighbourhoods and City Quarters in Antiquity
Author: Annette Haug,Adrian Hielscher,Anna-Lena Krüger
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 184
Release: 2023-08-21
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9783111248097

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Studies on ancient urbanity either concerns individual buildings or the city as a whole. This volume, instead, addresses a meso-scale of urbanity: the socio-spatial organisation of ancient cities. Its temporal focus is on Late Republican and Imperial Italy, and more specifically the cities of Pompeii and Ostia. Referring to a praxeological and phenomenological perspective, it looks at neighbourhoods and city quarters as basic categories of design and experience. With the terms 'neighbourhood and 'city quarter' the volume proposes two different methodological approaches: Neighbourhood here refers to the face-to-face relation between people living next to each other - thus the small-scale environment centred around a house and an individual. Neighbourhoods thus do not constitute a (collectively defined) urban territory with clear borders, but are rather constituted by individual experiences. In contrast, city quarters are understood as areas that share certain characteristics.

Urban Disasters and the Roman Imagination

Urban Disasters and the Roman Imagination
Author: Virginia M. Closs,Elizabeth Keitel
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 297
Release: 2020-09-21
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783110674736

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This book affords new perspectives on urban disasters in the ancient Roman context, attending not just to the material and historical realities of such events, but also to the imaginary and literary possibilities offered by urban disaster as a figure of thought. Existential threats to the ancient city took many forms, including military invasions, natural disasters, public health crises, and gradual systemic collapses brought on by political or economic factors. In Roman cities, the memory of such events left lasting imprints on the city in psychological as well as in material terms. Individual chapters explore historical disasters and their commemoration, but others also consider of the effect of anticipated and imagined catastrophes. They analyze the destruction of cities both as a threat to be forestalled, and as a potentially regenerative agent of change, and the ways in which destroyed cities are revisited — and in a sense, rebuilt— in literary and social memory. The contributors to this volume seek to explore the Roman conception of disaster in terms that are not exclusively literary or historical. Instead, they explore the connections between and among various elements in the assemblage of experiences, texts, and traditions touching upon the theme of urban disasters in the Roman world.

Architecture in Ancient Central Italy

Architecture in Ancient Central Italy
Author: Charlotte R. Potts
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 225
Release: 2022-04-07
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9781108845281

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Reconnects ancient buildings with the people who made them, with their surroundings, and with practices in other times and cultures.

Handbook of Ancient Afro Eurasian Economies

Handbook of Ancient Afro Eurasian Economies
Author: Sitta Reden
Publsiher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 954
Release: 2019-12-02
Genre: History
ISBN: 9783110604948

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The notion of the “Silk Road” that the German geographer Ferdinand von Richthofen invented in the 19th century has lost attraction to scholars in light of large amounts of new evidence and new approaches. The handbook suggests new conceptual and methodological tools for researching ancient economic exchange in a global perspective with a strong focus on recent debates on the nature of pre-modern empires. The interdisciplinary team of Chinese, Indian and Graeco-Roman historians, archaeologists and anthropologists that has written this handbook compares different forms of economic development in agrarian and steppe regions in a period of accelerated empire formation during 300 BCE and 300 CE. It investigates inter-imperial zones and networks of exchange which were crucial for ancient Eurasian connections. Volume I provides a comparative history of the most important empires forming in Northern Africa, Europe and Asia between 300 BCE and 300 CE. It surveys a wide range of evidence that can be brought to bear on economic development in the these empires, and takes stock of the ways academic traditions have shaped different understandings of economic and imperial development as well as Silk-Road exchange in Russia, China, India and Western Graeco-Roman history.

Trees in Ancient Rome

Trees in Ancient Rome
Author: Andrew Fox
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2023-07-13
Genre: Nature
ISBN: 9781350237810

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Focusing on the transitional period of the late Republic to the early Principate, Trees in Ancient Rome offers a sustained examination of the deployment of trees in the ancient city, exploring not only the practicalities of their cultivation, but also their symbolic value. The Ruminal fig tree sheltered the she-wolf as she nursed Romulus and Remus and year's later Rome was founded between two groves. As the city grew, neighbourhoods bore the names of groves and hills were known by the trees which grew atop them. From the 1st century BCE, triumphs included trees among their spoils and Rome's green cityscape grew, as did the challenges of finding room for trees within the congested city. This volume begins with an examination of the role of trees as repositories of human memory, lasting for several generations. It goes on to untangle the import of trees, and their role in the triumphal procession, before closing with a discussion of how trees could be grown in Rome's urban spaces. Drawing on a combination of literary, visual and archaeological sources, it reveals the rich variety of trees in evidence, and explores how they impacted, and were used to impact, life in the ancient city.

The Origins of Concrete Construction in Roman Architecture

The Origins of Concrete Construction in Roman Architecture
Author: Marcello Mogetta
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 335
Release: 2021-06-24
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781108997478

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In this study, Marcello Mogetta examines the origins and early dissemination of concrete technology in Roman Republican architecture. Framing the genesis of innovative building processes and techniques within the context of Rome's early expansion, he traces technological change in monumental construction in long-established urban centers and new Roman colonial cites founded in the 2nd century BCE in central Italy. Mogetta weaves together excavation data from both public monuments and private domestic architecture that have been previously studied in isolation. Highlighting the organization of the building industry, he also explores the political motivations and cultural aspirations of patrons of monumental architecture, reconstructing how they negotiated economic and logistical constraints by drawing from both local traditions and long-distance networks. By incorporating the available evidence into the development of concrete technology, Mogetta also demonstrates the contributions of anonymous builders and contractors, shining a light on their ability to exploit locally available resources.