Explanatory Or More Detailed References

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Explanatory Or More Detailed References 606 BACKGROUND INFORMATIONINDEX INDEX 607 Apollo Belvedere 27, 358, 450 Aristeas and Papias, copyists 53 Apollodorus of Damascus, architect 114, Arnolfo di Cambio (c. 1245–1302) 47, 62, 124, 547 279, 280, 301, 297, 392, 425, 484 Apollonius, sculptor 314, 451 Arrigucci, Luigi (active 1620–30) 548 Explanatory or more detailed references (where there are many), or references to Apoxyomenos 450 Arx, citadel of Rome 35 places where an artist’s work is best represented, are given in bold. Numbers in italics Appartamento dei Conservatori 41–43 Aspetti, Tiziano (1565–1607) 135 are picture references. Dates are given for all artists, architects and sculptors. Ancient Appiani, Andrea (1754–1817) 364 Asprucci, Antonio (1723–1808) 355, 356 names are rendered in italics, as are works of art. Aprile, Francesco (d. 1685) 548 Asprucci, Mario (1764–1804) 355 Aqueducts, general 525 Auditorium, the 501 Acqua Felice 24, 36, 310, 312, 524, 525, Augustine, St 16, 526 A Allegrini, Francesco (1587–1663) 186 566 Augustus, Emperor 13, 14, 54, 66, 90, Abbazia delle Tre Fontane 485–86 All Saints, church of 349–50, 584 Acqua Paola 25, 413, 525 121, 161; Forum of 120–23; (house of) Abbot Luigi, talking statue 207 Altemps collection 181ff Acqua Vergine Nuova 343, 525 99–100, 99; (mausoleum of) 162; (as Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei 196, 385 Altemps, Roberto 188 Anio Novus 287, 525, 540 pontifex maximus) 314; (Prima Porta Accademia di San Luca 554–55 Amato, Orazio (1884–1952) 383 Anio Vetus 524, 525, 540 statue of) 55, 446–47; (other portaits of) Acqua Paola (see Fountains) American Academy 400 Aqua Appia 525 52, 446, 471, 479 Acquario Romano 559 Amici, Luigi (1817–97) 178, 426 Aqua Claudia 14, 287, 520, 524, 525, 564 Aula Isiaca 97 Acquisti, Luigi (1745–1823) 557 Ammannati, Bartolomeo (1511–92) 340, Aqua Julia 525, 566 Aulenti, Gae (b. 1927) 322 Actium, battle of 13, 97, 121, 163 374, 397, 560 Aqua Marcia 250, 304, 520, 525, 566 Aureli, Cesare (1843–1923) 393 Adonaea 94 Ammianus Marcellinus 16, 66, 125 Aqua Tepula 525, 566 Aurelian Walls 15, 283, 286, 287, 377, Aeneas 83, 89, 307 Amphitheatrum Castrense 286 Aqua Virgo (Acqua Vergine) 319, 351, 525 383, 556, 368, 385, 395, 566 Afro (Afro Basaldella; 1912–76) 372 Ancus Marcius, king 231, 395 Aqueduct of Nero 564 Avanzi, Jacopo (early 15C) 148 Agapitus, St, library of 257 Andersen, Hendrik 556 Aqueduct of Trajan 400, 525 Aventine Hill 243ff Agnes, St 178, 490–91 Andrea d’Assisi (L’Ingegno; late 15C) 43 Pia Marcia 304 Avignon, popes in 20, 171, 409 Agresti, Livio (c. 1508–79) 236, 412 Andrea del Sarto 360, 218 Peschiera-Capore 525 Aymonino, Carlo (b. 1926) 44 Agrippa 163, 173, 251, 319, 266 (see also Andreotti, Libero (1875–1933) 370 Ara Pacis 160–62, 160 Azzurri, Francesco (1831–1901) 310, 330 Baths) Angelico, Fra’ 135, 384, 439, 462; (tomb Arcadia, Academy of 396 Alaric, sack of Rome by 16 of) 168, 170 Arcesilaus, sculptor 120 B Albani, Cardinal Alessandro 39, 563 Angelini, Giuseppe (1735–1811) 246 Arches, general 112 Babington’s English Tea Rooms 336 Albani, Francesco (1578–1660) 323 Anguissola, Sofonisba (1532/5–1625) 148 Arco di San Lazzaro 247 Babuino 350, 351 Alberti, Durante (1538–1616) 474, 551 Anicetus, Pope 188, 415 Arcus Argentariorum 242 Baburen, Dirk van (1595–1624) 398 Alberti, Leon Battista (1404–72) 319, 415 Aniene, river 521, 540 Arcus Novus 154 Baccio da Montelupo (1469–1535) 407 Aldobrandini Marriage 470, 561 Annia Regilla, tomb of 511 of Augustus 43, 84 Baciccia (Giovanni Battista Gaulli; Alexander VI, Pope 22, 295, 410, 463, Antinous 543; (likenesses of) 57, 183, 314, of Constantine 110–11; 111 1639–1709) 150, 174, 180, 205, 205, 544; (tomb of) 226 404, 444, 452, 453, 479, 563; (obelisk of Claudius 40 219, 237, 326, 385, 394, 553 Alexander VII, Pope 26, 72, 153, 158, from tomb of) 342 of Dolabella and Silanus 260 Badalocchio, Sisto (1585–c. 1619) 256, 190, 274, 424; (and Bernini) 25, 173, Antiochos, sculptor 184 of Drusus 557 257, 362 325, 327, 346, 417, 424; (bust of) 385; Antipopes, general 171 of Gallienus 564 Baglione, Giovanni (1571–1644) 148, 270, (monument to) 426 Antiquario Comunale 554 of Janus 241 278, 297, 333, 360, 393 Alexis, St 246, 266 Antiquarium of the Forum 86 of Marcus Aurelius 40, 40 Baldi, Lazzaro (c. 1624–1703) 337, 550 Algardi, Alessandro (1598–1654) 41, 51, Antium, battle of 74 di Portogallo 41, 48 Balla, Giacomo (1871–1958) 367, 368, 555 63, 135, 136, 142, 155, 156, 180, 181, Antonello da Messina (c. 1430–79) 362 of Septimius Severus 79 Balthus (Baltazar Klossowski de Rola) 340, 182, 184, 185, 209, 214, 229, 274, 298, Antoniazzo Romano (active 1460–1508) of Tiberius 77 341 325, 362, 385, 400, 552; (bust of 150, 166, 167, 170, 274, 285, 401, 485, of Titus 86, 87 Balzico, Alfonso (1825–1901) 365 Innocent X) 142; (Dadoforo) 188; (Leo 548, 549, 551, 554 Area Sacra di Largo Argentina 212, 564 Banca d’Italia 559 Arresting the Progress of Attila) 426; Antoninus Pius, Emperor 15, 543; Ares, Seated, statue of 185 Baratta, Francesco (1590–after 1656) 178, (Olimpia Maidalchini) 144, 181; (Mellini (Column of) 438 Argiletum 72, 124 398 monuments) 346 Aphrodite of Cnidos 449 Aristonothos, potter 44 Baratta, Giovanni Maria (1670–1747) 178, 608 INDEX INDEX 609 552 Benedict, St 390 Bonaparte, Pauline (see Borghese) Bregno, Andrea (Andrea da Milano; c. Barberini, Cardinal Antonio 376 Benedict XIII, Pope, monument 170 Bonelli, Cardinal Michele 117 1421–1506) 60, 151, 171, 215, 225, Barberini family 25 Benedict XIV, Pope 109 Boni, Giacomo 66, 86, 91, 102 226, 266, 270, 277, 282, 292, 301, 345, Barberini Harp 287 Bernich, Ettore (1840–1915) 559 Boniface VIII, Pope 32–33, 176, 276, 277; 347, 411, 492; (tomb of) 170 Barberini Hera 453 Bernini, Gian Lorenzo (1598–1680) 25, 26, (bull of) 421 Bril, Paul (1554–1626) 144, 324, 351, Barberini, Maffeo (see Urban VIII) 41, 43, 113, 135, 136, 144, 152, 158, Bonizzo (11C) 512 356, 392 Barberini tapestry workshop 456 164, 170, 171, 172, 178, 182, 185, 188, Bordone, Paris (1500–70) 142, 407 British School at Rome 559 Barberini Togatus 479 193, 202, 206, 225, 229, 295, 301, 323, Borghese Chapel (S.M. Maggiore) 297 Bronzino, Agnolo (1503–72) 146, 360 Barocci, Federico (Il Baroccio; 1526–1612) 327, 329, 330, 332, 334, 335, 343, 346, Borghese family 25, 355 Browning, Robert 300, 335 144, 169, 209, 324, 384, 441, 474 347, 359, 361–62, 380, 385, 398, 403, Borghese, Pauline 179, 298, 342, 562; Brueghel, Jan the Elder (1568–1625) 144, Baronino, Bartolomeo (16C) 218 443, 470, 517, 541, 551; (Apollo and (sculpture of) 356 148, 219 Bartoli, Alfonso 66, 91 Daphne) 357–58, 358; (Blessed Lodovica Borghese, Cardinal Scipione 25, 198, 327, Brueghel, Pieter the Elder (c. 1525–69) 144 Bartoli, Amerigo (1890–1971) 370 Albertoni) 394; (David) 357; (Fontana del 355, 356, 359, 495; (portrait bust of) 361 Bruno, Giordano 211 Bartoli, Francesco (17C–18C) 97 Tritone) 334; (Fountain of the Four Rivers) Borgia, Cesare 155, 463 Brutus 13, 120 Bartolomeo, Fra’ (Bartolomeo della Porta; 177–78, 179; (Gabriele Fonseca) 159; Borgia, Rodrigo (see Alexander VI) Brutus, portrait head 42, 55 1475–1517) 360, 384 (Habakkuk) 346; (monument to Urban Borgia Rooms (see Vatican Museums) Bugiardini, Giuliano (1475–1554) 148 Basile, Ernesto (1857–1932) 158 VIII) 426; (Ponte Sant’Angelo) 337, 402; Borgo, district 21, 409ff Buonvicino, Ambrogio (c. 1552–1622) Basilica Aemilia 70 (Rape of Persephone) 358; (Sant’Andrea al Borgognone (Guillaume Courtois; c. 207, 418, 551 Basilica of Constantine (see Basilica of Quirinale) 325, 326; (Santa Bibiana) 549; 1628–79) 137, 147, 214, 301, 326, 564 Burckardt, Bishop Hans 558 Maxentius) (St Peter’s basilica) 25, 417, 418, 421, Borromeo, St Charles 160, 208, 213, 301, Burckhardt, Jacob 358 Basilica Julia 76, 76 423, 424, 425, 426, 427; (St Peter’s 328 Burne-Jones, Sir Edward (1833–98) 553 Basilica of Maxentius 85–86 Square) 413; (St Teresa) 311; (Scipione Borromini, Francesco (1599–1667) 176, Burri, Alberto (1915–95) 372 Basilica di Porta Maggiore 287 Borghese) 361; (self-portrait) 361; (tomb 181, 195, 199, 214, 224, 229, 274, 312, Buti, Carlo (1902–63) 552 Basilica Ulpia 127 of) 297; (tomb of Maria Raggi) 170, 170 329, 330, 337, 395–96, 423, 431, 550; Byron, Lord 58, 107, 336, 450, 451 Bassano family 144 Bernini, Pietro (1562–1629) 207, 229, (burial place of) 229; (Palazzo dei Bassano, Francesco (1549–92) 199, 206 298, 356, 357, 359 Filippini) 210; (Palazzo Spada) 218, 219; C Bassano, Jacopo (c. 1510–92) 362 Bessarion, Cardinal 150, 559 (San Carlino) 327–29, 328; (Sant’Agnese) Cabianca, Vincenzo (1827–1902) 365 Baths (general) 250, 251 Bianchi, Pietro (1694–1740) 147 178, 180, 180; (Sant’Ivo) 176 Cacus, monster 101, 240 Baths of Agrippa 173 Bianchini, Francesco 91 Bosco Parraiso 396 Cades, Giuseppe (1750–99) 151 Baths of Caracalla 249–53, 249, 252 Biblioteca Angelica 202 Boscoli, Tommaso (1503–74) 226 Cadorna, General Raffaello 399, 490 Baths of Constantine, site of 324 Biblioteca Casanatense 171 Bosio, Antonio 513 Caelian Hill 255ff Baths of Diocletian 304ff Biblioteca Corsiniana 385 Boswell, James 26 Caesar (see Julius Caesar) Baths of Nero 251 Biblioteca Nazionale 565 Botticelli, Sandro (1444–1510) 324, 360, Caffà, Melchiorre (1635–67) 549 Baths of Titus 114 Biblioteca Vallicelliana 210 465 Caffè Greco 337 Baths of Trajan 114 Bioparco (see Zoo) Bracci, Pietro (1700–73) 135, 156, 170, Caffi, Ippolito (1809–66) 364, 383, 557 Batoni, Pompeo (1708–87) 147, 309, 362, Bistolfi, Leonardo (1859–1935) 132 299, 319, 357, 384 Calandra, Davide (1856–1915) 158, 366 384, 443, 558, 563 Bitta, Antonio della (19C) 178 Bramante, Donato (1444–1514) 22, 192, Calcagni, Tiberio (1532–65) 298 Bazzani, Cesare (1873–1939) 231, 362 Bizzaccheri, Carlo (active 1700–17) 239, 215, 227, 345, 380, 436, 450, 462, 470; Calcografia Nazionale 554 Beccafumi, Domenico (1485–1551) 145, 551 (St Peter’s); 415–16, 421; (Tempietto) Calder, Alexander (1898–1976) 372 299, 332 Bloemen, Jan Frans van (1662–1749) 147, 398, 398; (portrait of) 441 Calderini, Guglielmo (1837–1916) 483, Bede, the Venerable 106 385 Bramantino (Bartolomeo Suardi; 484 Bellarmine, Cardinal Roberto 206 Bocca della Verità 240 1455–1536) 461, 485 Caligula, emperor, ships of 315, 538 Bellini, Giovanni (c.
Recommended publications
  • Boso's- Lfe of Alexdnder 111
    Boso's- Lfe of Alexdnder 111 Introduction by PETER MUNZ Translated by G. M. ELLIS (AG- OXFORD . BASIL BLACKWELL @ Basil Blackwell 1973 AI1 rights Reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval System, or uansmitted, in any form or by. any. means, electronic, mechanical, photo- copying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permis- sion of Basil Blackwell & Mott Limited. ICBN o 631 14990 2 Library of Congress Catalog Card Num'cer: 72-96427 Printed in Great Britain by Western Printing Services Ltd, Bristol MONUMENTA GERilAANIAE I-' 11.2' I d8-:;c,-q-- Bibliothek Boso's history of Pope Alexander I11 (1159-1181) is the most re- markable Part of the Liber Pontificalis. Unlike almost all the other contributions, it is far more than an informative chronicle. It is a work of history in its own right and falsely described as a Life of Alexander 111. Boso's work is in fact a history of the Iong schism in the church brought about by the double election of I159 and perpet- uated until the Peace of Venice in I 177. It makes no claim to be a Life of Alexander because it not only says nothing about his career before his election but also purposely omits all those events and activities of his pontificate which do not strictly belong to the history of the schism. It ends with Alexander's return to Rome in 1176. Some historians have imagined that this ending was enforced by Boso's death which is supposed to have taken piace in 1178.~But there is no need for such a supposition.
    [Show full text]
  • Trastevere a Porte Aperte
    Trastevere a Porte Aperte 1 ____________________________________________________________________________________________________ Turismo Culturale Italiano prenotazioni +39.06.4542.1063 [email protected] informazioni www.turismoculturale.org Trastevere a Porte Aperte TRASTEVERE A PORTE APERTE 2 3 / 30 APRILE 2018 – I EDIZIONE Turismo Culturale Italiano ha programmato la I Edizione di questa iniziativa che si svolgerà a Roma dal 3 al 30 aprile. Questo nuovo evento, che si affianca alle precedenti edizioni di Palazzi e Ville di Roma a Porte Aperte, prevede l’apertura di chiese, palazzi, ville e giardini dello storico quartiere di Trastevere, tra i più popolari e intriganti rioni di Roma che conserva ancora oggi angoli e scorci intatti. Il programma si articola in un ricco programma di visite guidate in luoghi capaci di raccontare la storia del rione: dagli antichi sotterranei di Santa Cecilia a quelli di San Pasquale Baylonne, dalle piccole chiese romaniche di San Benedetto in Piscinula o Santa Maria in Cappella agli splendori berniniani in San Giacomo alla Lungara, dall’antica Farmacia di Santa Maria della Scala alla villa Aurelia Farnese, dalle architetture settecentesche dell’ex carcere nel complesso di San Michele a Ripa Grande fino al capolavoro di Moretti della ex-GIL. In programma anche una serie di passeggiate e itinerari urbani tra le caratteristiche vie, piazze e vicoli volte alla scoperta di aneddoti, curiosità, aspetti insoliti e poco conosciuti del popolare rione. Trastevere è pronta a svelare i suoi tesori. Vi aspettiamo!
    [Show full text]
  • 039-San Pancrazio.Pages
    (39/20) San Pancrazio San Pancrazio is a 7th century minor basilica and parish and titular church, just west of Trastevere. This is in the suburb of Monteverde Vecchio, part of the Gianicolense quarter. The church is up a driveway from the road, and is surrounded by the park of the Villa Doria Pamphilj. The dedication is to St Pancras. History The basilica is on the site of the tomb of St Pancras, an early 4th century martyr. Unfortunately his legend is unreliable, but his veneration is in evidence from early times. The revised Roman martyrology carefully states in its entry for 12 May: "St Pancras, martyr and young man who by tradition died at the second milestone on the Via Aurelia". The actual location is on the present Via Vitellia, which is possibly an ancient road in its own right. The legend alleges that the body of the martyr was interred by a pious woman called Octavilla. This detail is thought to preserve the name of the proprietor of the cemetery in which the martyr was buried, which as a result is also called the Catacombe di Ottavilla. The re-laying of the church's floor in 1934 revealed some of the original surface cemetery (cimitero all'aperto), which began as a pagan burial ground in the 1st century. Three columbaria or "gardens of remembrance" for funerary ashes were found. This cemetery around the saint's tomb was extended as a Christian catacomb beginning at the start of the 4th century, with four separate identifiable foci. The earliest area seems to be contemporary with his martyrdom.
    [Show full text]
  • International Conference: International Conference
    International Conference: “Business Leaders as Agents of Economic and Social Inclusion” 17th - 18th November 2016 Vatican City - New Synod Hall Via di Porta Cavalleggeri (Petrian Gate) Silver sponsor Welcome Bronze sponsor Dear Participant, elcome to the International Conference “Business Leaders as Agents of Economic and Social Inclusion”, organized by the Pon- tificalW Council for Justice and Peace in association with UNIAPAC. During this congress, we hope to foster constructive reflection and dis- Supporters cussion on the mechanisms that we can build together to help bring about a sustainable inclusive economy—an economy that develops human dignity, and that includes the excluded and the poor in overall prosperity by ensuring fair paid work. This includes identifying effective ways for business enterprise to bring about greater improvements in areas that matter most in people´s lives, using subsidiarity as a process to dignify human development, which can be achieved through the joint effort of governments, civil society The generous financial individual contribution of several businesswoman and businessman and the business community. “We are not simply talking about ensuring nourishment or a “dignified sustenance” for all people, but also their “general temporal welfare and prosperity”. This means education, access to health care, and above all employment, for it is through free, creative, participatory and mutually “….today we also have to say “thou shalt not” to an economy of exclusion supportive labor that human beings express
    [Show full text]
  • Does AACHEN Provide the Missing Urban Splendor for the Early Middle
    69 Does AACHEN provide the missing urban splendor for the Early Middle Ages? For 300 years, Ravenna basically only shows San Salvatore ad Calchi – with a layout that fits the architectural styles of the 2nd/3rd or the 5th/ 6th century – in an otherwise ghostly wasteland. Ravenna's vivarium, although also dated in the 8th/9th century, does not help either, because structurally it resembles nymphaea of the 2nd/3rd century (Cerelli 2019, 294). But alas, Aachen also disappoints. For the 300 years of the Early Middle Ages, there are only Carolingian administrative buildings and one church. Early medieval wasteland of downtown AACHEN (8th-10th century AD), lacking residential quarters, latrines, streets, and baths etc., from which the monuments of Charlemagne stand out in splendid isolation. The small structures in the model represent primitive huts sunk into the dark earth (“dunkler Moder”) separating the High Middle Ages (10th/11th c. AD) from Roman civilization. [Photo G. Heinsohn from a video in Aachen's Centre Charlemagne with permission of the staff (2015). The video's co- author, Sebastian Ristow, points out that he plans to develop the model further; see also https://www.medieval.eu/charlemagne-aachen-2014/.] 70 Contemporary roads and latrines, housing for citizens and servants, lodgings for the warrior guards, stables, monasteries, water pipes, baths, parks for the peacocks, etc. have never been found. The famous monuments of Aachen protrude out of a death zone like broken teeth, reminding posterity of the magnificence of the once classically beautiful dentition: “Surprisingly, no excavation or construction site observation inside or outside the old town of Aachen has so far recorded clear settlement remains of Carolingian times, although tradition suggests the presence of merchants and numerous inhabitants as well as the existence of quite sophisticated aristocratic courts, some of whose buildings and material culture should be found in the ground.
    [Show full text]
  • The Medici Aphrodite Angel D
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Master's Theses Graduate School 2005 A Hellenistic masterpiece: the Medici Aphrodite Angel D. Arvello Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses Part of the Arts and Humanities Commons Recommended Citation Arvello, Angel D., "A Hellenistic masterpiece: the Medici Aphrodite" (2005). LSU Master's Theses. 2015. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/2015 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Master's Theses by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A HELLENISTIC MASTERPIECE: THE MEDICI APRHODITE A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in The School of Art by Angel D. Arvello B. A., Southeastern Louisiana University, 1996 May 2005 In Memory of Marcel “Butch” Romagosa, Jr. (10 December 1948 - 31 August 1998) ii ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I wish to acknowledge the support of my parents, Paul and Daisy Arvello, the love and support of my husband, Kevin Hunter, and the guidance and inspiration of Professor Patricia Lawrence in addition to access to numerous photographs of hers and her coin collection. I would also like to thank Doug Smith both for his extensive website which was invaluable in writing chapter four and for his permission to reproduce the coin in his private collection.
    [Show full text]
  • Public Construction, Labor, and Society at Middle Republican Rome, 390-168 B.C
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2012 Men at Work: Public Construction, Labor, and Society at Middle Republican Rome, 390-168 B.C. Seth G. Bernard University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the Ancient History, Greek and Roman through Late Antiquity Commons, and the History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons Recommended Citation Bernard, Seth G., "Men at Work: Public Construction, Labor, and Society at Middle Republican Rome, 390-168 B.C." (2012). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 492. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/492 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/492 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Men at Work: Public Construction, Labor, and Society at Middle Republican Rome, 390-168 B.C. Abstract MEN AT WORK: PUBLIC CONSTRUCTION, LABOR, AND SOCIETY AT MID-REPUBLICAN ROME, 390-168 B.C. Seth G. Bernard C. Brian Rose, Supervisor of Dissertation This dissertation investigates how Rome organized and paid for the considerable amount of labor that went into the physical transformation of the Middle Republican city. In particular, it considers the role played by the cost of public construction in the socioeconomic history of the period, here defined as 390 to 168 B.C. During the Middle Republic period, Rome expanded its dominion first over Italy and then over the Mediterranean. As it developed into the political and economic capital of its world, the city itself went through transformative change, recognizable in a great deal of new public infrastructure.
    [Show full text]
  • Ideazione Di Clementina Panella a Cura Di Alessandro D'alessio
    Ideazione di Clementina Panella A cura di Alessandro D’Alessio Clementina Panella Rossella Rea ROMA UNIVERSALIS SEZIONE I SEZIONE II 206 Tombe e necropoli a Roma SEZIONE III L’IMPERO E LA DINASTIA L’IMPERO DEI SEVERI LA ROMA DEI SEVERI e dintorni ROMA E IL MEDITERRANEO VENUTA DALL’AFRICA Barbara E. Borg LA DINASTIA LA FORMA DELLA CITTÀ 210 Linguaggio architettonico e sistemi CITTÀ, TERRITORI, ECONOMIE 23 I Severi e i caratteri di un’epoca. 36 I Severi 132 Urbs Roma – Urbs Sacra: forma decorativi dei grandi complessi 264 La Sicilia Continuità e frattura nella storia Orietta D. Cordovana e immagini della Città di Roma Daniele Malfitana della popolazione di Roma Domenico Palombi L’IMPERO IN PACE Patrizio Pensabene, Francesca Caprioli 270 L’Africa e del suo impero mediterraneo 48 Moneta, economia e cittadinanza I LUOGHI SEVERIANI Alejandro Quevedo Elio Lo Cascio 220 L’industria laterizia e Marco Maiuro 142 Le “Terme di Elagabalo” l’organizzazione dei grandi 278 L’Egitto 28 Cronologia dell’età severiana. Clementina Panella 58 Società, cultura, religione cantieri urbani Jessica Montani 192-235 Cesare Letta 150 I reperti scultorei dalle Évelyne Bukowiecki, 282 Dal Mediterraneo a Roma “Terme di Elagabalo”: dall’età Ulrike Wulf-Rheidt † L’IMPERO IN GUERRA Clementina Panella augustea all’età severiana 64 Gli eserciti: riforme, campagne Massimiliano Papini L’IMPERATORE E LA PLEBE URBANA militari e nuove province 228 Intrattenere e sorprendere: ludi, 298 Abbreviazioni Cecilia Ricci 154 Il Tempio di Elagabalo munera e agones Françoise Villedieu 300 Bibliografia ARTE E ARCHITETTURA Silvia Evangelisti 72 Luoghi, monumenti, immagini: 158 La Domus Severiana sul Palatino.
    [Show full text]
  • ROMAN ARCHITEXTURE: the IDEA of the MONUMENT in the ROMAN IMAGINATION of the AUGUSTAN AGE by Nicholas James Geller a Dissertatio
    ROMAN ARCHITEXTURE: THE IDEA OF THE MONUMENT IN THE ROMAN IMAGINATION OF THE AUGUSTAN AGE by Nicholas James Geller A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Classical Studies) in the University of Michigan 2015 Doctoral Committee: Associate Professor Basil J. Dufallo, Chair Associate Professor Ruth Rothaus Caston Professor Bruce W. Frier Associate Professor Achim Timmermann ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This dissertation would not have been possible without the support and encouragement of many people both within and outside of academia. I would first of all like to thank all those on my committee for reading drafts of my work and providing constructive feedback, especially Basil Dufallo and Ruth R. Caston, both of who read my chapters at early stages and pushed me to find what I wanted to say – and say it well. I also cannot thank enough all the graduate students in the Department of Classical Studies at the University of Michigan for their support and friendship over the years, without either of which I would have never made it this far. Marin Turk in Slavic Languages and Literature deserves my gratitude, as well, for reading over drafts of my chapters and providing insightful commentary from a non-classicist perspective. And I of course must thank the Department of Classical Studies and Rackham Graduate School for all the financial support that I have received over the years which gave me time and the peace of mind to develop my ideas and write the dissertation that follows. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS………………………………………………………………………ii LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS……………………………………………………………………iv ABSTRACT……………………………………………………………………………………....v CHAPTER I.
    [Show full text]
  • 9781107013995 Index.Pdf
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-107-01399-5 — Rome Rabun Taylor , Katherine Rinne , Spiro Kostof Index More Information INDEX abitato , 209 , 253 , 255 , 264 , 273 , 281 , 286 , 288 , cura(tor) aquarum (et Miniciae) , water 290 , 319 commission later merged with administration, ancient. See also Agrippa ; grain distribution authority, 40 , archives ; banishment and 47 , 97 , 113 , 115 , 116 – 17 , 124 . sequestration ; libraries ; maps ; See also Frontinus, Sextus Julius ; regions ( regiones ) ; taxes, tarif s, water supply ; aqueducts; etc. customs, and fees ; warehouses ; cura(tor) operum maximorum (commission of wharves monumental works), 162 Augustan reorganization of, 40 – 41 , cura(tor) riparum et alvei Tiberis (commission 47 – 48 of the Tiber), 51 censuses and public surveys, 19 , 24 , 82 , cura(tor) viarum (roads commission), 48 114 – 17 , 122 , 125 magistrates of the vici ( vicomagistri ), 48 , 91 codes, laws, and restrictions, 27 , 29 , 47 , Praetorian Prefect and Guard, 60 , 96 , 99 , 63 – 65 , 114 , 162 101 , 115 , 116 , 135 , 139 , 154 . See also against permanent theaters, 57 – 58 Castra Praetoria of burial, 37 , 117 – 20 , 128 , 154 , 187 urban prefect and prefecture, 76 , 116 , 124 , districts and boundaries, 41 , 45 , 49 , 135 , 139 , 163 , 166 , 171 67 – 69 , 116 , 128 . See also vigiles (i re brigade), 66 , 85 , 96 , 116 , pomerium ; regions ( regiones ) ; vici ; 122 , 124 Aurelian Wall ; Leonine Wall ; police and policing, 5 , 100 , 114 – 16 , 122 , wharves 144 , 171 grain, l our, or bread procurement and Severan reorganization of, 96 – 98 distribution, 27 , 89 , 96 – 100 , staf and minor oi cials, 48 , 91 , 116 , 126 , 175 , 215 102 , 115 , 117 , 124 , 166 , 171 , 177 , zones and zoning, 6 , 38 , 84 , 85 , 126 , 127 182 , 184 – 85 administration, medieval frumentationes , 46 , 97 charitable institutions, 158 , 169 , 179 – 87 , 191 , headquarters of administrative oi ces, 81 , 85 , 201 , 299 114 – 17 , 214 Church.
    [Show full text]
  • BM Tour to View
    08/06/2020 Gods and Heroes The influence of the Classical World on Art in the C17th and C18th The Tour of the British Museum Room 2a the Waddesdon Bequest from Baron Ferdinand Rothschild 1898 Hercules and Achelous c 1650-1675 Austrian 1 2 Limoges enamel tazza with Judith and Holofernes in the bowl, Joseph and Potiphar’s wife on the foot and the Triumph of Neptune and Amphitrite/Venus on the stem (see next slide) attributed to Joseph Limousin c 1600-1630 Omphale by Artus Quellinus the Elder 1640-1668 Flanders 3 4 see previous slide Limoges enamel salt-cellar of piédouche type with Diana in the bowl and a Muse (with triangle), Mercury, Diana (with moon), Mars, Juno (with peacock) and Venus (with flaming heart) attributed to Joseph Limousin c 1600- 1630 (also see next slide) 5 6 1 08/06/2020 Nautilus shell cup mounted with silver with Neptune on horseback on top 1600-1650 probably made in the Netherlands 7 8 Neptune supporting a Nautilus cup dated 1741 Dresden Opal glass beaker representing the Triumph of Neptune c 1680 Bohemia 9 10 Room 2 Marble figure of a girl possibly a nymph of Artemis restored by Angellini as knucklebone player from the Garden of Sallust Rome C1st-2nd AD discovered 1764 and acquired by Charles Townley on his first Grand Tour in 1768. Townley’s collection came to the museum on his death in 1805 11 12 2 08/06/2020 Charles Townley with his collection which he opened to discerning friends and the public, in a painting by Johann Zoffany of 1782.
    [Show full text]
  • The Aqua Traiana / Aqua Paola and Their Effects on The
    THE AQUA TRAIANA / AQUA PAOLA AND THEIR EFFECTS ON THE URBAN FABRIC OF ROME Carolyn A. Mess A Thesis Presented to the Faculty of the Department of Architectural History In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Architectural History May 2014 Cammy Brothers __________________ Sheila Crane __________________ John Dobbins __________________ ii ABSTRACT Infrastructure has always played an important role in urban planning, though the focus of urban form is often the road system and the water system is only secondary. This is a misconception as often times the hydraulic infrastructure determined where roads were placed. Architectural structures were built where easily accessible potable water was found. People established towns and cities around water, like coasts, riverbanks, and natural springs. This study isolates two aqueducts, the Aqua Traiana and its Renaissance counterpart, the Aqua Paola. Both of these aqueducts were exceptional feats of engineering in their planning, building techniques, and functionality; however, by the end of their construction, they symbolized more than their outward utilitarian architecture. Within their given time periods, these aqueducts impacted an entire region of Rome that had twice been cut off from the rest of the city because of its lack of a water supply and its remote location across the Tiber. The Aqua Traiana and Aqua Paola completely transformed this area by improving residents’ hygiene, building up an industrial district, and beautifying the area of Trastevere. This study
    [Show full text]