Adventures in Rome”
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Iudaea Capta Vs. Mother Zion: the Flavian Discourse on Judaeans and Its Delegitimation in 4 Ezra
Journal for the Study of Judaism 49 (2018) 498-550 Journal for the Study of Judaism brill.com/jsj Iudaea Capta vs. Mother Zion: The Flavian Discourse on Judaeans and Its Delegitimation in 4 Ezra G. Anthony Keddie1 Assistant Professor, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada [email protected] Abstract This study proposes that the empire-wide Iudaea capta discourse should be viewed as a motivating pressure on the author of 4 Ezra. The discourse focused on Iudaea capta, Judaea captured, was pervasive across the Roman empire following the First Revolt. Though initiated by the Flavians, it became misrecognized across the Mediterranean and was expressed in a range of media. In this article, I examine the diverse evidence for this discourse and demonstrate that it not only cast Judaeans as barbaric enemies of Rome using a common set of symbols, but also attributed responsibility for a minor provincial revolt to a transregional ethnos/gens. One of the most distinctive symbols of this discourse was a personification of Judaea as a mourning woman. I argue that 4 Ezra delegitimates this Iudaea capta discourse, with its mourning woman, through the counter-image of a Mother Zion figure who transforms into the eschatological city. Keywords Iudaea capta/Judaea capta − Flavian dynasty − 4 Ezra − Roman iconography − Jewish-Roman relations − Mother Zion − apocalyptic discourse − First Jewish Revolt 1 I would like to thank Steven Friesen and L. Michael White for their helpful feedback and insightful suggestions on earlier versions of this study. © koninklijke brill nv, leiden, 2018 | doi:10.1163/15700631-12494235Downloaded from Brill.com10/06/2021 11:31:49PM via free access Iudaea Capta vs. -
An Art Lover's
INSIGHT DELICIOUSLY TRAVEL AND SMALLER SEAMLESS, EXPERIENCES AUTHENTIC STAY IN STYLE GROUP STRESS-FREE DINING CAMARADERIE TRAVEL AN ART LOVER’S TASTE OF EUROPE 15 DAYS | Departing 26 September 2021 A cultural journey, visiting some of the best art galleries and museums in Europe while enjoying the sights and tastes of a selection of Europe’s most loved cities. INSIGHTVACATIONS.COM #INSIGHTMOMENTS An Art Lover’s Taste of EuropeThe Louvre, Paris Itinerary DAY 1: ARRIVAL ROME DAY 3: GALLERIA BORGHESE DAY 5: RENAISSANCE FLORENCE Welcome to Rome! On arrival AND FREE TIME With a Local Expert, visit the Uffizi Gallery, complimentary transfers are provided to A highlight for art lovers today, a visit one of the oldest and most famous art your hotel, departing the airport at 09.30, to the Galleria Borghese, which houses museums in Europe. Admire works by 12.30 and 15.30hrs. Later, meet your a substantial part of the Borghese Michelangelo, Botticelli and Raphael Travel Director for a Welcome Dinner in a collection of paintings, sculptures and amongst other masterpieces. Then local restaurant. (DW) antiquities, begun by Cardinal Scipione embark on a sightseeing trip to see the Hotel: Kolbe, Rome – 3 nights Borghese, the nephew of Pope Paul V who multi coloured marble cathedral, bell reigned from 1605 to 1621. The rest of the tower and baptistry, adorned by Ghiberti’s “Gate of Paradise”. This evening is yours DAY 2: ROME SIGHTSEEING day is yours to explore before joining for dinner at a local restaurant this evening. to enjoy the ambience of this timeless The day is devoted to the Eternal City. -
Falda's Map As a Work Of
The Art Bulletin ISSN: 0004-3079 (Print) 1559-6478 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rcab20 Falda’s Map as a Work of Art Sarah McPhee To cite this article: Sarah McPhee (2019) Falda’s Map as a Work of Art, The Art Bulletin, 101:2, 7-28, DOI: 10.1080/00043079.2019.1527632 To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/00043079.2019.1527632 Published online: 20 May 2019. Submit your article to this journal Article views: 79 View Crossmark data Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at https://www.tandfonline.com/action/journalInformation?journalCode=rcab20 Falda’s Map as a Work of Art sarah mcphee In The Anatomy of Melancholy, first published in the 1620s, the Oxford don Robert Burton remarks on the pleasure of maps: Methinks it would please any man to look upon a geographical map, . to behold, as it were, all the remote provinces, towns, cities of the world, and never to go forth of the limits of his study, to measure by the scale and compass their extent, distance, examine their site. .1 In the seventeenth century large and elaborate ornamental maps adorned the walls of country houses, princely galleries, and scholars’ studies. Burton’s words invoke the gallery of maps Pope Alexander VII assembled in Castel Gandolfo outside Rome in 1665 and animate Sutton Nicholls’s ink-and-wash drawing of Samuel Pepys’s library in London in 1693 (Fig. 1).2 There, in a room lined with bookcases and portraits, a map stands out, mounted on canvas and sus- pended from two cords; it is Giovanni Battista Falda’s view of Rome, published in 1676. -
Ist. Arts & Culture Festival First Global Edition Kicks
IST. ARTS & CULTURE FESTIVAL FIRST GLOBAL EDITION KICKS OFF IN ROME, ITALY ON MAY 31 ISTANBUL ’74 C o - Founders Demet Muftuoglu Eseli & Alphan Esel i to Co - curate IST.FEST.ROME With Delfina Delettrez Fendi and Nico Vascellari Demet Muftuoglu Eseli & Alphan Eseli , Co - Founders of ISTANBUL’74 launch the first global edition of IST. Arts & Culture Festival i n the city of Rome , the artistic an d cultural center of the world that has played host to some of the most impressive art and architecture achieved by human civilization , on May 31 st - June 2 nd 2019. Co - c urated by Demet Muftuoglu Eseli, Alphan Eseli, with Delfina Delettrez Fendi and Nico Vascellari , the IST.FEST. ROME will bring together some of the world’s most talented and creative minds , and leading cultural figures around an inspiring program of panels, talks, exhibitions, performances, screenings and workshops while maintaining its admission - free format. IST. FEST. ROME will focus on the theme: “Self - Expression in the Post - Truth World.” This edition of IST. F estival sets out to explore the ways in which constant changes in our surrounding habitats affect crea tive minds and artistic output. The core mission of the theme is to invoke lively debate around the struggle between reality and make - believe while acknow ledging digital technology and its undeniable power and vast reach as the ultimate tool for self - expression. IST.FEST.ROME will be presented in collaboration with MAXXI, the National Museum of 21st Century Arts , the first Italian national institution dev oted to contemporary creativity designed by the acclaimed architect Zaha Hadid , and Galleria Borghese , one the most respected museums over the world with masterpieces by Bernini and Caravaggio in its collection. -
The Restoration of the Arch of Titus in The
日本建築学会計画系論文集 第82巻 第734号,1109-1114, 2017年4月 【カテゴリーⅠ】 J. Archit. Plann., AIJ, Vol. 82 No. 734, 1109-1114, Apr., 2017 DOI http://doi.org/10.3130/aija.82.1109 THE RESTORATION OF THE ARCH OF TITUS THE RESTORATIONIN THE OF THE NINETEENTH ARCH OF TITUS CENTURY: IN THE NINETEENTH The intention of Giuseppe Valadier regardingCENTURY: distinctions between old and new architectural materials The intervention of Giuseppe Valadier19 世紀のティトゥスの凱旋門の修復 regarding distinctions between old and new architectural materials 工法「新旧の建材の識別」に関するジュゼッペ・ヴァラディエの意図19 ୡ⣖ࡢࢸࢺࢫࡢถ᪕㛛ࡢಟ ᕤἲࠕ᪂ᪧࡢᘓᮦࡢ㆑ูࠖ㛵ࡍࡿࢪࣗࢮࢵ࣭ࣦ࣌ࣛࢹ࢚ࡢពᅗ Go OHBA * 大場 豪 ሙ * Go OHBA The Arch of Titus, restored in the first half of nineteenth century, is a restoration model in terms of certain distinctions between old and new architectural materials. To comprehend the intervention method, this study examined sources on the restoration and compared with a case study, the restoration of the eastern outer wall of the Colosseum. As a result, this study pointed that the Roman architect Giuseppe Valadier sought architectural unity that denoted for the harmony of the two different types of materials. Keywords: The Arch of Titus, restoration, Giuseppe Valadier, The Colosseum ࢸࢺࢫࡢถ᪕㛛㸪ಟ㸪ࢪࣗࢮࢵ࣭ࣦ࣌ࣛࢹ࢚, ࢥࣟࢵࢭ࢜ Recognize Introduction proposal was based on the restoration of the Arch of Titus, as he himself This study discusses the restoration of the Arch of Titus from 1818 to mentioned in Mouseion, the journal of conference’s host organization the 1823 in Rome. The intervention made the ancient monument valuable for International Museum Office4). This episode proved that people still the interplay between old and new architectural materials, a concept that is exemplified the intervention one hundred years after its implementation in taken in restoration projects abroad. -
VISTA ROMA ROMA La Cupola Di San Pietro, in Lontananza, Troneggia Sul Tevere Illuminato
VISTA ROMA ROMA La cupola di San Pietro, in lontananza, troneggia sul Tevere illuminato. Sulle sponde fermento e bancarelle: da giugno ad agosto la manifestazione “Lungo il Tevere...Roma” anima l’estate capitolina. Fascino immortale Cambiamenti e trasformazioni hanno accompagnato alcuni quartieri di Roma. Monti, Trastevere, Pigneto e Centocelle, in tempi e modi diversi, portano avanti la loro rinascita: sociale, gastronomica e culturale DI VIOLA PARENTELLI 40 _ LUGLIO 2019 ITALOTRENO.IT ITALOTRENO.IT LUGLIO 2019 _ 41 VISTA ROMA A destra, un pittoresco scorcio di Monti e sullo sfondo la Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore. Fafiuché, vineria nascosta tra i vicoli del rione, è una tappa obbligata per sorseggiare un calice di vino. isomogenea, caotica, imperfetta. Impo- “zona abitata sotto la città” ne richiama nente nella sua maestosità storica, fami- la struttura: che si scenda dalla Salita liare nei dettagli visibili solo agli sguardi dei Borgia o da Via dei Serpenti, tutte le più attenti. Con Roma ci vuole pazienza, scale portano qui. Tolti gli abiti di luogo e ci vuole empatia. Roma accoglie, ma malfamato che era in origine, da qualche solo chi sa leggerne le infinite anime po- decennio è una delle mete più apprezzate trà sentirsi davvero a casa. Per ammirar- per il suo fascino un po’ rétro. Dopo una ne la bellezza, le terrazze sono luoghi pri- visita al mercatino vintage a pochi passi vilegiati. Il Roof 7 Terrace di Le Méridien dall’uscita della metro B, camminare su Visconti, a Prati, gode di questa fortuna. quegli infiniti sanpietrini diventa quasi D Un salotto con vista dove appagare il pa- piacevole. -
Rodolfo Lanciani, the Ruins and Excavations of Ancient Rome, 1897, P
10/29/2010 1 Primus Adventus ad Romam Urbem Aeternam Your First Visit to Rome The Eternal City 2 Accessimus in Urbe AeternA! • Welcome, traveler! Avoiding the travails of the road, you arrived by ship at the port of Ostia; from there, you’ve had a short journey up the Via Ostiensis into Roma herself. What do you see there? 3 Quam pulchra est urbs aeterna! • What is there to see in Rome? • What are some monuments you have heard of? • How old are the buildings in Rome? • How long would it take you to see everything important? 4 Map of Roma 5 The Roman Forum • “According to the Roman legend, Romulus and Tatius, after the mediation of the Sabine women, met on the very spot where the battle had been fought, and made peace and an alliance. The spot, a low, damp, grassy field, exposed to the floods of the river Spinon, took the name of “Comitium” from the verb coire, to assemble. It is possible that, in consequence of the alliance, a road connecting the Sabine and the Roman settlements was made across these swamps; it became afterwards the Sacra Via…. 6 The Roman Forum • “…Tullus Hostilius, the third king, built a stone inclosure on the Comitium, for the meeting of the Senators, named from him Curia Hostilia; then came the state prison built by Ancus Marcius in one of the quarries (the Tullianum). The Tarquin [kings] drained the land, gave the Forum a regular (trapezoidal) shape, divided the space around its borders into building- lots, and sold them to private speculators for shops and houses, the fronts of which were to be lined with porticoes.” --Rodolfo Lanciani, The Ruins and Excavations of Ancient Rome, 1897, p. -
The Architecture of Roman Temples
P1: JzL 052181068XAgg.xml CB751B/Stamper 0 521 81068 X August 28, 2004 17:30 The Architecture of Roman Temples - The Republic to the Middle Empire John W. Stamper University of Notre Dame iii P1: JzL 052181068XAgg.xml CB751B/Stamper 0 521 81068 X August 28, 2004 17:30 published by the press syndicate of the university of cambridge The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom cambridge university press The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge cb2 2ru, uk 40 West 20th Street, New York, ny 10011-4211, usa 477 Williamstown Road, Port Melbourne, vic 3207, Australia Ruiz de Alarcon´ 13, 28014 Madrid, Spain Dock House, The Waterfront, Cape Town 8001, South Africa http://www.cambridge.org C John W. Stamper 2005 This book is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 2005 Printed in the United Kingdom at the University Press, Cambridge Typefaces Bembo 11/14 pt., Weiss, Trajan, and Janson System LATEX 2ε [tb] A catalog record for this book is available from the British Library. Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data Stamper, John W. The architecture of Roman temples : the republic to the middle empire / John W. Stamper. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 0-521-81068-x 1. Temples, Roman – Italy – Rome. 2. Temple of Jupiter Capitolinus (Rome, Italy) 3. Architecture, Roman – Italy – Rome – Influence. 4. Rome (Italy) -
The Soundscape of the Trevi Fountain in Covid-19 Silence Received Jul 15, 2020; Accepted Sep 28, 2020 1 Introduction
Noise Mapp. 2020; 7:212–222 Research Article Enza De Lauro*, Mariarosaria Falanga, and Laura Tedeschini Lalli The soundscape of the Trevi fountain in Covid-19 silence https://doi.org/10.1515/noise-2020-0018 Received Jul 15, 2020; accepted Sep 28, 2020 1 Introduction Abstract: This paper is devoted to the analyses of sound- This paper is about the soundscape of the famous Piazza scape at fontana di Trevi in Rome (Italy) with the aim to Fontana di Trevi in Rome. The piazza itself is a culturally compare its characteristics during the Italian lockdown important place, so that a study of the "sound signature" due to the (Sars-COV2) Covid-19 sanitary emergency and its of the fountain is important for heritage studies. In this pa- characteristics before and after such time. The lockdown per we address the differences that can be objectively mea- has represented an exceptional environment due to the sured in very different situations regarding background silence everywhere, never occurred in centuries, offering noise. the opportunity to recognize the "signature" of the sound At the end of December 2019, in a market of Wuhan in the emitted by the famous Fontana di Trevi and recognize Hubei Province (China), there was a first documented case how it interacts with other features. The signature is im- of anomalous pneumonia, thereafter denominated Covid- portant for preservation issues and cultural heritage. The 19 disease. On January 9, 2020, the Chinese CDC reported soundscape was documented in a field survey by means of that this anomalous pneumonia was due to a new coro- hand held microphones, which acquired simultaneously navirus that was responsible of a Severe Acute Respira- the acoustic wavefield all around the fountain. -
OUT of the BOX a Boutique Hotel, Intimately Connected to Its Roots in the Heart of Rome
136 VOYAGE From Rome, Italy 137 OUT OF THE BOX A Boutique Hotel, Intimately Connected to its Roots in the Heart of Rome In Rome, a few steps from the Colosseum and the Roman Forum, the new Condominio Monti is a new boutique hotel that preserves the convivial atmosphere of its historic neighborhood, famous for its picturesque alleys and which oozes life during the day through its tiny craft shops and galleries, and by night through its trendy wineries and bars. The brainchild of entrepreneurs Kaja Osinski and Filippo Ribacchi, who helm Living Roma, Condominio Monti occupies an area of 900 square meters and has been developed within two neighboring buildings: hence the name, highlighting the intimate collective project, where attention is paid to shared spaces. Far from the aseptic standards of many major hotel chains, the new structure rewrites the concept of hospitality through 33 rooms, designed for selective travelers and design lovers, and a reception with a tailored edge. A concierge service based on the guests’ needs, offers suggestions for experiencing the Eternal City in contemporary and unconventional ways, with ad hoc illustrated itineraries at guests’ disposal in every room. The architectural and interior design, which preserves the structure of a traditional Roman house, with its bijou, but functional rooms distributed along a corridor, bears the signature of designers STUDIOTAMAT and the shades, finishes, fabrics, patterns and objects have been selected by Sabina Guidotti, founder of Bludiprussia. Photos © Condominio Monti 138 VOYAGE 139 Balanced lighting and custom-designed furnishings – from bedside tables to headboards – blend with a palette of bold colors, sophisticated wallpapers and decorative patterns that allude to the concept of "exotic", and are intended as a journey to discover “otherness”. -
Return International Airfares 3-4 Star Accommodation Professional
D aily Breakfast & dinner R eturn International Ai rfares 3 - 4 star accommodation P rDoafeilsys ional loca&l guide AiRrpeoturrtn T Irnatnesrfneartsi onal TrAiainrf atircekse ts 3-4 star accommodation Professional local guide Airport Transfers Train tickets Day 1: Melbourne - - Rome Departure from Melbourne, begin your journey of Italy. Day 2: Rome Arrive in Rom e , a C ity of 3 00 0 yea rs histor y. Italy ’ s capital is a sprawling , cosmopolitan city with nearly 3,000 years of globally influential art , architecture and culture on display . Ancient ruins such as the Roman Forum and the Colosseum evoke the power of the former Roman Empire .Up on arrival , your tour gu ide will meet you at the airport with the warmest greeting. Transfer to hotel . Day 3: Rome Empire Explore Rome after breakfast . You ’ll understand soon why it is defined an “open air mu seum”: as you walk aroun d the ci ty center, yo u’ll s ee the remains of it s glorio us past all around y ou, as you’re making a time travel back to the ancient Rome empire era. Visit C olosseum *, Arch of Constantine, Roman Forum*. Walk over to Venice Square and way up the Campidoglio Hill you will visit Capitoline Museums*. opened to the public since 1734.The Capitoline Museums are considered the first museum in the world including a large number of ancient Roman statues , inscriptions , and other artifacts ; a collection of medieval and Renaissance art ; and collections of jewels , coins and other items . Transfer ba c k to ho t el after din ner . -
Trevi Fountain Rome, Italy Trevi Fountain: Rome, Italy the Architects
Trevi Fountain Rome, Italy Trevi Fountain: Rome, Italy The Architects The Trevi Fountain (Fontana di Trevi) is the most famous and arguably Little of Nicola Salvi’s (1697–1751) work beyond the Trevi Fountain remains the most beautiful fountain in Rome. This impressive Baroque-styled today and relatively little is known of the architect himself. He was monument was completed in 1762 and still dominates the small Trevi admitted to the Roman Academy of Arcadia in 1717 and only became square located in the city’s Quirinale district. an architect after studying mathematics and philosophy. His friend and colleague, the sculptor Pietro Bracci (1700–1773), would eventually go on to complete the fountain. Bracci’s most famous piece of work, the statue of Oceanus, forms the centerpiece of the fountain. 2 History The imposing fountain sits at the junction of three roads, or tre vie, which many believe gave the fountain its name, and marks the terminal point of one of the original aqueducts that supplied water to ancient Rome. Built by Marcu Vipsanius Agrippa in 19 BC, the Aqua Virgo aqueduct was over 13 miles (21 km) long and even then had a fountain at its terminus. The aqueduct and fountain served Rome for over 400 years, but after the invasion of the Goths in AD 537, the aqueduct was cut off and the final portion abandoned, forcing the medieval Romans to draw water from wells and the River Tiber. It would be over 1,000 years, and the advent of the Early Renaissance period, before a fountain would again stand in the location we know today.