Tenarishydril Premium Connections Catalogue En 6 MB

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Tenarishydril Premium Connections Catalogue En 6 MB Premium Connections Catalogue Table of contents 4 20 INTRODUCTION CONNECTIONS BY TECHNOLOGY TenarisHydril Wedge Series Integrated Tubular Solutions Wedge 563® Unparalleled Product Technology Wedge XP™ 2.0 Steel Grades Wedge 625® Dopeless® Technology Wedge 623® Reliable Manufacturing Quality Wedge 523® Wedge 521® Wedge 513® 13 Wedge 511® Application Guide Wedge 533® Connections Nomenclature Dimensional Range Blue® Series Blue® Blue® Max Blue® Heavy Wall Blue® Riser Large OD BlueDock® Connector Blue® Quick Seal ER™ TenarisXP® Series TXP® Buttress Legacy Series Legacy connections INTRODUCTION For information on other connections, visit www.tenaris.com PREMIUM CONNECTIONS CATALOGUE TenarisHydril 3 TenarisHydril TenarisHydril offers outstanding premium TenarisHydril premium connections are supplied connection design and technology worldwide. and supported by Tenaris, the leading manufac- With a comprehensive range of high performance turer and supplier of steel tubes and integrated products backed by an extensive global field tubular services to the world's energy industry. service network and licensed threading shops, we For further information please visit our website at develop solutions to meet the needs of ever more www.tenaris.com. demanding E&P environments. 4 Integrated Tubular Solutions Tenaris meets the evolving needs of the oil and gas industry with a commitment to unparalleled service, quality and innovative technology. Over the years, the oil and gas industry has moved Our TenarisHydril Blue® Series of connections from its onshore roots to more complex shallow are renowned for their outstanding performance water and deepwater operations, and on to uncon- in critical offshore and high pressure applications, ventional reserves. Operators seek not just reliable where fully tested gas-tight seals are required. and safe technologies to support their drilling Our Dopeless® technology is an industrially- operations, but efficient supply chain systems so applied coating that simplifies pipe handling and they can drill their wells in the most profitable running and reduces environmental contamination way possible. through making the use of manually-applied dope lubricants superfluous in oil and gas operations. To deliver the best results requires an integrated And when it comes to large diameter surface approach combining outstanding technology, and conductor casing, we have a unique range reliable product quality and efficient service with of technologies and integrated solutions. continuous innovation. At Tenaris, innovation goes beyond product tech- Through constant investment in research and nology. We are transforming the tubular supply development over many years, Tenaris has built chain through our Rig Direct® service. This fully up a unique range of product technologies that integrated approach saves customers both time deliver unmatched performance benefits for oil and money as it reduces total costs and signifi- and gas drilling operations in many applications. cantly cuts on-site inventories by synchronizing Such is the case of the TenarisHydril Wedge Series the supply chain, feeding materials from the mill of connections, which provide exceptional torque or yard to rigs in real-time – all this while performance and are recognized as the most robust maintaining the highest QHSE standards under and fastest running connections in the market. one single system. Unparalleled product and service combined in our Rig Direct® model. INTRODUCTION PREMIUM CONNECTIONS CATALOGUE TenarisHydril 5 Unparalleled Product Technology Tenaris is the leader in product technology, backed by an extensive R&D network. Our products and services provide outstanding performance in the field. WEDGE SERIES BLUE® SERIES Wedge connections provide robust, fast and easy Ranging from the original Blue® to the comple- running. Soon after TenarisHydril introduced the mentary Blue® Max and Blue® Heavy Wall Wedge technology 35 years ago, operators around connections, the TenarisHydril Blue® Series the world broadly adopted the solution. incorporates advanced casing and tubing connections design features for challenging E&P TenarisHydril Wedge connections are renowned operations around the world. for their best-in-class torque capacity, surpassing that of most competing technologies, their Blue® connections have been extensively tested outstanding performance in integral designs under the most demanding industry standards, and their robust comportment in the field. including the API RP 5C5 Testing Protocol. These Ideal for use in demanding applications such threaded and coupled connections are the perfect as offshore wells requiring slim clearance strings choice for drilling in HP/HT and deepwater or horizontal wells with long laterals, or strings environments. that must be rotated and pushed into place, our Wedge connections can offer additional sealing LARGE OD capabilities and compression ratings, suitable for TenarisHydril’s connection portfolio for the top the most severe shale and deepwater conditions. of the well section is comprehensive, starting with its BlueDock® connector. The latest addition to the TenarisHydril’s Wedge Series, the Wedge XP™ 2.0, offers extreme torque The BlueDock® weld-on connector was developed capability, mainly for production casing in uncon- for surface and conductor casing in deepwater ventional applications. applications. Testing shows excellent perfor- mance under combined loads and fatigue. The BlueDock® connector is offered as an integrated pipe and connector solution based on Tenaris’s A DEDICATED RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT NETWORK Tenaris’s global R&D network PRODUCTS FOR TOMORROW’S TESTING FOR PERFORMANCE consists of laboratories and testing OPERATIONS Within this system, premium facilities in Argentina, Italy, Japan, Tenaris supports its customers in connections can be tested under the design, testing and qualification the most demanding procedures Mexico and Brazil, staffed by more of its premium connections for including the newest version of the than 360 scientists and engineers. applications such as deepwater, ISO 13679 standard and the API RP HP/HT, unconventionals and more. 5C5, or with ad-hoc, fit-for-purpose From finite element analysis as a key protocols that reflect possible design input to full-scale performance application conditions, including testing to verify critical features such fatigue. These technologies are also as galling resistance and sealability, tested in the field, gathering valuable Tenaris develops new premium input to improve them. connection technologies with its world-class assets. 6 experience in pipe manufacturing, premium con- Our products and services nection design and welding technology, all carried have been proven out under the same quality management system. in the most challenging operations around the world. To complement this, Tenaris offers two different threaded and coupled products. The Blue® Quick Seal, an extension of the Blue® Series, features a qualified metal-to-metal seal and provides a complete seal for gas. The ER™ connection, for surface and intermediate casing, offers fast make- up with minimum risk of cross threading. Easy to run and stab, this product has achieved a solid track record in a variety of applications worldwide. TENARISXP® SERIES The TenarisXP® Series combines enhanced per- formance with API compatibility. TXP® Buttress connections have become widely popular for production casing in unconventional and drilling- More than 360 scientists while-casing applications. The TXP® Buttress and engineers support connection, with its special shouldered coupling Tenaris’s R&D efforts worldwide. design, offers extra torque and compression resistance and greater make-up stability than standard buttress connections. LEGACY SERIES TenarisHydril's Legacy connections include proven performers, such as the 3SB™, MS™ and MACII™ connections, that have provided many years of reliable service in challenging drilling environments around the world. Wedge Series Thread Identification Code FIRST DIGIT SECOND DIGIT THIRD DIGIT INTRODUCTION SERIES 500 CONFIGURATION AND PIPE ENDS METAL TO METAL SEAL Wedge threads 0- Integral connection on external API upset pipe 1- Integral connection on non-upset pipe with pipe with body OD box (flush) 1- Not present 2- Integral connection on non-upset pipe with swaged and turned OD box (semi-flush) 3- Integral connection on internal/external upset pipe 3- Internal seal 5- Integral connection on non-upset pin end and upset box end pipe 6- Coupled connection on non-upset pipe FIRST DIGIT SECOND DIGIT THIRD DIGIT PREMIUM CONNECTIONS CATALOGUE SERIES 600 CONFIGURATION AND PIPE ENDS METAL TO METAL SEAL Advanced Wedge threads 2- Integral connection on non-upset pipe with swaged and turned OD box (semi-flush) 3- Internal and External seals 5- Mid seal on step-to-step Wedge threads TenarisHydril 7 Steel Grades Our proprietary range of steel grades is designed for the most demanding well conditions. Tenaris has developed a broad range of proprie- HIGH COLLAPSE & SOUR SERVICE tary steel grades to meet the most demanding well The design of our High Collapse & Sour Service conditions, from severe sour environments to high grades is based on the development of carbon external pressure conditions and deep wells. and low alloy steels. The manufacturing process In addition, leveraging its global industrial infra- is strictly controlled from steelmaking through structure and R&D capabilities, Tenaris works rolling and heat treatment. with customers
Recommended publications
  • Fall 20212021
    LOSLOS MEDANOSMEDANOS COLLEGECOLLEGE FALLFALL 20212021 Discover Your Future LOS MEDANOS COLLEGE Fall 2021 Online Registration Dates: DATE PRIORITY GROUP CRITERIA Important Dates April 26-27 Group 1 Priority registration for EOPS, DSPS, qualified veterans, qualified foster youth and CalWORKs, for students under 100 degree- applicable units or in good standing Contra Costa Community April 28 Group 2 Special registration for DSPS note takers, early graduation applicants College District and qualified athletes, for students under 100 degree-applicable units Los Medanos College is proud to be part or in good standing of the Contra Costa Community College April 29 Group 3a Continuing* students with 45-75 units within the district District. The District Office is May 3-4 Group 3b Continuing* students with 0-44 .99 units within the district and Dual Enrollment Students registering in CCAP courses . located at 500 Court Street in Martinez, California 94553. May 8 Group 3c Recent matriculated* high school graduates May 10-11 Group 3d Continuing* students with 75 .01-99 .99 units within the district Other colleges in the district include: May 12 Group 3e New matriculated* and returning* students with less than 100 units Contra Costa College in San Pablo, and in the district Diablo Valley College in Pleasant Hill May 19 Group 4 Registration for continuing* and returning* students over 100 degree- and San Ramon. applicable units or on 2nd semester probation or dismissal June 1-2 Group 5 New non-matriculated and exempt students Board of Trustees John E. Márquez, Ward 1 Fall 2021 Open Registration Dates: Judy E. Walters, Ward 2 Rebecca Barrett, Ward 3 June 21 Group 6 ALL Special Admit/Concurrent high school students registration Andy Li, Ward 4 August 9 Group 7 Open registration for all college students Fernando Sandoval, Ward 5 Mansu Kim, Student Trustee Other Important Dates: Chancellor Native American Day (college closed) .
    [Show full text]
  • AH4 Option 3 Empire
    JACT Teachers’ Notes AH4 / F394 – Roman History Option 3. Ruling the Roman Empire AD 14-117 Teachers’ notes by Penelope J. Goodman and Zahra Newby Contents: 1. BOOKS AND RESOURCES General works 2 More specialist volumes 3 2. INTRODUCTION TO THE SOURCES Suetonius 6 Pliny the Younger 7 LACTOR 8 – Inscriptions of the Roman Empire 9 LACTOR 15 – Dio: the Julio-Claudians 10 LACTOR 18 – The High Tide of Empire 12 3. BACKGROUND INFORMATION The empire 14 The emperor and the principate 15 4. THEMATIC NOTES 4.1 MECHANISMS OF GOVERNMENT The emperor and the provinces 20 Provincial taxation 21 Senators in government and administration 22 Equestrians in government and administration 27 Imperial freedmen in government and administration 28 Local government 29 The role of the army 31 Frontier and defence policies 32 4.2 PROVINCIAL RESPONSES TO ROMAN RULE The issue of ‘Romanisation’ 34 Provincial rebellions 37 Displays of loyalty 39 4.3 LIFE IN THE PROVINCES Regional identities 42 Economics 44 The image of the emperor 46 The imperial cult 48 - 1 - JACT Teachers’ Notes 1. BOOKS AND RESOURCES Only secondary material is covered here – for primary sources, see Introduction to the Sources, below p. 6. General works: Garnsey P. & Saller, R. The Roman Empire: Economy, Society and Culture (Duckworth, 1987) This is a standard study of the workings of the Roman empire, divided into four sections on administration, the economy, society and religion. It is useful, but the thinking now seems slightly outdated – the authors place more emphasis on the Roman state as a dominant and even coercive power in effecting cultural change in the provinces than most scholars do today.
    [Show full text]
  • Herodes Atticus: World Citizen, AD 101-177
    This dissertation has been microfilmed exectlv fl<; rp>rpivgcl Mic 60-4127 RUTLEDGE, Harry C arraci. HERODES ATTICUS: WORLD CITIZEN, A.D. 101-177. The Ohio State University, Ph. D., 1960 Language and Literature, classical University Microfilms, Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan * • > . HERODES ATTICUS: WORLD CITIZEN A. D. 101 - 177 DISSERTATION Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By HARRY CARRACI RUTLEDGE, B .S c. in Edu., M.A. The Ohio State University I960 Approved by .ser Department of Classical Languages PREFACE Herodes Atticus has frequently been designated as the orator noblllsslmus of the Second Sophistic, the well- known rhetorical movement of the second century A.D. Although his prominence in the Second Sophistic is undoubted, Herodes is scarcely one of the major figures of antiquity; the Second Sophistic itself, because of its lack of recognized literary masterpieces, engages the interest of few but specialists. No literary works at all are extant from the hand of Herodes Atticus; but he has never suffered the artistic eclipse that time has imposed on men like Cornelius Gallus, for example, since Flavius Philostratus, fascinated by the extraordinary variety in Herodes' life, saw fit to give him the paramount position in his Vitae Sophlstarum. Furthermore, Herodes1 name, i f not h is 1 if e - s to r y , has ever been w ell known to archaeologists and historians of ancient art because of the survival of so many traces of his architectural philan­ thropies. Herodes was the most prominent millionaire of the second century; his lavish gift to Athens of the Odeum at the foot of the Acropolis has been a familiar landmark for c e n tu r ie s .
    [Show full text]
  • Math 110, 110S Packet Version 1.0 This Work Is Licensed Under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Sharealike 4.0 Inter- National License
    Math 110, 110S Packet Version 1.0 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 Inter- national License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ or send a let- ter to Creative Commons, PO Box 1866, Mountain View, CA 94042, USA. Contents 1 Affective Domain 1 Module 1 A Poster Session ..................................... 3 Module 2 Learning Strategies ................................... 7 Module 3 Brainology and Growing Your Brain ......................... 11 Module 3.1 Brainology ..................................... 11 Module 3.2 Grow Your Brain .................................. 17 2 Summarizing Data Graphically and Numerically 21 Module 4 Distributions of Quantitative Data .......................... 23 Module 4.1 Distributions of Quantitative Data: Introduction ............... 23 Module 4.2 Dot Plots ...................................... 27 Module 4.3 Histograms ..................................... 33 Module 4.4 Module 4 Lab ................................... 39 Module 5 Measures of Center ................................... 43 Module 5.1 A Feel for Measures of Center .......................... 43 Module 5.2 The Mean as a Balancing Point ......................... 49 Module 5.3 Shape and Measures of Center ......................... 53 Module 6 Measures of Spread about the Median ........................ 57 Module 6.1 Quantifying Variability Relative to the Median Part 1 ............ 57 Module 6.2 Quantifying Variability Relative to the Median Part 2 ............ 61 Module 6.3 Module 6 Lab ................................... 65 Module 7 Quantifying Variability Relative to the Mean ..................... 67 Module 7.1 Measuring Variability Relative to the Mean: ADM .............. 67 Module 7.2 Using the ADM ................................... 73 Module 7.3 The Standard Deviation ............................. 75 Module 7.4 The Mean and Standard Deviation: Intervals of Typical Measurements . 79 Module 7.5 Module 7 Lab ..................................
    [Show full text]
  • University of Birmingham Dio Chrysostom (707)
    University of Birmingham Dio Chrysostom (707) Dowden, Kenneth License: None: All rights reserved Document Version Peer reviewed version Citation for published version (Harvard): Dowden, K 2015, Dio Chrysostom (707). in I Worthington (ed.), Brills New Jacoby. Brill's New Jacoby, Brill. <http://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/brill-s-new-jacoby/dio-chrysostom-707-a707> Link to publication on Research at Birmingham portal Publisher Rights Statement: Published in Brill's New Jacoby. Final version of record available online: http://referenceworks.brillonline.com/browse/brill-s-new-jacoby General rights Unless a licence is specified above, all rights (including copyright and moral rights) in this document are retained by the authors and/or the copyright holders. The express permission of the copyright holder must be obtained for any use of this material other than for purposes permitted by law. •Users may freely distribute the URL that is used to identify this publication. •Users may download and/or print one copy of the publication from the University of Birmingham research portal for the purpose of private study or non-commercial research. •User may use extracts from the document in line with the concept of ‘fair dealing’ under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (?) •Users may not further distribute the material nor use it for the purposes of commercial gain. Where a licence is displayed above, please note the terms and conditions of the licence govern your use of this document. When citing, please reference the published version. Take down policy While the University of Birmingham exercises care and attention in making items available there are rare occasions when an item has been uploaded in error or has been deemed to be commercially or otherwise sensitive.
    [Show full text]
  • Jewish Christians and Other Religious Groups in Judaea
    TELAVIV UNIVERSITY THELESTER AND SALLYENTINFACULTYOFHUMANITIES THECHAIMROSENBERGSCHOOL OFJEWISHSTUDIES JEWISH CHRISTIANS AND OTHER RELIGIOUS GROUPS IN JUDAEA FROM THE GREAT REVOLT TO THE BAR-KOKHBA WAR THESIS SUBMITTEDFOR THEDEGREE OFDOCTOROFPHILOSOPHY BY: YONATANBOURGEL UNDER THESUPERVISION OFPROFESSORAHARONOPPENHEIMER SUBMITTEDTO THESENATE OFTEL AVIVUNIVERSITY MAY2009 ב תודות::: בראש ובראשונה אני מבקש להודות מכל ליבי לפרופ ' אהרן אופנהיימר שהנ חה אותי בעבודתי ברוחב לב ובנכונות אין קץ לעזור ולסייע לי בכל צורך ובקשה . הוא היה לי לא רק מנחה מקצועי ומסור אלא גם ידיד של אמת . ברצוני להודות למספר חוקרים אשר הועילו לייעץ לי ולחלוק עמי את ידיעותיהם ובמיוחד לפרופ ' בנימין איזק אשר קרא חלק ממחקרי והעיר הער ות חשובות עליו ולד" ר יובל שחר שהקדיש לי רבות מזמנו ושיתף אותי במידע על ממצאיו ומחקריו . כן אני חב תודה לרבים וטובים אחרים ובהם לד" ר סוזן ויינגרטן על העריכה הלשונית , הערותיה המחכימות ועצותיה המקצועיות , לגב ' נילי אופנהיימר על הפניות ביבליוגרפיות רבות וחשובות ולאשבל רצון , עמיתתי ללימודי דוקטורט וידידתי היקרה , שלא חסכה מזמנה כדי לתקן את שגיאותיי בעברית . תודתי נתונה גם לביה" ס למדעי היהדות ובפרט לשרה ורד על כל העזרה והסיוע שהיא העניקה לי . Contents Abbreviations ………………………………………………………………………………………iv Introduction ………………………………………………………………………………..……...1 I- The Jewish Christians’ move from Jerusalem as a pragmatic choice (68 CE) …………………………………………………………………………………. ... ...21 A- The sources ……………………………………………………………………………………...23 B- The choice of Pella ………..…………………………………………………………………..36 C- The date of the migration to Pella ………….……………………………………………..39 D- The material difficulties ……………….…………………………………………………….…47 E- Reconstruction ……..………….……………………………………………………………….…50 F- Scope and significance ………………………………………………………………………..54 G- Appendix of references to the ‘Flight to Pella’ …...……...…………………………..……56 II- The Jewish Christians’ relationship to Jerusalem and the Temple following the Jewish War: .…………... ………………………………………………………...……...…..…60 A- Was there a Jewish Christian community in Jerusalem after 70 CE? .
    [Show full text]
  • The Pantheon. Rose Petals and the Film "Roman Holiday"
    SCIENCE AND PRACTICE, PROBLEMS AND INNOVATIONS Abstracts of VII International Scientific and Practical Conference Ottawa, Canada February 25 – 27, 2021 SCIENCE AND PRACTICE, PROBLEMS AND INNOVATIONS Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data UDC 01.1 The VII International Science Conference «Science and practice, problems and innovations», February 25 – 27, 2021, Ottawa, Canada. 220 p. ISBN - 978-1-63732-138-6 DOI - 10.46299/ISG.2021.I.VII EDITORIAL BOARD Professor of the Department of Criminal Law and Criminology Pluzhnik Elena Odessa State University of Internal Affairs Candidate of Law, Associate Professor Scientific and Research Institute of Providing Legal Framework for Liubchych Anna the Innovative Development National Academy of Law Sciences of Ukraine, Kharkiv, Ukraine, Scientific secretary of Institute Department of Accounting and Auditing Kharkiv Liudmyla Polyvana National Technical University of Agriculture named after Petr Vasilenko, Ukraine Candidate of Economic Sciences, Associate Professor of Mushenyk Iryna Mathematical Disciplines , Informatics and Modeling. Podolsk State Agrarian Technical University Dnipropetrovsk State University of Internal Affairs Oleksandra Kovalevska Dnipro, Ukraine Odessa State University of Internal Affairs, Prudka Liudmyla Associate Professor of Criminology and Psychology Department Doctor of Medical Sciences, Head of the Department of Health Slabkyi Hennadii Sciences, Uzhhorod National University. Ph.D. in Machine Friction and Wear (Tribology), Associate Professor of Department of Tractors and Agricultural Machines, Marchenko Dmytro Maintenance and Servicing, Lecturer, Deputy dean on academic affairs of Engineering and Energy Faculty of Mykolayiv National Agrarian University (MNAU), Mykolayiv, Ukraine Candidate of Technical Sciences, specialty 05.22.20 - operation and Harchenko Roman repair of vehicles. 2 SCIENCE AND PRACTICE, PROBLEMS AND INNOVATIONS TABLE OF CONTENTS AGRICULTURAL SCIENCES 1.
    [Show full text]
  • The Roman Cultural Memory of the Conquest of Latium
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2016 The Roman Cultural Memory of the Conquest of Latium Elizabeth Grace Palazzolo University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the Classics Commons Recommended Citation Palazzolo, Elizabeth Grace, "The Roman Cultural Memory of the Conquest of Latium" (2016). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 1929. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/1929 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/1929 For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Roman Cultural Memory of the Conquest of Latium Abstract In this dissertation, I examine the Roman cultural memory of the conquest of Latium and Rome’s earliest expansion through case studies of three Latin cities—Tusculum, Tibur, and Praeneste. Each of these cities underwent the transition from independent civic entity to community of Roman citizens on a different timeline than the majority of Latium: though most Latin cities came under Roman control after being defeated in the Roman-Latin Wars around 338 BCE, Tusculum had already been incorporated as the first municipium cum suffragio after 381 BCE, while Tibur and Praeneste seem to have remained independent allied cities until 90 BCE. I reconstruct the Roman cultural memory of these cities and how it changed over time, incorporating a variety of textual and material sources including literary references, inscriptions, iconography alluding to each city, and monuments or significant sites. I demonstrate that the memory of Tusculum, Tibur, and Praeneste as formerly independent, non-Roman communities persisted through the Late Republic and into the Empire, even as they became completely politically integrated with Rome.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction Alice König and Christopher Whitton
    Cambridge University Press 978-1-108-42059-4 — Roman Literature under Nerva, Trajan and Hadrian Edited by Alice König , Christopher Whitton Excerpt More Information Introduction Alice König and Christopher Whitton Among the Scrolls PictureyourselfinRomearoundad115,standinginthenewForumof Trajan. Beside you is the great equestrian statue of the emperor, before you the vast Basilica Ulpia, crowded with the usual mêlée of jurists and scribes, oicials and petitioners. High above its roof is another statue of Trajan, glinting down from the summit of his victory column. As you make your way further into the forum, your eye is caught by the colourful carvings on the column’s shaft; but you can’t help also being struck by the buildings that lank it, the two monumental wings of the Bibliotheca Ulpia.1 One of them houses a copy of Trajan’s Dacian war, a textual account of his Danu- bian victories to complement the triumphal scenes winding up the column outside.2 What other scrolls you might have found in this double library is now a matter of speculation. Archival material for sure, such as the prae- tors’ edicts that would one day be called up by Aulus Gellius;3 butitisa fair bet that literary works featured too,4 Greek and Latin.5 If so, here was a building grandly proclaiming its imperial patron’s investment in the writ- ten word, both documentary and literary, and in both world languages.6 The Bibliotheca Ulpia was not a public library as we know them, with bor- rowing rights and hushed reading rooms for research.7 As well as consulting the collection, visitors may have come to marvel at the statuary or attend 1 For an architectural description of the library, see Packer 2001: 78–9; on its position, Packer 1995: 353–4.
    [Show full text]
  • The Antonine Plague and the 'Third-Century Crisis'
    THE ANTONINE PLAGUE AND THE ‘THIRD-CENTURY CRISIS’ Christer Bruun* Introduction: the Antonine plague This paper will discuss two broad topics, the plague under Marcus Aurelius and the development of the Roman empire from the late second century onwards, and the relations between these two phe- nomena. The English word ‘plague’ is here used in the general sense of ‘potentially lethal epidemic disease’. I do not want to imply that we are dealing with the ‘bubonic plague’ caused by the yersinia pestis bacillus (discovered or identi ed in 1894),1 as today no one knows for certain what disease spread through the Roman world from 165 C.E. onwards, regardless of much speculation on the matter.2 The role of the plague among the causes of the ‘third-century crisis’ The ‘third century crisis’ is in itself a debated topic, as is made abun- dantly clear in other contributions in this volume. To save time and space, I will simply take it for granted that changes affected the Roman world from the reign of Marcus Aurelius onwards which in certain * Warm thanks are due to Lukas de Blois, Olivier Hekster, Gerda de Kleijn and the other organizers of the colloquium in Nijmegen. I am most grateful to Wolfgang Habermann for offprints and to Jonathan Edmondson for helpful comments on the content and for improving my English; all remaining errors are my own. Part of the research for this paper was carried out while the author enjoyed a Standard Research Grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, which is gratefully acknowledged.
    [Show full text]
  • Rule and Revenue in Egypt and Rome: Political Stability and Fiscal Institutions
    Princeton/Stanford Working Papers in Classics Rule and Revenue in Egypt and Rome: Political Stability and Fiscal Institutions Version 1.0 August 2007 Andrew Monson Stanford University Abstract: This paper investigates what determines fiscal institutions and the burden of taxation using a case study from ancient history. It evaluates Levi’s model of taxation in the Roman Republic, according to which rulers’ high discount rates in periods of political instability encourage them to adopt a more predatory fiscal regime. The evidence for fiscal reform in the transition from the Republic to the Principate seems to support her hypothesis but remains a matter of debate among historians. Egypt’s transition from a Hellenistic kingdom to a Roman province under the Principate provides an analogous case for which there are better data. The Egyptian evidence shows a correlation between rulers’ discount rates and fiscal regimes that is consistent with Levi’s hypothesis. © Andrew Monson. [email protected] 1 Explicit rational choice models are rare in studies of Greek and Roman political history.1 Most ancient historians avoid discussing the underlying behavioral assumptions of politics and opening them to criticism or potential falsification. Often the impetus for theoretical debate has to come from social scientists willing to venture into ancient history. The topic of this paper was treated in one chapter of Levi’s book Of Rule and Revenue (1988), which introduces a rational choice model for Roman taxation. The latter is part of the growing social
    [Show full text]
  • Lothar Haselberger
    1 revised: Apr. 2018 LOTHAR HASELBERGER University of Pennsylvania, Department of the History of Art email [email protected] 3405 Woodland Walk tel. (215) 898 2358 Philadelphia, PA 19104-6208 fax (215) 573 2210 Short Curriculum Vitae Lothar Haselberger is Morris Russell Williams and Josephine Chidsey Williams Professor Emeritus in Roman Architecture at the University of Pennsylvania. Trained as architectural historian, architect, and city planner at the Technical University of Munich and at Harvard University, he primarily works on the theory and practice of Graeco-Roman architecture and urbanism, especially on the ancient construction plans he discovered at the Temple of Apollo at Didyma, Turkey, as well as on the Augustan city of Rome and the Pantheon. A volume he initiated on the debate of the controversial Horologium of Augustus appeared in 2014, and a book on Hermogenes is in preparation, with an advance chapter published (together with Samuel Holzman) in the Journal of Roman Archaeology 2015. Haselberger was a Fellow of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton and at the American Academy in Berlin, and he received the University of Pennsylvania’s Ira Abrams Memorial Award for Distinguished Teaching. He is an elected Life Member of the German Archaeological Institute and serves in its external review boards of the Jahrbuch and Römische Mitteilungen. EDUCATION Technical University, Munich; PhD in Engineering (Dr.-Ing.) with distinction ("sehr gut"), 1985. Technical University, Munich; Graduate Engineer (Dipl.-Ing.) with best thesis of its category, 1976. Harvard University, Graduate School of Design, Fulbright Fellow, 1974–1975. Technical University, Munich; MA in Architecture (Vor-Diplom) with distinction ("sehr gut"), 1972.
    [Show full text]