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Zusatztext "Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through graduate students." (Choice! 1 June 2013) Informationen zum Autor Roger B. Ulrich is Ralph Butterfield Professor of Classics at Dartmouth College, where he teaches Roman Archaeology and Latin and directs Dartmouth's Rome Foreign Study Program in Italy. He is the author of The Roman Orator and the Sacred Stage : T he Roman Templum Rostratum(1994) and Roman Woodworking (2007). Caroline K. Quenemoen is Professor in the Practice and Director of Fellowships and Undergraduate Research at Rice University. Previously she taught courses in Greek and Roman art and archaeology at Rice. Her research focuses on Roman architecture, including articles on the House of Augustus. Klappentext A Companion to Roman Architecture presents a comprehensive review of the critical issues and approaches that have transformed scholarly understanding in recent decades in one easy-to-reference volume.* Offers a cross-disciplinary approach to Roman architecture, spanning technology, history, art, politics, and archaeology* Brings together contributions by leading scholars in architectural history* An essential guide to recent scholarship, covering new archaeological discoveries, lesser known buildings, new technologies and space and construction* Includes extensive, up-to-date bibliography and glossary of key Roman architectural terms Zusammenfassung This Companion provides a comprehensive review of the critical issues and approaches that have transformed scholarly understanding of Roman architecture in the last 20 years. It serves as an indispensable teaching and reference work for English-speaking undergraduates and graduates. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Illustrations viii Contributors xiii Maps/General Images xviii Introduction 1 1. Italic Architecture of the Earlier First Millennium BCE 6 Jeffrey A. Becker 2. Rome and Her Neighbors: Greek Building Practices in Republican Rome 27 Penelope J.E. Davies 3. Creating Imperial Architecture 45 Inge Nielsen 4. Columns and Concrete: Architecture from Nero to Hadrian 63 Caroline K. Quenemoen 5. The Severan Period 82 Edmund V. Thomas 6. The Architecture of Tetrarchy 106 Emanuel Mayer 7. Architect and Patron 127 James C. Anderson, jr. 8. Plans, Measurement Systems, and Surveying: The Roman Technology of Pre-Building 140 John R. Senseney 9. Materials and Techniques 157 Lynne C. Lancaster and Roger B. Ulrich 10. Labor Force and Execution 193 Rabun Taylor 11. Urban Sanctuaries: The Early Republic to Augustus 207 John W. Stamper 12. Monumental Architecture of Non-Urban Cult Places in Roman Italy 228 Tesse D. Stek 13. Fora 248 James F.D. Frakes 14. Funerary Cult and Architecture 264 Kathryn J. McDonnell 15. Building for an Audience: The Architecture of Roman Spectacle 281 Hazel Dodge 16. Roman Imperial Baths and Thermae 299 Fikret K. Yegül 17. Courtyard Architecture in the Insulae of Ostia Antica 324 Roger B. Ulrich 18. Domus/Single Family House 342 John R. Clarke 19. Private Villas: Italy and the Provinces 363 Mantha Zarmakoupi 20. Romanization 381 Louise Revell 21. Streets and Facades 399 Ray Laurence 22. Vitruvius and his Influence 412 Ingrid D. Rowland 23. Ideological Applications: Roman Architecture and Fascist Romanità 426 ...
List of contents
List of Illustrations viii
Contributors xiii
Maps/General Images xviii
Introduction 1
1. Italic Architecture of the Earlier First Millennium BCE 6
Jeffrey A. Becker
2. Rome and Her Neighbors: Greek Building Practices in Republican Rome 27
Penelope J.E. Davies
3. Creating Imperial Architecture 45
Inge Nielsen
4. Columns and Concrete: Architecture from Nero to Hadrian 63
Caroline K. Quenemoen
5. The Severan Period 82
Edmund V. Thomas
6. The Architecture of Tetrarchy 106
Emanuel Mayer
7. Architect and Patron 127
James C. Anderson, jr.
8. Plans, Measurement Systems, and Surveying: The Roman Technology of Pre-Building 140
John R. Senseney
9. Materials and Techniques 157
Lynne C. Lancaster and Roger B. Ulrich
10. Labor Force and Execution 193
Rabun Taylor
11. Urban Sanctuaries: The Early Republic to Augustus 207
John W. Stamper
12. Monumental Architecture of Non-Urban Cult Places in Roman Italy 228
Tesse D. Stek
13. Fora 248
James F.D. Frakes
14. Funerary Cult and Architecture 264
Kathryn J. McDonnell
15. Building for an Audience: The Architecture of Roman Spectacle 281
Hazel Dodge
16. Roman Imperial Baths and Thermae 299
Fikret K. Yegül
17. Courtyard Architecture in the Insulae of Ostia Antica 324
Roger B. Ulrich
18. Domus/Single Family House 342
John R. Clarke
19. Private Villas: Italy and the Provinces 363
Mantha Zarmakoupi
20. Romanization 381
Louise Revell
21. Streets and Facades 399
Ray Laurence
22. Vitruvius and his Influence 412
Ingrid D. Rowland
23. Ideological Applications: Roman Architecture and Fascist Romanità 426
Genevieve S. Gessert
24. Visualizing Architecture Then and Now: Mimesis and the Capitoline Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus 446
Melanie Grunow Sobocinski
25. Conservation 462
William Aylward
Glossary 480
References 501
Index 565
Report
"The Companion is an important study that opens up new avenues for discussion and consideration, challenges what is currently perceived to be the approved wisdom on Roman architecture and encourages a new approach to understanding the material culture of a society that remains evident and influential in our own." (Reference Reviews, 1 October 2014)
"Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through graduate students." (Choice, 1 June 2013)