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A companion to roman Italy / edited by Alison E Cooley.
- Format:
- Book
- Series:
- Blackwell companions to the ancient world.
- THEi Wiley ebooks.
- Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World
- THEi Wiley ebooks
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Italy--History.
- Italy.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource (816 pages) : illustrations, maps.
- Edition:
- 1st ed.
- Place of Publication:
- Chichester, West Sussex, England : Wiley-Blackwell, 2016.
- System Details:
- Access using campus network via VPN at home (THEi Users Only).
- Summary:
- A Companion to Roman Italy investigates the impact of Rome in all its forms-political, cultural, social, and economic-upon Italy's various regions, as well as the extent to which unification occurred as Rome became the capital of Italy. * The collection presents new archaeological data relating to the sites of Roman Italy * Contributions discuss new theories of how to understand cultural change in the Italian peninsula * Combines detailed case-studies of particular sites with wider-ranging thematic chapters * Leading contributors not only make accessible the most recent work on Roman Italy, but also offer fresh insight on long standing debates
- Contents:
- Intro
- Table of Contents
- BLACKWELL COMPANIONS TO THE ANCIENT WORLD
- Title Page
- List of Illustrations
- List of Tables
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- INTRODUCTION: Setting the Scene
- CHAPTER 1: Italy Before the Romans
- 1.1 Introduction
- 1.2 Forces of Centralization - InterpretingSettlement Patterns
- 1.3 Single Communities - Cemeteries
- 1.4 Individual Networks and Mobility
- 1.5 Community Organization Beyond Territory
- 1.6 Supra-Community Organization
- 1.7 Sanctuaries as Fora
- 1.8 Free Agents and Organization ofInstant Communities
- 1.9 Conclusion
- FURTHER READING
- REFERENCES
- PART I: The Impact of Rome - Unification and Integration
- CHAPTER 2: Rome's Encroachment on Italy
- 2.1 Introduction
- 2.2 The Early Years (Circa 509-390 BC)
- 2.3 Italy Encounters Rome (Circa 390-264 BC)
- 2.4 The Impact of Roman Encroachment: Italy in the Third and Early Second Centuries BC
- 2.5 Roman Encroachment and Cultural Change
- 2.6 Conclusion
- CHAPTER 3: Italy and the Greek East, Second Century BC
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 Romans and Greeks to 205 BC
- 3.3 Romans and Greeks in the Second Century BC
- 3.4.1 The impact on Italy: political and demographic
- 3.4.2 The impact on Italy: cultural
- 3.5 Resistance
- 3.6 Conclusion
- CHAPTER 4: The Social War
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 Italian Grievances and Aspirations
- 4.3 Which Italians?
- 4.4 Attitudes to the Citizenship
- 4.5 The War
- CHAPTER 5: The Civil Wars and the Triumvirate
- 5.1 Rome and Italy: Ideological Imbrication?
- 5.2 Out of the Frying Pan into the Fire
- 5.3 Practical Developments
- 5.4 Political Involvement
- 5.5 Tota Italia
- CHAPTER 6: Coming to Terms with Dynastic Power, 30 BC-AD 69.
- 6.1 Tota Italia
- 6.2 Domus Augusta and Familia Caesaris
- 6.3 The Economic Impact of Dynastic Power
- 6.4 The End of the Dynasty
- CHAPTER 7: Italy during the High Empire, from the Flavians to Diocletian
- 7.1 Rebuilding After Civil Wars
- 7.2 Italy and the Emperors
- 7.3 The Impact of Women on the Landscapes of Italy
- 7.4 Patterns in City Life
- 7.5 Administration of Italy
- CHAPTER 8: Late Roman and Late Antique Italy
- 8.1 Introduction
- 8.2 Constantine and a New Order
- 8.3 Emperors, Invaders and Italy, AD 340-490
- 8.4 Changed Landscapes
- 8.5 From Ostrogoths to Lombards
- PART II: Local and Regional Diversity
- 2.1 Cultural Diversity
- CHAPTER 9: Funerary Practices
- 9.1 Introduction
- 9.2 A "Roman" Way of Death?
- 9.3 Inhumation and Cremation
- 9.4 Rituals and Graves
- 9.5 Monuments
- 9.6 Epitaphs
- 9.7 Bones and Bodies
- 9.8 Conclusions
- CHAPTER 10: Diversity in Architecture and Urbanism
- 10.1 Introduction
- 10.2 Cultural Diversity in Early Italy
- 10.3 The Etruscans
- 10.4 Early Latium and Rome: Between Etruria and Greece
- 10.5 Geographical Diversity
- 10.6 Republican Italy: Rome, Colonies and Allied Towns
- 10.7 Rome in the Principate
- 10.8 Urban Change in Augustan Italy
- 10.9 Conclusion
- CHAPTER 11: Language and Literacy in Roman Italy
- 11.1 Introduction
- 11.2 Languages in Pre-Roman Italy
- 11.3 The Diffusion of the Latin Language and Alphabet
- 11.4 Literacy: The Uses of Writing in Ancient Italy
- 11.5 Language, Literacy and Cultural Identities
- CHAPTER 12: Roman Naples
- 12.1 Introduction
- 12.2 Naples: Greek, Campanian, and Roman.
- 12.3 Public Building and Civic Identities: The Reshaping of an Urban Environment
- 12.4 Institutions in Transition: The Municipal Administration of Roman Naples
- 12.5 The Cultural Life of Roman Naples
- 12.6 Public and Private: Identities in the Funerary Record
- 12.7 Conclusions
- 2.2 Greek Italy
- CHAPTER 13: Magna Graecia, 270 BC-AD 200
- 13.1 Introduction
- 13.2 Roman Conquest: Magna Graecia Before the Social War
- 13.3 Reorganizing Magna Graecia
- 13.4 Economic Development
- 13.5 Magna Graecia and the Greek World
- 13.6 Cities and Urban Development
- 13.7 Urban Society and Culture: Cultural Identities Between Greece and Rome
- 2.3 Case-study: Becoming Roman in Cisalpina
- CHAPTER 14: The Changing Face of Cisalpine Identity
- 14.1 Gaul, Transapadana, Italy. What's in a Name?
- 14.2 The Archaic Background: The Arrival of the Gauls
- 14.3 First Roman Forays Acrossthe Apennines, 290-218 BC
- 14.4 The Transformation of the Landscape, 201-148 BC
- 14.5 Citizenship and Belonging
- 14.6 Conclusion: An Epitaph for Cremona
- PART III: Town and Country
- 3.1 Settlement Patterns
- CHAPTER 15: Urbanization
- 15.1 Introduction
- 15.2 Defining Urbanization
- 15.3 The Development of Cities in Italy
- 15.4 The Historical Context of Urbanization in Roman Italy in the Republican Period
- 15.5 Regional Diversity
- 15.6 Case Studies: Poseidonia/Paestum and Cosa
- 15.7 Patterns of Public Building
- 15.8 The Role of the City in Roman Italy
- 15.9 Conclusion
- CHAPTER 16: Urban Peripheries
- 16.1 Introduction
- 16.2 The Urban Periphery in Roman Italy
- 16.3 Spurs for Periurban Development
- 16.4 The Role of the Urban Periphery
- 16.5 Conclusion
- CHAPTER 17: Villas.
- 17.1 Introduction
- 17.2 Definitions
- 17.3 Origins, Chronology, and Development
- 17.4 Geography
- 17.5 Fructus and Luxuria: Production andLuxury in the Italian Villa
- 17.6 Otium and Negotium in Villa Lifestyles: Literary Evidence
- 17.7 Villas in Archaeology: Case Studies (Villa dei Papiri
- Settefinestre
- Villa Regina)
- 17.8 Decline?
- CHAPTER 18: Republican and Early Imperial Towns in the Tiber Valley
- 18.1 Introduction
- 18.2 Historical Background
- 18.3 Settlement Patterns and Economy
- 18.4 Key Issues in the Development of Roman Towns in the Middle and Lower Tiber Valley
- 18.5 Discussion
- 3.2 Case-studies of Towns and their Territories
- CHAPTER 19: Cosa and the Ager Cosanus
- 19.1 Cosa
- 19.2 The Ager Cosanus
- CHAPTER 20: Pompeii and the Ager Pompeianus
- 20.1 Landscape History and Cultural Memory1
- 20.2 The Landscape of the City and the Country
- 20.3 Emulation and Local Elite Identities
- 20.4 Homes in the City and the Countryside
- 20.5 Urban Spectacle
- 20.6 Pompeii and the History of Italy
- CHAPTER 21: Ostia
- 21.1 Introduction1
- 21.2 The Foundation of Ostia
- 21.3 The Colonia Maritima
- 21.4 The Creation of a Façade Maritime
- 21.5 The Formation of the Imperial City
- 21.6 Commercial City
- 21.7 Housing
- 21.8 From the Third Century to Late Antiquity
- PART IV: Economy and Society
- CHAPTER 22: Regional Interaction
- 22.1 Regional Interaction and Local Networks
- 22.2 Market-Days in Roman Italy
- 22.3 A Cultural Network for Gladiatorial Spectacles
- CHAPTER 23: Agricultural Production in Roman Italy
- 23.1 Introduction
- 23.2 Ancient Texts and Archaeology.
- 23.3 Animals: The 'Other' Mediterranean Triad
- 23.4 Plants: The Original Mediterranean Triad
- 23.5 Aristocrats and Agrobusiness
- 23.6 On the Family Farm
- 23.7 Conclusions
- CHAPTER 24: Local Elites
- 24.1 Introduction
- 24.2 The Roman Conquest and the Italian Elites
- 24.3 "Dim Characters with Fantastic Names": The Roman Revolution and the "Victory of the Italians"
- 24.4 The Italian Elites Under the Principate
- 24.5 Conclusion
- CHAPTER 25: Sub-Elites
- 25.1 Introduction
- 25.2 Working in Wool and Working for Status?: Lanarii
- 25.3 Getting from Point A to Point B and Getting Ahead?: Muliones and Iumentarii
- 25.4 Conclusion: Revisiting Two Models of Urban Development
- Index
- End User License Agreement.
- Notes:
- Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.
- Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (ebrary, viewed January 19, 2016).
- ISBN:
- 9781118993118
- 111899311X
- 9781119092261
- 1119092264
- 9781118993101
- 1118993101
- OCLC:
- 934513985
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