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Porti e approdi fluviali in Italia peninsulare : dall'età romana all'anno Mille / Alessandro Luciano.

LIBRA HE557.I8 L83 2019
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Luciano, Alessandro, author.
Contributor:
George Clapp Vaillant Book Fund.
Series:
Archaeopress archaeology
Language:
Italian
Subjects (All):
Shipping.
History.
Harbors.
Commerce.
Rome--Commerce.
Rome.
Italy--Commerce.
Italy.
Rome (Empire).
Harbors--Rome--History.
Harbors--Italy--History--To 1500.
Harbors--Design and construction.
Shipping--Rome--History.
Shipping--Italy--History--To 1500.
Genre:
History.
Physical Description:
ix, 104 pages ; 29 x 21 cm.
Place of Publication:
Summertown, Oxford : Archaeopress, [2019]
Summary:
In the Imperial Age, many ports in Italy had been built in opus coementicium. The most important ones were in Latium (eg. Portus Romae, Antium and Centumcellae), in the Phlegrean Fields (portus Iulius, Misenum, Puteoli and Baiae) and along the northern-Adriatic coast (Classis-Ravenna, Aquileia and Altino). The military fleets of Augustus, in particular, were quartered in the ports of Classis and Misenum.00Most Roman ports were located at river mouths and/or in lagoon areas and were connected with inland areas by rivers or artificial canals. For this reason, port structures (piers and warehouses) were set at some distance from the sea, as in Rome (Emporium of Testaccio along the Tiber), in Pisa-San Rossore and in the Po valley.00In Late Antiquity many of the Roman ports gradually fell into disuse while others continued until the 7th century. In Ravenna, however, a new port settlement, known as Civitas Classis, came into being in the 5th century, after the creation of the suburb of Portus Romae. In the Early Middle Ages, the northern-Adriatic coast became very important in connection with trade with Constantinople. New settlements equipped with timber port structures were created at Comacchio, Cittanova and in the Venetian lagoon. If maritime trade in the Tyrrhenian Sea decreased (although to a lesser extent in Byzantine towns like Naples), river-borne traade was still dynamic and often managed by abbeys and other ecclesiastical institutions. According to historical sources, many river wharves were located along the Po while San Vincenzo abbey managed the Volturno river. The Carolingian river wharves of San Vincenzo were composed of timber, stone and, according to the Roman tradition, concrete structures. A slow recovery of maritime trades is already evident in the Carolingian Age.
Notes:
Includes bibliography.
Local Notes:
Acquired for the Penn Libraries with assistance from the George Clapp Vaillant Book Fund.
ISBN:
9781789692204
1789692202
OCLC:
1099997094
Publisher Number:
99982988282

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