Rome, Ostia, Pompeii Movement and Space

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Edition: Reprint
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2018-06-26
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

Rome, Ostia, Pompeii: Movement and Space demonstrates how studies of the Roman city are shifting focus from static architecture to activities and motion within urban spaces. This volume provides detailed case studies from the three best-known cities from Roman Italy, revealing how movement contributes to our understanding of the ways different elements of society interacted in space, and how the movement of people and materials shaped urban development.

The chapters in this book examine the impressions left by the movement of people and vehicles as indentations in the archaeological and historical record, and as impressions upon the Roman urban consciousness. Through a broad range of historical issues, this volume studies movement as it is found at the city gate, in public squares and on the street, and as it is represented in texts. Its broad objective is to make movement meaningful for understanding the economic, cultural, political, religious, and infrastructural behaviours that produced different types and rhythms of interaction in the Roman city.

This volume's interdisciplinary approach will inform the understanding of the city in classics, ancient history, archaeology and architectural history, as well as cultural studies, town planning, urban geography, and sociology.

Author Biography


Ray Laurence, Professor of Roman History and Archaeology, University of Kent,David J. Newsome, Institute of Archaeology and Antiquity, University of Birmingham

Ray Laurence is Professor of Roman History and Archaeology at the University of Kent. In 2006 he won the 'Longman-History Today New Generation Prize for book most likely to inspire the young to study history' for his volume Pompeii The Living City.


David J. Newsome was awarded his PhD in 2010 from the University of Birmingham. He won the BABESCH-Byvanck Award in 2008 for his innovative research on traffic and urban change at Pompeii. Both have published widely on the Roman city.

Table of Contents


Dedication
Table of contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Notes on Contributors
Introduction
Making Movement Meaningful, David J. Newsome
Part I: Articulating Movement and Space
1. Movement and the Linguistic Turn: Reading Varro s de Lingua Latina, Diana Spencer
2. Literature and the Spatial Turn: Movement and Space in Martial s Epigrams, Ray Laurence
3. Measuring spatial visibility, adjacency, permeability and degrees of street life in Pompeii, Akkelies van Nes
4. Towards a Multisensory Experience of Movement in the City of Rome, Eleanor Betts
Part II: Movement in the Roman city: infrastructure and organisation
5. The Power of Nuisances on the Roman Street, Jeremy Hartnett
6. Pes dexter: Superstition and the state in the shaping of shop-fronts and street activity in the Roman world, Steven Ellis
7. Cart Traffic Flow in Pompeii and Rome, Alan Kaiser
8. Where to Park? Carts, Stables and the Economics of Transport in Pompeii, Eric E. Poehler
9. The Spatial Organisation of the Movement Economy: The Analysis of Ostia s scholae, Hanna Stoger
Part III: Movement and the Metropolis
10. The Street Life of Ancient Rome, Claire Holleran
11. The City in Motion: Walking for transport and leisure in the city of Rome, Elizabeth Macaulay-Lewis
12. Movement and Fora in Rome (the Late Republic to the first century CE), David J. Newsome
13. Movement, gaming and the use of space in the forum, Francesco Trifilo
14. Construction Traffic in Imperial Rome: Building the Arch of Septimius Severus, Diane Favro
15. Movement and urban development at two city gates in Rome: the Porta Esquilina and Porta Tiburtina, Simon Malmberg and Hans Bjur
Endpiece
From Movement to Mobility: Future Directions, Ray Laurence
Bibliography

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