The use of trophies on Roman bridges is examined in the light of contemporary literary celebrations of bridge- and road-building in the heroic terms of military victory, with the Roman emperor as the conqueror and Nature herself as the defeated foe. The focus of the discussion is Trajan's bridge over the Danube and Domitian's bridge over the Volturnus River, but other examples of triumphal imagery on bridges are cited from Augustus to Septimius Severus.Kleiner Fred S. The Trophy on the Bridge and the Roman Triumph over Nature. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 60, 1991. pp. 182-192
For Trajan’s bridge it could be said, and with good reason, that when it was built it represented on...
Triumphal arch located in Rome. The Arch of Constantine was built to commemorate Constantine I's vic...
Abstract. This study aims to present an historical perspective on utilitarian architecture in late a...
The use of trophies on Roman bridges is examined in the light of contemporary literary celebrations ...
The Greek and Roman civilizations were established on the basis of a single religious and political ...
This article examines the narrative, epigraphic and legal textual sources to assess the social aspec...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the cultural significance of trees in Rome and its environs, wi...
RESUMEN: La prolongada dominación de Roma sobre numerosos pueblos se apoyó en la difusión de símbolo...
Greek-style artistic and sporting competitions (agōnes) reached a peak, in terms of numbers and geog...
The Tropaeum Traiani was one of two trophy monuments known to be erected on foreign soil since the t...
This article was first published in The Art Bulletin, LXXXV: 2, 2003, published by the College Art A...
Roman society used iconography to convey messages which responded to an ideology and to the legitima...
Trajan's Bridge, built by Romans over the Danube River in the first years of the II century, was the...
War is competition on the grandest scale, and victory is the end product of competition. The winning...
In 1515, Emperor Maximilian I of the Holy Roman Empire, set forth to create a triumphal arch unlike ...
For Trajan’s bridge it could be said, and with good reason, that when it was built it represented on...
Triumphal arch located in Rome. The Arch of Constantine was built to commemorate Constantine I's vic...
Abstract. This study aims to present an historical perspective on utilitarian architecture in late a...
The use of trophies on Roman bridges is examined in the light of contemporary literary celebrations ...
The Greek and Roman civilizations were established on the basis of a single religious and political ...
This article examines the narrative, epigraphic and legal textual sources to assess the social aspec...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the cultural significance of trees in Rome and its environs, wi...
RESUMEN: La prolongada dominación de Roma sobre numerosos pueblos se apoyó en la difusión de símbolo...
Greek-style artistic and sporting competitions (agōnes) reached a peak, in terms of numbers and geog...
The Tropaeum Traiani was one of two trophy monuments known to be erected on foreign soil since the t...
This article was first published in The Art Bulletin, LXXXV: 2, 2003, published by the College Art A...
Roman society used iconography to convey messages which responded to an ideology and to the legitima...
Trajan's Bridge, built by Romans over the Danube River in the first years of the II century, was the...
War is competition on the grandest scale, and victory is the end product of competition. The winning...
In 1515, Emperor Maximilian I of the Holy Roman Empire, set forth to create a triumphal arch unlike ...
For Trajan’s bridge it could be said, and with good reason, that when it was built it represented on...
Triumphal arch located in Rome. The Arch of Constantine was built to commemorate Constantine I's vic...
Abstract. This study aims to present an historical perspective on utilitarian architecture in late a...