This study investigates the origins and growth of civic identity at Rome during the city’s initial phases in the mid-seventh to the mid-fourth century BC. Although the development of Roman identity in the face of Rome’s wider Mediterranean expansion in the third and second centuries has received much scholarly attention, the early stages of the development – the foundations of this identity - have been largely neglected. From the mid-seventh to the early-fifth century, the community at Rome seems to have gained an increasingly centralised focus. Discrete hilltop hut settlements give way to a more unified community centred around a newly created neutral area – the Forum Romanum. This new centralised focus may be indicative of the developme...
Archaeological research exploring the transformation of Rome between the so-called 'Constantinian Re...
The presentation of the self in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages has traditionally been defi...
This volume is the result of a conference held at the University of Manchester in July 2010, which f...
In the period from the fourth to the sixth centuries the most interesting process is twofold: while ...
The built, urban context of the city served as the dominant mechanism by which Rome’s hegemony expan...
Questions of ethnic and cultural identities are central to the contemporary understanding of the Rom...
This chapter will consider processes of transformation in the interior of north-western Sicily durin...
In the century following 150 BCE, the Romans developed a coherent vision of empire and a more system...
This book analyses the physical, social, and cultural history of Rome in late antiquity. Between AD ...
The subject of the thesis is that of the transformation of the Roman empire in the third and fourth ...
Vicinitas in Urbe: Neighborliness and Urban Community in Mid-RepublicanRome is an analysis of the so...
In his fragmentary De Re Publica, written between 54 and 51 BC, Cicero (d. 43 BC) explains that citi...
During the Ancient Greek and Roman eras, participation in political communities at the local level, ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013In a purely territorial sense, a Roman empire, defined...
Questions of ethnic and cultural identities are central to the contemporary understanding of the Rom...
Archaeological research exploring the transformation of Rome between the so-called 'Constantinian Re...
The presentation of the self in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages has traditionally been defi...
This volume is the result of a conference held at the University of Manchester in July 2010, which f...
In the period from the fourth to the sixth centuries the most interesting process is twofold: while ...
The built, urban context of the city served as the dominant mechanism by which Rome’s hegemony expan...
Questions of ethnic and cultural identities are central to the contemporary understanding of the Rom...
This chapter will consider processes of transformation in the interior of north-western Sicily durin...
In the century following 150 BCE, the Romans developed a coherent vision of empire and a more system...
This book analyses the physical, social, and cultural history of Rome in late antiquity. Between AD ...
The subject of the thesis is that of the transformation of the Roman empire in the third and fourth ...
Vicinitas in Urbe: Neighborliness and Urban Community in Mid-RepublicanRome is an analysis of the so...
In his fragmentary De Re Publica, written between 54 and 51 BC, Cicero (d. 43 BC) explains that citi...
During the Ancient Greek and Roman eras, participation in political communities at the local level, ...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013In a purely territorial sense, a Roman empire, defined...
Questions of ethnic and cultural identities are central to the contemporary understanding of the Rom...
Archaeological research exploring the transformation of Rome between the so-called 'Constantinian Re...
The presentation of the self in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages has traditionally been defi...
This volume is the result of a conference held at the University of Manchester in July 2010, which f...