The elevation of Ravenna as a new Imperial capital, at the beginning of the 5th century, determined a redefinition of the housing space and the plant of new buildings destined to the Court and to the display of the Imperial power. In this urbanistic renewal materials and structures of the earlier Roman city have been consistently reemployed. Reuse of tiles and architectural material was considerable, due to economic reasons and the necessity for immediate furnishing of necessary structures for the Imperial burocracy. The re-employment of ancient materials was so vast that most of the buildings of the previous Roman city have been destroyed – even the big important monuments. Temples, the area of the Forum, buildings for the administration a...
The transformation dynamics of the ancient towns are completely changing the urban landscape of the ...
The archaeological excavations carried out in 1993-1994 in Ravenna, via d’Azeglio, unearthed a large...
Archaeological research exploring the transformation of Rome between the so-called 'Constantinian Re...
The elevation of Ravenna as a new Imperial capital, at the beginning of the 5th century, determined ...
The construction of the new imperial see of Ravenna was quite completely made with reused materials,...
The architectural landscape of present-day Rome is a physical history lesson in the use of spolia; a...
Dieser Artikel bietet eine Übersicht über den Einsatz von Spolien in Rom zwischen dem 4. und dem 13...
none1noRavenna was one of the most important cities of the Mediterranean in Late Antiquity. The city...
Spolia, an archaic term rarely used outside of the study of Roman and Medieval antiquities, describe...
During the eleventh and twelfth centuries the Church began a process of renovation (renovatio) and ...
V zaključni seminarski nalogi bom podrobneje predstavila prakso ponovne uporabe spolij v antičnem Ri...
The remains of the early Byzantine churches of west Asia Minor are real repositories of reused Clas...
Ravenna ranked among the most significant administrative, political and religious centres of late an...
Between the 4th and 8th centuries disappear around a third of Italian urban centers of Roman traditi...
“Spolia” is a term applied to earlier architectural elements re-used in new buildings. This practice...
The transformation dynamics of the ancient towns are completely changing the urban landscape of the ...
The archaeological excavations carried out in 1993-1994 in Ravenna, via d’Azeglio, unearthed a large...
Archaeological research exploring the transformation of Rome between the so-called 'Constantinian Re...
The elevation of Ravenna as a new Imperial capital, at the beginning of the 5th century, determined ...
The construction of the new imperial see of Ravenna was quite completely made with reused materials,...
The architectural landscape of present-day Rome is a physical history lesson in the use of spolia; a...
Dieser Artikel bietet eine Übersicht über den Einsatz von Spolien in Rom zwischen dem 4. und dem 13...
none1noRavenna was one of the most important cities of the Mediterranean in Late Antiquity. The city...
Spolia, an archaic term rarely used outside of the study of Roman and Medieval antiquities, describe...
During the eleventh and twelfth centuries the Church began a process of renovation (renovatio) and ...
V zaključni seminarski nalogi bom podrobneje predstavila prakso ponovne uporabe spolij v antičnem Ri...
The remains of the early Byzantine churches of west Asia Minor are real repositories of reused Clas...
Ravenna ranked among the most significant administrative, political and religious centres of late an...
Between the 4th and 8th centuries disappear around a third of Italian urban centers of Roman traditi...
“Spolia” is a term applied to earlier architectural elements re-used in new buildings. This practice...
The transformation dynamics of the ancient towns are completely changing the urban landscape of the ...
The archaeological excavations carried out in 1993-1994 in Ravenna, via d’Azeglio, unearthed a large...
Archaeological research exploring the transformation of Rome between the so-called 'Constantinian Re...