From the end of the 1st century BC onwards, a progressive monumentalization (a greater development of public architecture) can be observed in Roman cities. In the Alpine centres, whose situation in a high mountainous landscape was also relatively new for Romans, this phenomenon occurs at an even faster and stronger rate. These territories became points of connection and exchange between Italy and the Northern provinces of the Roman Empire. Political choices are reflected in the urban planning and are strongly influenced by the geographical and morphological context. It becomes apparent that the dynamics of the settlement development in areas strongly characterized by mountainous landscape led to specific planning choices. Although Roman cit...
This paper attempts to analyse the land transport in Roman times in mountainous areas, taking into a...
This paper presents the first results of a landscape archaeological project carried out in the terri...
This case study considers the trajectory of Ancient Rome’s urban development in its riverine environ...
Actes de la journée d'étude des 6-7-8 octobre 2006International audienceSuetonius enumerates among C...
"The focus of Regional Urban Systems in the Roman World is on urban hierarchies and interactions in ...
. AT ITS GREATEST EXTENT, THE ROMAN EMPIRE REPRESENTED ONE OF THE largest continuous areas of land t...
From a technical perspective, the body of late Roman documents known collectively as the Corpus Agri...
This book follows a new path of describing the Alps from the years 500 to 800. Instead of running th...
The built, urban context of the city served as the dominant mechanism by which Rome’s hegemony expan...
<p>The results of a long-lasting geomorphological survey carried out in Rome are summarized. A metho...
An Urban Geography of the Roman World, 100 B.C. to A.D. 300 Although there have been numerous studie...
The thesis deliberates the existence of civilian structures built with Roman construction techniques...
This thesis examines the building projects undertaken under the auspices of the emperors within the ...
The first two centuries AD are conventionally thought of as the "golden age" of the Roman Empire, ye...
The quality of 'monumentality' is attributed to the buildings of few historical epochs or cultures m...
This paper attempts to analyse the land transport in Roman times in mountainous areas, taking into a...
This paper presents the first results of a landscape archaeological project carried out in the terri...
This case study considers the trajectory of Ancient Rome’s urban development in its riverine environ...
Actes de la journée d'étude des 6-7-8 octobre 2006International audienceSuetonius enumerates among C...
"The focus of Regional Urban Systems in the Roman World is on urban hierarchies and interactions in ...
. AT ITS GREATEST EXTENT, THE ROMAN EMPIRE REPRESENTED ONE OF THE largest continuous areas of land t...
From a technical perspective, the body of late Roman documents known collectively as the Corpus Agri...
This book follows a new path of describing the Alps from the years 500 to 800. Instead of running th...
The built, urban context of the city served as the dominant mechanism by which Rome’s hegemony expan...
<p>The results of a long-lasting geomorphological survey carried out in Rome are summarized. A metho...
An Urban Geography of the Roman World, 100 B.C. to A.D. 300 Although there have been numerous studie...
The thesis deliberates the existence of civilian structures built with Roman construction techniques...
This thesis examines the building projects undertaken under the auspices of the emperors within the ...
The first two centuries AD are conventionally thought of as the "golden age" of the Roman Empire, ye...
The quality of 'monumentality' is attributed to the buildings of few historical epochs or cultures m...
This paper attempts to analyse the land transport in Roman times in mountainous areas, taking into a...
This paper presents the first results of a landscape archaeological project carried out in the terri...
This case study considers the trajectory of Ancient Rome’s urban development in its riverine environ...