Scholars of Roman archaeology, epigraphy, and history are increasingly discussing urban maintenance and waste disposal, but the impact of these phenomena on the archaeological record remains largely understudied. The presence of waste disposal systems in Roman towns entails that a large part of what was discarded was periodically removed from the urban area. This in turn implies that whole historical periods may be underrepresented by the finds recovered within the city. This aspect can be apprehended through the post-excavation analysis of the House of Titus Macer in Aquileia, whose mid-imperial phase, during which the domus was inhabited and regularly maintained, is poorly represented. What has been observed suggests that great caution mu...
In this study, gentrification concepts have been used as a heuristic device to analyse urban socio-e...
Despite its world renown as an archaeological site, the past twelve years of archaeological excavati...
An Urban Geography of the Roman World, 100 B.C. to A.D. 300 Although there have been numerous studie...
In this article, the authors investigate the effectiveness of glass and metal recycling in Roman tow...
This paper examines towns and the use of public building space in Britain in late Roman times (aroun...
This thesis examines the amphora assemblages from a series of excavated Late Antique waste deposits ...
The disuse and abandonment of once luxurious houses followed by the widespread emergence of squalid ...
Archaeological deposits of the late fourth and early fifth centuries in towns can be fragile, fragme...
The horror of the puticuli, the mass burial pits, and their traditional association with the poor, h...
The horror of the puticuli, the mass burial pits, and their traditional association with the poor, h...
In this book, Adam Rogers examines the late Roman phases of towns in Britain. Critically analysing t...
The last period at the Aquincum Civil Town has long been a matter of dispute. Earlier researchers pr...
While the remains of the well‐preserved and excavated towns of Pompeii, Ostia and Herculaneum provid...
The number and complexities of the legal texts from the Roman world far surpass anything we have fro...
Scholarship on late antique cities has largely conceptualized them as singular entities, either deca...
In this study, gentrification concepts have been used as a heuristic device to analyse urban socio-e...
Despite its world renown as an archaeological site, the past twelve years of archaeological excavati...
An Urban Geography of the Roman World, 100 B.C. to A.D. 300 Although there have been numerous studie...
In this article, the authors investigate the effectiveness of glass and metal recycling in Roman tow...
This paper examines towns and the use of public building space in Britain in late Roman times (aroun...
This thesis examines the amphora assemblages from a series of excavated Late Antique waste deposits ...
The disuse and abandonment of once luxurious houses followed by the widespread emergence of squalid ...
Archaeological deposits of the late fourth and early fifth centuries in towns can be fragile, fragme...
The horror of the puticuli, the mass burial pits, and their traditional association with the poor, h...
The horror of the puticuli, the mass burial pits, and their traditional association with the poor, h...
In this book, Adam Rogers examines the late Roman phases of towns in Britain. Critically analysing t...
The last period at the Aquincum Civil Town has long been a matter of dispute. Earlier researchers pr...
While the remains of the well‐preserved and excavated towns of Pompeii, Ostia and Herculaneum provid...
The number and complexities of the legal texts from the Roman world far surpass anything we have fro...
Scholarship on late antique cities has largely conceptualized them as singular entities, either deca...
In this study, gentrification concepts have been used as a heuristic device to analyse urban socio-e...
Despite its world renown as an archaeological site, the past twelve years of archaeological excavati...
An Urban Geography of the Roman World, 100 B.C. to A.D. 300 Although there have been numerous studie...