Thesis (Master's)--University of Washington, 2017-12This thesis examines the urban development of the Roman urbs during the first century BCE. The cities of southern Umbria provide a case study of a wider phenomenon occurring throughout Italy following the municipalization of the peninsula after the Social War. Using archaeology and contemporary cultural analysis, I examine the development of their fora, theaters, and amphitheaters through the century. These public spaces and buildings demonstrate the concept of recirculation that occurs when architectural design ideas flow between Italian cities and Rome, informing one another until refined into a standard form. The canonical form of these Roman buildings, while set in Rome, are indebt...
An Urban Geography of the Roman World, 100 B.C. to A.D. 300 Although there have been numerous studie...
From the end of the third century BC, Rome became Hellenized at an accelerated pace. The conjunction...
Several transitions mark Late Antiquity as a departure from the Roman world’s political, religious, ...
This thesis explores Rome’s built environment from its early republican foundation to the period of ...
This thesis compares Umbria before and after the Roman conquest in order to assess the impact of the...
This thesis serves as a diachronic study of the development of walls and roads in ancient Umbria. By...
The built, urban context of the city served as the dominant mechanism by which Rome’s hegemony expan...
This thesis takes an interdisciplinary, multi-theoretical approach to investigate the physical growt...
Although there have been numerous studies of individual cities or groups of cities, there has never ...
This dissertation investigates how Rome organized and paid for the considerable amount of labor that...
This dissertation investigates how Rome organized and paid for the considerable amount of labor that...
The thesis concerns the organisation and typology of building construction in Rome during the period...
The subject of the thesis is that of the transformation of the Roman empire in the third and fourth ...
This thesis examines the reception of the Greco-Roman city in modern Italian planning theory, both a...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines the private patronage of public buildin...
An Urban Geography of the Roman World, 100 B.C. to A.D. 300 Although there have been numerous studie...
From the end of the third century BC, Rome became Hellenized at an accelerated pace. The conjunction...
Several transitions mark Late Antiquity as a departure from the Roman world’s political, religious, ...
This thesis explores Rome’s built environment from its early republican foundation to the period of ...
This thesis compares Umbria before and after the Roman conquest in order to assess the impact of the...
This thesis serves as a diachronic study of the development of walls and roads in ancient Umbria. By...
The built, urban context of the city served as the dominant mechanism by which Rome’s hegemony expan...
This thesis takes an interdisciplinary, multi-theoretical approach to investigate the physical growt...
Although there have been numerous studies of individual cities or groups of cities, there has never ...
This dissertation investigates how Rome organized and paid for the considerable amount of labor that...
This dissertation investigates how Rome organized and paid for the considerable amount of labor that...
The thesis concerns the organisation and typology of building construction in Rome during the period...
The subject of the thesis is that of the transformation of the Roman empire in the third and fourth ...
This thesis examines the reception of the Greco-Roman city in modern Italian planning theory, both a...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines the private patronage of public buildin...
An Urban Geography of the Roman World, 100 B.C. to A.D. 300 Although there have been numerous studie...
From the end of the third century BC, Rome became Hellenized at an accelerated pace. The conjunction...
Several transitions mark Late Antiquity as a departure from the Roman world’s political, religious, ...