The Thermae of Diocletian are Rome’s largest stone repository of ancient architectural sculptures. The museum management seeks to offer a wider range of exhibits and to establish a section on Roman architecture. The majority of the building elements from the repository shall be put on display in this new section. For this purpose, all relevant architectural fragments shall be catalogued and analysed, using digital photography, in order to attain an exact allocation to groups
During the campaign of 2015, the conservation works at the Roman baths – which started in 2014 – wer...
The project focuses on a new documentation of formerly excavated remains at the site, which yet lack...
A first campaign of a new project on the Capitoline Hill took place between July and September 2018 ...
The Thermae of Diocletian are Rome’s largest stone repository of ancient architectural sculptures. T...
A collection of drawings – the so called Gerhard’scher Apparat – is preserved in the archive of the ...
The Rome Department of the German Archaeological Institute was asked by the Soprintendenza Archeolog...
Working together with the Soprintendenza of Rome on the Campus Martius it has been possible to recon...
This project aims to investigate an hitherto unknown part of roman Italy, ancient Irpinia, based on ...
Detailed architectural and archaeological analysis of four major sections of the Imperial residences...
The first known basilica in the area was the Basilica Sempronia erected in 170 BC by the censor Titu...
In 2016, the department Rome of the German Archaeological Institute startet the project „New researc...
Based on the evidence of about 200 small villages populated from Augustan times to the end of the 3r...
According to Livius’s tradition (40, 51, 4–5), the original building was officially consecrated by t...
Starting point of the project in collaboration with the Soprintendeza of Capua and Pozzuoli is speci...
A new documentation done with a 3D-laser-scanner was used to do research on the building technique a...
During the campaign of 2015, the conservation works at the Roman baths – which started in 2014 – wer...
The project focuses on a new documentation of formerly excavated remains at the site, which yet lack...
A first campaign of a new project on the Capitoline Hill took place between July and September 2018 ...
The Thermae of Diocletian are Rome’s largest stone repository of ancient architectural sculptures. T...
A collection of drawings – the so called Gerhard’scher Apparat – is preserved in the archive of the ...
The Rome Department of the German Archaeological Institute was asked by the Soprintendenza Archeolog...
Working together with the Soprintendenza of Rome on the Campus Martius it has been possible to recon...
This project aims to investigate an hitherto unknown part of roman Italy, ancient Irpinia, based on ...
Detailed architectural and archaeological analysis of four major sections of the Imperial residences...
The first known basilica in the area was the Basilica Sempronia erected in 170 BC by the censor Titu...
In 2016, the department Rome of the German Archaeological Institute startet the project „New researc...
Based on the evidence of about 200 small villages populated from Augustan times to the end of the 3r...
According to Livius’s tradition (40, 51, 4–5), the original building was officially consecrated by t...
Starting point of the project in collaboration with the Soprintendeza of Capua and Pozzuoli is speci...
A new documentation done with a 3D-laser-scanner was used to do research on the building technique a...
During the campaign of 2015, the conservation works at the Roman baths – which started in 2014 – wer...
The project focuses on a new documentation of formerly excavated remains at the site, which yet lack...
A first campaign of a new project on the Capitoline Hill took place between July and September 2018 ...