Debates on the nature of the Roman city and its relation to the countryside have lately moved towards questioning the validity of the very category of ‘the city’, both analytically and in terms of past reality. While archaeology has long been mobilized within these debates, this paper argues for the unexplored potential of a range of specialist pockets of qualitative knowledge about specific artefact classes. Terra sigillata, the red-gloss imperial tableware, is a case in point. By adopting a bird’s eye view on sigillata production, distribution, and consumption across a geographical and chronological range, this paper develops a new metaphor for the role of Roman cities: as switching devices in the building of networks. By describi...
During the period of the Roman Imperial Period the area north of the Roman limes, Germania Magna, wa...
'Tabernae' were ubiquitous in all Roman cities, lining the busiest streets and dominating their most...
This thesis incorporates a reassessment of Roman pottery from non-Roman contexts in southern Scotlan...
This article discusses the problems surrounding the matching of South Gaulish terra sigillata shapes...
This paper examines towns and the use of public building space in Britain in late Roman times (aroun...
An Urban Geography of the Roman World, 100 B.C. to A.D. 300 Although there have been numerous studie...
At its greatest extent, the Roman empire represented one of the largest continuous areas of land to ...
Although there have been numerous studies of individual cities or groups of cities, there has never ...
By detailed examination of the location of different types of building within a range of urban sites...
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd, 2016. How closely integrated were the commercial centres of ...
Rome between AD 300-600 was a city in transition, which saw major changes in its demographic and eco...
This thesis examines the amphora assemblages from a series of excavated Late Antique waste deposits ...
This study comprises the analysis of 8.11 tonnes of Roman tile from York and its immediate hinterlan...
From a technical perspective, the body of late Roman documents known collectively as the Corpus Agri...
The built, urban context of the city served as the dominant mechanism by which Rome’s hegemony expan...
During the period of the Roman Imperial Period the area north of the Roman limes, Germania Magna, wa...
'Tabernae' were ubiquitous in all Roman cities, lining the busiest streets and dominating their most...
This thesis incorporates a reassessment of Roman pottery from non-Roman contexts in southern Scotlan...
This article discusses the problems surrounding the matching of South Gaulish terra sigillata shapes...
This paper examines towns and the use of public building space in Britain in late Roman times (aroun...
An Urban Geography of the Roman World, 100 B.C. to A.D. 300 Although there have been numerous studie...
At its greatest extent, the Roman empire represented one of the largest continuous areas of land to ...
Although there have been numerous studies of individual cities or groups of cities, there has never ...
By detailed examination of the location of different types of building within a range of urban sites...
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd, 2016. How closely integrated were the commercial centres of ...
Rome between AD 300-600 was a city in transition, which saw major changes in its demographic and eco...
This thesis examines the amphora assemblages from a series of excavated Late Antique waste deposits ...
This study comprises the analysis of 8.11 tonnes of Roman tile from York and its immediate hinterlan...
From a technical perspective, the body of late Roman documents known collectively as the Corpus Agri...
The built, urban context of the city served as the dominant mechanism by which Rome’s hegemony expan...
During the period of the Roman Imperial Period the area north of the Roman limes, Germania Magna, wa...
'Tabernae' were ubiquitous in all Roman cities, lining the busiest streets and dominating their most...
This thesis incorporates a reassessment of Roman pottery from non-Roman contexts in southern Scotlan...