
Destinations In Mind Explores How Objects Depicting Distant Sites Helped Romans Understand Their Vast Empire. At A Time When Many Cities Were Written About But Only A Few Were Represented In Art, Four Distinct Sets Of Artifacts Circulated New Information. Engraved Silver Cups List All The Stops From Spanish Cádiz To Rome, While Resembling The Milestones That Helped Travelers Track Their Progress. Vivid Glass Cups Represent Famous Charioteers And Gladiators Competing In Circuses And Amphitheaters, And Offered Virtual Experiences Of Spectacles That Were New To Many Regions. Bronze Bowls Commemorate Forts Along Hadrian's Wall With Colorful Enameling Typical Of Celtic Craftsmanship. Glass Bottles Display Labeled Cityscapes Of Baiae, A Notorious Resort, And Puteoli, A Busy Port, Both In The Bay Of Naples. These Artifacts And Their Journeys Reveal An Empire Divided Not Into Center And Periphery, But Connected By Roads That Did Not All Lead To Rome. They Bear Witness To A Shared Visual Culture That Was Not Divided Into High And Low Art, But United By Extraordinary Craftsmanship. New Aspects Of Globalization Are Apparent In The Multi-lingual Placenames That The Vessels Bear, In The Transformed Places That They Visualize, And In The Enriched Understanding Of The Empire's Landmarks That They Impart. With In-depth Case Studies, The Book Argues That The Best Way To Comprehend The Roman Empire Is To Look Closely At Objects Depicting Its Fascinating Places--
This book investigates how specific portable objects depicting distant sites functioned as essential tools for Romans to conceptualize and navigate the geography of their vast empire. Kimberly Cassibry, an expert in Roman art and archaeology, utilizes a rigorous analysis of four distinct artifact sets to challenge traditional center-periphery models of imperial power. She argues that these objects—ranging from silver cups to glass bottles—served as visual conduits that connected disparate regions through a shared, sophisticated material culture.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of Roman material culture and the mechanics of imperial connectivity. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a detailed and nuanced look at how everyday objects shaped the Roman worldview.
Page Count:
278
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
ISBN-10:
0190921900
ISBN-13:
9780190921903
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