
This Volume Addresses The Treatment And Perception Of Historic Buildings In Imperial Rome, Examining The Ways In Which Public Monuments Were Restored In Order To Develop An Understanding Of The Roman Concept Of Built Heritage. It Considers Examples From The First Century Bc To The Second Century Ad, Focusing Primarily On The Six Decades Between The Great Fire Of Ad 64 And The Ad 120s, Which Constituted A Period Of Dramatic Urban Transformation And Architectural Innovation In Rome. Through A Detailed Analysis Of The Ways In Which The Design, Materiality, And Appearance Of Buildings - Including The Temple Of Jupiter Capitolinus And Hut Of Romulus - Developed With Successive Restorations, The Case Is Made For The Existence Of A Consistent Approach To The Treatment Of Historic Buildings In This Period. This Study Also Explores How Changes To Particular Monuments And To The Urban Fabric As A Whole Were Received By The People Who Experienced Them First-hand, Uncovering Attitudes To Built Heritage In Roman Society More Widely. By Examining Descriptions Of Destruction And Restoration In Literature Of The First And Second Centuries Ad, Including The Works Of Seneca The Younger, Pliny The Elder, Martial, Tacitus, And Plutarch, It Forms A Picture Of The Conflicting Ways In Which Rome's Inhabitants Responded To The Redevelopment Of Their City. The Results Provide An Alternative Way Of Explaining Key Interventions In Rome's Built Environment And Challenge The Idea That Heritage Is A Purely Modern Phenomenon. Introduction: Starting From An Unexpected Premise -- Definitions And Parameters -- Restoration: Why, Who, How -- The Restorations Of The Temple Of Jupiter Capitolinus -- The Casa Romuli Anomaly -- Ancient Responses To Restoration -- Roman Thoughts On The Rebuilding Of Rome -- Conclusion: Where Next: A Tentative Idea? Christopher Siwicki. Includes Bibliographical References (pages [245]-285) And Indexes.
This volume investigates whether the Roman Empire possessed a coherent conceptual framework for the preservation and restoration of historic buildings. Christopher Siwicki, a scholar of Roman architecture, utilizes archaeological evidence and contemporary literary sources to argue that the Romans engaged in a consistent, deliberate approach to built heritage long before the modern era. By analyzing the physical evolution of iconic structures, the author challenges the assumption that heritage management is a strictly contemporary invention.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of Roman urbanism and the history of preservation. Readers frequently note the academic rigor and the depth of the author's synthesis of archaeological data with classical literature.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0191883026
ISBN-13:
9780191883026
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