Paris, 1928, Cahiers de la quinzaine chez l'Artisan du Livre, treizième cahier de la 18 ° série, e-o n°504, 136 p, br, 13 x 19 cm, titre typo noir
Reference : 1342
Bel exemplaire
Librairie Art et Arts
Mme Annie Eytier
15, rue Maubec - BP 4
33037 BORDEAUX cedex Bordeaux
France
09 61 45 05 25
Envoi des ouvrages par port recommandé, après réception de leur règlement, sur facture proforma incluant les frais de port. Assurance à la charge du client. Cartes bancaires acceptées. Pour l'étranger, règlement en euro demandé.
, Brepols, 2025 Hardback, 220 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:20 b/w, 75 col., 13 tables b/w., 4 maps b/w, 6 maps color, Language: English. *new ISBN 9782503612447.
Summary Roman Imperial denarii from the first-third centuries AD are, almost without exception, the most common ancient coinage to be found in Central, Northern, and Eastern Europe beyond the Roman limes. Perhaps surprisingly, however, a significant percentage of these coins are in fact counterfeit, comprised largely of denarii subaerati (plated denarii, fourrées) and denarii flati (base-metal cast copies). Moreover, these fake coins were not only manufactured by Romans themselves, but also by barbarian peoples in Eastern Europe, far from the Roman limes, in what should be considered a mass-scale phenomena. This volume draws together archaeological, numismatic, and historical research in order to offer a new assessment of the production and use of counterfeit Roman Imperial denarii both within the European provinces of the Roman Empire and in European Barbaricum. Drawing on the results of the research project Barbarian Fakers. Manufacturing and Use of Counterfeit Roman Imperial Denarii in East-Central Europe in Antiquity, from the University of Warsaw, the papers gathered here explore the transfer of ideas, technology, and finished products that led to the transfer of counterfeit coinage across the Empire, and shed light on how, why, and when such coins were created and used. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations List of Abbreviations Introduction Arkadiusz Dymowski and Kyrylo Myzgin 1. Counterfeit Coin Moulds from Britannia Inferior: A Summary and Brief Discussion Richard Brickstock 2. The Production of Struck and Cast Denarii in Châteaubleau (France) during the Second Half of the Third Century AD Fabien Pilon 3. Counterfeit Denarii North of Hadrian's Wall: Roman or 'Barbarian'? Fraser Hunter 4. Non-official Roman Denarii in Thuringia: The Finds from the Germanic Settlement of Frienstedt Mario Schlapke 5. The ONAV Group of Barbarian Imitations and Copies of Roman Imperial Coins: Manufacturing of denarii subaerati in Eastern Europe in Antiquity Arkadiusz Dymowski 6. Finds of Counterfeit Roman Denarii at Selected Roman Period Settlement Sites in Western Lesser Poland: The State of Research and Prospects Jaros?aw Bodzek, Szymon Jellonek, and Barbara Zaj?c 7. Cast Copies of Roman Imperial Denarii from Belarus Vital' Sidarovich 8. Technological Variety of Methods Used in the Production of Cast Copies of Roman Denarii on the Territory of the Chernyakhiv Culture between the Middle Dniester and Southern Bug Oleksandr Nadvirniak and Oleh Pohorilets 9. Elemental Composition of Cast Copies of Denarii and Related Production Waste from Ukraine Determined Using PIXE and XRF Methods Oleksandr Buhay, Kyrylo Myzgin, Oleksandr Nadvirniak, and Oleh Pohorilets 10. Denarii flati Kyrylo Myzgin 11. Cast Counterfeit Coins or pecunia flata? Ancient Latin Sources and the Term denarii flati Bartosz Awianowicz
, Brepols, 2019 Paperback, xviii + 232 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:229 col., 1 tables b/w., Language: English. ISBN 9782503576336.
Summary This volume provides a unique survey of locally produced funerary representations from across regions of ancient Syria, exploring material ranging from reliefs and statues in the round, to busts, mosaics, and paintings in order to offer a new and holistic approach to our understanding of ancient funerary portraiture. Up to now, relatively little attention has been paid to the way in which local and regional production of material in this area formed part of a broader pattern of sculptural and iconographical development across the Roman Near East. By drawing on material from an area encompassing modern Lebanon, Jordan, Syria, and Turkey, as well as Egypt and Achaia, the contributions in this book make it possible for the first time to take a wider perspective on the importance of funerary portraiture within Greater Roman Syria, and in doing so, to identify influences, connections, and iconographical analogies present throughout the region, as well as local differences, larger-scale boundaries, and ruptures in traditions that occurred across time and place. TABLE OF CONTENTS Michael Blömer & Rubina Raja, Funerary Portraits in Roman Greater Syria - Time for a Reappreciation Michael Blömer & Rubina Raja, Shifting the Paradigms: Towards a New Agenda in the Study of the Funerary Portraiture of Greater Roman Syria Andrea U. De Giorgi, 'Til Death Do Us Part: Commemoration, Civic Pride, and Seriality in the Funerary Stelai of Antioch on the Orontes Michael Blömer, The Diversity of Funerary Portraiture in Roman Commagene and Cyrrhestice Jutta Rumscheid, Different from the Others: Female Dress in Northern Syria Based on Examples from Zeugma and Hierapolis Michael A. Speidel, Roman Soldiers' Gravestones in Greater Syria: Thoughts on Designs, Imports, and Impact Rubina Raja, Funerary Portraiture in Palmyra: Portrait Habit at a Crossroads or a Signifier of Local Identity? Signe Krag, Palmyrene Funerary Female Portraits: Portrait Tradition and Change Achim Lichtenberger & Rubina Raja, Portrait Habit and the Funerary Portraiture of the Decapolis Karl-Uwe Mahler, Funerary Portraiture from the Coastal Region of Roman Syria Bilal Annan, Petrified Memories: On Some Funerary Portraits from Roman Phoenicia C. H. Hallett, Mummies with Painted Portraits from Roman Egypt and Personal Commemoration at the Tomb Sheila Dillon, Attic Funerary Portraiture in the Roman Period
Lautaro Roig Lanzillotta, José Luís Brandão, Cláudia Teixeira, Ália Rodrigues (eds)
Reference : 64450
, Brepols, 2023 Paperback, 402 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:10 col., 2 tables b/w., Language: English. ISBN 9782503599229.
Summary Recent years have seen a significant increase in migration and displacement. Due to economic, political, and climatic pressures, large numbers of individuals are leaving their countries of origin and settling in new environments and societies. As a result, national identity has increasingly come to the fore in public discourse. Shaping and reshaping national agendas, debates surrounding national identity are affecting policies and influencing voting behaviours. Discourse on this issue is often centred on the idea of autochthony and nativism. Yet we do not encounter such anxieties in ancient Rome, one of the longest-lasting political orders in history. Unlike among the Greeks, the idea of autochthony did not take root among the Romans. Instead, Rome's identity tended to be fluid, accommodating the development of highly variegated and multi-ethnic groups and societies. The purpose of this volume is to understand how the Romans represented themselves and how others defined and regarded them. It aims to identify the various narratives that contributed to the construction of Roman self-representation by raising the following questions: What stories did Romans tell about themselves? How did they enact and perform their selfhood in biographical and autobiographical sources? How did Greek and Judean sources understand and define Roman identity? And, taken together, how did these narratives influence Roman self-perception? Rather than arguing for a monolithic or coherent understanding of Romanitas, this volume explores a variety of performances and manifestations of Roman identity. It focuses both on sources where the self or individual is the primary focus, alongside more general texts dealing with specific elements of Roman identity. TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction: Defining Self and Other in Changing Situations and Discourses. The Dynamism and Fluidity of the Notion of Identity (Lautaro Roig Lanzillotta) I. Roman Identity in (Auto)Biographical Texts Similarities and Dissimilarities: Roman Identity and Models of Behaviour in Nepos' Punic Lives (Francesco Ginelli) Identity in Latin Verse Autobiography (Helen Kaufmann) Lucretia, Tullia and Tanaquil: Shaping the Identity of Rome's Women in the Augustan Period (Nuno Simões Rodrigues) Pythagoreanism and Roman Identity in Plutarch's Aemilius Paullus (Davide Morelli) Overcoming Otherness in Flavian Rome: Flavius Josephus and the Rhetoric of Identity in the Bellum Judaicum (Eelco Glas) Performing Roman Identity in Suetonius' Caesars (José Luís Brandão) When the Emperor is the Other: Perceptions of Identity in the Historia Augusta's Life of Maximinus (Cláudia Teixeira) II. Roman Identity in Political and Legal Discourses Quirites and Populus Romanus: New Identities and Old Figures in Archaic Legal Formulas (Carlo Pelloso) Rome in the Mirror: Varro's Quest for the Past, for a Present Goal (Federica Lazzerini) Sacra privata perpetua manento: A Reading of Cicero's De Legibus (Cláudia Beltrão) Roman Maiestas: Becoming Imperial, Staying Republican (Ália Rodrigues) What's in a Natio: Negotiating Ethnic Identity in the Roman Empire (Kelly Nguyen) Index rerum ac nominum
, Brepols, 2023 Paperback, 504 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:47 col., Language: English. ISBN 9789603710776.
Summary The second volume of the study on the Roman names in the Cyclades completes the contribution to the social history of a marginal zone of the Roman world. It includes prosopographic catalogues of bearers of Roman names attested on Amorgos, Anaphe, Ios, Naxos, Oliaros, Paros, Pholegandros, Thera and attestations connected generally with the Cyclades, but not with a specific island. An extensive introduction presents the historical context and a synthetic overview of the diffusion of Roman names and citizenship in the Cyclades. The book is enriched by two synthetic contributions written by specialists. One of them (El. Sverkos) focuses on the origin of certain characteristic names and the other (P. Doukellis) on the study of 'spatiality' and the sociological parameters of the diffusion of the names as a method for perceiving the complex mechanisms for the construction of personal identities. This work is also a contribution to the epigraphy of the Cyclades, as the prosopographic catalogues were based on autopsy of the published and unpublished epigraphic material, relocation of stones and research in the archive of the Inscriptiones Graecae (Berlin). This method yielded hitherto unknown prosopographic data as well as new readings and interpretations of epigraphic texts which had not been studied for over a century. As part of the documentation, 47 plates include photos of several inscriptions or their squeezes, which are published here for the first time. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface List of Abbreviations Map of the Cyclades Introduction The Cyclades in the 'Globalized' Roman Oecumene: Roman Names in a World of Diverse Isolated Places Connected by the 'Boundless Sea of Unlikeliness' South-eastern Cyclades: Catalogues of Roman Names Amorgos Anaphe Ios Naxos Oliaros Paros Pholegandros Thera Cyclades (non-specified) Remarks on Roman Names in the Cyclades: Tracing them in Italy and in other Parts of the Roman Oikoumene (El. Sverkos) Hybrid Names, Meandering Identities, Fluid Spatialities (P. Doukellis) Bibliography Indices Plates
, Brepols, 2023 Paperback, 304 pages, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:229 b/w, 13 col., 13 tables b/w., 8 maps color, Language: English. ISBN 9782503600666.
Summary Roman bathhouses are considered to be prime markers when studying romanization in the provinces of the Empire, as these very specific ? and archaeologically recognizable ? buildings, together with their associated ideas about the body and personal health, introduced a decidedly Roman habit into regions that had hitherto been unfamiliar with (communal) bathhouses and heating technology. While traditionally, studies into Roman baths and bathing have focused on large public baths in the cities of the empire, however, those from the area that now roughly corresponds to modern-day Belgium have often been neglected in recent research as this was an area with few important urban centres. This book for the first time investigates the introduction, spread, and eventual disappearance of Roman-style baths and of bathing habits in this north-western corner of the Roman Empire. A detailed analysis of the architecture, technology, and decoration of both public and private baths is combined with a discussion on the role of bathing in the area's romanization, and supplemented by a fully illustrated catalogue of all bathhouses in the area of study. In doing so, the volume sheds new light not only on the evolution of baths and bathing in this region, but also on their broader role in larger historic processes such as cultural change across the Empire. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations Key to All Plans Preface Introduction Chapter 1 Communal Baths ? a Roman Phenomenon? Chapter 2 Earlier Research on Roman Bathing in the North-West Chapter 3 The Roman Continental North-West, a Blank Spot for Baths? Chapter 4 The Architecture of the Baths Chapter 5 Technology of the Baths Chapter 6 Building Material and Decoration Chapter 7 Bathing and Society Conclusions Catalogue Appendices Works Cited Index