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Monumentality in Etruscan and Early Roman Architecture
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Table of Contents

  • Preface (Michael L. Thomas)
  • Acknowledgments
  • Note on Abbreviations
  • 1. Introduction: The Experience of Monumentality in Etruscan and Early Roman Architecture (Gretchen E. Meyers)
  • 2. Straw to Stone, Huts to Houses: Transitions in Building Practices and Society in Protohistoric Latium (Elizabeth Colantoni)
  • 3. The Performance of Death: Monumentality, Burial Practice, and Community Identity in Central Italy’s Urbanizing Period (Anthony Tuck)
  • 4. Monumentalization of the Etruscan Round Moulding in Sixth-Century BCE Central Italy (Nancy A. Winter)
  • 5. Monumental Embodiment: Somatic Symbolism and the Tuscan Temple (P. Gregory Warden)
  • 6. The Capitoline Temple and the Effects of Monumentality on Roman Temple Design (John N. Hopkins)
  • 7. On the Introduction of Stone Entablatures in Republican Temples in Rome (Penelope J. E. Davies)
  • Afterword: Reflections (Ingrid E. M. Edlund-Berry)
  • About the Contributors
  • Index

Promotional Information

"This volume introduces new and interesting ways to look at Etruscan and early Roman buildings in their topographical and social contexts. One remarkable aspect of the essays is their consistently high quality of scholarly content. They are well-written, interesting, and remarkably cohesive. The theories have broad applications." -- Helen Nagy, Professor Emerita, University of Puget Sound "An important contribution to the field... Many new perspectives are included, along with comparative data that offer much food for thought." -- Alexandra Carpino, Chair and Associate Professor of Art History, Northern Arizona University

About the Author

Michael L. Thomas is Director of the recently launched Center for the Study of Ancient Italy at the University of Texas at Austin. He has excavated in Italy for seventeen years, and he currently codirects two archaeological projects there.

Gretchen E. Meyers is Assistant Professor of Classics at Franklin and Marshall College. A scholar of Etruscan archaeology and culture, she has authored articles on architecture, roofing tiles, and textile production and serves as Director of Materials at the Etruscan site of Poggio Colla.

Reviews

On relÈvera À cet Égard que les dÉveloppements d’E. Colantoni sur les mutations architecturales observÉes dans le Latium protohistorique et auprÈs de certaines peuplades amÉricaines et africaines apportent quelques ÉlÉments de comparaison inattendus et fort utiles. (Museum Helveticum)

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