Cities of Roman Italy
By (Author) Guy de la Bedoyere
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bristol Classical Press
25th January 2010
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
937.7
Paperback
128
Width 135mm, Height 216mm, Spine 8mm
174g
The ruins of Pompeii, Herculaneum, and Ostia have excited the imagination of scholars and tourists alike since early modern times. The removal of volcanic debris at Pompeii and Herculaneum, and the clearance of centuries of accumulated soil and vegetation from the ancient port city of Rome at Ostia, have provided us with the most important evidence for Roman urban life. Work goes on at all three sites to this day, and they continue to produce new surprises. Pompeii is the subject of numerous books, but the other two cities are nothing like as well-served. This book, written by an archaeologist, historian and teacher with a lifelong interest in the Roman world, is designed for students of A-level and university courses on Classical Civilization who need a one-stop introduction to all three sites. Its principal focus is status and identity in Roman cities, and how they were expressed through institutions, public buildings and facilities, private houses and funerary monuments, against a backdrop of the history of the cities, their rise, their destruction, preservation and excavation. The reader is also guided towards other reading material and Internet sites that now offer unprecedented access to the cities.
De la Bdoyre's accessible prose style, relevant selection of literary, documentary, and archaeological sources illustrating and supporting his text, and useful appendix of additional print and electronic resources, combine to good effect in introducing the interested non-specialist and beginning student of classical archaeology to the premier urban sites of Roman Italy. * BMCR *
Guy de la Bedoyere is a well-established Roman historian with numerous books and television appearances to his credit, including Channel 4's 'Time Team', Channel 5's 'Pompeii Live', and PBS's 'Herculaneum Uncovered'. He teaches History and Classical Civilization at Kesteven and Sleaford High School, in Sleaford, Lincolnshire.