Campagna Romana

Campagna Romana
Author: Joel Sternfeld
Publisher: Knopf
Total Pages: 120
Release: 1992
Genre: History
ISBN:

Stunning images of an extraordinary and endangered landscape from one of America's finest photographers. Sternfeld's magnificent photographs capture juxtapositions of Rome's past and present--tombs, villas, arches coexisting with apartment houses, malls, and the blight of the modern city. 2 maps. 88 color photographs (including 7 gatefolds).

Landuse in the Roman Empire

Landuse in the Roman Empire
Author: Jesper Carlsen
Publisher: L'ERMA di BRETSCHNEIDER
Total Pages: 198
Release: 1994
Genre: History
ISBN: 9788870628661

Proceedings of a symposium held in January of 1993 by the Danish Institute in Rome, 1993.

The Classical Review

The Classical Review
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages: 304
Release: 1912
Genre: Classical literature
ISBN:

This companion to the Classical Quarterly contains reviews of new work dealing with the literatures and civilizations of ancient Greece and Rome. Over 300 books are reviewed each year.

Cosmatesque Ornament

Cosmatesque Ornament
Author: Paloma Pajares-Ayuela
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Total Pages: 334
Release: 2001
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: 9780393730371

A richly illustrated study of architectural ornament in the late Middle Ages.

Patrons and Adversaries

Patrons and Adversaries
Author: Caroline Castiglione
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2005-02-03
Genre: History
ISBN: 0190291680

The early modern Roman countryside was a site of contestation between great aristocratic families and an expanding papal political regime. Rarely has the role of the inhabitants of this landscape--the villagers--been considered as part of that power struggle. As Caroline Castiglione shows in this compelling revisionist work, one Roman aristocratic family, the Barberini, was not squeezed out of governing by the extension of the papal bureaucracy, but rather became increasingly engaged with it during the long eighteenth century. Through their participation in the rural commune, villagers in an extensive territory belonging to the Barberini became active participants in the governing of the countryside. Villagers cultivated and exploited interference from the aristocratic family and the papal government, but they also kept urban elites at bay, defending their rights through the strategies of adversarial literacy. Such literate practices drew on village mastery of local constitutions, debates in the village assembly, and brilliant use of the legal system of the papacy to thwart the designs of the Barberini. Later villagers created and interpreted sources for themselves, effectively challenging the elite monopoly on making and interpreting texts. A lost world of increasingly savvy villagers, irate nobles, and exasperated bureaucrats emerges here in an engaging narrative that chronicles how seemingly marginalized villagers challenged the pragmatic control of the Roman countryside, using texts and ideas that urban elites had exported to the countryside for other purposes.

Alle pendici dei Colli Albani / On the slopes of the Alban Hills

Alle pendici dei Colli Albani / On the slopes of the Alban Hills
Author: Agnese Livia Fischetti
Publisher: Barkhuis
Total Pages: 276
Release: 2019-06-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9492444925

This volume results from the conference "Between Appia and Latina, Settlement Dynamics and Territorial Development on the Slopes of the Alban Hills", held at the Royal Dutch Institute at Rome (KNIR) in February, 2017. It contains 23 methodological, thematic and material culture studies on the historical topographical reconstruction of the Alban Hills in Antiquity with a focus on the area of contact with the suburbium of Rome. Papers present both data from new research and results of research done in the past. In the initiative a range of research institutions partook (foreign Institutes at Rome, Universities, Archaeological Services) and independent researchers stimulating the exchange of current knowledge of this small, but important part of the Campagna Romana.

Niccolò Ridolfi and the Cardinal's Court

Niccolò Ridolfi and the Cardinal's Court
Author: Lucinda Byatt
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2022-08-29
Genre: History
ISBN: 1000637905

Niccolò Ridolfi (1501–50), was a Florentine cardinal, nephew and cousin to the Medici popes Leo X and Clement VII, and he owed his status and wealth to their patronage. He remained actively engaged in Florentine politics, above all during the years of crisis that saw the Florentine state change from republic to duchy. A widely respected patron and scholar throughout his life, his sudden death during the conclave of 1549–50 led to allegations of poison that an autopsy appears to confirm. This book examines Cardinal Ridolfi and his court in order to understand the extent to which cardinalate courts played a key part in Rome’s resurgence and acted as hubs of knowledge located on the fault lines of politics and reform in church and state, hospitable spaces that can be analysed in the context of entanglements in Florentine and Roman cultural and political patronage, and intersections between the princely court and a more professional and complex knowledge and practice of household management in the consumer and service economy of early modern Rome. Based on an array of archival sources and on three treatises whose authors were closely linked to Ridolfi’s court, this monograph explores these multidisciplinary intersections to allow the more traditional fields of church and political history to be approached from different angles. Niccolò Ridolfi and the Cardinal's Court will appeal to all those interested in the organisation of these elite establishments and their place in sixteenth-century Roman society, the life and patronage of Niccolò Ridolfi in the context of the Florentine exiles who desired a return to republicanism, and the history of the Roman Catholic Church.