The Roman Forum was in many ways the heart of the Roman Empire. Today, the Forum exists in a fragmentary state, having been destroyed and plundered by barbarians, aristocrats, citizens and priests over the past two millennia. Enough remains, however, for archaeologists to reconstruct its spectacular buildings and monuments. This richly illustrated volume provides an architectural history of the central section of the Roman Forum during the Empire (31 BCE476 CE), from the Temple of Julius Caesar to the monuments on the slope of the Capitoline hill. Bringing together state-of-the-art technology in architectural illustration and the expertise of a prominent Roman archaeologist, this book offers a unique reconstruction of the Forum, providing architectural history, a summary of each building's excavation and research, scaled digital plans, elevations, and reconstructed aerial images that not only shed light on the Forum's history but vividly bring it to life. With this book, scholars, students, architects and artists will be able to visualize for the first time since antiquity the character, design and appearance of the famous heart of ancient Rome.
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Product Details
Weight: 2930g
Dimensions: 235 x 312mm
Publication Date: 11 Jun 2015
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780521192446
About Gilbert J. GorskiJames E. Packer
Gilbert J. Gorski is a licensed architect and the project designer for numerous buildings including the World Headquarters for the McDonald's Corporation in Oak Brook IL and the Oceanarium a major addition to the John G. Shedd Aquarium in Chicago. In 1987 he was designated the Burnham Fellow by the Chicago Architectural Club and was awarded an associate fellowship to the American Academy in Rome. Since 1989 Gorski has headed his own firm specializing in design and illustration. His drawings and paintings have been included in numerous publications and exhibits on architecture and illustration. He was twice awarded the Hugh Ferriss Memorial Prize the nation's highest singular honor in architectural illustration by the American Society of Architectural Illustrators. He is also the recipient of an Institute Honor for Collaborative Achievement awarded by the American Institute of Architects. He presently is an associate professor at the University of Notre Dame and holds the James A. and Louise F. Nolen Chair in Architecture. James E. Packer is Emeritus Professor of Classics at Northwestern University. He is the author of the three-volume The Forum of Trajan in Rome (1997); of numerous articles in journals including the American Journal of Archaeology the Journal of Roman Archaeology the Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma the Maryland Historian Natural History Croniche Pompeiane Technology and Culture Curator Inland Architect Archeo and Archaeology; and of articles in collections including the Lexicon Topographicum Urbis Romae (19932000). He is the recipient of many grants including those from the Samuel H. Kress Foundation the Getty Grant Program the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. He has excavated at Pompeii in the Forum of Trajan (Rome) and in the Theater of Pompey (Rome). 'The Forum of Trajan' exhibition at the opening of the new Getty Museum in Los Angeles (1997) was based on Packer's work.