From Concept to Monument: Time and Costs of Construction in the Ancient World celebrates Janet DeLaines seminal work on Roman architecture and construction. One of the foremost scholars of the last decades, her pioneering research has offered important insights not only into individual structures in central Italy but also into the processes involved in creating ancient buildings. Her approach has provided important conceptual frameworks that have allowed scholars to understand Roman buildings in their proper social and economic contexts. The volume collects papers from an international conference held in Janets honour at Wolfson College, Oxford, in January 2020. The various contributions focus on modelling the costs of construction over the course of 2,500 years, from Bronze Age Greece to the early Middle Ages. They discuss both broader issues of methodology and particular case studies, with particular attention to the effort needed in the different steps of architectural creation, such as the exploitation of raw materials (e.g. quarries), transport, and the construction processes on building sites. The papers not only cover a wide chronological and geographical area of the ancient world but also take up many of the themes explored by Janet throughout her career on Roman architecture, urbanism, building technologies, materials, and the principles of design. The wide range of papers reflects the scope and vibrancy of Janets scholarship on Roman architecture and her enormous contribution to the discipline.
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Product Details
Weight: 1562g
Dimensions: 205 x 290mm
Publication Date: 13 Jul 2023
Publisher: Archaeopress
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781789694222
About Alasdair K.B. Ruthven
Simon J. Barker is a specialist in many aspects of the ancient world including Roman architecture and the building industry late antique urbanism and recycling practices. An additional focus is the application of architectural energetics to questions of construction and the economy with emphasis on the labour of stone-working and the cost of stone architectural decoration. Christopher Courault holds a PhD from the University of Cordoba (Spain) with international mention (University of Edinburgh). He is a member of the research group Ciudades de Andalucía and from 2017 he has been an associate researcher at the University of Geneva. His primary interest lies in the construction of city walls from the Republican to Islamic period. Javier Á. Domingo holds a PhD in Archaeology from the Universitat Rovira i Virgili of Tarragona and has taught Christian Archaeology at the Pontifical University of the Holy Cross in Rome since 2014. His research and publications have focused on Roman and late Roman architectural decoration. Dominik Maschek has published widely on Roman archaeology architecture and construction including three monographs four edited volumes and numerous peer-reviewed papers and book-chapters. He is the director of excavations at the Roman site of Carnuntum (Austria) and of a battlefield archaeology project at Fregellae (Italy).