Bloomsbury Handbook of Experimental Approaches to Roman Archaeology

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Archaeological evidence
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classical
community engagement
Empire
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experimentation
heritage
Imperial
Late Antique
museology
museum
postgraduate
re-enactment
reconstruction
replication
reproduction
Republic
research
Rome
simulation

Product details

  • ISBN 9781350217836
  • Weight: 1451g
  • Dimensions: 176 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Dec 2024
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This volume is the first comprehensive overview of Roman experimental archaeology, exploring its key themes, methodologies and applications through a diverse array of international case studies. Experiments, simulations and reconstructions are important methods for understanding the past, from uncovering how ancient objects and structures were made, used, destroyed, deposited and affected underground, to illuminating the experiences of tasting ancient foods, fighting alongside comrades or living in replicated structures. Although the incorporation of experimentation has had great success in prehistoric studies, greater reliance on the wealth of literary and material sources remaining from the classical period has meant that its potential for Roman studies has yet to be fully realised.

The 26 chapters in this book are divided into 5 thematic parts, each of which opens with a contextualizing introduction that frames the detailed case studies found in individual chapters and showcases the actual and potential diversity of experimentation as applied to the Roman past by scholars, re-enactors, and practitioners in the heritage sector. In laying out a detailed guide to Roman experimental archaeology, the volume as a whole maps its past, present and future, and provides a firm foundation for further practical research and collaboration. In doing so, it reasserts that experiments and reconstructions are a significant resource for testing or developing theories, rather than merely artistic replicas, and that the vast amount of quantifiable data they yield can be invaluable in support of interpretations of relevant archaeological or historical evidence, regardless of the period in question and beyond the confines of academia.

Lee Graña Nicolaou is a Research Fellow in Archaeology at the University of Bologna, Italy.

Tatiana Ivleva is a Visiting Research Fellow at the University of Newcastle, UK.

Bill Griffiths is Head of Programmes and Collections at Tyne and Wear Archives and Museums, UK.