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The Genesis of Roman Architecture

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An important new look at Rome's earliest buildings and their context within the broader tradition of Mediterranean culture This groundbreaking study traces the development of Roman architecture and its sculpture from the earliest days to the middle of the 5th century BCE.

Existing narratives cast the Greeks as the progenitors of classical art and architecture or rely on historical sources dating centuries after the fact to establish the Roman context.

Author John North Hopkins, however, allows the material and visual record to play the primary role in telling the story of Rome’s origins, synthesizing important new evidence from recent excavations.

Hopkins’s detailed account of urban growth and artistic, political, and social exchange establishes strong parallels with communities across the Mediterranean.

From the late 7th century, Romans looked to increasingly distant lands for shifts in artistic production.

By the end of the archaic period they were building temples that would outstrip the monumentality of even those on the Greek mainland.

The book’s extensive illustrations feature new reconstructions, allowing readers a rare visual exploration of this fragmentary evidence.

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£55.00
Product Details
Yale University Press
0300211813 / 9780300211818
Hardback
722.7
02/02/2016
United States
English
xiv, 254 pages : illustrations (black and white, and colour), maps (black and white, and colour)
26 cm