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Civic Monuments and the Augustales in Roman Italy

Civic Monuments and the <I>Augustales</I> in Roman Italy

Civic Monuments and the <I>Augustales</I> in Roman Italy

Margaret L. Laird, University of Delaware
September 2015
Hardback
9781107008229
$143.00
USD
Hardback
USD
eBook

    The combination of portrait statue, monumental support, and public lettering was considered emblematic of Roman public space even in antiquity. This book examines ancient Roman statues and their bases, tombs, dedicatory altars, and panels commemorating gifts of civic beneficence made by the Augustales, civic groups composed primarily of wealthy ex-slaves. Margaret L. Laird examines how these monuments functioned as protagonists in their built and social environments by focusing on archaeologically attested commissions made by the Augustales in Roman Italian towns. Integrating methodologies from art history, architectural history, social history, and epigraphy with archaeological and sociological theories of community, she considers how dedications and their accompanying inscriptions created webs of association and transformed places of display into sites of local history. Understanding how these objects functioned in ancient cities, the book argues, illuminates how ordinary Romans combined public lettering, honorific portraits, emperor worship, and civic philanthropy to express their communal identities.

    • The first book-length study of the semantic meanings of inscribed monuments made by 'ordinary Romans' in Roman towns, and the first book to examine the monuments made by and for Augustales
    • Broadens beyond the well-known sites of Ostia, Pompeii, and Herculaneum to consider towns throughout Italy, bringing new sites into English language scholarship on Roman art and urbanism
    • Integrates methodologies from art history, architectural history, social history, and epigraphy with archaeological and sociological theories of community

    Product details

    September 2015
    Hardback
    9781107008229
    364 pages
    262 × 186 × 21 mm
    0.94kg
    100 b/w illus.
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Representation in the Funerary Realm:
    • 1. VIVIR AVG IDEM QQ: text, image, and context
    • 2. Ob honorem bisellii: the grammar of representation
    • Part II. Augustales in Their Meeting Places:
    • 3. Templum Augusti quod est Augustalium: municipal and private Augustea
    • 4. Curia Augustiana: civic standing and the Collegio degli Augustali at Herculaneum
    • 5. Res communis Augustalium: group identity in the Sacello degli Augustali at Misenum XXX
    • 6. Ob Eximiam Benivolentiam: donors and Augustales in second-century Misenum
    • Part III. Monuments in Public:
    • 7. In statuas ponendas: sculpting a public persona
    • 8. In vias sternendas: paving your way in the Roman town
    • Conclusions.
      Author
    • Margaret L. Laird , University of Delaware

      Margaret L. Laird is a Lecturer in the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures at the University of Delaware. She has received grants from the American Academy in Rome, the Getty Foundation, the Graham Foundation, the Council of American Overseas Research Centers, and the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation. She is co-editor of Walls and Memory: The Abbey of San Sebastiano at Alatri (Lazio), from Late Roman Monastery to Renaissance Villa and Beyond (2005). She has published in the Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome and has contributed essays to several edited volumes.