The Changing Landscapes of Rome’s Northern Hinterland presents a new regional history of the middle Tiber valley as a lens through which to view the emergence and transformation of the city of Rome from 1000 BC to AD 1000. Setting the ancient city within the context of its immediate territory, the authors reveal the diverse and enduring links between the metropolis and its hinterland. At the heart of the volume is a detailed consideration of the results of a complete restudy of the pioneering South Etruria Survey ( c. 1955–1970), one of the earliest and most influential Mediterranean landscape projects. Between 1998 and 2002, an international team based at the British School at Rome conducted a comprehensive restudy of the material and documentary archive generated by the South Etruria Survey. The results were supplemented with a number of other published and unpublished sources of archaeological evidence to create a database of around 5000 sites across southern Etruria and the Sabina Tiberina, extending in date from the Bronze Age, through the Etruscan/Sabine, Republican and imperial periods, to the middle ages. Analysis and discussion of these data have appeared in a series of interim articles published over the past two decades; the present volume offers a final synthesis of the project results.
The chapters include the first detailed assessment of the field methods of the South Etruria Survey, an extended discussion of the use of archaeological legacy data, and new insights into the social and economic connectivities between Rome and the communities of its northern hinterland across two millennia. The volume as a whole demonstrates how the archaeological evidence generated by landscape surveys can be used to rewrite narrative histories, even those based on cities as familiar as ancient Rome.
Includes contributions by Martin Millett, Simon Keay and Christopher Smith, and a preface by Andrew Wallace-Hadrill.
Table of Contents
Preface – Andrew Wallace-Hadrill
Chapter 1 The Tiber Valley an introduction – Simon Keay, Martin Millett and Christopher Smith
Chapter 2 The middle Tiber history of studies and project methodologies – Robert Witcher
Chapter 3 The protohistoric to late Republican landscapes of the middle Tiber valley – Helga Di Giuseppe
Chapter 4 The early and mid-imperial landscapes of the middle Tiber valley ( c . 50 bc–ad 250) – Robert Witcher
Chapter 5 The late antique landscapes of the middle Tiber the mid-third to mid-sixth centuries ad – Helen Patterson
Chapter 6 The end of the Roman the Tiber valley in the late sixth to seventh centuries ad – Helen Patterson
Chapter 7 The middle Tiber valley in the eighth and ninth centuries ad – Helen Patterson
Chapter 8 The Tiber Valley retrospect and prospect – Martin Millett
Appendix 1 List of Tiber Valley Project participants
Appendix 2 List of Tiber Valley Project publications
References
Index
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