ABSTRACT

This volume investigates how urban growth and prosperity transformed the cities of the Roman Mediterranean in the last centuries BCE and the fi rst centuries CE, integrating debates about Roman urban space with discourse on Roman urban history.

The contributions explore how these cities developed landscapes full of civic memory and ritual, saw commercial priorities transforming the urban environment, and began to expand signifi cantly beyond their wall circuits. These interrelated developments not only changed how cities looked and could be experienced, but they also affected the functioning of the urban community and together contributed to keeping increasingly complex urban communities socially cohesive. By focusing on the transformation of urban landscapes in the Late Republican and Imperial periods, the volume adds a new, explicitly historical angle to current debates about urban space in Roman studies. Confronting archaeological and historical approaches, the volume presents developments in Italy, Africa, Greece, and Asia Minor, thus significantly broadening the geographical scope of the discussion and offering novel theoretical perspectives alongside well- documented, thematic case studies.

Urban Space and Urban History in the Roman World will be of interest to anyone working on Roman urbanism or Roman history in the Late Republic and early Empire.

part I|70 pages

Experiencing the city

chapter 2|20 pages

Political space and the experience of citizenship in the city of Rome

Architecture and interpellation

chapter 3|27 pages

Emotion and the city

The example of Pompeii

chapter 4|21 pages

Hilltops, heat, and precipitation

Roman urban life and the natural environment

part II|90 pages

Community, identity, and urban space

chapter 7|22 pages

Women in the forum

The cases of Italy and Roman North Africa

chapter 8|15 pages

Religion in the urban landscape

The special case of Rome

part III|88 pages

Commerce and the urban landscape

chapter 9|19 pages

Sacred transactions

Religion and markets in Roman urbanism

chapter 10|23 pages

Fora and commerce in Roman Italy

chapter 12|24 pages

The ports of Roman Lycia

Urbanism, networks, and hierarchies

part IV|60 pages

Urban life beyond the city walls