ABSTRACT

This volume explores the transformation of public space and administrative activities in republican and imperial Rome through an interdisciplinary examination of the topography of power.

Throughout the Roman world building projects created spaces for different civic purposes, such as hosting assemblies, holding senate meetings, the administration of justice, housing the public treasury, and the management of the city through different magistracies, offices, and even archives. These administrative spaces – both open and closed – characterised Roman life throughout the Republic and High Empire until the administrative and judicial transformations of the fourth century CE. This volume explores urban development and the dynamics of administrative expansion, linking them with some of the most recent archaeological discoveries. In doing so, it examines several facets of the transformation of Roman administration over this period, considering new approaches to and theories on the uses of public space and incorporating new work in Roman studies that focuses on the spatial needs of human users, rather than architectural style and design.

This fascinating collection of essays is of interest to students and scholars working on Roman space and urbanism, Roman governance, and the running of the Roman Empire more broadly.

part I|66 pages

Theory and Methodology

chapter 2|36 pages

The Administrative Topography of Rome

Mapping Administrative Space and the Spatial Dynamics of Roman Republicanism

chapter 3|28 pages

Models of Administrative Space in the Roman World

Between Public and Private

part II|69 pages

The Space of the Magistrate and Politics

chapter 6|26 pages

Moving Magistrates in a Roman City Space

The Pompeian Model

part III|86 pages

The Space of the Institutions

chapter 7|27 pages

The Rise and Consolidation of a Bureaucratic System

New Data on the Praefectura Urbana and Its Spaces in Rome

chapter 8|21 pages

Scholae and Collegia

Spaces for ‘Semi-Administrative’ Associations in the Imperial Age

chapter 9|19 pages

Civic Archives and Roman Rule

Spatial Aspects of Roman Hegemony in Asia Minor from Republic to Empire

chapter 10|17 pages

Between Private and Public

Women's Presence in Procuratorial Praetoria

part V|6 pages

Coda

chapter 15|4 pages

Afterword

Space and Roman Administration