Roman working lives and urban living

書誌事項

Roman working lives and urban living

edited by Ardle Mac Mahon and Jennifer Price

Oxbow Books , David Brown Bk. Co., 2005

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注記

"This volume originated in a conference on 'Roman Working Lives and Urban Living' organised through the Centre for Roman Provincial Archaeology and held in the Department of Archaeology at the University of Durham in July 2001"--P. v

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

The ordinary people who made up the largest section of the population in the cities and towns in the Roman world were largely ignored by contemporary writers and have often been marginalised in traditional studies of Roman urbanism, but research into their patterns of work and social interaction have increased markedly in recent years. This book has come out of a conference on 'Roman Working Lives and Urban Living' held at the University of Durham in 2001. The conference was planned as a forum for people researching urban space and architecture, commercial and retail structures, organisation of craft activity and social theory. The twelve papers presented here have been organised into two categories: Urban living and the settings for working lives and People at work: Owners, and artisans, crafts and professions . The range of topics and variety of approaches in the papers emphasise the wealth of the material available, and it is hoped that this will stimulate further research into the lives of the 'silent voices' of Roman urban society.

目次

Urban Living and the Settings for Working Lives Beating the bounds: Ritual and the articulation of urban space in Roman Britain (Simon Esmonde Cleary) Domestic architecture and social discourse in Roman towns (Dominic Perring) The commercial landscape of Ostia (Janet DeLaine) The shops and workshops of Roman Britain (Ardle Mac Mahon) The taberna counters of Pompeii and Herculaneum (Ardle Mac Mahon) People at Work: Owners and Artisans, Crafts and Professions Re-thinking the social organisation of trade and industry in first century AD Pompeii (Damian Robinson) Of lumberjacks and brick stamps: Working with the Tiber as infrastructure (Shawn Graham) The shopkeepers and craft-workers of Roman London (Jenny Hall) Pottery in urban Romano-British life (Jeremy Evans) Glass-working and glassworkers in cities and towns (Jennifer Price) How many lives depended on plants? Specialisation and agricultural production at Pompeii (Mariana Ciaraldi) The role of doctors in the city (Ralph Jackson)

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