- Department: Archaeology
- Credit value: 20 credits
- Credit level: M
- Academic year of delivery: 2023-24
- See module specification for other years: 2022-23
This module traces the development and physical manifestation of Rome as a world city and superpower in the Republican and Imperial periods, with an impact on neighbouring and distant regions and populations. It investigates public and private architecture, physical mobility, social structure, religious practices, economic exchanges, and ethnic and cultural identities in Italy, the Mediterranean, continental Europe, and Britain.
Occurrence | Teaching period |
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A | Semester 1 2023-24 |
This module aims:
By the end of the module the students should be able to:
This module traces the development and physical manifestation of Rome as a world city and superpower in the Republican and Imperial periods. The module investigates class structure and the ways in which power was expressed and maintained by the elite and the middle classes through benefaction, patronage, and religious practices, and it explores themes such as the Roman family as the essential building block of Roman society. It studies population mobility and the relationship between the inhabitants at the centre of empire and the provinces, the implications of social mobility, and the visual and material expression of cultural and ethnic identities, in life and in death. Domestic and public architecture is examined as a forum for social interaction and status display. Trade, commerce and economic connectivity between Rome and its near and distant neighbours are evaluated through the study of transport networks and the material remains of commodities exchanged. The module is interdisciplinary and integrates primary data of different types (artefactual, pictorial, documentary, epigraphic, scientific). The module will explore key sites in Roman Italy and Europe, with comparative material from North Africa and the eastern Mediterranean. Teaching will comprise lectures and seminars with student input and discussions.
Task | % of module mark |
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Essay/coursework | 100 |
None
Task | % of module mark |
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Essay/coursework | 100 |
Formative: oral feedback from module leaders
Summative: written feedback within the University's turnaround policy
A. Wallace-Hadrill (2008), Rome’s Cultural Revolution.Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
S. Bell, I.L. Hansen (eds) (2008). Role Models in the Roman World. Identity and Assimilation. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press
L. de Ligt and L.E. Tacoma (eds) (2016). Migration and Mobility in the Early Roman Empire. Leiden: Brill