A C O M P A N I O N T O t h e archaeology of archaeology · 2013. 7. 18. · A Companion to the...

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BLACKWELL COMPANIONS TO THE ANCIENT WORLD archaeology of the roman Republic A COMPANION TO the EDITED BY jane derose evans

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  • BLACKWELL COMPANIONS TO THE ANCIENT WORLDBLACKWELL

    COMPANIONS TO THE ANCIENT

    WORLD

    archaeologyof the

    roman Republic

    A C O M P A N I O N T O t h e

    EDITED BY jane derose evans

    A C O M P A N I O N T O T h e

    archaeology of the roman

    republicE D I T E D B Y

    J a n e d e r o s e e v a n s

    The role of archaeology has expanded over the past 30 years, and research now frequently overlaps with the work of ancient historians and classicists. A Companion to the Archaeology of the Roman Republic demonstrates how archaeological methods have been used to study the era of the Roman Republic, and the influence of non-Roman cultures on its formation. A collection of original essays by both emerging and established archaeologists, with a wide range of nationalities and areas of interest, A Companion to the Archaeology of the Roman Republic reveals how differing approaches and methodologies contribute to an understanding of the Republic across the Mediterranean basin. Of interest both to archaeologists themselves, and to students of ancient history, art history and classics, it offers a diverse approach to a fascinating field.

    t h e e d i t o rJane DeRose Evans is Professor of Art History at Temple University, where she is also affiliated with the Classics Department. She is the author of The Art of Persuasion: Political Propaganda from Aeneas to Brutus (1992) and The Joint Expedition to Caesarea Maritima: Excavation Reports v.6, The Coins and the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine Economy of Palestine (2006).

    A C O M P A N I O N T O t h e

    archaeology of the roman republic

    C o n t r i b u t o r s t o t h i s v o l u m e :

    Albert J. Ammerman, Michael Anderson, Jeffrey A. Becker, Penelope J.E. Davies, Sylvia Diebner, Michael Dobson, Stephen L. Dyson, Ingrid Edlund-Berry,

    Jane DeRose Evans, Helena Fracchia, Andrew L. Goldman, Helen Goodchild,Alison B. Griffith, Maurizio Gualtieri, Shelley Hales, A. Trevor Hodge,

    Michael C. Hoff, Marie D. Jackson, Cynthia K. Kosso, Fanette Laubenheimer,Ray Laurence, Elio Lo Cascio, Margaret M. Miles, J. Andrew Overman, Isabel Rodá,

    David Gilman Romano, Roman Roth, Rafael Scopacasa, Susan Kirkpatrick Smith, Tesse D. Stek, David L. Stone, Marlene Suano, Steven L. Tuck,

    Miguel John Versluys, P. Gregory Warden, R.J.A. Wilson, Fikret K. Yegül,Mantha Zarmakoupi

    A L S O A V A I L A B L E I N T H I S S E R I E S :

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  • A COMPANION TO THE ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE ROMAN REPuBLIC

  • BLACKWELL COMPANIONS TO THE ANCIENT WORLDThis series provides sophisticated and authoritative overviews of periods of ancient history, genres of classical literature, and the most important themes in ancient culture. Each volume comprises approximately twenty-five and forty concise essays written by individual scholars within their area of specialization. The essays are written in a clear, provocative, and lively manner, designed for an international audience of scholars, students, and general readers.

    Ancient HistoryPublishedA Companion to the Roman ArmyEdited by Paul ErdkampA Companion to the Roman RepublicEdited by Nathan Rosenstein and Robert Morstein-MarxA Companion to the Roman EmpireEdited by David S. PotterA Companion to the Classical Greek WorldEdited by Konrad H. KinzlA Companion to the Ancient Near EastEdited by Daniel C. SnellA Companion to the Hellenistic WorldEdited by Andrew ErskineA Companion to Late AntiquityEdited by Philip RousseauA Companion to Ancient HistoryEdited by Andrew ErskineA Companion to Archaic GreeceEdited by Kurt A. Raaflaub and Hans van WeesA Companion to Julius CaesarEdited by Miriam GriffinA Companion to ByzantiumEdited by Liz JamesA Companion to Ancient EgyptEdited by Alan B. LloydA Companion to Ancient MacedoniaEdited by Joseph Roisman and Ian WorthingtonA Companion to the Punic WarsEdited by Dexter HoyosA Companion to AugustineEdited by Mark VesseyA Companion to Marcus AureliusEdited by Marcel van AckerenA Companion to Ancient Greek GovernmentEdited by Hans BeckA Companion to the Neronian AgeEdited by Emma Buckley and Martin T. Dinter

    LiterAture And cuLturePublishedA Companion to Classical ReceptionsEdited by Lorna Hardwick and Christopher StrayA Companion to Greek and Roman HistoriographyEdited by John MarincolaA Companion to CatullusEdited by Marilyn B. SkinnerA Companion to Roman ReligionEdited by Jörg RüpkeA Companion to Greek ReligionEdited by Daniel Ogden

    A Companion to the Classical TraditionEdited by Craig W. KallendorfA Companion to Roman RhetoricEdited by William Dominik and Jon HallA Companion to Greek RhetoricEdited by Ian WorthingtonA Companion to Ancient EpicEdited by John Miles FoleyA Companion to Greek TragedyEdited by Justina GregoryA Companion to Latin LiteratureEdited by Stephen HarrisonA Companion to Greek and Roman Political ThoughtEdited by Ryan K. BalotA Companion to OvidEdited by Peter E. KnoxA Companion to the Ancient Greek LanguageEdited by Egbert BakkerA Companion to Hellenistic LiteratureEdited by Martine Cuypers and James J. ClaussA Companion to Vergil’s Aeneid and its TraditionEdited by Joseph Farrell and Michael C. J. PutnamA Companion to HoraceEdited by Gregson DavisA Companion to Families in the Greek and Roman WorldsEdited by Beryl RawsonA Companion to Greek MythologyEdited by Ken Dowden and Niall LivingstoneA Companion to the Latin LanguageEdited by James ClacksonA Companion to TacitusEdited by Victoria Emma PagánA Companion to Women in the Ancient WorldEdited by Sharon L. James and Sheila DillonA Companion to SophoclesEdited by Kirk OrmandA Companion to the Archaeology of the Ancient Near EastEdited by Daniel PottsA Companion to Roman Love ElegyEdited by Barbara K. GoldA Companion to Greek ArtEdited by Tyler Jo Smith and Dimitris PlantzosA Companion to Persius and JuvenalEdited by Susanna Braund and Josiah OsgoodA Companion to the Archaeology of the Roman RepublicJane DeRose Evans

  • A COMPANION TO THE

    ARCHAEOLOGY OF THE ROMAN

    REPuBLIC

    Edited by

    Jane DeRose Evans

    A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., Publication

  • This edition first published 2013© 2013 Blackwell Publishing Ltd

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    A companion to the archaeology of the Roman Republic / edited by Jane DeRose Evans. pages cm. – (Blackwell companions to the ancient world) Includes bibliographical references and index. “A John Wiley & Sons, Ltd., publication.” ISBN 978-1-4051-9966-7 (hardback : alkaline paper) – ISBN 978-1-118-55712-9 (Wiley Online Libary) – ISBN 978-1-118-55713-6 (Bro) – ISBN 978-1-118-55714-3 (eMobi) – ISBN 978-1-118-55715-0 (ePDF) – ISBN 978-1-118-55716-7 (ePub) 1. Rome–History–Republic, 510–265 B.C. 2. Rome–History–Republic, 265–30 B.C. 3. Rome–Antiquities. 4. Social archaeology–Rome. 5. Material culture–Rome. 6. Landscape archaeology–Rome. 7. Technology–Social aspects–Rome. 8. Group identity–Rome. 9. Imperialism–Social aspects–Rome. I. Evans, Jane DeRose, 1956– DG77.C583 2013 937′.02–dc23

    2012042774

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    1 2013

  • Contents

    List of Illustrations ixNotes on Contributors xivAbbreviations xxiPreface xxii

    Introduction 1Jane DeRose Evans

    PART I Material Culture and Its Impact on Social Configuration 131 Development of Baths and Public Bathing

    during the Roman Republic 15Fikret K. Yegül

    2 Public Entertainment Structures 33Mantha Zarmakoupi

    3 Republican Houses 50Shelley Hales

    4 Tombs and Funerary Monuments 67Sylvia Diebner

    5 Before Sigillata: Black-Gloss Pottery and Its Cultural Dimensions 81Roman Roth

    6 Amphoras and Shipwrecks: Wine from the Tyrrhenian Coast at the End of the Republic and Its Distribution in Gaul 97Fanette Laubenheimer

  • vi Contents

    7 Coins and the Archaeology of the Roman Republic 110Jane DeRose Evans

    8 Weapons and the Army 123Andrew L. Goldman

    9 Bodies of Evidence: Skeletal Analysis in Roman Greece and Cyprus 141Susan Kirkpatrick Smith

    10 Population and Demographic Studies 155Elio Lo Cascio

    PART II Archaeology and the Landscape 167

    11 Looking at Early Rome with Fresh Eyes: Transforming the Landscape 169Albert J. Ammerman

    12 Survey, Settlement and Land Use in Republican Italy 181Helena Fracchia

    13 Agriculture and the Environment of Republican Italy 198Helen Goodchild

    14 No Holiday Camp: The Roman Republican Army Camp as a Fine-Tuned Instrument of War 214Michael Dobson

    15 Reconstructing Religious Ritual in Italy 235Alison B. Griffith

    PART III Archaeology and Ancient Technology 251

    16 The Orientation of Towns and Centuriation 253David Gilman Romano

    17 Scientia in Republican Era Stone and Concrete Masonry 268Marie D. Jackson and Cynthia K. Kosso

    18 Aqueducts and Water Supply 285A. Trevor Hodge

    19 Roads and Bridges 296Ray Laurence

    20 Villas and Agriculture in Republican Italy 309Jeffrey A. Becker

    21 Ports 323Steven L. Tuck

  • Contents vii

    PART IV The Archaeology of Identity 335

    22 Material Culture, Italic Identities and the Romanization of Italy 337Tesse D. Stek

    23 The Importance of Being Elite: The Archaeology of Identity in Etruria (500–200) 354P. Gregory Warden

    24 Greeks, Lucanians and Romans at Poseidonia/Paestum (South Italy) 369Maurizio Gualtieri

    25 Central Apennine Italy: The Case of Samnium 387Marlene Suano and Rafael Scopacasa

    26 Early Rome and the Making of “Roman” Identity through Architecture and City Planning 406Ingrid Edlund-Berry

    PART V The Archaeology of Empire during the Republic 427

    27 Material Culture and Identity in the Late Roman Republic (c. 200–c. 20) 429Miguel John Versluys

    28 The Archaeology of Mid-Republican Rome: The Emergence of a Mediterranean Capital 441Penelope J.E. Davies

    29 The Late Republican City of Rome 459Jane DeRose Evans

    30 Cosa 472Stephen L. Dyson

    31 Becoming Roman Overseas? Sicily and Sardinia in the Later Roman Republic 485R.J.A. Wilson

    32 The Archaeology of Africa in the Roman Republic 505David L. Stone

    33 Hispania: From the Roman Republic to the Reign of Augustus 522Isabel Rodá

    34 The Archaeology of Palestine in the Republican Period 540J. Andrew Overman

  • viii Contents

    35 Greece and the Roman Republic: Athens and Corinth from the Late Third Century to the Augustan Era 559Michael C. Hoff

    PART VI Republican Archaeology and the Twenty-First Century 579

    36 Computer Technologies and Republican Archaeology at Pompeii 581Michael Anderson

    37 Archaeology and Acquisition: The Experience of Republican Rome 598Margaret M. Miles

    References 611Index 711

  • List of Illustrations

    Maps

    1 A Map of the extent of the Republican empire at the death of Caesar

    2 B Map of the major cultural groups in Republican Italy

    Figures

    1.1 Reconstruction of a typical apodyterium in use in the Late Republican period 19

    1.2 Plan of the Stabian Baths, Pompeii, c. 80 23

    1.3 Schematic hypocaust system of a Roman bath 26

    1.4 The Republican Baths in Fregellae, restored plan 29

    2.1 Plan of the Large Theater at Pompeii 36

    2.2 Plan of the Amphitheater at Pompeii 42

    2.3 View of the arena and seating of the Amphitheater at Pompeii 43

    2.4 Theater at Bononia, reconstructed outer theater façade 44

    3.1 Plan of the house blocks on the lower slopes of the Palatine, Rome 52

    3.2 Aerial view of the insulae of Regio VI, Pompeii 53

    3.3 Plan of the House of Diana at Cosa 55

    3.4 Second Style wall in the Corinthian oecus of the House of the Labyrinth, Pompeii 62

  • x List of Illustrations

    4.1 Tomb of the Flavii by the Porta Nocera, Pompeii 75

    4.2 Urn of Q. Minucius Saturninus, from Isernia 77

    4.3 Grave stone of L. Vesprius, from Assisi 79

    5.1 Typology of the widespread forme Morel 2783 87

    6.1 Typical profiles and sections of Dressel 1 Amphoras 99

    6.2 Trade routes of Dressel 1 Amphoras in the Republican era. 100

    8.1 Late Republican soldiers, from the so-called Domitius Ahenobarbus Altar in the Louvre Museum 129

    8.2 Location of major hoard, type- and find sites for Republican weapons 131

    8.3 Spanish sword from Delos 134

    9.1 Male and female pelvises showing features used in sex determination 145

    9.2 Adult phalanges (finger bones) and juvenile phalanges 146

    9.3 Left os coxa (hip bone) showing the pubic symphysis and auricular surface which can be used to age adults 147

    9.4 Skull sutures in various stages of fusion 148

    9.5 Mandibular incisor with a large carious lesion and mandibular canine tooth with two linear enamel hypoplasias 150

    9.6 The upper portion of the eye orbit (socket) of a person who suffered from anemia 152

    11.1 Cross-section showing the environmental settings of the Capitoline Hill, the Velabrum Valley and the Palatine Hill 173

    11.2 Map of the main sites located in and around the Forum 175

    12.1 Comparative survey trends in Italy 184

    12.2 Sites with grey glaze pottery in the upper Bradano Valley 194

    13.1 Map of Italy, showing sites mentioned in the text 202

    14.1 Reconstruction of a Polybian manipular double-consular camp 218

    14.2 Detailed reconstruction of the “south-western quarter” of the Polybian manipular double-consular camp 219

    14.3 The camps at Renieblas, Spain 220

    14.4 The camps and siegeworks around Numantia, Spain 221

    14.5 Reconstruction of the cohort-organized, single-consular camp of the late second century 223

    14.6 Types of Roman defended camp entrances 232

  • List of Illustrations xi

    16.1 Centuriation of the territorium of Corinth, dating to the time of the Caesarian colony 262

    16.2 Centuriation of the urban center of Corinth, dating to the time of the Caesarian colony 263

    16.3 Centuriation of the territorium of Corinth, dating to the time of the Flavian colony 265

    17.1 Quarries in the vicinity of Rome 269

    17.2 Uniaxial compressive strengths of Roman tuffs and travertine 274

    19.1 Ponte di Nona, one of the best preserved Republican bridges on the Via Praenestina 297

    19.2 Map of the development of the public roads in the Republic 298

    19.3 Plan of the expansion of the Roman colony of Minturnae 301

    20.1 Plan of the Auditorium site 315

    20.2 Typological sampling of Hellenistic farmhouses and villas 318

    20.3 Plan of the villa at Settefinestre 319

    21.1 Hypothetical reconstruction of the port at Cosa in the late second and first centuries 326

    21.2 Reconstruction of the port of Forum Iulii in the late first century 333

    22.1 The terrace sanctuary at Munigua, two views 338

    22.2 The sanctuary of Fortuna Primigenia at Praeneste 339

    22.3 The sanctuary of Hercules Victor at Tibur 340

    23.1 Helmet of Negau type from Vetulonia, ritually crushed 358

    23.2 Porta Marzia, Perugia 359

    23.3 Urn from the Tomb of the Calisna Sepu, Monteriggioni 365

    24.1 Plan of Poseidonia-Paestum 374

    24.2 Sanctuary and cemetery sites around Paestum, 600–300 bce 377

    24.3 Short wall of Tomb 61 of the Andriolo urban cemetery: woman facing a mounted warrior 379

    24.4 Detail of the Tomb of the Magistrate (Tomb 1), Spinazzo cemetery: seated magistrate 380

    25.1 Map of Samnium, showing sites mentioned in text 388

    25.2 Female grave from the necropolis of Opi, at the upper Sangro River Valley, sixth century 393

    25.3 Plan of the sanctuary of Pietrabbondante 396

  • xii List of Illustrations

    25.4 “Dea di Rapino,” sixth-century bronze statuette 403

    25.5 Pottery of the so-called Daunian type, from Grave 7 at Guglionesi 404

    26.1 The hills of Early Rome 408

    26.2 Rome around.500 bce 416

    28.1 Pons Aemilius, first constructed in the second century bce 449

    28.2 Cloaca Maxima, as vaulted in the first half of the second century bce 450

    28.3 Terracotta figure of Mars from a pediment, found on the Via San di Gregorio 452

    28.4 Marble temple by the Tiber, probably commissioned by L. Mummius 453

    29.1 Plan of the Palatine in the first century 462

    29.2 Plan of the Forum Romanum in the first century 464

    30.1 Plan of Cosa, second phase of colonization 474

    30.2 Polygonal masonry of the northwest gate, Cosa 475

    30.3 Plan showing the site of Cosa, Le Colonne and Settefinestre 482

    31.1 View of the remains of the second-century theater at Soluntum (Soluonto), Sicily 490

    31.2 The Italic podium temple (the “Oratory of Phalaris”), Agrigentum, Sicily 491

    31.3 Nora, Sardinia, temple thought to be of Asclepius 497

    31.4 Statue base from Sulcis (Sant’Antioco), Sardinia, with bilingual inscription 498

    31.5 Trilingual inscription in Latin, Greek and neo-Punic from San Nicolò Gerrei, Sardinia 503

    32.1 North Africa in the Republican period, with provincial boundaries and sites mentioned in the text 506

    32.2 Centuriation in North Africa, with sites mentioned in the text 516

    33.1 Map of Republican Hispania, with sites mentioned in text 524

    33.2 Tower of El Brull (Turó de Montgròs) 525

    33.3 Wall of Tarragona 531

    33.4 Funerary monument from Malla 532

    33.5 Suggested reconstructions of the Trophy of Pompey in the Pyrenees 534

  • List of Illustrations xiii

    34.1 Map of Palestine, with sites mentioned in text 541

    34.2 Aerial view of the excavations of the temple at Omrit 544

    34.3 Detail of the excavations of the temple at Omrit 545

    34.4 Reconstruction of the Early Imperial temple at Omrit 546

    34.5 Aerial view of the compound of Hippos 548

    35.1 Fragmentary base with inscription mentioning Brutus (I3366) 570

    35.2 Athena Gate to the Roman Forum, Athens 572

    35.3 Plan of the center of Roman Corinth 576

    36.1 Three resistivity sections undertaken in the south-east corner of Pompeii Insula VII 6 590

    36.2 Photograph of a wall rectified using Hugin panoramic stitching software and resulting section drawing in Pompeii Insula VII 593

    36.3 Cistern recovered in Pompeii, VII 6, 26: photograph and 3D surface mesh 593

    Tables

    12.1 Chronological breakdown of the Morel typology of black-gloss pottery 188

    16.1 The north–south orientation and unit size for parcels around Corinth in the Flavian era 264

    26.1 Table contrasting historical events, archaeological terminology and archaeological dates with events in early Rome 410

    32.1 Phases of Roman imperialism in Africa 510

  • Notes on Contributors

    Albert J. Ammerman is a Research Professor at Colgate University. He took his PhD in European Archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology, University of London (under the supervision of Prof. John D. Evans). Between 1985 and 2004, he carried out fieldwork at more than 15  different sites in the heart of ancient Rome, in close collaboration with both the Superintendency of Archaeology in Rome and the City of Rome. He has taught at Stanford University, SUNY Binghamton and  the Universities of Parma and Trento. His publications include the results of his work on the origins of the Forum, the early Comitium, the Capitoline Hill, the Palatine Hill, the Velabrum and the clay beds there, and on the characterization of the earliest roof tiles and architectural terracottas at early sites in Rome, Latium and southern Etruria. He has also directed projects in Calabria (Neolithic), Venice (origins of the city) and Cyprus (pre-Neolithic sites and the origins of seafaring in the eastern Mediterranean).

    Michael Anderson is an archaeologist and Assistant Professor in Classics at San Francisco State University who has studied ancient Pompeii since 1996. He directs

    the Via Consolare Project in Pompeii, which conducts excavations in Insula VII 6 and the area of the Villa delle Colonne a Mosaico. His research and publications relate to the use of GIS and computer technologies in archaeological research.

    Jeffrey A. Becker is a Mediterranean archaeologist. He earned both an MA and  a PhD at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Since 2007 he has been one of the principal investigators of the archaeological fieldwork at Gabii in central Italy undertaken by the University of Michigan and the Kelsey Museum of Archaeology. He is the co-editor of Roman Republican Villas: Architecture, Context, and Ideology (2011) and has held teach-ing  appointments at the College of William  & Mary, Boston University, McMaster University, and the Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology and the Ancient World at Brown University. Becker is presently Acting Director of the Ancient World Mapping Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

    Penelope J.E. Davies is Associate Professor in Roman art and architecture

  • Notes on Contributors xv

    at the University of Texas at Austin. Author of Death and the Emperor: The Funerary Monuments of the Roman Emperors from Augustus to Marcus Aurelius (2000, 2004), and co-author of Janson’s History of Art (2007, 2010), she currently focuses her research on public art and politics in Republican Rome.

    Sylvia Diebner, a classical archaeologist, is  the director of the photography archive at  the German Archaeological Institute in  Rome. Her publications include Aesernia – Venafrum: Untersuchungen zu den römischen Steindenkmälern zweier römischer Landstädte, 2 vols. (1979); “Frühkaiserzeitliche Urnen aus Picenum” (1982); Reperti funerari in Umbria a sinis-tra del Tevere. I sec. A.C –I sec. D.C. (1986); “Landstädtische Sepulkraldenkmäler aus Picenum” (2007); and “Aschenkisten aus Amelia: Handwerkstraditionen im südlichen Umbrien” (2008).

    Michael Dobson studied archaeology at the University of Exeter and worked as an archaeologist in Exeter before returning to  the University to teach Archaeological Computing. He is now Director of Flexible Combined Honours there. Interest in the  Roman army and particularly Republican and early Imperial military installations began with his doctoral thesis. This continued research has included a number of publications and collaborations with archaeologists in Spain and Germany, including The Army of the Roman Republic: The Second Century BC, Polybius and the Camps at Numantia, Spain (2008).

    Stephen L. Dyson is the Park Professor of Classics at the University of Buffalo. He has published extensively on the history of American archaeology in the Mediterr-anean Basin, (e.g. In Pursuit of Ancient Pasts: A History of Classical Archaeology in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries,

    2006). He has also written on the archaeology of the city of Rome (The Roman Countryside, 2003 and Rome: A Living Portrait of an Ancient City, 2010) and is preparing the final reports for his excavation in Capalbiaccio, near Cosa. Dyson has served as director for a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminar for College and University Teachers at the American Academy in Rome, is a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, and is a Corresponding Member of the German Archaeological Institute.

    Ingrid Edlund-Berry is Professor Emerita in the Department of Classics at the University of Texas at Austin. Her research interests are the history and archaeology of  ancient Italy, with special emphasis on  Etruscan archaeology. Her excavation experience includes Poggio Civitate (Murlo)  and Poggio Colla (Vicchio), S.  Angelo Vecchio, Metaponto, and Morgantina. Among her publications are  The Gods and the Place: Location and  Function of Sanctuaries in the Countryside of Etruria and Magna Graecia (700–400 B.C.) (1987), The Seated and Standing Statue Akroteria from Poggio Civitate (Murlo) (1992), with Lucy Shoe Meritt, Etruscan and Republican Roman Mouldings (2000), and with G. Greco and J. Kenfield (eds), Deliciae Fictiles III: Architectural Terracottas in Ancient Italy: New Discoveries and Interpretations (2006).

    Jane DeRose Evans is a numismatist and archaeologist; she is a Professor in the Art History Department, and affiliated with the Classics Department, of Temple University. Evans has worked on Roman sites in Turkey, France and Israel and is currently the numismatist for the Harvard Sardis Expeditions. Her publications include The Art of Persuasion: Political Propaganda from Aeneas to Brutus (1992),  and The Joint Expedition to

  • xvi Notes on Contributors

    Caesarea Maritima: Excavation Reports v.6, The Coins and the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine Economy (2006).

    Helena Fracchia is Professor of Classics in the Department of History and Classics, University of Alberta Edmonton, Canada. She is also the Director of the University of Alberta School in Italy (Cortona) and the Archaeological Field school at Ossaia. Her recent publications and fieldwork address various aspects of cultural and social history in pre-Roman southern Italy, the ceramic and survey evidence from the Upper Bradano Valley and Roccagloriosa as well as the Etruscan site and successive Roman villa at Ossaia in the Val di Chiana, Tuscany.

    Andrew L. Goldman is an Associate Professor in the History Department of Gonzaga University, Spokane, Washington, and contributor to the Classical Civili-zations Department. His areas of schol-arly  interest include the Roman military and the material culture of the Roman provinces, in particular those of Anatolia. Since 1992, his archaeological fieldwork has concentrated on the investigation of the Roman settlement at Gordion, where he has identified and excavated the first early Imperial auxiliary fort in Turkey.

    Helen Goodchild is a landscape archaeo-logist and GIS specialist working in the Department of Archaeology at the University of York. She has worked as part of a number of large-scale landscape projects, including the Wroxeter Hinterland Project (United Kingdom), the Tiber Valley  Project (Italy) and the Cyrene Archaeological Project (Libya). Her PhD in 2007 investigated Roman agricultural production using computer modeling techniques, from which she has published a number of papers.

    Alison B. Griffith is a senior lecturer in Classics at the University of Canterbury in  Christchurch, New Zealand. Her

    research and publications focus primarily on archaeological evidence for Roman reli-gion and cults, especially the Roman cult of Mithras. She has also published on aspects of the topography of ancient Rome and the application of cognitive science to the study of ancient religious practice.

    Maurizio Gualtieri, PhD, University of Pennsylvania and Professor Emeritus in  the Department of History and Classics, University of Alberta, Edmonton (Canada), is presently teaching Classical Archaeology at the University of Perugia (Italy). His fieldwork includes the Etruscan site of Artimino (Florence), as coordinator of the University of Pennsylvania University Museum team in Tuscany and then Roccagloriosa (Salerno) as scientific col-laborator of the Department of Antiquities of Salerno, first, and then as co-director of the University of Alberta team. More recently he has conducted excavations at the Roman site of Oppido Lucano and co-directed the joint University of Perugia University of Alberta excavations at the late Republican villa of Ossaia (Cortona, Arezzo). His recent publications include La Lucania Romana. Cultura e Società nella Documentazione Archeologica (Quaderni di Ostraka, vol. 8) (2004) and a chapter on “Roman villas in southern Italy” for the forthcoming volume edited by G. Métraux and A. Marzano on The Roman Villa in the Mediterranean Basin.

    Shelley Hales is a Senior Lecturer in Art and Visual Culture in the Department of  Classics and Ancient History at the University of Bristol. She works on Roman domestic and personal art and its relation to identity-making in the ancient world as  well as its reception (particularly in terms of the excavations at Pompeii) in the nineteenth century. She is the author of  Roman Houses and Social Identity (2003) and has co-edited several volumes

  • Notes on Contributors xvii

    exploring these issues, including Material Culture and Social Identities in the Ancient World (2010) and Pompeii in the Public Imagination (2011).

    A. Trevor Hodge (1930–2012) was a classical archaeologist (BA, MA, PhD, Dipl. Cl. Arch. [Cantab]), who from 1960 to 1997 was a Professor at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, from which (2010) he held the title of Distinguished Research Professor. His publications include The Woodwork of Greek Roofs (1960, repr. 2011), Roman Aqueducts and Water Supply (1992), Ancient Greek France (1998) and, as joint editor, Frontinus’ Legacy (2001). After retirement he often broadcasted on Canadian national radio and lectured on cruise ships.

    Michael C. Hoff is Professor of Art History at the University of Nebraska. As a  field archaeologist in Greece, Hoff has participated in excavations at the Athenian Agora, Corinth, Kavousi and Nemea. From 1997 to 2004, Hoff co-directed the architectural survey of the Rough Cilicia Archaeological Research Project, and since 2005 he has been director of excavations of the Antiochia ad Cragum Archaeological Research Project in Turkey. His publications include The Romanization of Athens ( co-edited with Susan Rotroff, 1997); and  Rough Cilicia. New Historical and Archaeological Approaches (co-edited with Rhys Townsend, 2011).

    Marie D. Jackson is a Researcher in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at the University of California at Berkeley. She received a Doctorat d’Université from Université de Nantes, France, in Structural Geology, and a PhD from Johns Hopkins University in Earth Sciences. She works on ancient Roman concretes from monumental buildings and  seawater harbors, and their volcanic

    ash aggregates and pozzolanic cements, to  describe the expertise of Roman builders  and apply their methods to modern sustainable concretes. She has numerous publications in journals such as  Archaeometry, American Journal of Archaeology, Journal of Archaeological Science and Geoarchaeology.

    Cynthia K. Kosso is a Professor in the Department of History at Northern Arizona University. She received her PhD in History and Classics from the University of Illinois at Chicago, and her Master’s degrees in Ancient History and Classical Archaeology from the University of Minnesota. Her professional interests are  interdisciplinary in nature – from the translation of ancient languages and the study of innovation in ancient societies, to public and economic history as reflected in  material evidence. She has co-edited several recent collections of essays, includ-ing The Nature of Water, Baths, Bathing, and Hygiene from Antiquity through the Renaissance (2009).

    Fanette Laubenheimer is the Research Director (emeritus) at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), where her research projects centered on the eco-nomic history of the Roman world and especially amphoras. For 25 years she directed the excavation of a potters’ complex which produced amphoras in southern France, at Sallèles d’Aude. Part of the work was to ensure that the excavations be pro-tected and presented to the public; the museum above the site evokes a bird with outstretched wings protecting the archaeo-logical structures. She is the author of several books and a number of articles.

    Ray Laurence is Professor of Roman History and Archaeology at the University of Kent (United Kingdom). He is the author of a number of books, including

  • xviii Notes on Contributors

    The  Roads of Roman Italy: Mobility and Cultural Change (1999) and Roman Pompeii: Space and Society (2nd edn, 2007), co-author of The City in the Roman West (2011) and co-editor of Rome, Pompeii and Ostia: Movement and Space (2011).

    Elio Lo Cascio is Professor of Roman History at Sapienza Università di Roma. He has published extensively on the demogra-phy and economy of the ancient Roman world, including Il princeps e il suo impero: Studi di storia amministrativa e finanziaria romana (2000) and Crescita e declino: Studi di storia dell’economia romana (2009). His many articles and edited volumes show his main areas of interest: the history of the administration of the Roman Empire; the institutional history of the Roman Republic; the economic and social history of Rome, from the Republic to the late Empire, with  particular emphasis on monetary history; and Roman population history and the impact of demographic change on  the economy and society of the Roman Empire. He has also written on late Republican municipal legislation; on the city of Rome and on Roman cities and their elites, espe-cially on Pompeii; and on the dynamics of Romanization.

    Margaret M. Miles is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Classical Studies at the American School of Classical Studies in Athens, Greece, and Professor of Art History and Classics at the University of California, Irvine. Her previous publica-tions include a study of the Temple of Nemesis at Rhamnous (1989), a volume on the City Eleusinion in the Athenian Agora (1998), and Art as Plunder (2008), a study of Cicero’s Verrines and their impact on ideas about cultural property.

    J. Andrew Overman is the Harry M. Drake Distinguished Professor in the Humanities and Fine Arts in the

    Department of Classics at Macalester College, St. Paul, MN. He has directed archaeological excavations in northern Israel, as well as in the Black Sea region. He has published widely on the archaeol-ogy of Galilee, the Roman East, and the beginnings of Judaism and Christianity in the eastern Mediterranean.

    Isabel Rodá is the Director of the ICAC (Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology) and Professor of Archaeology of the UAB (Autonomous University of Barcelona). She has written on the ceramics of Hispania (Ceramicas exoticas y de imitacion en el poblado iberico de Sant Julia de Ramis, 1974) and authored and co-authored several corpora concerning Roman inscriptions on the peninsula.

    David Gilman Romano, PhD, is the Karabots Professor of Greek Archaeology in the School of Anthropology at the University of Arizona. He began the Corinth Computer Project, (http://corinthcomputerproject.org) in 1987 as a long-term study of the urban and rural landscape of the Roman colony of Corinth. Since 2004 he has been Co-Director and Field Director of the Mt. Lykaion Excavation and Survey Project in Arcadia, Greece (http://lykaionexcavation.org). His publications include Mapping Augustan Rome (2002) in collaboration with Lothar Haselberger, The Catalogue of  the Classical Collection of the Glencairn Museum (1999) with Irene Bald Romano and Athletics and Mathematics in Archaic Corinth: The Origins of the Greek Stadion (1993), as well as a series of publications on  the city and landscape planning of the Roman colony of Corinth. Romano directs the Archaeological Mapping Lab (http://archaeologicalmappinglab.org).

    Roman Roth teaches Classics at the University of Cape Town. His primary research interests concern the cultural

    http://corinthcomputerproject.orghttp://corinthcomputerproject.orghttp://lykaionexcavation.orghttp://lykaionexcavation.orghttp://archaeologicalmappinglab.orghttp://archaeologicalmappinglab.org

  • Notes on Contributors xix

    history of ancient Italy, with a particular focus on the material and visual culture of the Republican period. He is the author of Styling Romanisation: Pottery and Society in Central Italy (2007), as well as several articles and book chapters, and also directs the current excavations on the site of ancient Capena (Provincial di Roma).

    Rafael Scopacasa (PhD, University of Exeter) is a research fellow at the British School at Rome. His work focuses on combining written and material evidence to understand key historical developments in Italy from the Iron Age to the Roman conquest, most recently in his dissertation, “Identity as social practice in the funerary sites of central Apennine Italy (‘Samnium’), 6th–3rd century BC.”

    Susan Kirkpatrick Smith is a biological anthropologist in the Department of Geography and Anthropology at Kennesaw State University in Kennesaw, Georgia. She has conducted skeletal analysis of human remains from the Bronze Age through the Roman period in Greece. Her areas of interest include warfare and social change and their effects on the body.

    Tesse D. Stek is Golding Junior Research Fellow at Brasenose College, Oxford University. He is the author of Cult Places and Cultural Change in Republican Italy (2009) and conducts archaeological field-work in the south Italian region of Molise, ancient Samnium. This work is funded by the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research (NWO).

    David L. Stone is Assistant Professor of Classics at Florida State University. He is  the co-editor of Mortuary Landscapes of  North Africa (2007) and Leptiminus (Lamta). Report no. 3, the Field Survey, JRA Suppl. 87 (2011). He has also published several articles on epigraphy and landscape archaeology in North Africa.

    Marlene Suano (PhD, University of London) is a lecturer in Archaeology and Ancient History at the University of São Paulo, Brazil. She is interested in using  archaeological evidence to answer questions about cultural identity and cul-tural change in ancient Italy, especially that of the Samnite area. Her book, I vivi fra i loro morti: frequentazione rituale nella necropoli di Tornareccio (in press), explores cultural change in the Central Apennines.

    Steven L. Tuck is Associate Professor in Classics and the History of Art at Miami University. His scholarship includes a dissertation on Roman Imperial harbor monuments and articles on the Tiber and its installations and the triumphal monu-ments in ports around the Roman world. He is also the author of a history of Roman art (forthcoming from Wiley-Blackwell).

    Miguel John Versluys is Associate Professor of Classical Archaeology at Leiden University. His research focuses on cultural interaction in the Hellenistic-Roman Mediterranean and Near East. He is the author of Aegyptiaca Romana. Nilotic Scenes and the Roman Views of Egypt (2002) and the co-editor of  two volumes of Isis studies: Nile into Tiber. Egypt in the Roman World (2007) and Isis on the Nile. Egyptian Gods in Hellenistic and  Roman Egypt (2010). A monograph on  Nemrud Dağ and late Hellenistic Commagene is forthcoming.

    P. Gregory Warden, President of Franklin College (Lugano), formerly University Distinguished Professor of Art History and Associate Dean for Research and Academic Affairs at Southern Methodist University, has authored/co-authored five books as well as over 70 articles and reviews on areas  ranging from Greek archaeology to Etruscan art, archaeology and ritual, and Roman architecture. Warden is the founder, Principal Investigator, and co-Director of

  • xx Notes on Contributors

    the Mugello Valley Archaeological Project and excavations at Poggio Colla, an Etruscan settlement north-east of Florence, a joint mission of SMU, Franklin and Marshall College, and the University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology. Warden is also the former editor of Etruscan  Studies and a Trustee of the Etruscan Foundation, and has been elected to the Istituto di Studi Etruschi e Italici. In  2011 he was awarded the Stella della Solidarietà Italiana and the title of Cavaliere by the Republic of Italy.

    R.J.A. Wilson is Professor of the Archaeology of the Roman Empire at the  University of British Columbia and Director of the Centre for the Study of  Ancient Sicily there. He has been Humboldt Fellow at the University of Bonn (1987–9), Visiting Professor at McMaster University (1998), Balsdon Fellow at the British School at Rome (2003) and Guest Scholar in Residence at the Getty Villa, Malibu (2012). His books include Guide to the Roman Remains in Britain (1975, 1980, 1988, 2002; 5th edn in preparation), Piazza Armerina (1982) and Sicily under the Roman Empire (1990).

    Fikret K. Yegül is an architect and a Professor of the History of Art and Architecture at the University of California,

    Santa Barbara. A scholar of Roman architecture, he has been a member of the Harvard Sardis Excavations in Turkey and  the Ohio State University Isthmia Excavations in Greece. Specializing in the baths and bathing culture of antiquity, Yegül is the author of articles and books on  Roman architecture, notably Baths and Bathing in Classical Antiquity (1992, 1995) which received the Alice D. Hitchcock Award from the Society of Architectural Historians in 1994. His most recent book  is Bathing in the Roman World (2010). He is working on a book on Roman architecture and urbanism.

    Mantha Zarmakoupi received her MSt and DPhil in Classical Archaeology from Oxford University. Prior to this she studied Architecture at the National Technical University of Athens and gained a Master of Design Studies in History and Theory from Harvard University. Her research in archaeology is informed by her background in architectural practice, history and theory of architecture as well as digital visualiza-tions. Her dissertation on the architecture of Roman luxury villas around the Bay of Naples is in press for Oxford University Press. She has also edited a volume on the Villa of the Papyri (2010), and is presently studying the urban growth of Late Hellenistic Delos, the “Quartier du Stade.”

  • Abbreviations

    Abbreviations of the names and works of ancient authors, as well as for collections of inscriptions, are as found in the Oxford Classical Dictionary (3rd edn, 1996). Abbreviations of journal titles and modern works abbreviated by initial titles of books (e.g. NTDAR) are as found in the online abbreviations for the American Journal of Archaeology (www.ajaonline.org); if the journals are not listed there, the titles are spelled out in full. All dates are BCE, unless otherwise specified.

    http://www.ajaonline.org

  • Preface

    Roman Republican archaeology, while overshadowed by its larger sibling the archaeology of the Roman Empire, has a growing body of evidence that is changing the  way that archaeologists, art historians, historians, classicists and anthropologists think about a culture that is nominally recorded by ancient historians. This book, which came about through the suggestion of Haze Humbert at Wiley-Blackwell, is intended to speak to those archaeologists, art historians, historians, classicists and anthropologists who are interested in the sixth through first centuries on the Italian Peninsula and in the empire of the Republic. The work of the archaeologist has changed dramatically in the last 30 years, due to the introduction of new technologies, the explosion of informa-tion available (from satellite photos to DNA analysis), and the declining interest of organizations in funding “big digs.” Archaeologists have thus expanded the types of questions they ask, the manner in which they can answer old and ask new questions, and the fora in which they publish. One example of how archaeological research has changed is the interpretation of a site through interdisciplinary teams. Thus, the time for such a Companion is now, as scholars in differing disciplines publishing in a range of journals and presses develop the picture of the Republic. I have asked a wide variety of scholars, from anthropologists to ancient historians to field archaeologists, to help illuminate broad swaths of this field, allowing readers to see what particular disciplines are contemplating. By giving both a guide to further reading and a detailed bibliography, the reader can move into specialized studies on a particular topic of interest. I have also asked both more established authors and younger authors to contribute, to benefit from their combined wisdom and new thinking. The Roman world, by the end of the Republican period, was an intensely pan-Mediterranean one and in order to bring a fuller discussion of these cultures which comprised the Republic, I have turned to scholars in North America, the United Kingdom, Europe, Africa and New Zealand, and have had contributions from French, German, Italian and Spanish translated for the English-speaking audience of the Companion – though the reference list will quickly alert the reader to the global nature of this study.

  • Figure A Map of the extent of the Republican empire at the time of the death of Caesar. Source: Drawing by J.D. Evans.

  • Cosa

    OstiaPraeneste

    PompeiiPaestum

    Carthage

    Syracuse

    Tarentum

    Aleria

    Caralis

    CORSICA

    SARDINIA

    UMBRIA

    SAMNIUM

    BR

    UT

    TIU

    M

    CAMPANIA

    ETRURIA

    GALLIA CISALPINA

    PICENUM

    LATIUM

    AFRICA

    APULIACALABRIALUCANIA

    0 100 km

    Rome

    SICILIA

    N

    Figure B Map of the major cultural groups in Republican Italy. Source: Drawing by J.D. Evans.

  • A Companion to the Archaeology of the Roman Republic, First Edition. Edited by Jane DeRose Evans. © 2013 Blackwell Publishing Ltd. Published 2013 by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

    Introduction

    Jane DeRose Evans

    In a traditional sense, the Roman Republic begins in 509 and ends with the death of Caesar in 44, or the Battle of Actium in 31, or the reforms of Octavian in 27. Yet what would be the Republic begins to take shape under the rule of its kings, and indeed, even earlier, with the development of the landscape that was to become Rome. Thus, Ammerman and Jackson and Kosso return us to the formation of the very earth itself, to help us understand what the Romans were undertaking as they built their city beside the Tiber. Edlund-Berry moves us into the proto-historical period, technically before the Republic is inaugurated; we cannot understand the later development of the city without this work. In the prov-inces, Stone (for Africa), Rodá (for Spain), Overman (for Israel) and Hoff (for Greece) explore reforms initiated in the Augustan period, in order to help us see what was begun in the Republican period that would come to full maturity in Imperial Rome.

    The contributions of the book are organized into six parts. Those grouped under “Material Culture and Its Impact on Social Configuration” are intended to show how archaeologists are rethinking the physical objects that have been, or are being, excavated. Instead of grouping objects into material categories (“architecture,” “frescoes,” or “silver”), these scholars have undertaken the task of showing how objects can illuminate the soci-ety’s formation, laws, behavior and habits. Thus, the most Roman of all habits – the daily bath – is shown by Yegül (Chapter 1) to be a complex mixture of input from Greek customs of education and indigenous interests which may have been connected to preventative medicinal procedures (the latter is also explored by Griffith in her essay on religious ritual). The custom develops its own internal stresses which the Romans express in unease over “luxuria” and assaults on female modesty. Yet baths were considered necessary parts of Roman colonies, as Dyson notes for Cosa; and by the end of the Republic, as Hales and Dyson show us, private bath suites were a normal part of every

  • 2 Jane DeRose Evans

    aristocratic house (though our evidence for bathing suites in villas comes in the first century ce at Settefinestre and Francolise; see Carandini, 1985a; Cotton, 1979).

    Circuses, said to be a vital part of the Roman Imperial world, are explored in their infancy by Zarmakoupi (Chapter 2), along with other structures used for entertainment in the Roman world. The flexibility of the place of entertainment in the Republican world gives way to distinctive buildings, which become one more way for a Roman poli-tician to emblazon his name across Rome and use manubial booty or proceeds from the developing economy. As a result, entertaining Romans became an increasingly important duty of ambitious politicians, whether they lived in Rome, Pompeii or Puteoli.

    The development of the aristocratic atrium house is explored by Hales (Chapter 3), who shows how the neighborhood in which it was built, the carefully controlled view offered to the visitor, and the decoration of the rooms all contribute to the deeply held identity of the aristocrat and his public image. Indeed, she argues, the house becomes the stage upon which the elite male plays out his life, and by the end of the Republic, aristocrats increasingly depend on more luxurious surroundings to maintain their politi-cal status. We return to the houses of the rich and famous in Becker’s essay on villas, where he focuses on the development of the villa form and the role of the villa in the agricultural landscape.

    Yet another material manifestation of the making of a Roman’s identity is in the building – or marking – of his tomb. Diebner (Chapter 4) takes us on a tour of Republican Italy to explore the various forms of these tombs, highlighting local tastes and trends to show a bewildering variety of form and decoration. But common to all was an inscrip-tion naming the individual dead. Tombs of aristocrats are also noted by Edlund-Berry and Davies as an important part of the landscape of Early and Mid-Republican Rome, respectively. Earlier tombs of the Greeks and Lucanians around Paestum allow Gualtieri to explore the changing society of the elite in the fifth and fourth century, as these cul-tures came in contact with the Romans. And to the north of Rome, Warden uses tombs to discuss the changing nature of elite identity in Etruria, as they, too, come in contact with the Romans. Farther afield, Stone remarks that while the study of tombs is an important component of the study of the indigenous people in North Africa, there is much still to be learned about the chronologies of the tomb types and the people who built them.

    Black-gloss pottery, often used as the primary indication of chronology within the strata of a site, is shown by Roth (Chapter 5) to have less stability for the archaeologist than once thought. Archaeologists have long used the groundbreaking work of Lamboglia (1952), which was given an important and systematic overhaul by Morel (1981a). But as new excavations have isolated fabrics and production sites, our knowl-edge of what was produced where – and the variations that are possible on basic forms outlined by Lamboglia – means that we can have a fuller understanding of the trade patterns, the influences on various local productions, and the “Romanization” of pottery production in the peninsula (for a brief discussion, see also Chapter 22). Roth’s work has had a wide impact as archaeologists begin to reassess the pottery evidence in their surveys and excavations, especially when it is used as a chronological determinant, as can be seen in the essay by Fracchia. But his greater point is that the pottery should not only be used as a chronological indicator; it is better studied as a cultural artifact, one that can contribute a great deal to our discussion of the character of “Roman Italy.”

  • Introduction 3

    This discussion about pottery and what it means in its Roman cultural context is also taken up by Laubenheimer (Chapter 6), for a different class of pottery. Focusing on the wine trade between Italy and Gaul, Laubenheimer notes that these amphoras cannot be thought of as being used in the same way in both places. On the surface, the storage ves-sels look to be straightforward indications of the adoption of Roman culture, in an area that will soon be labeled “Togate Gaul” for its embrace of Roman ways of life. Yet, as Laubenheimer shows, the culture of wine drinking, and even the use and reuse of ampho-ras, looks very different in Gaul than in Italy, sounding a warning to archaeologists not to interpret the material culture by itself as a simple indication of “Romanization” (see also Dietler, 2010, who discusses the same issue in relation to Greek culture and southern Gaul).

    In Chapter 7, I discuss another chronological indicator in strata, coins. Here, again, a warning is sounded to archaeologists against relying too heavily on coins as a sole indica-tor of chronology. The case for the impact of the Republican monetary system is assessed through Roman Hispania, where arguments still swirl around the date of the introduc-tion of the denarius, and thus the military and economic impact of Rome on the peninsula – which is noted as well by Rodá.

    The weapons of the legionary soldiers – one of the reasons often cited for the success-ful military expansion of Republican Rome – are surveyed by Goldman (Chapter 8). This period is briefly treated in handbooks on Roman weaponry, but the story of Rome’s adaptations of neighboring cultures’ forms and technologies and her own innovations show again the complex interaction between Rome and her competitors-turned-allies. The physical forms of the weapons depict changing political forces as well, as the army becomes a professional fighting force by the end of the first century, a formidable tool in the hands of strong leaders, and a contributing factor in the collapse of the Republic. The work of Dobson on Roman camps can be usefully consulted in conjunction with Goldman’s essay, and the changing shape of weapons as the Lucanians are confronted with Rome is briefly addressed by Gualtieri.

    For the last two chapters in this section, we turn to the bodies of the Romans themselves. Osteological studies are included in only a few final publications of archaeo-logical excavations, but their potential for unlocking many mysteries about lifestyle in the time of the Roman Republic is great. Since so few studies have concentrated on this period, Smith (Chapter 9) needs to range farther than the other authors in the Companion to find interpretive parallels to make sense of the Republican bodies that have been studied. In doing so, she can assess physical stress (as shown by diet or trauma) to begin to decide if the coming of the Romans meant any major lifestyle changes to individuals in the east (for a parallel study of Imperial era bodies and malaria, see Gowland and Garnsey, 2010). Smith also appropriately pleads for more attention to the study of bones on the part of archaeologists; Warden notes that preliminary studies of the DNA of Etruscan individuals has already reminded scholars that the arguments concerning the origin of the Etruscans are still open in many minds. The origin of Imperial inhabitants of Rome is currently being studied by strontium isotope analysis (Killgrove, 2010), a method which may be able to be used on populations of an earlier age as well.

    Lo Cascio’s entry on population and demographic study brings together aspects of several of the chapters on material culture, and points to problems that are addressed in specific regions of Italy (Chapter 10). His analysis of the “high” and “low” estimates of the population in Italy is crucial to understanding the development of cities, towns and

  • 4 Jane DeRose Evans

    villas, the role that agriculture plays in the economic growth of the peninsula, and the expansion of the number of men who could be called “cives Romani.” These numbers have an impact, as can be seen in the chapters by Fracchia, Gualtieri, Suano and Scopacasa, on the idea of identity, Romanization, and the problem of slave labor on latifundia. But they also have an impact on the growth of the city of Rome (as in Davies) and the needs that prompted colonization (as in Dyson).

    We move from the social to the landscape in Part II, “Archaeology and the Landscape,” where the authors use the physical features of the Roman world to explore how the Romans were formed by, and thereby formed, the landscape. Ammerman (Chapter 11) explores how the inhabitants of Rome largely reshaped the valleys (especially) and the hills to build their city. This view of earliest Rome can only be dimly seen, due to the deep, deep deposits that now overlie this era, and Ammerman cautions us about hewing too closely to the ancient authors’ description – or our very modern ideas – about the ancient topography of Rome. His work is complemented and illuminated by the chapters by Jackson and Kosso on architectural building materials; Edlund-Berry and Davies on Early and Middle Republican Rome, respectively; Hodge on aqueducts and water supply; and Laurence on roads and bridges.

    The landscape is used in a very different way by archaeologists who work on surveys, as Fracchia (Chapter 12) demonstrates. This form of “excavation,” which has become popular especially since the 1980s, is still plagued by problems of interpreting the data obtained by fieldwalking. As a consequence, as Fracchia notes, survey results are not always taken into consideration when it is time to write the history of the Italian Peninsula. The results of surveys do help the archaeologist and ancient historian discuss the impact of Roman colonization and agricultural practices and legislation. However, to be fully understood the survey results must be used in conjunction with excavation of sites. Gualtieri and Suano and Scopacasa explicitly argue that survey results are evidence for comprehending the cultures of the Italian Peninsula.

    Chapter 13 on agriculture and the environment by Goodchild is directly connected to the evidence found in surveys. Goodchild casts her net wider than surveys, using ancient authors, annual rainfall, man-made irrigation and drainage systems, botanical data, evidence of processing centers and animal bones to make her argument. By so doing, she can reflect on Late Republican agrarian “crises” and the development of large-scale agri-culture worked primarily by slaves or tenants. These problems are touched on by Becker, in his discussion on the development of villas.

    Dobson’s Chapter 14 on the development of the legionary camp is an admirable example of how an archaeologist must wrestle with the interpretation of both the physi-cal evidence and the ancient authors to understand the political and societal changes occurring in the Republic. Few Republican camps have been identified and fewer still excavated. The best-known camps, circling the city of Numantia, were built and rebuilt in the same spots during successive military campaigns. But Dobson can show the development from the manipular double-consular camp to the cohort-organized single-consular camp, a development that, as noted above, should be read in conjunction with the changes to the weaponry of the army that were outlined by Goldman.

    The Romans felt strongly that the landscape held the sacred, while they were also bent on reforming the landscape to make it sacred. Griffith (Chapter 15) first explores how we can reconstruct religious ritual and then discusses how this ritual was informed by or