Listing 1 - 10 of 23 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
Ce volume hors-série du Corpus des inscriptions de la France médiévale rassemble plus de 80 inscriptions funéraires d'époque carolingienne (milieu du VIIIe - fin du Xe siècle) provenant de l'Ouest de la France actuelle (Anjou, Maine, Touraine, Poitou), région alors partagée entre Aquitaine et Neustrie. Il compte autant de véritables épitaphes (plates tombes ou stèles placées sur les sépultures) que de plaques obituaires, commémorant la mort d'un individu, fixées voire intégrées dans le mur de l'église ou du cloître, et même une " endotaphe ", inscription déposée dans la tombe. Éditées selon les normes actuelles, traduites et abondamment commentées, ces inscriptions sont accompagnées de nombreux dessins et clichés photographiques, le tout précédé d'une importante introduction historique et méthodologique.
Inscriptions, Latin --- Carolingians --- Epitaphs --- Inscriptions, Latin --- France
Choose an application
Choose an application
Die römischen Grabdenkmäler aus dem Siedlungsgebiet der Treverer sind in vielerlei Hinsicht exzeptionell. Sie bilden sowohl aufgrund ihres Anteils am erhaltenen Denkmälerbestand als auch ihres charakteristischen Erscheinungsbildes eine wichtige Fundgruppe und haben einen hohen Stellenwert für die Erforschung der kaiserzeitlichen Kunst und Architektur im Moselraum. Die Beiträge in diesem Tagungsband geben einen Überblick zu aktuellen Forschungen, stellen neues Material vor und demonstrieren an konkreten Fallbeispielen die Anwendung innovativer methodischer Zugänge. Erstmals wird dabei das gesamte Treverergebiet mitsamt den benachbarten Regionen in den Blick genommen und in überregionaler Perspektive behandelt.
Sepulchral monuments --- Relief (Sculpture), Roman --- Inscriptions, Latin
Choose an application
L'Egitto dei Flavi, providing synthesis and new prospects of investigation, offers an overall review of the various information obtainable from papyrological and epigraphic sources from the Roman province of Egypt at the moment of transition from the Julio-Claudian dynasty to the new Flavian dynasty. Within the investigations, an attempt was made to focus on the province of Egypt during the period of Flavian domination with the aim of providing a compendium and a more balanced examination of the technical and economic organization of the country in a historical period that still would seem complex to want to define in its entirety. This operation made it necessary to start from the various documentary sources (papyrus, ostraka, epigraphs and wooden tablets) which bore testimony of the aspects that were intended to be emphasized. The texts examined were therefore carefully selected in the context of the substantial material available.
Romans --- Inscriptions, Latin --- Inscriptions, Greek --- Egypt --- History --- Sources.
Choose an application
Gods, Roman --- Ancestor worship --- Sepulchral monuments --- Stele (Archaeology) --- Inscriptions, Latin
Choose an application
Excavations (Archaeology) --- Tombs --- Fortification, Roman --- Inscriptions, Latin --- Lugli, Giuseppe,
Choose an application
Mercury (Roman deity) --- Inscriptions, Latin --- Cult --- Gods, Roman --- Mercury --- Mercury (Roman deity) - Cult - France --- Inscriptions, Latin - France
Choose an application
Carving a Professional Identity: The occupational epigraphy of the Roman Latin West presents the results of long-term research into the occupational epigraphy from the Latin-language provinces of the Roman Empire. It catalogues stone epigraphs of independent professionals (thus excluding state workers, imperial slaves, freedmen and military personnel), comprising some 690 people, providing quantitative as well as qualitative analyses of the raw data. A glossary translating the occupational titles is also included. The book reveals a very lively work market, where specialisation responded to demand and brought social and economic status to the worker. The coherence of epigraphic habits and manifestations within a professional group, along with all the other existing clues for a rather unitary use of symbols, endorse once more the existence of a Roman provincial, commercial, middle class.
Inscriptions, Latin --- Stone carvers --- Carvers (Decorative artists) --- Sculptors --- Stone-cutters --- E-books
Choose an application
Excavations (Archaeology) --- Architecture, Roman --- Inscriptions, Latin --- Albano Laziale (Italy) --- Antiquities, Roman.
Choose an application
Building --- Building materials --- Quarries and quarrying --- Inscriptions, Latin --- Stonemasons --- Architecture, Roman. --- Job descriptions
Listing 1 - 10 of 23 | << page >> |
Sort by
|