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Visualizing Harbours In The Classical World Iconography And Representation Around The Mediterranean Federico Ugolini

  • SKU: BELL-50234038
Visualizing Harbours In The Classical World Iconography And Representation Around The Mediterranean Federico Ugolini
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Visualizing Harbours In The Classical World Iconography And Representation Around The Mediterranean Federico Ugolini instant download after payment.

Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
File Extension: PDF
File size: 26.56 MB
Author: Federico Ugolini
ISBN: 9781350125735, 9781350125766, 1350125733, 1350125768
Language: English
Year: 2020

Product desciption

Visualizing Harbours In The Classical World Iconography And Representation Around The Mediterranean Federico Ugolini by Federico Ugolini 9781350125735, 9781350125766, 1350125733, 1350125768 instant download after payment.

In recent years, there has been intense debate about the reality behind the depiction of maritime cityscapes, especially harbours. Visualizing Harbours in the Classical World argues that the available textual and iconographic evidence supports the argument that these representations have a symbolic, rather than literal, meaning and message, and moreover that the traditional view, that all these media represent the reality of the contemporary cityscapes, is often unrealistic. Bridging the gap between archaeological sciences and the humanities, it ably integrates iconographic materials, epigraphic sources, history and archaeology, along with visual culture.
Focusing on three main ancient ports – Alexandria, Rome and Leptis Magna – Federico Ugolini considers a range of issues around harbour iconography, from the triumphal imagery of monumental harbours and the symbolism of harbour images, their identification across the Mediterranean, and their symbolic, ideological and propagandistic messages, to the ways in which aspects of Imperial authority and control over the seas were expressed in the iconography of the Julio-Claudian, Trajan and Severii periods, how they reflected the repute, growth and power of the mercantile class during the Imperial era, and how the use of imagery reflected euergetism and paideia, which would inform the Roman audience about who had power over the sea.

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