Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-7479d7b7d-767nl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-08T12:34:46.697Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

References

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 November 2022

Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
The Lives of a Roman Neighborhood
Tracing the Imprint of the Past, from 500 BCE to the Present
, pp. 225 - 238
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adkins, Leslie, and Adkins, Roy. 1996. Dictionary of Roman Religion. New York: Facts on File.Google Scholar
Adler, Marcus Nathan. 1907. The Itinerary of Benjamin of Tudela. New York: Philip Feldheim.Google Scholar
Agnew, John. 1998. “The Impossible Capital: Monumental Rome under Liberal and Fascist Regimes, 1870–1943.” Geografiska Annaler 80(4): 229–40.Google Scholar
Aicher, Peter J. 2004. Rome Alive: A Source Guide to the Ancient City. 2 vols. Wauconda: Bolchazy-Carducci.Google Scholar
Albers, Jon. 2015. “Zur Rekonstruktion des Heiligtums für Hercules Musarum am flaminischen Circus in Rom.” Kölner und Bonner Archaeologica 5: 3964.Google Scholar
Albertini, Francesco. 1510. Opusculum de mirabilibus noue et veteris Urbis Romae.Google Scholar
Aldrete, Gregory S. 2007. Floods of the Tiber in Ancient Rome. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Antonucci, Silvia Haia, and Procaccia, Claudio. 2010. “Benè Romi. La presenza ebraica a Roma nel Settecento,” in Castro, Daniela Di, ed. Et ecce gavdivm, Gli ebrei romani e la cerimonia di insediamento dei pontefici, 1221. Rome: Araldo De Luca Editore.Google Scholar
Arthurs, Joshua. 2015. “The Excavatory Intervention: Archaeology and the Chronopolitics of Roman Antiquity in Fascist Italy.” Journal of Modern European History 13(1): 4458.Google Scholar
Babić, Marek. 2014. “Reconstructions of Three Bridges in the Fourth Century Rome.” Studia Antiqua et Archaeologica 20: 249–69.Google Scholar
Baxa, Paul. 2004. “Piacentini’s Window: The Modernism of the Fascist Master Plan of Rome.” Contemporary European History 13(1): 120.Google Scholar
Baxa, Paul. 2010. Roads and Ruins: The Symbolic Landscape of Fascist Rome. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Beard, Mary. 2007. The Roman Triumph. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Beneš, Carrie E. 2008. “Mapping a Roman Legend: The House of Cola di Rienzo from Piranesi to Baedeker.” Italian Culture 26: 5783.Google Scholar
Benevolo, Leonardo. 1980. The History of the City. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Benocci, Carla, and Guidoni, Enrico, eds. 1993. Il Ghetto. Rome: Bonsignori Editore.Google Scholar
Berliner, Abraham. 1992. Storia degli ebrei di Roma. Milan: Rusconi Libri.Google Scholar
Bernard, Jean François, Bernardi, Philippe, and Esposito, Daniela, eds. 2008. Il reimpiego in architettura: Recupero, trasformazione e uso. Rome: l’École française de Rome.Google Scholar
Bevilacqua, Mario. 1988. Il Monte dei Cenci: Una famiglia e il suo insediamento urbano tra medioevo ed età barocca. Rome: Gangemi Editore.Google Scholar
Bianchi, Lorenzo. 1998. Case e torri medioevali a Roma: Documentazione, Storia e Sopravvivenza di Edifici Medioevali nel Tessuto Urbano di Roma. Vol. 1. Rome: L’Erma di Bretschneider.Google Scholar
Bifolco, Stefano, and Ronca, Fabrizio. 2018. Cartografia e Topografia Italiana Del XVI Secolo. 3 vols. Rome: Edizioni Antiquarius.Google Scholar
Biondo, Flavio. 2016. Rome in Triumph. Pincelli, Maria Agata, ed. and Frances Muecke, trans. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Blennow, Anna, and Rota, Stefano Fogelberg, eds. 2019. Rome and the Guidebook Tradition: From the Middle Ages to the 20th Century. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter.Google Scholar
Boiteux, Martine. 1976. “Les Juifs dans le Carnaval de la Rome modern, XVIe–XVIIIe siècles.” Mélanges de l’Ecole française de Rome. Moyen-Age, Temps modernes 88(2): 745–87.Google Scholar
Borlenghi, Aldo. 2014. “Les espaces du ludus dans le Champ de Mars à l’époque républicaine.” Collection de l’Ecole française de Rome 493: 1538.Google Scholar
Bottai, Giuseppe. 1936. Roma nei suoi rioni. Rome: Fratelli Palombi.Google Scholar
Boyd, M. J. 1953. “The Porticoes of Metellus and Octavia and Their Two Temples.” Papers of the British School of Rome 21: 152–59.Google Scholar
Bradley, Mark, and Stow, Kenneth R., eds. 2012. Rome, Pollution and Propriety: Dirt, Disease and Hygiene in the Eternal City from Antiquity to Modernity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Brentano, Robert. 1990. Rome before Avignon: A Social History of Thirteenth Century Rome. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Brezzi, Paolo. 1975. “Holy Years in the Economic Life of the City of Rome.” Journal of European Economic History 4: 673–90.Google Scholar
Brocchi, G. 1820. Dello stato fisico del suolo di Roma: Memoria per servire d’illustrazione alla carta geognostica di questa citta. Rome: Stamperia de Romanis.Google Scholar
Brock, Andrea L. 2016. “Envisioning Rome’s Prehistoric River Harbor: An Interim Report from the Forum Boarium.” Etruscan Studies 19(1): 122.Google Scholar
Brock, Andrea L. 2017. “Floodplain Occupation and Landscape Modification in Early Rome.” Quaternary International 460: 167–74.Google Scholar
Buisseret, David, ed. 1998. Envisioning the City: Six Studies in Urban Cartography. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Burroughs, Charles. 1990. From Signs to Design: Environmental Process and Reform in Renaissance Rome. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Buzzetti, Carlo, Virgili, Paola, and Santi, Maresita Nota. 1985. “Rione IX.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 90(2): 362–85.Google Scholar
Cafà, Valeria. 2010. “The Via Papalis in Early Cinquecento Rome: A Contested Space between Roman Families and Curials.” Urban History 37(3): 434–51.Google Scholar
Caffiero, Marina, and Esposito, Anna, eds. 2012. Judei de urbe. Roma e i suoi ebrei: una storia secolare. Rome: Archivi Di Stato.Google Scholar
Calcani, Giuliana. 1989. Cavalieri di Bronzo – La Torma di Alessandro Opera di Lisippo. Rome: L’Erma di Bretschneider.Google Scholar
Calimani, Riccardo. 2018. Storia degli Ebrei di Roma: Dall’antichità al XX secolo. Milan: Mondadori Libri S.p.A.Google Scholar
Campbell, Constance. 2003. “The Uncompleted Theatres of Rome.” Theatre Journal 55(1): 6779.Google Scholar
Carandini, Andrea, and Carafa, Paolo, eds. 2012. Atlante di Roma antica. Immagini della città. 2 vols. Milan: Electa Elemond.Google Scholar
Carpaneto, Giorgio et al. 2000. La Grande Guida dei Rioni di Roma. Rome: Newton & Compton editori.Google Scholar
Carragáin, Éamonn, and Vegvar, Carol Neuman De. 2007. Roma Felix – Formation and Reflections of Medieval Rome. Hampshire: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Carter, Harold. 1983. An Introduction to Urban Historical Geography. London: Edward Arnold.Google Scholar
Castagnoli, Ferdinando. 1981. “La zona del Circo Flaminio nel medioevo.” Archivio della Società Romana di Storia Patria 104: 4752.Google Scholar
Ceen, Allan. 1991. Rome 1748=Roma 1748 – La Pianta grande di Roma di Giambattista Nolli in facsimile. Highmount, NY: J.H. Aronson.Google Scholar
Çelnik, Zeynep, Favro, Diane, and Ingersoll, Richard, eds. 1994. Streets – Critical Perspectives on Public Space. Los Angeles: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Champagne, Marie Thérèse, and Boustan, Ra‘anan S.. 2011. “Walking in the Shadows of the Past: The Jewish Experience of Rome in the Twelfth Century.” Medieval Encounters 17: 464–94.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola. 1996. “Rinvenimenti e restauri al portico d’Ottavia e in piazza delle Cinque Scuole.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Communale di Roma 97: 267–79.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola. 2000. “Tempio di Apollo: nuove indagini sulla fase repubblicana.” Rendiconti 70: 177–96.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola. 2008a. “Teatro di Marcello: Nuove aquisizioni sulla struttura e organizzazione della scena e dell’area Post Scaenam alla luce delle indagini recenti.” Studi Romani 56: 323.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola. 2008b. “Portico D’Ottavia – Sant’Angelo in Pescheria: Nuove acquisizioni sulle fase medievali.” Rivista di Archeologia Cristiana 84: 414–38.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola. 2009. “Portico d’Ottavia: scavi, restauri, valorizzazioni,” in Arch.it.arch dialoghi di Archeologia e Architettura, 6277. Rome: Edizioni Quasar,.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola. 2013. “Roma. L’Arco di Germanico in ‘Circo Flaminio’: Nuove acquisizioni topografiche.” Atlante Tematico di Topografia Antica 23: 139–48.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola. 2017. “Porticus Metelli: Riflessioni.” Atlante Tematico di Topografia Antica 27: 724.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola. 2018. “Porticus Octaviae: Fase Augustea.” Atlante Tematico di Topografia Antica 28: 2552.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola, and Sartorio, Giuseppina Pisani, eds. 2017. Theatrum Marcelli. Rome: Istituto Nazionale di Studi Romani.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola, Borgia, Emanuela, and De Fabrizio, Silvia. 2015. “Portico d’Ottavia. Indagini archeologiche negli ambienti sotterranei dell’ex convento di S. Ambrogio della massima.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 115: 305–22.Google Scholar
Ciancio Rossetto, Paola, and Buonfiglio, Marialetizia. 2010. “Teatro di Marcello: Analisi e Riflesione Sugli Aspetti Progettuali e Costruttivi,” in Camporeale, Stefano, Dessales, Hélène, and Pizzo, Antonio, eds. Arqueología de la construccción II – Los procesos constructivos en el mundo Romano: Italia y Provincias Orientales, 5170. Madrid: Mérida.Google Scholar
Coarelli, Filippo. 1968. “Il tempio di Bellona.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologia Comunale di Roma 80: 3772.Google Scholar
Coarelli, Filippo. 1977. “Il Campo Marzio occidentale. Storia e topografia.” Mélanges de l’Ecole Française de Rome, Antiquité 89(2): 807–46.Google Scholar
Coarelli, Filippo. 1997. Il Campo Marzio: dalle origini alla fine della Repubblica. Rome: Quasar.Google Scholar
Coarelli, Filippo. 2007. Rome and Environs: An Archaeological Guide. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Coarelli, Filippo. 2009. Divus Vespasianus. Il bimillenario dei Flavi. Milan: Electra.Google Scholar
Coates-Stephens, Robert. 1996. “Housing in Early Medieval Rome, 500–1000 AD.” Papers of the British School at Rome 64: 239–59.Google Scholar
Coates-Stephens, Robert. 1997. “Dark Age Architecture in Rome.” Papers of the British School at Rome 65: 177232.Google Scholar
Coates-Stephens, Robert. 1998. “The Walls and Aqueducts of Rome in the Early Middle Ages, AD 500–1000.” The Journal of Roman Studies 88: 166–78.Google Scholar
Coffy, Pierre. 2018. “Le ghetto de Rome au XVIIIe siècle, un espace façonné par une communauté complexe.” Proposte e ricerche 81: 87106.Google Scholar
Connors, Joseph. 1989. Alliance and Enmity in Roman Baroque Urbanism. Tübingen: Wasmuth.Google Scholar
Connors, Joseph. 2011. Piranesi and the Campus Martius: The Missing Corso – Topography and Archaeology in Eighteenth-Century Rome. Milan: Editoriale Jaca Book.Google Scholar
Cornell, T. J. 1995. The Beginnings of Rome: Italy and Rome from the Bronze Age to the Punic Wars (c. 1000–264 BC). London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Corsi, Cristina. 2013. “‘Decoloranda Urbs’ – Archaeological Aspects of Rome in the Fifth Century AD,” in Oliveira, Francisco de et al., eds. A queda de Roma e o alvorecer da Europa, 152–66. Coimbra: Coimbra University Press.Google Scholar
Cosenza, Mario Emilio, ed. 1986. The Revolution of Cola di Rienzo/Petrarch. New York: Italica Press.Google Scholar
Coulston, Jon, and Dodge, Hazel, eds. 2000. Ancient Rome – The Archaeology of the Eternal City. Oxford: Oxford University School of Archaeology.Google Scholar
Davies, Penelope. 2017. Architecture and Politics in Republican Rome. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Davis, Raymond, trans. 1992. The Lives of the Eighth-Century Popes (Liber Pontificalis) – The Ancient Biographies of the Nine Popes from AD 715 to AD 817. Liverpool: Liverpool University Press.Google Scholar
Debenedetti-Stow, Sandra. 1992. “The Etymology of ‘Ghetto’: New Evidence from Rome.” Jewish History 6: 7985.Google Scholar
Degrassi, Attilio. 1954. Fasti capitolini. Turin: Paravia.Google Scholar
Delumeau, Jean. 1957. Vie économique et sociale de Rome dans le seconde moitié du XVIe siècle. Paris: E. De Boccard, Editeur.Google Scholar
De Nuccio, Marilda. 2011. “La decorazione architettonica del tempio di Bellona.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 112: 191226.Google Scholar
De Stefano, F. 2014. “Hercules Musarum in Circo Flaminio: Dalla dedica di Fulvio Nobiliore alla Porticus Philippi.” Archeologia Classica 65 n.s. 2 (4): 401532.Google Scholar
Dennie, John. 1898. Rome To-Day and Yesterday – The Pagan City. 4th ed. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons.Google Scholar
Desgodetz, Antoine Babuty. 1682. Les edifices antiques de Rome. Paris: Coignard.Google Scholar
Develin, Robert. 1979. “The Political Position of C. Flaminius.” Rheinische Museum für Philologie 122: 268277.Google Scholar
Dey, Henrik. 2015. The Afterlife of the Roman City: Architecture and Ceremony in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dey, Henrik. 2016. “From ‘Street’ to ‘Piazza’: Urban Politics, Public Ceremony, and the Redefinition of platea in Communal Italy and Beyond.” Speculum 91(4): 919–44.Google Scholar
Dey, Henrik. 2021. The Making of Medieval Rome: A New Profile of the City, 400–1450. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dickens, Charles. 1846. Pictures from Italy. Leipzig: Bernhard Tauchnitz.Google Scholar
Ditchfield, Simon. 2005. “Reading Rome as a Sacred Landscape c. 1586–1635,” in Coster, Will and Spicer, Andrew, eds. Sacred Space in Early Modern Europe, 167–92. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Dixon, Susan M. 2005. “Illustrating Ancient Rome, or the Ichnographia as Uchronia and Other Time Warps in Piranesi’s Il Campo Marzio,” in Smiles, Sam and Moser, Stephanie, eds. Envisioning the Past: Archaeology and the Image, 115–32. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Dixon, Susan M. 2019. Archaeology on Shifting Ground – Rodolfo Lanciani and Rome 1871–1914. Rome: “L’ERMA” di Bretschneider.Google Scholar
Dodero, Eloisa. 2016. “La documentazione grafica della Forma Urbi tra XVI e XVIII secolo: Approcci, metodi e finalit.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 117: 135–52.Google Scholar
Doran, John, and Smith, Damian J., eds. 2016. Pope Innocent II (1130–43) – The World vs the City. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Dumézil, Georges. 1996. Archaic Roman Religion, with an Appendix on the Religion of the Etruscans. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Dyson, Stephen L. 2010. Rome: A Living Portrait of an Ancient City. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Dyson, Stephen L. 2019. Archaelogy, Ideology and Urbanism in Rome from the Grand Tour to Berlusconi. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Edwards, Catherine. 1996. Writing Rome: Textual Approaches to the City. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Einsiedeln, Stiftsbibliothek, Codex 326 (1076): Manuscript of collected works (www.e-codices.unifr.ch/en/list/one/sbe/0326).Google Scholar
Erdkamp, Paul, ed. 2013. The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Rome. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Esposito, Anna, and Palermo, Luciano, eds. 2005. Economia e società a Roma tra Medioevo e Rinascimento – Studi dedicati ad Arnold Esch. Roma: Viella.Google Scholar
Farhat, G., ed. 2020. Landscapes of Pre-Industrial Urbanism. Washington, DC: Dumbarton Oaks.Google Scholar
Favro, Diane. 1996. The Urban Image of Augustan Rome. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ficacci, Luigi. 2000. Piranesi. The Complete Etchings. Köln: Taschen.Google Scholar
Fidenzoni, Paolo. 1970. Il Teatro Di Marcello. Rome: Edizioni Liber.Google Scholar
Filippi, Giorgio, and Liverani, Paolo. 2015. “Un nuovo frammento della Forma Urbis con il Circus Flaminius.” Rendiconti 87: 6988.Google Scholar
Filippi, Giorgio, and Liverani, Paolo. 2016. “Il frammento 31ll della Forma Urbis.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 117: 99114.Google Scholar
Fiorentino, Lucca. 2005. Il ghetto racconta Roma: The Ghetto Reveals Rome. Rome: Gangemi Editore.Google Scholar
Flohr, Miko, ed. 2021. Urban Space and Urban History in the Roman World. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Flory, Marleen B. 1996. “Dynastic Ideology, The Domus Augusta and Imperial Women: A Lost Statuary Group in the Circus Flaminius.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 126: 287306.Google Scholar
Flower, Harriet. 1995. “Fabulae Praetextae in Context: When Were Plays on Contemporary Subjects Performed in Republican Rome?The Classical Quarterly 45 (1): 170–90.Google Scholar
Fowler, W. Ward. 1899. The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic: An Introduction to the Study of the Religion of the Romans. London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Francini, Gierolamo. 1588. Le cose maravigliose dell’alma città di Roma. Venice.Google Scholar
Galinsky, Karl. 1996. Augustan Culture. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Galinsky, Karl. 2014. “Memory and Forgetting in the Age of Augustus.” 2014. Todd Memorial Lecture. Sydney: University of Sydney.Google Scholar
Galinsky, Karl, ed. 2005. The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Augustus. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Galinsky, Karl, ed. 2014. Memoria Romana: Memory in Rome and Rome in Memory. Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome. Supp. vol. X. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Galinsky, Karl, ed. 2016. Memory in Ancient Rome and Early Christianity. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Galinsky, Karl, and Lapatin, Kenneth, eds. 2015. Cultural Memories in the Roman Empire. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum.Google Scholar
Galli, Paolo, and Molin, Diego. 2012. “Beyond the Damage Threshold: The Historic Earthquakes of Rome.” Bulletin of Earthquake Engineering 12: 12771306.Google Scholar
Gatti, Guglielmo. 1979. “Il teatro e la crypta di Balbo in Roma.” Mélanges de l’École française de Rome. Antiquité 91(1): 237313.Google Scholar
Goldsworthy, Adrian. 2009. How Rome Fell. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Goodson, Caroline. 2010. The Rome of Paschal I: Papal Power, Urban Renovation, Church Rebuilding and Relic Translation, 817–824. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Gorrie, Charmaine. 2007. “The Restoration of the Porticus Octaviae and Severan Imperial Policy.” Greece & Rome, 2nd series, 54(1): 117.Google Scholar
Gosling, Anne. 1986. “Octavian, Brutus and Apollo: A Note on Opportunist Propaganda.” The American Journal of Philology 107(4): 586–89.Google Scholar
Gowing, Alain M. 2005. Empire and Memory: The Representation of the Roman Republic in Imperial Culture. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Greenhalgh, Michael. 1989. The Survival of Roman Antiquities in the Middle Ages. London: Gerald Duckworth & Co.Google Scholar
Gregorovius, Ferdinand. 1948. Moses Hadas, trans. The Ghetto and the Jews of Rome. New York: Schocken Books.Google Scholar
Gregorovius, Ferdinand. 2004. Annie Hamilton, trans. History of the City of Rome in the Middle Ages. New York: Italica Press.Google Scholar
Groppi, Angela, ed. 2014. Gli abitanti del ghetto di Roma – La Descriptio Hebreorum del 1733. Rome: Viella s.r.l.Google Scholar
Grossi Gondi, F. 1920. “La Cripta Confessionis del Sec. VIII Nella Chiesa di S. Angelo in Pescheria.” Civilta Cattolica 70 (3): 524–32.Google Scholar
Gruen, Erich. 1992. Culture and National Identity in Republican Rome. Ithaca: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Guidobaldi, Federico. 2014. “Un estesissimo intervento urbanistico nella Roma dell’inizio del XII secoloe la parziale perdita della ‘memoria topografica’ della città antica.” Mélanges de l’École française de Rome – Moyen Âge 126(2) (on line http://mefrm.revues.org/2223).Google Scholar
Günther, Hubertus. 2010. “Die ‘Porticus Pompeji’ in Rom,” in Winfried Nerdinger: Geschichte der Rekonstruktion, Konstruktion der Geschichte, 370–71. Munich: Prestel.Google Scholar
Gurval, Robert A. 1998. Actium and Augustus: The Politics and Emotions of Civil War. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Louis I. 2003. “Memory, Symbol, and Arson: Was Rome “Sacked,” in 1084?Speculum 78 (2): 378–99.Google Scholar
Haselberger, Lothar. 2007. Urbem Adornare: Die Stadt Rom und ihre Gestaltumwandlung unter Augustus / Rome’s Urban Metamorphosis under Augustus. Journal of Roman Archaeology Supp. Series 64. Alexander Thein, trans. Portsmouth, RI: Journal of Roman Archaeology.Google Scholar
Haselberger, Lothar, Romano, David Gilman, and Dumser, Elisha Ann, eds. 2002. Mapping Augustan Rome. Journal of Roman Archaeology Supp. Series 50. Portsmouth, RI: Journal of Roman Archaeology.Google Scholar
Häuber, Chrystina. 2017. Augustus and the Campus Martius in Rome: The Emperorʹs Role as Pharaoh of Egypt and Julius Caesarʹs Calendar Reform; the Montecitorio Obelisk, the Meridian Line, the Ara Pacis, and the Mausoleum Augusti. Munich: Fortuna Papers.Google Scholar
Hawthorne, Nathaniel. 2002. The Marble Faun. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Heather, Peter. 2006. The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History of Rome and the Barbarians. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Heather, Peter. 2013. The Restoration of Rome – Barbarian Popes and Imperial Pretenders. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Heiken, Grant, Funiciello, Renata, and De Rita, Donatella. 2005. The Seven Hills of Rome: A Geological Tour of the Eternal City. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Heslin, Peter. 2015. The Museum of Augustus: The Temple of Apollo in Pompeii, the Portico of Philippus in Rome and Latin Poetry. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum.Google Scholar
Hetherington, Paul. 1994. Medieval Rome: A Portrait of the City and Its Life. London: Rubicon Press.Google Scholar
Hickman, Frances V. 1991. “Augustus ‘Triumphator’: Manipulation of the Triumphal Theme in the Political Program of Augustus.” Latomus 50(1): 124–38.Google Scholar
Hill, Philip V. 1962. “The Temples and Statues of Apollo in Rome.” The Numismatic Chronicle and Journal of the Royal Numismatic Society. Seventh series, 2: 125–42.Google Scholar
Holstein, Alizah. 2006. “Rome during Avignon: Myth, Memory and Civic Identity in Fourteenth-Century Roman Politics.” PhD diss. Cornell University.Google Scholar
Hubert, Étienne. 1990. Espace urbain et habitat à Rome du Xé siecle à la fin du XIII siecle. Rome: École Française de Rome.Google Scholar
Hubert, Étienne et al., ed. 1993. Rome aux XIIIe et XIVe siècles. Rome : École Française de Rome.Google Scholar
Hülsen, Christian. 1927. Le chiese di Roma nel medio evo. Florence: Olschki editore.Google Scholar
Humphrey, John H. 1986. Roman Circuses: Arenas for Chariot Racing. London: B.T. Batsford.Google Scholar
Insolera, Italo. 2002. Le città nella storia d’Italia – Roma. Rome: Editori Laterza.Google Scholar
Insolera, Italo. 2018. Modern Rome – From Napoleon to the Twenty-First Century. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.Google Scholar
Jacks, Philip. 2008. “Restauratio and Reuse: The Afterlife of Roman Ruins.” Places Journal 20(1): 1020.Google Scholar
Jacobs, II, Paul, W. 2018. “Cola di Rienzo and the Reenactment of an Ancient Tale – Finding the Prata Flaminia in Fourteenth-Century Rome.” Renaissance Studies 33(5): 738–60.Google Scholar
Jacobs, II, Paul, W., and Conlin, Diane Atnally. 2014. Campus Martius: The Field of Mars in the Life of Ancient Rome. New York and Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Jones, Pamela M., Wisch, Barbara, and Ditchfield, Simon, eds. 2019. A Companion to Early Modern Rome, 1492–1692. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Kalas, Gregor. 2011. “Mapping, Memory and Fragmented Representation,” in Pérez-Gómez, Alberto et al., eds. Where Do You Stand? Proceedings of the 2011 ACSA Annual Conference, 538–42. Washington, DC: Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture.Google Scholar
Kallis, Aristotle. 2012. “The ‘Third Rome’ of Fascism: Demolitions and the Search for a New Urban Syntax.” The Journal of Modern History 84(1): 4079.Google Scholar
Katermaa-Ottela, Aino. 1981. Le casetorri medievali in Roma. Commentationes Humanarum Litterarum 67. Helsinki: Societas scientiarum Fennica.Google Scholar
Katz, Robert. 2003. The Battle for Rome. New York: Simon & Schuster.Google Scholar
Kemezis, Adam M. 2015. Urban Dreams and Realities in Antiquity – Remains and Representations of the Ancient City. Leiden and Boston: Brill.Google Scholar
Kinney, Dale. 2007. “Fact and Fiction in the Mirabilis urbis Romae,” in Carragáin, Éamonn Ó and Vegvar, Carol Neuman de, eds. Roma Felix – Formation and Reflections of Medieval Rome, 235–52. London: Ashgate.Google Scholar
Kinney, Dale. 2011. “Spolia as Signifiers in Twelfth-Century Rome.” Hortus Artium Medievalium 17: 151–66.Google Scholar
Kinney, Dale. 2013. “Spoliation in Medieval Rome,” in Altekamp, Stefan, Marcks-Jacobs, Carmen, and Seiler, Peter, eds. Perspektiven der Spolienforschung, 1: 261–85. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Kleiner, Fred. 1988. “The Arch in Honor of C. Octavius and the Fathers of Augustus.” Historia: Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 37(3): 347–57.Google Scholar
Kostof, Spiro. 1973. The Third Rome 1870–1950: Traffic and Glory. Berkeley: University Art Museum.Google Scholar
Kostof, Spiro. 1991. The City Shaped – Urban Patterns and Meanings through History. London: Thames and Hudson, Ltd.Google Scholar
Krautheimer, Richard. 1937. Corpus Basilicarum Christianarum Romae: The Early Christian Basilicas of Rome (IV–IX Cent.). Città del Vaticano: Pontificio Istituto Di Archeologia Cristiana.Google Scholar
Krautheimer, Richard. 1980. Rome: Profile of a City, 312–1308. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Krautheimer, Richard. 1985. The Rome of Alexander VII 1655–1667. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Kritzer, Ruth Elizabeth. 2010. “Renaissance Rome Descriptions in Comparison.” Bibliothèque d’Humanisme et Renaissance 72(1): 113–25.Google Scholar
La Rocca, Eugenio. 1985. Amazzonomachia. Le sculture frontonali del tempio d’Apollo Sosiano. Rome: De Luca Editore.Google Scholar
La Rocca, Eugenio. 1993. “Due monumenti a pianta circolare in circo Flaminio. Il perirrhanterion e la columna Bellica,” in Scott, A. R. and Scott, R. T., eds. Eius Virtutis Studiosi: Classical and Postclassical Studies in Memory of Frank Edward Brown (1908–1988), 1729. Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art.Google Scholar
Lanciani, Rodolfo. 1878. “Scavi nel Portico d’Ottavia.” Bullettino dell ‘ Instituto di corrispondenza archeologica anno 1878: 209–19.Google Scholar
Lanciani, Rodolfo. 1890. Ancient Rome in the Light of Recent Discoveries. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin.Google Scholar
Lanciani, Rodolfo. 1897. The Ruins and Excavations of Ancient Rome. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.Google Scholar
Lanciani, Rodolfo. 1902. Storia degli scavi di Roma e notizie intorno le collezioni romane di Antichita. Vol. I. Rome: Ermanno Loescher & Co.Google Scholar
Lanciani, Rodolfo. 2007. Forma Urbis Romae. Rome: Edizioni Quasar.Google Scholar
Lange, Carsten. 2015. “Augustus’ Triumphal and Triumph-like Returns,” in Östenberg, Ida, Malmberg, Simon, and Bjørnebye, Jonas, eds. The Moving City – Processions, Passages and Promenades in Ancient Rome, 133–44. London: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc.Google Scholar
Lansford, Tyler. 2009. The Latin Inscriptions of Rome. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Lee, Egmont, ed. 1985. Descriptio Urbis – The Roman Census of 1527. Rome: Bulzoni Editore.Google Scholar
Leonardi, Raffaele, Pracchia, Stefano, Buonaguro, Stefano, Laudato, Matteo, and Saviane, Nicoletta. 2010. “Appendice: Sondaggi lungo la tratta T2 Caratteri ambientali e aspetti topografici del campo Marzio In Epoca Romana,” in R. Egidi, R., Filippi, F., and Martone, S., eds. Archeologica e infrastrutture: Il tracciato fondamentale della linea C della metropolitana di Roma: prime indagini archeologiche, 8292. Florence: Olschki editore.Google Scholar
Leone, Anna, Palombi, Domenico, and Walker, Susan, eds. 2007. Res bene gestae: Ricerche di storia urbana su Roma antica in ornere di Eva Steinby. Lexicon Topographicum Urbis Romae, Supplementum IV. Rome: Edizione Quasar.Google Scholar
Leoni, Tommaso. 2020. “The Date of Vespasian and Titus’s Triumph de Iudaeis.” Bollettino di Studi Latini 50(2): 682–95.Google Scholar
Lerner, L. Scott. 2002. “Narrating over the Ghetto of Rome.” Jewish Social Studies 8: 138.Google Scholar
Long, Pamela O. 2018. Engineering the Eternal City: Infrastructure, Topography and the Culture of Knowledge in Late Sixteenth-Century Rome. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Lott, J. Bert. 1996. “An Augustan Sculpture of August Justice.” Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 113: 263–70.Google Scholar
Lott, J. Bert. 2004. The Neighborhoods of Augustan Rome. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Lumisden, Andrew. 1812. Remarks on the Antiquities of Rome and Its Environs. London: Bulmer and Co.Google Scholar
MacDonald, William L. 1982. The Architecture of the Roman Empire. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
MacMillan, Hugh. 1888. Roman Mosaics or Studies in Rome and Its Neighbourhood. New York: MacMillan.Google Scholar
MacMullen, Ramsey. 1970. “Market Days in the Roman Empire.” Phoenix 24(4): 333–41.Google Scholar
Magnuson, Torgil. 1986. Rome in the Age of Bernini. 2 vols. Stockholm: Almqvist et Wiksell.Google Scholar
Magnuson, Torgil. 2004. The Urban Transformation of Medieval Rome, 312–1420. Stockholm: Swedish Institute in Rome.Google Scholar
Maier, Jessica. 2012. “Francesco Rosselli’s Lost View of Rome: An Urban Icon and Its Progeny.” The Art Bulletin 94(3): 395411.Google Scholar
Maier, Jessica. 2015. Rome Measured and Imagined – Early Modern Maps of the Eternal City. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Maire Vigueur, Jean-Claude. 2016. The Forgotten Story: Rome in the Communal Period. Rome: Viella.Google Scholar
Manacorda, Daniele. 1990. “Excavations in the Crypta Balbi, Rome: A Survey.” The Journal of the Accordia Research Center 1: 7381.Google Scholar
Manacorda, Daniele. 2000. Crypta Balbi: Museo Nazionale Romano. Milan: Electra.Google Scholar
Manacorda, Daniele. 2001. Crypta Balbi: Archeologia e storia di un paesaggio urbano. Milan: Electra.Google Scholar
Marazzi, Federico. 2000. “Rome in Transition: Economic and Political Change in the Fourth and Fifth Centuries,” in Smith, Julia M. H. and Bullough, Donald, eds. Early Medieval Rome and the Christian West: Essays in Honour of Donald Bullough, 2141. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Marcellino, Giuseppe. 2018. “Filologia, antiquaria e propaganda nel Quattrocento. Il caso del tempio di Apollo in Circo.” Commentaria Classica 5: 6175.Google Scholar
Marchetti-Longhi, Giuseppe. 1924. “Porticus Gallatorum.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 52: 176240.Google Scholar
Marchetti-Longhi, Giuseppe. 1938. “Il quartiere Greco-orientale di Roma nell’antichità e nel medio evo.” ATTI del IV Congresso Nazionale di Studi Romani 1: 169–85.Google Scholar
Marchetti-Longhi, Giuseppe. 1970. “Nuovi aspetti della topografia dell’antico. Campo Marzio di Roma: Circo Flaminio o Teatro di Balbo?Mélanges d’archéologie et d’histoire 82(1): 117–58.Google Scholar
Marchetti-Longhi, Giuseppe. 1976. “Il ‘Mons Fabiorum’ – Note di topografia medioevale di Roma.” Archivio della Società romana di storia patria 99: 569.Google Scholar
Marliani, Bartholomeo. 1534. Urbis Romae Topographia. Venice: Hieronymus Francinum.Google Scholar
Martinelli, Fioravante. 1644. Roma ricercata nel suo sito & nella scuola di tutti gli antiquarij. Rome: Bernardino Tani.Google Scholar
Maskarinec, Maya. 2014. “Foreign Saints at Home in Eighth- and Ninth-Century Rome: The Patrocinia of Diaconiae, Xenodochia and Greek Monasteries,” in Kuzmová, S., Marinković, A., and Vedriš, T., eds. Cuius patrocinio tota gaudet regio. Saints’ Cults and the Dynamics of Regional Cohesion, 2137. Zagreb: Hagiotheca.Google Scholar
Maskarinec, Maya. 2018. Rebuilding Rome in the Early Middle Ages. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.Google Scholar
Meneghini, Roberto. 1997. “Edilizia pubblica e riuso dei monumenti classici a Roma nell’alto medioevo: L’area dei temple di Apollo Sosiano e Bellona a la diaconia di S. Angelo in Pescheria,” in Gelichi, Sauro, ed. I Congresso Nazionale di Archeologia medievale, 5256. Florence: Sesto Fiorentino.Google Scholar
Meneghini, Roberto. 2016. “La Forma urbis e le altre cartografie marmoree di Roma antica alla luce delle ultime ricerche e scoperte.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 117: 179–92.Google Scholar
Meneghini, Roberto, and Valenzani, Riccardo Santangeli. 2004. Roma nell’Altomedioevo: Topografia e urbanistica Della Città Dal V al X Secolo. Rome: Libreria Dello Stato.Google Scholar
Messer, William Stuart. 1926. “The New Rome and Archaeology.” The Classical Journal 22(3): 179–88.Google Scholar
Miglio, Massimo. 1991. Scrittori, scrittori e storia, 2 vols. Rome: Vecchiarelli.Google Scholar
Mignone, Lisa Marie. 2016. The Republican Aventine and Rome’s Social Order. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Milano, Attilio. 1988. Il Ghetto di Roma. Rome: Carucci editore.Google Scholar
Miles, Gary B. 1995. Livy: Reconstructing Early Rome. Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Millar, Fergus. 1998. The Crowd in Rome in the Late Republic. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Mineo, Bernard, ed. 2015. A Companion to Livy. West Sussex: John Wiley and Sons, Inc.Google Scholar
Modigliani, Anna. 1998. Mercati, botteghe e spazi di commercio a Roma tra medioevo ed età moderna. Rome: Roma nel Rinascimento.Google Scholar
Modigliani, Anna. 2014. “L’area di Piazza Navona tra medioevo e rinascimento: usi sociali, mercantile, cerimoniali,” in Bernard, J.-F., ed. Piazza Navona, ou Place Navone, la plus belle & la plus grande – Du stade de Domitien à la place moderne, histoiree d’une évolution urbaine, 481504. Rome: École Française de Rome.Google Scholar
Montalbano, Riccardo. 2018. “Ricostruire il sistema stradale di Roma antica. Note sulla viabilità del Campo Marzio in età Repubblicana,” in Cavallo, D., Migliorati, L., and Stasolla, F., eds. Seminari di topogratia antica e medievale per Letizia Ermini Pani, 8798. Rome: Istituto Nazionale di Studi Romani.Google Scholar
Monterroso, A. 2009. “Via Triumphalis per Theatrum Marcelli, símbolos de arquitectura en la forma urbis marmorea.” Revue Archéologique, new series, 1: 351.Google Scholar
Moraci, Alfredo. 2018. “Edificio per spettacoli o magazzini? Sulle strutture attribuite all’anfiteatro di Statilio Tauro nel Campo Marzio meridionale.” Ostraka 27: 7791.Google Scholar
Moralee, J. 2017. “A Hill of Many Names: The Capitolium from Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages.” Acta ad archaeologiam et artium historiam pertinentia 26: 4770.Google Scholar
Morgan, M. Gwyn. 1971. “The Portico of Metellus: A Reconsideration.” Hermes 99: 480505.Google Scholar
Mortensen, Eva, and Poulsen, Birte, eds. 2017. Cityscapes and Monuments of Western Asia Minor – Memories and Identities. Oxford and Philadelphia: Oxbow Books.Google Scholar
Mulryan, Michael J.J. 2008. “The Religious Topography of Late Antique Rome (A.D. 313–440): A Case Study for A Strategy.” DPhil diss. University College, London.Google Scholar
Musto, Ronald G. 2003. Apocalypse in Rome: Cola di Rienzo and the Politics of the New Age. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Najbjerg, Tina, and Trimble, Tina. 2006. “The Severan Marble Plan since 1960,” in Meneghini, Roberto and Valenzani, Riccardo Santangeli, eds. Formae Urbis Romae – Nuovi Frammenti di Piante Marmoree dallo scavo dei Fori Imperiali, 75101. Rome: “L’ERMA” di Bretschneider.Google Scholar
Nibby, Antonio. 1861. Itinerario di Roma e delle sue vicinanze. 7th ed. Rome: Aureli E C.Google Scholar
Nichols, Francis Morgan, and Gardiner, Eileen. 1986. The Marvels of Rome – Mirabilia Urbis Romae. New York: Italica Press.Google Scholar
Niederer, Francis J. 1952. “Early Medieval Charity.” Church History 21(4): 285–95.Google Scholar
Nippel, Wilfried. 1995. Public Order in Ancient Rome. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Nussdorfer, Laurie. 1997. “The Politics of Space in Early Modern Rome.” Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome. 42: 161–86.Google Scholar
Olinder, Björn. 1974. Porticus Octavia in Circo Flaminio: Topographical Studies in the Campus Martius of Rome. Stockholm: Svenska Institutet I Rom.Google Scholar
O’Neill, P. 2002. “Triumph Songs, Reversal and Plautus’ Amphitruo.” Ramus 32: 138.Google Scholar
Orlin, Eric M. 2002a. Temples, Religion, and Politic in the Roman Republic. Boston: Brill Academic.Google Scholar
Orlin, Eric M. 2002b. “Foreign Cults in Republican Rome: Rethinking the Pomerial Rule.” Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 47: 118.Google Scholar
Osborne, John, trans and commentary. 1987. Master Gregorius – The Marvels of Rome. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies.Google Scholar
Palmer, Robert E. A. 1990. “Studies of the Northern Campus Martius in Ancient Rome.” Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 80(2): 164.Google Scholar
Palmer, Robert E. A. 1997. Rome and Carthage at Peace. Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag.Google Scholar
Palombi, Domenico. 2010. “Roma tardo-repubblicana: verso la città ellenistica,” in Rocca, Eugenio La, Presicce, Claudio Parisi, and Monaco, Annalisa Lo, eds. I giorni di Roma: L’età della conquista, 6582. Rome: Skira.Google Scholar
Panciera, Silvio. 1987. “Ancora tra epigrafia e topografia,” in L’Urbs: espace urbain et histoire (Ier siècle av. J.-C. – IIIe siècle ap. J.-C.), 6186. Rome: Ecole Française de Rome.Google Scholar
Pastor, Ludwig von. 1913. The History of the Popes from the Close of the Middle Ages. 4th ed. London : Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co.Google Scholar
Patterson, John R. 1992. “The City of Rome: From Republic to Empire.” The Journal of Roman Studies 82: 186215.Google Scholar
Pensabene, Patrizio. 2011. “Il ‘Portichetto’ tuscanico presso il tempio di Bellona e la ‘Via Trionfale’.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 112: 251–91.Google Scholar
Pensabene, Patrizio. 2015. Roma su Roma – Reimpiego architettonica, recupero dell’antico e trasformazioni urbane tra il III e il XIII secolo. Vatican: Pontificio Istituto di Archeologia Cristiana.Google Scholar
Pensabene, Patrizio. 2017. “Architectual Spolia and Urban Transformation in Rome from the Fourth to the Thirteenth Century,” in Altekamp, Stefan, Marcks-Jacobs, Carmen, and Seiler, Peter, eds. Zentren und Konjunkturen der Spoliierung, 177233. Berlin: De Gruyter.Google Scholar
Pergola, Stefania. 2020. “Il significato del reimpiego di spolia in alcune strutture tardo antiche e medioevali nell’antico Campo Marzio meridionale: Il caso dell’area archeologica del Teatro di Marcello,” in Mateos Cruz, P. and Morán Sánchez, C. J., eds. Exemplum et Spolia. La reutilización arquitectónica en la transformacion del paisaje urbano de las ciudades históricas, 183–94. Mytra: Mérida.Google Scholar
Petrarch, Francesco. 1996. The Revolution of Cola di Rienzo, ed. Cosenza, Mario. New York: Italica Press.Google Scholar
Pietilä-Castrén, Leena. 1987. Magnificentia Publica: The Victory Monuments of the Roman Generals in the Era of the Punic Wars. Helsinki: Societas Scientiarum Fennica.Google Scholar
Pietrangeli, Carlo, ed. 1976. Rione XI, S. Angelo. Guide rionali di Roma: 26. Rome: Fratelli Palombi Editori.Google Scholar
Platner, Samuel Ball, and Ashby, Thomas. 1926. A Topographical Dictionary of Rome. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Poe, Joe Park. 1984. “The Secular Games, the Aventine, and the Pomerium in the Campus Martius.” Classical Antiquity 3(1): 5781.Google Scholar
Pollitt, J. J. 1978. “The Impact of Greek Art on Rome.” Transactions of the American Philological Association 108: 155–74.Google Scholar
Popkin, Maggie L. 2012. “The Triumphal Route in Republican and Imperial Rome: Architecture, Experience, and Memory.” PhD diss. New York University.Google Scholar
Popkin, Maggie L. 2016. The Architecture of the Roman Triumph: Monuments, Memory, and Identity. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Poplacean, Danielle Meghan. 2017. “The Business of Butchery: Bellona and War, Society and Religion from Republic to Empire.” MA thesis. McGill University.Google Scholar
Porta, Giuseppe, ed. 2007. Anonimo romano: Cronica. Milan: Adelphi.Google Scholar
Postlewate, Laurie, and Hüsken, Wim, eds. 2007. Acts and Texts: Performance and Ritual in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. Amsterdam: Rudopi.Google Scholar
Prebys, Portia, ed. 2011. Early Modern Rome 1341–1667: Proceedings of a Conference Held in Rome May 13–15, 2010. Ferrara: Edisai.Google Scholar
Procaccia, Claudio, ed. 2013. Ebrei a Roma tra Risorgimento ed emancipazione (1814–1914). Rome: Gangemi Editore spa.Google Scholar
Pugliesi, Laura. 2008. “Alcune osservazioni sulle fasi piu antiche della chiesa di S. Angelo in Pescheria.” Rivista di Archeologia Cristiana. 84: 377414.Google Scholar
Pulvers, Marvin. 2002. Roman Fountains – 2000 Fountains in Rome: A Complete Collection. Rome: l’ERMA di Bretschneider.Google Scholar
Rawson, Elizabeth. 1987. “Discrimina Ordinum: The Lex Julia Theatralis.” Papers of the British School at Rome 55: 83114.Google Scholar
Rendina, Claudio, and Paradisi, Donatella. 2003. La grande guida delle strade di Roma. Rome: Newton & Compton editori s.r.l.Google Scholar
Riccioni, Stefano. 2011. “Rewriting Antiquity, Renewing Rome. The Identity of the Eternal City through Visual Art, Monumental Inscriptions and the Mirabilia.” Medieval Encounters 17(4–5): 439463.Google Scholar
Richardson, Lawrence, Jr. 1976. “The Evolution of the Porticus Octaviae.” American Journal of Archaeology 80(1): 5564.Google Scholar
Richardson, Lawrence, 1992. A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press.Google Scholar
Robbins, Deborah King. 1989. “A Case Study of Medieval Urban Process: Rome’s Trastevere (1250–1450).” PhD diss. University of California, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Rodriguez Almeida, Emilio. 1980. Forma Urbis Marmorea. Rome: Edizioni Quasar.Google Scholar
Roselaar, Saskia T. 2010. Public Land in the Roman Republic: A Social and Economic History of Ager Publicus in Italy, 396–89 B.C. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Rossi, Filippo. 1697. Descrizione di Roma Antica Formata Nuovamente. Rome.Google Scholar
Rowe, Julie. 2014. “Rome’s Medieval Fish Market at S. Angelo in Pescheria.” Melbourne Art Journal 13: 827.Google Scholar
Russell, Amy. 2014. “Memory and Movement in the Roman Fora from Antiquity to Metro C.” Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 73(4): 478506.Google Scholar
Salvagni, Isabella. 1997. “La pescaria presso il Portico d’Ottavia a Roma: Il propileo severiano, la chiesa di S. Angelo, la cappella di Sant’Andrea, l’oratorio dei Pescivendoli.” Rivista Storica del Lazio 7: 91133.Google Scholar
Salvagni, Isabella. 2000. “Da ‘Tempio’, a ‘Portico’, a Propileo: Le soluzioni del conflitto con l’ ‘Antico’ nella chiesa di Sant’Angelo in Pescaria nel Portico d’Ottavia.” Archivio della Società Romana di Storia Patria 23: 133–68.Google Scholar
San Juan, Rose Marie. 2001. Rome: A City Out of Print. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Saunders, Catherine. 1913. “The Site of Dramatic Performances at Rome in the Times of Plautus and Terence.” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 44: 8797.Google Scholar
Scaglia, Gustina. 1964. “The Origin of an Archaeological Plan of Rome by Alessandro Strozzi.” Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 27: 137–63.Google Scholar
Scheidel, Walter. 2009. “When Did Livy Write Books 1, 3, 28 and 59?The Classical Quarterly 59: 653–59.Google Scholar
Schwarz, Amy. 1994. “Images and Illusions of Power in Trecento Art: Cola di Rienzo and the Ancient Roman Republic.” PhD diss. State University of New York, Binghamton.Google Scholar
Scott, Russell T., and Scott, Ann Reynolds. 1994. Eius Virtutis Studiosi: Classical and Postclassical Studies in Memory of Frank Edward Brown (1908–1988). Washington, DC: National Gallery of Art.Google Scholar
Scullard, H. H. 1981. Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Sear, Frank. 2006. Roman Theatres: An Architectural Study. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Segarra Lagunes, Maria Margarita. 2004. Il Tevere e Roma: storia di una simbiosi. Roma: Gangemi.Google Scholar
Seibt, Gustav. 2000. Anonimo romano. Scrivere la storia alle soglie del Rinascimento. Rome: Viella Libreria Editrice.Google Scholar
Senseney, John. 2011. “Adrift toward Empire: The Lost Porticus Octavia in Rome and the Origins of the Imperial Fora.” Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 70(4): 421–41.Google Scholar
Serlio, Sebastiano. 1600. Tutte l’opere d’architettura et prospetiva. Vicenza: Francesco de’ Franceschi.Google Scholar
Sessa, Kristina. 2012. The Formation of Papal Authority in Late Antique Italy – Roman Bishops and the Domestic Sphere. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Shetterly, Anya. 1984. Romewalks. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.Google Scholar
Simonsohn, Shlomo. 1989. The Apostolic See and the Jews, Documents: 1394–1464. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.Google Scholar
Smallwood, F. Mary. 1976. The Jews under Roman Rule: From Pompey to Diocletian. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Smith, Gregory, and Gadeyne, Jan, eds. 2013. Perspectives on Public Space in Rome from Antiquity to the Present Day. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Smith, Julia M. H., ed. 2000. Early Medieval Rome and the Christian West: Essays in Honour of Donald Bullough. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Spera, Lucrezia. 2014. “Trasformazioni e riassetti del tessuto urbano nel Campo Marzio centrale tra tarda antichità e medioevo.” Mélanges de l’École française de Rome – Moyen Âge 126(1): 4774.Google Scholar
Spizzichino, Giancarlo. 2011. La scomparsa della sesta scola: La sinagoga Portaleone. Rome: Gangemi Editore.Google Scholar
Stamper, John W. 2005. The Architecture of Roman Temples: The Republic to the Middle Empire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Steinby, Eva Margareta, ed. 19932000. Lexicon Topographicum Urbis Romae. Rome: Edizioni Quasar.Google Scholar
Stinger, Charles. 1985. The Renaissance in Rome. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Google Scholar
Stow, Kenneth. 1972. “The Burning of the Talmud in 1553, in the Light of Sixteenth Century Catholic Attitudes toward the Talmud.” Bibliotheque d’Humanisme et Renaissance. 34(3): 435–59.Google Scholar
Stow, Kenneth. 1992. “The Consciousness of Closure: Roman Jewry and Its Ghet,” in Ruderman, David B., ed. Essential Papers on Jewish Culture in Renaissance and Baroque Italy, 386400. New York: New York University Press.Google Scholar
Stow, Kenneth. 1997. The Jews in Rome. 2 vols. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
Stow, Kenneth. 2001. Theatre of Acculturation: The Roman Ghetto in the 16th Century. Seattle and London: University of Washington Press.Google Scholar
Taylor, Lily Ross. 1990. Roman Voting Assemblies: From The Hannibalic War to the Dictatorship of Caesar. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Taylor, Rabun, Rinne, Katherine, and Kostof, Spiro. 2016. Rome: An Urban History from Antiquity to the Present. New York and Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Temple, Nicholas. 2011. renovatio urbis: Architecture Urbanism and Ceremony in the Rome of Julius II. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Tittoni, M. E., Pirani, Federica, and Fornasiero, Maria Paola. 2007. Paesaggi della memoria – Gli acquerelli romani di Ettore Roesler Franz dal 1876 al 1895. Florence: Mandragora.Google Scholar
Torelli, Mario. 1992. Typology and Structure of Roman Historical Reliefs. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Totti, Pamphilio. 1638. Ritratto di Roma moderna. Rome.Google Scholar
Tucci, Pier Luigi. 1995. “Considerazioni sull’edificio di via di Santa Maria de’ Calderari.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 46: 95124.Google Scholar
Tucci, Pier Luigi. 1996. “Un arco onorario e una torre medievale.” Mélanges de l’Ecole française de Rome – Antiquité 108 (1): 2747.Google Scholar
Tucci, Pier Luigi. 2001. Laurentius Manlius: la ruiscoperta dell’antica Roma, la nuova Roma di Sisto IV. Rome: Edizione Quasar.Google Scholar
Tucci, Pier Luigi. 2011–2012. “The Pons Sublicius: A Reinvestigation.” Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 56–57: 177212.Google Scholar
Tucci, Pier Luigi. 2013. “The Marble Plan of the Via Anicia and the Temple of Castor and Pollux in Circo Flaminio: The State of the Question.” Papers of the British School at Rome 81: 91127.Google Scholar
Ungern-Sternberg, J. von. 2005. “The End of the Conflict of the Orders,” in Raaflaub, Kurt, ed. Social Struggles in Archaic Rome: New Perspectives on the Conflict of the Orders, 312–32. Malden, MA and Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Valenzani, Riccardo Santangeli. 2007. “Public and Private Space in Rome during Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages.” FRAGMENTA. Journal of the Royal Netherlands Institute in Rome 1: 6382.Google Scholar
Valenzani, Riccardo Santangeli. 2014. “Hosting Foreigners in Early Medieval Rome: From Xenodochia to Scholae Peregrinorum,” in Tinti, Francesca, ed., England and Rome in the Early Middle Ages: Pilgrimage, Art, and Politics, 6988. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols.Google Scholar
Vasi, Mariano. 1794. Itinerario istruttivo di Roma. Vol. 2. Rome.Google Scholar
Verstegen, Ian, and Ceen, Allan. 2013. Giambattista Nolli and Rome – Mapping the City before and after the Pianta Grande. Rome: Studium Urbis.Google Scholar
Vishnia, Rachel Feig. 2012. “A Case of ‘Bad Press’? Gaius Flaminius in Ancient Historiography.” Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 181: 2745.Google Scholar
Vitti, Massimo. 2010. “Note di topografia sull’area del Teatro di Marcello.” Mélanges de l’École française de Rome – Antiquité 122: 549–84.Google Scholar
Vitti, Massimo. 2016. “Per una revisione della lastra 31: i templi di Apollo e di Bellona e l’area circostante.” Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Comunale di Roma 117: 115–28.Google Scholar
Vopato, Antonio, and Gajano, Sofia Boesch, eds. 2008. Monaci, ebrei, sant: studi per Sofia Boesci Gajano. Rome: Viella.Google Scholar
Wace, A.J.B. 1907. “Studies in Roman Historical Reliefs.” Papers of the British School at Rome 4: 226276.Google Scholar
Ward-Perkins, Bryan. 1984. From Classical Antiquity to the Middle Ages: Urban Public Building in Northern and Central Italy AD 300–850. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Welch, Katherine E. 2007. The Roman Amphitheatre: From Its Origins to the Colosseum. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Westfall, Carroll William. 1974. In This Most Perfect Paradise – Alberti, Nicholas V, and the Invention of Conscious Urban Planning in Rome 1447–55. University Park, PA and London: Pennsylvania State University Press.Google Scholar
Wickham, Chris. 2005. Framing the Early Middle Ages: Europe and the Mediterranean 400–800. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Wickham, Chris. 2015a. Medieval Rome: Stability and Crisis of a City, 900–1150. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Wickham, Chris. 2015b. Sleepwalking into a New World: The Emergence of Italian Communes in the Twelfth Century. Princeton: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Wisch, Barbara. 2011. “The Matrix: Le sette chiese di Roma of 1575 and the Image of Pilgrimage.” Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome 56–57: 271303.Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. 1974. “The Circus Flaminius,” Papers of the British School at Rome 42: 326.Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. 1976. “Two Questions on the Circus Flaminius,” Papers of the British School at Rome 44: 4447.Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. 1995. Remus: A Roman Myth. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Wiseman, T. P. 1998. Roman Drama and Roman History, Exeter: University of Exeter Press.Google Scholar
Wright, John, trans. 1975. The Life of Cola di Rienzo. Toronto: Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies.Google Scholar
Zanker, Paul. 1988. The Power of Images in the Age of Augustus. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Zema, Demetrius B. 1944. “The Houses of Tuscany and of Pierleone in the Crisis of Rome in the Eleventh Century.” Traditio 2: 155–75.Google Scholar
Zevi, Fausto. 1976. “L’identificazione del tempio di Marte in Circo e altre osservazioni,” in Mélanges offerts à Jacques Heurgon, vol. 2, 1047–66. Rome: École Française de Rome.Google Scholar
Ziólkowski, Adam. 1992. The Temples of Mid-Republican Rome and Their Historical and Topographical Context. Rome: l’ERMA di Bretschneider.Google Scholar
Zola, Émile. 2007. Rome. Los Angeles: Aegypan Press.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • References
  • Paul W. Jacobs, II
  • Book: The Lives of a Roman Neighborhood
  • Online publication: 22 November 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009067942.013
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • References
  • Paul W. Jacobs, II
  • Book: The Lives of a Roman Neighborhood
  • Online publication: 22 November 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009067942.013
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • References
  • Paul W. Jacobs, II
  • Book: The Lives of a Roman Neighborhood
  • Online publication: 22 November 2022
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009067942.013
Available formats
×