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Papers by Andrew Wallace-Hadrill
American Journal of Archaeology, 2000
The Roman archaeological ,il!?! world was deeply saddened by l: the sudden, early death of Timoi ... more The Roman archaeological ,il!?! world was deeply saddened by l: the sudden, early death of Timoi : thy Potter. Tim Potter is best ] known to readers of AJA through his survey and excavation work in southern Etruria and his synthesis of the research in that region started by John Ward Perkins. However, he was also a highly productive scholar in Romano-British archaeology and, through his work in the Department of Prehistoric and Romano-British An-
The American Historical Review, Feb 1, 1999
Oxbow Books, Mar 15, 2022
The American Historical Review, Feb 1, 1999
In the first comprehensive study of Roman ancestor masks in English, Harriet Flower explains the ... more In the first comprehensive study of Roman ancestor masks in English, Harriet Flower explains the reasons behind the use of wax masks in the commemoration of politically prominent family members by the elite society of Rome. Broadening her approach from the purely art historical, Flower traces the functional evolution of ancestor masks, from their first appearance in the third century BC to their last mention in the sixth century AD, through the examination of literary sources in both prose and verse, legal texts, epigraphy, archaeology, numismatics, and art. It is by putting these masks, which were worn by actors at the funerals of the deceased, into their legal, social, and political context that Flower is able to elucidate their central position in the media of the time and their special meaning as symbols of power and prestige.
Princeton University Press eBooks, Dec 31, 1994
... Page 4. Page 5. ANDREW WALLACE-HADRILL HOUSES AND SOCIETY IN Page 6. Page 7.ANDREW WALLACE-HA... more ... Page 4. Page 5. ANDREW WALLACE-HADRILL HOUSES AND SOCIETY IN Page 6. Page 7.ANDREW WALLACE-HADRILL O HOUSES AND SOCIETY IN POMPEII AND HERCULANEUM PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, PRINCETON. NEW JERSEY Page 8. ...
A Cultural History of the Senses in Antiquity
Remembering and Forgetting the Ancient City
The House of Amarantus at Pompeii, I, 9,11-12 : an Interim Report on Survey and Excavations in 1995-96, 2016
Journal of Roman Studies, 1979
Rome and the Colonial City
A Cultural History of the Home in Antiquity, 2021
The Numismatic Chronicle, 1981
Rome and the Colonial City
Rethinking the Roman City, 2022
After the story, Suetonius will detail place and date of death, length of life and length of reig... more After the story, Suetonius will detail place and date of death, length of life and length of reign, in a little obituary summary often introduced with the word 'obiit 1 or 'periit'. This information may be given in the course of the narrative: so Vespasian 'inter manus sublevantium extinctus est viiii Kal. lul. annum agens aetatis etc.' (24). Where personal details are interposed after the death narrative, the obituary notice is delayed until the end of the Life. Plutarch is no different: anedotve/eTeXeUTnae vel.sim. introduces details of place, date, age, length of rule or tenure of office. Commonly this forms an independent item, but it may be intertwined with the narrative, as for Pompey who evexapTepnoe rats TiArvyacs, e£nxovTa yev evos 6£ovTa , 31 J ... 32 33 Facts of funeral and disposal of the remains follow dryly. More interesting is the concern with public reactions of grief or joy, *J/ which for an emperor may be many and varied. Corresponding to this 35 theme in poets' Lives is the later reputation of their writings. Public reactions may be formally expressed in posthumous honours, from public 36 funeral to deification. Plutarch will also occasionally mention the dedication of statues and epigrams; Suetonius does not do so in the Caesars, presumably because of the embarras de richesses, but he does in literary lives. , The family and descendants are another recurrent point of interest. 38 Sometimes a man's family shares his fate. Sometimes the descendants succeed to power: Vespasian's ambitions for his family are used to round 39 off the life as in several cases in Plutarch. But generally Plutarch is more liberal with information on descendants than Suetonius whose subjects' families are either too well known (the Caesars) or else 40 unimportant or non-existent (most of the literary figures). On the *
Rome, les Césars et la ville
[Une version abrégée de cet article a été lue le 4 mai 1989 devant la Cambridge Philological Soci... more [Une version abrégée de cet article a été lue le 4 mai 1989 devant la Cambridge Philological Society. Je remercie de nombreux amis, en particulier Mary Beard et Paul Cartledge, pour leurs observations et discussions éclairées, exprimées à cette occasion et par la suite. Les commentaires de Michael Crawford, Fergus Millar, Simon Price et Peter Wiseman m’ont permis d’améliorer grandement une première ébauche. Ils ne peuvent être tenus responsables des imperfections qui demeurent.] « Il a été..
The Antiquaries Journal, 1986
Close Document Image Close Document Printer Image Print This Document! Conservation Information N... more Close Document Image Close Document Printer Image Print This Document! Conservation Information Network (BCIN). Author: Berry, Joanne Title of Source: Unpeeling Pompeii : studies in Region I of Pompeii Title Variant: Sotto ...
American Journal of Archaeology, 2000
The Roman archaeological ,il!?! world was deeply saddened by l: the sudden, early death of Timoi ... more The Roman archaeological ,il!?! world was deeply saddened by l: the sudden, early death of Timoi : thy Potter. Tim Potter is best ] known to readers of AJA through his survey and excavation work in southern Etruria and his synthesis of the research in that region started by John Ward Perkins. However, he was also a highly productive scholar in Romano-British archaeology and, through his work in the Department of Prehistoric and Romano-British An-
The American Historical Review, Feb 1, 1999
Oxbow Books, Mar 15, 2022
The American Historical Review, Feb 1, 1999
In the first comprehensive study of Roman ancestor masks in English, Harriet Flower explains the ... more In the first comprehensive study of Roman ancestor masks in English, Harriet Flower explains the reasons behind the use of wax masks in the commemoration of politically prominent family members by the elite society of Rome. Broadening her approach from the purely art historical, Flower traces the functional evolution of ancestor masks, from their first appearance in the third century BC to their last mention in the sixth century AD, through the examination of literary sources in both prose and verse, legal texts, epigraphy, archaeology, numismatics, and art. It is by putting these masks, which were worn by actors at the funerals of the deceased, into their legal, social, and political context that Flower is able to elucidate their central position in the media of the time and their special meaning as symbols of power and prestige.
Princeton University Press eBooks, Dec 31, 1994
... Page 4. Page 5. ANDREW WALLACE-HADRILL HOUSES AND SOCIETY IN Page 6. Page 7.ANDREW WALLACE-HA... more ... Page 4. Page 5. ANDREW WALLACE-HADRILL HOUSES AND SOCIETY IN Page 6. Page 7.ANDREW WALLACE-HADRILL O HOUSES AND SOCIETY IN POMPEII AND HERCULANEUM PRINCETON UNIVERSITY PRESS, PRINCETON. NEW JERSEY Page 8. ...
A Cultural History of the Senses in Antiquity
Remembering and Forgetting the Ancient City
The House of Amarantus at Pompeii, I, 9,11-12 : an Interim Report on Survey and Excavations in 1995-96, 2016
Journal of Roman Studies, 1979
Rome and the Colonial City
A Cultural History of the Home in Antiquity, 2021
The Numismatic Chronicle, 1981
Rome and the Colonial City
Rethinking the Roman City, 2022
After the story, Suetonius will detail place and date of death, length of life and length of reig... more After the story, Suetonius will detail place and date of death, length of life and length of reign, in a little obituary summary often introduced with the word 'obiit 1 or 'periit'. This information may be given in the course of the narrative: so Vespasian 'inter manus sublevantium extinctus est viiii Kal. lul. annum agens aetatis etc.' (24). Where personal details are interposed after the death narrative, the obituary notice is delayed until the end of the Life. Plutarch is no different: anedotve/eTeXeUTnae vel.sim. introduces details of place, date, age, length of rule or tenure of office. Commonly this forms an independent item, but it may be intertwined with the narrative, as for Pompey who evexapTepnoe rats TiArvyacs, e£nxovTa yev evos 6£ovTa , 31 J ... 32 33 Facts of funeral and disposal of the remains follow dryly. More interesting is the concern with public reactions of grief or joy, *J/ which for an emperor may be many and varied. Corresponding to this 35 theme in poets' Lives is the later reputation of their writings. Public reactions may be formally expressed in posthumous honours, from public 36 funeral to deification. Plutarch will also occasionally mention the dedication of statues and epigrams; Suetonius does not do so in the Caesars, presumably because of the embarras de richesses, but he does in literary lives. , The family and descendants are another recurrent point of interest. 38 Sometimes a man's family shares his fate. Sometimes the descendants succeed to power: Vespasian's ambitions for his family are used to round 39 off the life as in several cases in Plutarch. But generally Plutarch is more liberal with information on descendants than Suetonius whose subjects' families are either too well known (the Caesars) or else 40 unimportant or non-existent (most of the literary figures). On the *
Rome, les Césars et la ville
[Une version abrégée de cet article a été lue le 4 mai 1989 devant la Cambridge Philological Soci... more [Une version abrégée de cet article a été lue le 4 mai 1989 devant la Cambridge Philological Society. Je remercie de nombreux amis, en particulier Mary Beard et Paul Cartledge, pour leurs observations et discussions éclairées, exprimées à cette occasion et par la suite. Les commentaires de Michael Crawford, Fergus Millar, Simon Price et Peter Wiseman m’ont permis d’améliorer grandement une première ébauche. Ils ne peuvent être tenus responsables des imperfections qui demeurent.] « Il a été..
The Antiquaries Journal, 1986
Close Document Image Close Document Printer Image Print This Document! Conservation Information N... more Close Document Image Close Document Printer Image Print This Document! Conservation Information Network (BCIN). Author: Berry, Joanne Title of Source: Unpeeling Pompeii : studies in Region I of Pompeii Title Variant: Sotto ...