Luana Toniolo | Università Ca' Foscari Venezia (original) (raw)
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Papers by Luana Toniolo
Acta Rei Cretaria Romanae Fautorum 43 (Congreso internacional celebrado en Catania 2012), 2012
EBUSUS Y POMPEYA. TESTIMONIOS MONETALES DE UNA RELACIÓN MARITIMA (A. Arévalo D. Bernal & D. Cottica, eds.), 2014
Se estudian nuevas evidencias de la llegada de ánforas ebusitanas y de otros productos de origen ... more Se estudian nuevas evidencias de la llegada de ánforas ebusitanas y de otros productos de origen hispano a Pompeya y la bahía napolitana en el contexto general de la etapa romano-republicana, aproximándonos a su relación con el fenómeno de la imitación itálica de la moneda ibicenca. Asimismo, se presentan algunos primeros resultados del reestudio de los materiales anfóricos procedentes de las excavaciones realizadas en el área del Foro y la Via Marina de Pompeya en 1980-1981 con motivo del Impianto Elettrico.
Index for 2014 by Luana Toniolo
FOLD&R Fasti On Line Documents & Research, 314, 2014
The results of a geophysical survey at località Valbruna near Tezze di Arzignano (VI), in Italy’s... more The results of a geophysical survey at località Valbruna near Tezze di Arzignano (VI), in Italy’s western Veneto, cast new light on a Roman site that has never been systematically investigated. Conspicuous remains of houses possibly belonging to a large Roman settlement were uncovered in this area in 1795 and 1882 after major river floods. Among a series of buried anomalies revealed by gradiometer and GPR data, a rectangular wall-like feature (corresponding on the surface with a cluster of roof tiles and mosaic tesserae) has been interpreted as a portion of a Roman building. Another significant anomaly has been tentatively identified as an ancient roadway. Several small, pit-like anomalies found at a lower depth than these installations have affinities with prehistoric features but cannot be conclusively explained without further testing. There are indications that this building, whose size and functions could not be determined, may have been located near a burial ground outside the main settlement. The dating of the pottery recovered from the survey area suggests that the site was continuously occupied from the final phase of the late Iron age until the 3rd century A.D.
FOLD&R Fasti On Line Documents & Research, 318, 2014
This paper presents the preliminary data from excavations undertaken at Cà Bufalini in Cesenatico... more This paper presents the preliminary data from excavations undertaken at Cà Bufalini in Cesenatico in April 2006. This was the pilot fieldwork from which developed the Ad Novas-Cesenatico Project 2008-13 organised by Denis Sami and Neil Christie from the University of Leicester. During the 2006 season four test trenches were opened. This paper outlines the evidence retrieved both of late antique (fifth - sixth century AD) wooden structures as well as of a substantial paved Roman road. Potentially, the Cà Bufalini site may relate to the likely statio of Ad Novas depicted on the Tabula Peutingeriana.
Acta Rei Cretaria Romanae Fautorum 43 (Congreso internacional celebrado en Catania 2012), 2012
EBUSUS Y POMPEYA. TESTIMONIOS MONETALES DE UNA RELACIÓN MARITIMA (A. Arévalo D. Bernal & D. Cottica, eds.), 2014
Se estudian nuevas evidencias de la llegada de ánforas ebusitanas y de otros productos de origen ... more Se estudian nuevas evidencias de la llegada de ánforas ebusitanas y de otros productos de origen hispano a Pompeya y la bahía napolitana en el contexto general de la etapa romano-republicana, aproximándonos a su relación con el fenómeno de la imitación itálica de la moneda ibicenca. Asimismo, se presentan algunos primeros resultados del reestudio de los materiales anfóricos procedentes de las excavaciones realizadas en el área del Foro y la Via Marina de Pompeya en 1980-1981 con motivo del Impianto Elettrico.
FOLD&R Fasti On Line Documents & Research, 314, 2014
The results of a geophysical survey at località Valbruna near Tezze di Arzignano (VI), in Italy’s... more The results of a geophysical survey at località Valbruna near Tezze di Arzignano (VI), in Italy’s western Veneto, cast new light on a Roman site that has never been systematically investigated. Conspicuous remains of houses possibly belonging to a large Roman settlement were uncovered in this area in 1795 and 1882 after major river floods. Among a series of buried anomalies revealed by gradiometer and GPR data, a rectangular wall-like feature (corresponding on the surface with a cluster of roof tiles and mosaic tesserae) has been interpreted as a portion of a Roman building. Another significant anomaly has been tentatively identified as an ancient roadway. Several small, pit-like anomalies found at a lower depth than these installations have affinities with prehistoric features but cannot be conclusively explained without further testing. There are indications that this building, whose size and functions could not be determined, may have been located near a burial ground outside the main settlement. The dating of the pottery recovered from the survey area suggests that the site was continuously occupied from the final phase of the late Iron age until the 3rd century A.D.
FOLD&R Fasti On Line Documents & Research, 318, 2014
This paper presents the preliminary data from excavations undertaken at Cà Bufalini in Cesenatico... more This paper presents the preliminary data from excavations undertaken at Cà Bufalini in Cesenatico in April 2006. This was the pilot fieldwork from which developed the Ad Novas-Cesenatico Project 2008-13 organised by Denis Sami and Neil Christie from the University of Leicester. During the 2006 season four test trenches were opened. This paper outlines the evidence retrieved both of late antique (fifth - sixth century AD) wooden structures as well as of a substantial paved Roman road. Potentially, the Cà Bufalini site may relate to the likely statio of Ad Novas depicted on the Tabula Peutingeriana.