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Villas in Roman Italy

Nigel Pollard Orcid Logo

A Companion to Roman Italy, Pages: 330 - 354

Swansea University Author: Nigel Pollard Orcid Logo

Abstract

The term villa typically has been applied in antiquity and in modern scholarship to denote a rural residence with some luxurious characteristics, reflecting the elite status (or aspirations to elite status) of its owner. Villas took many forms, and were built in varied environments and contexts, inc...

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Published in: A Companion to Roman Italy
ISBN: 9781444339260
Published: Blackwell-Wiley 2016
Online Access: http://eu.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1444339265.html
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa13641
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spelling 2020-09-17T13:59:21.6371936 v2 13641 2012-12-12 Villas in Roman Italy da23d4fdd946eb6f605c5e6769dbd93f 0000-0002-8291-3334 Nigel Pollard Nigel Pollard true false 2012-12-12 ACLA The term villa typically has been applied in antiquity and in modern scholarship to denote a rural residence with some luxurious characteristics, reflecting the elite status (or aspirations to elite status) of its owner. Villas took many forms, and were built in varied environments and contexts, including the suburbs of the city of Rome itself, on the coast (especially from Etruria to the Bay of Naples) and more generally in rural areas throughout Roman Italy, co-existing with other forms of rural settlement. In Roman Italy, villas are predominantly a phenomenon of the second century BC to the second-third century AD, particularly last decades of the Republic and the Julio-Claudian period. However, they may owe their origins to earlier forms of Italian or Hellenistic elite rural architecture, and certainly many villas continued to flourish in the late empire too. Ancient literary evidence tends to present villas either as centres of agricultural production or as centres of display and consumption, and this dichotomy is often preserved in modern scholarship on the topic. However, the ancient writers’ discussions reflect one extreme or the other of a moralising discourse, and the reality (as typically demonstrated by archaeological evidence, if archaeological investigation has been sufficiently comprehensive) was more complex, with a balance of both production and consumption/display in any given villa that varied according to location and ownership. Book chapter A Companion to Roman Italy 330 354 Blackwell-Wiley 9781444339260 Roman, villa, agriculture, farm, economy, elite, suburb, luxury, production, consumption 1 4 2016 2016-04-01 http://eu.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1444339265.html COLLEGE NANME Classics COLLEGE CODE ACLA Swansea University 2020-09-17T13:59:21.6371936 2012-12-12T14:21:52.1058557 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - Classics, Ancient History, Egyptology Nigel Pollard 0000-0002-8291-3334 1
title Villas in Roman Italy
spellingShingle Villas in Roman Italy
Nigel Pollard
title_short Villas in Roman Italy
title_full Villas in Roman Italy
title_fullStr Villas in Roman Italy
title_full_unstemmed Villas in Roman Italy
title_sort Villas in Roman Italy
author_id_str_mv da23d4fdd946eb6f605c5e6769dbd93f
author_id_fullname_str_mv da23d4fdd946eb6f605c5e6769dbd93f_***_Nigel Pollard
author Nigel Pollard
author2 Nigel Pollard
format Book chapter
container_title A Companion to Roman Italy
container_start_page 330
publishDate 2016
institution Swansea University
isbn 9781444339260
publisher Blackwell-Wiley
college_str Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
department_str School of Culture and Communication - Classics, Ancient History, Egyptology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Culture and Communication - Classics, Ancient History, Egyptology
url http://eu.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1444339265.html
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description The term villa typically has been applied in antiquity and in modern scholarship to denote a rural residence with some luxurious characteristics, reflecting the elite status (or aspirations to elite status) of its owner. Villas took many forms, and were built in varied environments and contexts, including the suburbs of the city of Rome itself, on the coast (especially from Etruria to the Bay of Naples) and more generally in rural areas throughout Roman Italy, co-existing with other forms of rural settlement. In Roman Italy, villas are predominantly a phenomenon of the second century BC to the second-third century AD, particularly last decades of the Republic and the Julio-Claudian period. However, they may owe their origins to earlier forms of Italian or Hellenistic elite rural architecture, and certainly many villas continued to flourish in the late empire too. Ancient literary evidence tends to present villas either as centres of agricultural production or as centres of display and consumption, and this dichotomy is often preserved in modern scholarship on the topic. However, the ancient writers’ discussions reflect one extreme or the other of a moralising discourse, and the reality (as typically demonstrated by archaeological evidence, if archaeological investigation has been sufficiently comprehensive) was more complex, with a balance of both production and consumption/display in any given villa that varied according to location and ownership.
published_date 2016-04-01T03:15:36Z
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