Between 1977 and 1984 the excavations of a Canadian archaeological team at San Giovanni di Ruoti in southern Italy uncovered a series of three Roman villas dating from the first to the sixth centuries AD. The multi-volume report on the excavation will provide the first comprehensive overview of the social and economic life of a Roman villa in southern Italy. Volume II constitutes a catalogue raisonTe of the small finds, covering all categories of non-ceramic personal, domestic, and industrial artifacts recovered from the site.C.J. Simpson has been a member of the Canadian excavation team since…mehr
Between 1977 and 1984 the excavations of a Canadian archaeological team at San Giovanni di Ruoti in southern Italy uncovered a series of three Roman villas dating from the first to the sixth centuries AD. The multi-volume report on the excavation will provide the first comprehensive overview of the social and economic life of a Roman villa in southern Italy. Volume II constitutes a catalogue raisonTe of the small finds, covering all categories of non-ceramic personal, domestic, and industrial artifacts recovered from the site.C.J. Simpson has been a member of the Canadian excavation team since 1979. He provides detailed descriptions of the individual artifacts, their dates of manufacture, and their use, and discusses the evidence they yield for domestic and daily life. The artifacts range from hairpins and brooches to iron knives used for slicing and chopping. Coins and lamps found at the site are evaluated in separate contributions by R. Reece and J.J. Rossiter. The book includes several useful appendices, notably one by Vito Volterra on the analysis of millstones.The 400 items listed in the catalogue are illustrated by drawings or photographs.This volume presents one of very few accounts of the household artifacts found at an estate centre remote from urban Rome. It provides an important resource for specialists seeking to date similar objects, and adds much interesting detail to our picture of the rural economy of Italy in late antiquity.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
LIST OF TABLES LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS PREFACE ABBREVIATIONS Introduction Phases and dates of occupation The organization of the Catalogue The current disposition of the minor objects Format of Catalogue entries The minor objects as dating evidence The minor objects as evidence for daily life Constraints The tables The middens Catalogue I. Articles of adornment, dress, or toilet Hairpins Combs Brooches Finger rings Earrings Bracelets/armlets Beads Buckles and other articles of dress Ligulae Tweezers Mirror II. Articles associated with textiles Sewing needles Loom weights Spindle whorls Circular or irregularly shaped weights III. Articles associated with the processing of food Querns Stone mortars Large stone basins Metal bowl IV. Articles associated with writing Styli Stylus cases Seal box V. Articles associated with weighing Weights Steelyard VI. Tools (knife blades and other implements) Stone objects Bone objects Metal blades Implements used in woodworking Implements possibly associated with leatherworking Implements associated with agriculture Other implements Tools and implements of unknown use VII. Furnishings, fastenings, and fixtures Furniture attachments Objects of bone Objects of copper alloy Keys and lock fittings Hinges Staples and similar objects Loop-headed spikes Split pin/ ring staples Miscellaneous fixtures and fittings VIII. Articles associated with leisure, religious, and other activities Gaming pieces Flute fragment Metal sculpture Terracotta objects Amulet IX. Articles associated with equitation Cheekpiece Strap fittings Spurs X. Weaponry Projectile head XL Objects currently unidentifiable Copper alloy objects Iron objects Other objects Bibliography Concordances Small Find numbers: Volumes II/I Small Find numbers in ascending order Appendix 1 Conservation of the amulet by 0. Colacicchi Alessandri Appendix2 The inheritance of Stephen and the non-ceramic artifacts at San Giovanni di Ruoti Appendix3 Provenancing of ancient Roman millstones by V. Volterra COINS by R. Reece Coins and the economy in the later phases of San Giovanni Catalogue Bibliography LAMPS by J.J. Rossiter Introduction Catalogue Group 1: Italian lamps of Bailey Types A to G Group 2: Italian lamps of Bailey Types O and P Group 3: Italian lamps - miscellaneous fragments (first to second centuries AD) Group 4: Italian globule lamps (Bailey Type K) Group 5: African lamps of Atlante Form VIII/ Hayes Type I Group 6: African lamps of Atlante Form X/ Hayes Type II Group 7: Campanian Red Ware lamps of Bailey Type Siii Group 8: Lucanian Buffware lamps of Bailey Type Siii Group 9: Miscellaneous Late Roman lamps Bibliography ILLUSTRATIONS
LIST OF TABLES LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS PREFACE ABBREVIATIONS Introduction Phases and dates of occupation The organization of the Catalogue The current disposition of the minor objects Format of Catalogue entries The minor objects as dating evidence The minor objects as evidence for daily life Constraints The tables The middens Catalogue I. Articles of adornment, dress, or toilet Hairpins Combs Brooches Finger rings Earrings Bracelets/armlets Beads Buckles and other articles of dress Ligulae Tweezers Mirror II. Articles associated with textiles Sewing needles Loom weights Spindle whorls Circular or irregularly shaped weights III. Articles associated with the processing of food Querns Stone mortars Large stone basins Metal bowl IV. Articles associated with writing Styli Stylus cases Seal box V. Articles associated with weighing Weights Steelyard VI. Tools (knife blades and other implements) Stone objects Bone objects Metal blades Implements used in woodworking Implements possibly associated with leatherworking Implements associated with agriculture Other implements Tools and implements of unknown use VII. Furnishings, fastenings, and fixtures Furniture attachments Objects of bone Objects of copper alloy Keys and lock fittings Hinges Staples and similar objects Loop-headed spikes Split pin/ ring staples Miscellaneous fixtures and fittings VIII. Articles associated with leisure, religious, and other activities Gaming pieces Flute fragment Metal sculpture Terracotta objects Amulet IX. Articles associated with equitation Cheekpiece Strap fittings Spurs X. Weaponry Projectile head XL Objects currently unidentifiable Copper alloy objects Iron objects Other objects Bibliography Concordances Small Find numbers: Volumes II/I Small Find numbers in ascending order Appendix 1 Conservation of the amulet by 0. Colacicchi Alessandri Appendix2 The inheritance of Stephen and the non-ceramic artifacts at San Giovanni di Ruoti Appendix3 Provenancing of ancient Roman millstones by V. Volterra COINS by R. Reece Coins and the economy in the later phases of San Giovanni Catalogue Bibliography LAMPS by J.J. Rossiter Introduction Catalogue Group 1: Italian lamps of Bailey Types A to G Group 2: Italian lamps of Bailey Types O and P Group 3: Italian lamps - miscellaneous fragments (first to second centuries AD) Group 4: Italian globule lamps (Bailey Type K) Group 5: African lamps of Atlante Form VIII/ Hayes Type I Group 6: African lamps of Atlante Form X/ Hayes Type II Group 7: Campanian Red Ware lamps of Bailey Type Siii Group 8: Lucanian Buffware lamps of Bailey Type Siii Group 9: Miscellaneous Late Roman lamps Bibliography ILLUSTRATIONS
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