Ostia speaks: Inscriptions, Buildings and Spaces in Rome's Main Port

by L. B. Van Der Meer

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This monograph provides a brief introduction to the material history of
Ostia, Rome’s harbour town from ca 300 BC until ca AD 600, before
centring on about one hundred Latin as well as some Greek inscriptions,
some of which are previously unpublished. It focuses on inscriptions
which are still present in situ, in forty-two places. They range
in date from ca 100 BC until ca AD 420. They belong to and cast light
upon buildings, monuments, urban spaces and tombs. Some of them were
reused in floors after ca AD 250.


Each inscription is presented in full, supplemented by abbreviated names
and words, translated into English, dated, and commented upon from a
contextual point of view. Sometimes inscriptions that are not in
situ, as well as relevant ancient texts, are quoted and translated
in order to sketch a broader picture.


The comments are based on a critical evaluation of the most recent
archaeological, historical and epigraphic publications. Several new
interpretations result from own research.


The inscriptions cast light upon political, socio-economic, religious
(pagan and Christian), and funerary aspects of the multi-ethnic Ostian
society, its relation with Rome and the Mediterranean world.


The publication is intended not only for scholars, teachers and
students, but also for historians, classicists, philologists, linguists,
epigraphists, archaeologists and art historians. It may also prove a
useful vademecum for those who intend to visit or have visited Ostia
Antica.
  • ISBN13 9789042927001
  • Publish Date 3 September 2012
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country BE
  • Imprint Peeters Publishers
  • Format Paperback
  • Pages 129
  • Language English