Cosa was a Latin colony founded by Rome in 273 BC in a territory confiscated from the Etruscan city of Vulci. The town became an agricultural and commercial centre, whose trade can be traced in part through a distinctive type of amphora to destinations throughout the Mediterrnean world. But Cosa's archaeological importance lies in the information its structure and town-planning provide about the Republican period.
Cosa IV: the Houses by Vincent J. Bruno and Russell T. Scott
Report on a group of recently excavated houses between the forum and the northwest gate which traces the development of the Roman house from a small urban dwelling of the early colony to the more elaborate houses of the late second and early first centuries BC, including an example of the atrium house. 211p, 118 b/w illus (Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome Volume XXXVIII, Penn State Press 1993)
Cosa III: the Buildings of the Forum by Frank E. Brown, Emeline Hill Richardson and L. Richardson
Report on the excavations of the forum at Cosa, the purest example of a Republican forum which clearly shows the sequence of planning and building from its beginnings as the political heart of the town to its commercial developement with shops and markets.
- ISBN10 0271008253
- ISBN13 9780271008257
- Publish Date November 1993
- Publish Status Transferred
- Publish Country US
- Imprint The University of Michigan Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 298
- Language English