How to Cite

Zimmermann, Norbert and Fröhlich, Thomas (Eds.): The Economy of Death: New Research on Collective Burial Spaces in Rome from the Late Republic to the Late Roman Time: Panel 7.2, Heidelberg: Propylaeum, 2022 (Archaeology and Economy in the Ancient World: Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Classical Archaeology, Cologne/Bonn 2018, Volume 38). https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.894

Identifiers

ISBN 978-3-96929-068-2 (PDF)
ISBN 978-3-96929-069-9 (Softcover)

Published

09/21/2022

Authors

Norbert Zimmermann (Ed.), Thomas Fröhlich (Ed.)

The Economy of Death: New Research on Collective Burial Spaces in Rome from the Late Republic to the Late Roman Time

Panel 7.2

The contributions of this volume study economic aspects of Roman burial architectures for extended numbers of burials, such as columbaria, large hypogea, or catacombs, and try to form a picture of their owners and users. They discuss how far economic reasons played a leading role in the invention, the development and the use of these big burial monuments in Rome and how these buildings fulfilled the religious and social needs of their users, especially in the transitional period from the Roman to the Early Christian period. New studies in Roman funeral monuments could document interesting evidence for the dynamic process of the preparation and use of burial space. Especially in larger architectures for much more than a single family, the economic aspects of the  ownership and use of these installations is fascinating. Who were the planners of the projects, why were certain places and specific architectures chosen? How and at what time in the project were the burials of the owners and their families provided for? In what manner were further tombs sold or given to others? And which locations within the installation were they able to get? During the last decades, a series of general studies on Roman burials and burial customs were base on older documentation out of necessity, while new and more detailed analysis of single monuments often provide new and different insights of interpretation."

Norbert Zimmermann is scientific director at the German Archaeological Institute in Rome. Among his main fields of interests are the Roman catacombs and the development of funerary art from Roman time to Late antiquity.

Thomas Fröhlich is chief librarian and academic advisor for classical archeology at the German Archaeological Institute in Rome. The focus of his work is on the art and architecture of the late republic and the early imperial period in Rome and central Italy.

Chapters

Table of Contents
Pages
PDF
Titelei
a-iv
Contents
v
Martin Bentz, Michael Heinzelmann
vii
Clarissa Blume-Jung
On the Individualisation of Burials in Collective Burial Spaces in the City of Rome in the 1st and 2nd Century AD
29-43
Antonio E. Felle
Some Case Studies from Rome (3rd–4th Century CE)
89-101
Roberta Ruotolo
Il riutilizzo degli spazi funerari di età classica come modello economico o fenomeno di parassitismo architettonico?
103-114
Irene Bragantini
115-122

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