Books on the topic 'Constantine Arch of Constantine (Rome, Italy) Rome'

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1

L' Arco di Costantino: Divagazioni sull'antico. Milano: Skira, 2004.

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2

The valley of the Colosseum. Milan: Electa, 1997.

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3

MyiLibrary, ed. Remembering Constantine at the Milvian Bridge. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2011.

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4

Kultermann, Udo. Die Maxentius-Basilika: Ein Schlüsselwerk spätantiker Architektur. Weimar: VDG, 1996.

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5

La Basilica di Massenzio: Il monumento, i materiali, le strutture, la stabilità. Roma: L'Erma di Bretschneider, 2005.

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6

Maria, Tziatzi-Papagianni, ed. Theodori metropolitae cyzici epistulae: Accedunt epistulae mutuae Constantini Porphyrogeniti. Berlin: De Gruyter, 2011.

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7

L' ornato architettonico della Basilica di Massenzio. Roma: L'Erma di Bretschneider, 2005.

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8

The Valley of the Colosseum (Sporintendza Archelolgica Di Roma). Electa, 1997.

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9

Patrizio, Pensabene, and Panella Clementina, eds. Arco di Costantino tra archeologia e archeometria. Roma: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider, 1999.

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10

L, Conforto M., and Italy. Soprintendenza archeologica per il Lazio., eds. Adriano e Costantino: Le due fasi dell'arco nella valle del Colosseo. Milano: Electa, 2001.

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11

Letizia, Conforto Maria, ed. Adriano e Costantino: Le due fasi dell'arco nella valle del Colosseo. Milano: Electa, 2001.

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12

L, Conforto M., ed. Adriano e Costantino: Le due fasi dell'arco nella valle del Colosseo. Milano: Electa, 2001.

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13

Benedetta, Adembri, Melucco Vaccaro Alessandra, Reggiani Anna Maria, and Italy. Soprintendenza archeologica per il Lazio., eds. Adriano, architettura e progetto. Milano: Electa, 2000.

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14

Holloway, R. Ross. Constantine and Rome. Yale University Press, 2010.

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15

Holloway, R. Ross. Constantine and Rome. Yale University Press, 2008.

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16

Constantine and Rome. Yale University Press, 2004.

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17

Tragedy of Empire: From Constantine to the Destruction of Roman Italy. Harvard University Press, 2019.

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18

Remembering Constantine at the Milvian Bridge. Cambridge University Press, 2014.

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19

Carlo, Giavarini, and Centro interdipartimentale di scienza e tecnica per la conservazione del patrimonio storico-architettonico., eds. The Basilica of Maxentius: The monument, its materials, construction, and stability. Roma: L'Erma di Bretschneider, 2005.

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20

Watts, Edward J. The Eternal Decline and Fall of Rome. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190076719.001.0001.

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The Eternal Decline and Fall of Rome: The History of a Dangerous Idea traces the development and use of the rhetoric of Roman decline and renewal across 2200 years. Beginning in the Roman Republic at the turn of the second century BC and stretching to the uses of Roman decline in the present day, the book argues that the use of this common rhetoric frequently blamed people for sparking Roman decline. It also evolves over time. In the Republic, politicians like Cato pointed to decline in the present and promised future renewal. Augustus and other emperors beginning a new imperial dynasty often claimed to have sparked a renewal that corrected the decline caused by their predecessors. Early Christian emperors like Constantine and Theodosius I experimented with a rhetoric of progress in which they claimed that Rome’s embrace of Christianity meant it would become better than it ever had been before. The fifth-century loss of the West forced Christians like Augustine to disentangle Christian and Roman progress. It also enabled the Eastern emperor Justinian to justify invasions of Africa, Italy, and Spain as restorations of lost territories to Roman rule. Western emperors ranging from Charlemagne to Charles V used similar claims to support military action directed from the West against the East. Figures as diverse as Napoleon and Mussolini show that the allure of restoring Rome remained potent into the twentieth century, but the story of Rome’s decline and fall, popularized by eighteenth-century writers like Montesquieu and Gibbon, is now most frequently evoked as a warning about the consequence of social or political change.
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21

Omissi, Adrastos. Tyranny and Betrayal. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198824824.003.0005.

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This chapter explores Constantine’s rise to power, mustering evidence from Pan. Lat. VII and VI to argue that Constantine should be seen as a usurper and to defend the idea that he escaped the court of Galerius in 306. The chapter then explores how an individual’s reputation could be transformed by examining the way Maximian was portrayed as a monster in Pan. Lat. VI. The chapter then considers the war of 312 between Maxentius and Constantine, and discusses how Pan. Lat. XII and IV participated in shaping an image of Maxentius as a tyrant who was destroying Rome, an image which served to legitimate Constantine’s invasion of Italy and his progressive breakaway from the tetrarchy. Finally, the chapter considers the silence of Pan. Lat. XII and IV on the topic of Licinius, and draws the conclusion that the alliance that existed between Constantine and Licinius was always a cold one.
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22

Koortbojian, Michael. Crossing the Pomerium. Princeton University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691195032.001.0001.

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The ancient Romans famously distinguished between civic life in Rome and military matters outside the city—a division marked by the pomerium, an abstract religious and legal boundary that was central to the myth of the city's foundation. This book explores, by means of images and texts, how the Romans used social practices and public monuments to assert their capital's distinction from its growing empire, to delimit the proper realms of religion and law from those of war and conquest, and to establish and disseminate so many fundamental Roman institutions across three centuries of imperial rule. The book probes such topics as the appearance in the city of Romans in armor, whether in representation or in life, the role of religious rites on the battlefield, and the military image of Constantine on the arch built in his name. Throughout, the book reveals how, in these instances and others, the ancient ideology of crossing the pomerium reflects the efforts of Romans not only to live up to the ideals they had inherited, but also to reconceive their past and to validate contemporary practices during a time when Rome enjoyed growing dominance in the Mediterranean world. The book explores a problem faced by generations of Romans—how to leave and return to hallowed city ground in the course of building an empire.
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