Description

Book Synopsis
In recent years an increasing worldwide awareness of the importance of water management in the ancient civilizations has generated much new discussion on water archaeology in ancient Greece.

The present volume, Great Waterworks in Roman Greece, consists the very first presentation of large scale waterworks in the Greek provinces of the Roman Empire. As a collective work, it brings together a wide body of experts from the newly emerged and expanding field of water technology and water archaeology in Roman Greece, and it fills an essential gap in archaeological research and relative bibliography regarding water management and monumental water structures in Greece during the Roman period. Among the main goals that this multi-author volume attempts to succeed is to show that great waterworks (namely aqueducts and nymphaea) not only were novelties in the Greek provinces, both in form and function, but they also changed the architectural landscape of their surrounding environments, and they introduced the concept of luxury in the urban landscapes of Roman Greece. The discussed papers deploy along a wide geographical area, covering the roman provinces of Macedonia and Thrace, Epirus, Achaia, the Aegean islands and Crete, between the 1st century BC and the 4th century AD.

Collective studies such as this, not only will enlighten and promote the multifaceted significance of the archaeological remains regarding water management technology of the Roman period in the Greek regions, but they will also reveal the significant impact of the Roman technological heritage in the Greek territories.

Trade Review
'It is high time that a volume surveying the most prominent hydraulic structures of Roman Greece should see the light of day. Readers with a predisposition for this topic will turn to the present book with little prodding; those who study urban monuments will find much of value here as well.' —Rabun Taylor, GNOMON, Volume 93, 2021

Table of Contents

Preface – by Georgia A. Aristodemou and Theodosios P. Tassios ;
Introduction I. Roman Aqueducts in Greece – by Theodosios P. Tassios ;
Introduction II. Roman Monumental Fountains (Nymphaea) in Greece – by Georgia A. Aristodemou ;

PART I: AQUEDUCTS ;
Vaulted-roof aqueduct channels in Roman Macedonia – by Asimina Kaiafa-Saropoulou ;
The Aqueduct of Actian Nikopolis – by Constantinos Zachos and Leonidas Leontaris ;
The water supply of Roman Thessaloniki – by Manolis Manoledakis ;
The Hadrianic aqueduct of Athens and the underlying tradition of hydraulic engineering – by Eustathios D. Chiotis ;
The Hadrianic aqueduct in Corinth – by Yannis Lolos ;
The Roman aqueduct of Mytilene – by Yannis Kourtzellis, Maria Pappa and George Kakes ;
Roman aqueduct of Samos – by Τelauges Ν. Dimitriou ;
‘A Roman aqueduct through the Cretan highlands – securing the water supply for elevated Lyttos (Amanda Kelly) [Open Access: Download] ;

PART II: NYMPHAEA ;
Shifting tides: approaches to the public water-displays of Roman Greece – by Dylan Kelby Rogers ;
Fountain figures from the Greek provinces: monumentality in fountain structures of Roman Greece as revealed through their sculptural display programs and their patrons – by Georgia Aristodemou ;
The monumental fountain in the Athenian Agora: reconstruction and interpretation – by Shawna Leigh ;
New water from old spouts: the case of the Arsinoe fountain of Messene – by Mario Trabucco della Torretta ;
Reflecting the past: the nymphaeum near the so-called Praetorium at Gortyn – by Brenda Longfellow

Great Waterworks in Roman Greece: Aqueducts and

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    A Paperback / softback by Georgia A. Aristodemou, Theodosios P. Tassios

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      Publisher: Archaeopress
      Publication Date: 28/02/2018
      ISBN13: 9781784917647, 978-1784917647
      ISBN10: 1784917648

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      In recent years an increasing worldwide awareness of the importance of water management in the ancient civilizations has generated much new discussion on water archaeology in ancient Greece.

      The present volume, Great Waterworks in Roman Greece, consists the very first presentation of large scale waterworks in the Greek provinces of the Roman Empire. As a collective work, it brings together a wide body of experts from the newly emerged and expanding field of water technology and water archaeology in Roman Greece, and it fills an essential gap in archaeological research and relative bibliography regarding water management and monumental water structures in Greece during the Roman period. Among the main goals that this multi-author volume attempts to succeed is to show that great waterworks (namely aqueducts and nymphaea) not only were novelties in the Greek provinces, both in form and function, but they also changed the architectural landscape of their surrounding environments, and they introduced the concept of luxury in the urban landscapes of Roman Greece. The discussed papers deploy along a wide geographical area, covering the roman provinces of Macedonia and Thrace, Epirus, Achaia, the Aegean islands and Crete, between the 1st century BC and the 4th century AD.

      Collective studies such as this, not only will enlighten and promote the multifaceted significance of the archaeological remains regarding water management technology of the Roman period in the Greek regions, but they will also reveal the significant impact of the Roman technological heritage in the Greek territories.

      Trade Review
      'It is high time that a volume surveying the most prominent hydraulic structures of Roman Greece should see the light of day. Readers with a predisposition for this topic will turn to the present book with little prodding; those who study urban monuments will find much of value here as well.' —Rabun Taylor, GNOMON, Volume 93, 2021

      Table of Contents

      Preface – by Georgia A. Aristodemou and Theodosios P. Tassios ;
      Introduction I. Roman Aqueducts in Greece – by Theodosios P. Tassios ;
      Introduction II. Roman Monumental Fountains (Nymphaea) in Greece – by Georgia A. Aristodemou ;

      PART I: AQUEDUCTS ;
      Vaulted-roof aqueduct channels in Roman Macedonia – by Asimina Kaiafa-Saropoulou ;
      The Aqueduct of Actian Nikopolis – by Constantinos Zachos and Leonidas Leontaris ;
      The water supply of Roman Thessaloniki – by Manolis Manoledakis ;
      The Hadrianic aqueduct of Athens and the underlying tradition of hydraulic engineering – by Eustathios D. Chiotis ;
      The Hadrianic aqueduct in Corinth – by Yannis Lolos ;
      The Roman aqueduct of Mytilene – by Yannis Kourtzellis, Maria Pappa and George Kakes ;
      Roman aqueduct of Samos – by Τelauges Ν. Dimitriou ;
      ‘A Roman aqueduct through the Cretan highlands – securing the water supply for elevated Lyttos (Amanda Kelly) [Open Access: Download] ;

      PART II: NYMPHAEA ;
      Shifting tides: approaches to the public water-displays of Roman Greece – by Dylan Kelby Rogers ;
      Fountain figures from the Greek provinces: monumentality in fountain structures of Roman Greece as revealed through their sculptural display programs and their patrons – by Georgia Aristodemou ;
      The monumental fountain in the Athenian Agora: reconstruction and interpretation – by Shawna Leigh ;
      New water from old spouts: the case of the Arsinoe fountain of Messene – by Mario Trabucco della Torretta ;
      Reflecting the past: the nymphaeum near the so-called Praetorium at Gortyn – by Brenda Longfellow

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