Academic literature on the topic 'Architecture, domestic – rome – congresses'

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Journal articles on the topic "Architecture, domestic – rome – congresses"

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Mogetta, Marcello. "The early development of concrete in the domestic architecture of pre-Roman Pompeii." Journal of Roman Archaeology 29 (2016): 43–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047759400072044.

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Because of its exceptional state of preservation, Pompeii has traditionally been viewed as an ideal site at which to study the early development of Roman architecture. Scholars have looked to the Pompeian evidence in order to provide parallels for periods and classes of buildings that in Rome are less well documented archaeologically. The focus of recent debate has been on the Mid- to Late Republican transition, with an emphasis on building types whose introduction at Pompeii would demonstrate a direct cultural link with practice at Rome. The prevailing view is that both the town-planning and the architecture of Pompeii in the 3rd-2nd c. B.C. were strongly influenced by Roman models or prototypes. Similarly, there has been a tendency to refer to the Pompeian materials as the missing link for the high dating of early Roman concrete architecture in Rome, which would have been introduced around the same period. In a recent review of the evidence from Rome, I have argued for a later chronology, which, inevitably, prompts a reconsideration of the development and cultural significance of concrete construction at Pompeii.
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Mogetta, Marcello. "A New Date for Concrete in Rome." Journal of Roman Studies 105 (April 24, 2015): 1–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s007543581500043x.

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AbstractConcrete is regarded as a quintessentially Roman achievement. The spread of the technology is usually dated to the fourth or third centuriesb.c., and interpreted as a symptom of Rome's early expansion in Italy. In this paper I offer a reappraisal of the available evidence for early concrete construction in Rome. On the basis of stratigraphic evidence, I conclude that a later date should be assigned to most of the remains. I situate the origins of the technological innovation within the radical change in architectural styles that unfolded in the middle of the second centuryb.c., affecting both domestic architecture and public building. The new chronology has an impact on current models of cultural diffusion in Roman Italy, linking the development of Late Republican architecture with the broader debate on the cultural implications of the Roman conquest.
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Careri, Francesco. "The space of hospitality. Activism, art, architecture and urbanism in Rome." Quaderns de l'Institut Català d'Antropologia 39, no. 1 (October 24, 2023): 133–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.56247/qua.404.

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The article approaches the theme of the concrete utopias produced by hospitality from the point of view of architecture and the city, identifying political, artistic and academic experiences that are constructing that space already highlighted by linguists, philosophers and anthropologists: hospitality as a threshold capable of transforming the foreigner into a guest. In architectural space, that threshold is a theatrical machine capable of reversing roles, of constructing that limbo that suspends and makes property boundaries opaque, that allows ambiguities and ambivalence, that confuses opposing figures such as certain and uncertain, nomadic and sedentary, domestic and institutional. In urban space, the threshold is extended, becomes visible and public thanks to political and artistic experiences that have created places capable of giving guests the power to host in turn. In Rome, the housing struggle movements have produced intercultural condominiums as viable alternatives to the institutional welcome systems and to the housing emergency; artistic and academic researchers have identified urban strategies and policies producing imagery and projects for a hospitable city. Finally a project, Porto Fluviale RecHouse, drawn up jointly by the administration and the housing struggle movement, and currently being implemented - proposes a model of urban intervention based on hospitality.
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Tozer, Luke. "The Japanese House." Architectural Research Quarterly 21, no. 3 (September 2017): 203–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s135913551700032x.

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Western fascination with Japan and Japanese design is long established. The popularity of the recent exhibition The Japanese House: Architecture and Life After 1945 at London's Barbican illustrates that this fascination remains. This ‘blockbuster’ review of postwar domestic Japanese Architecture, supported by The Japan Foundation and previously hosted at MAXXI, National Museum of 21st Century Arts, Rome, responds to an enormous challenge: to try to account for the range and diversity of architectural approaches to domestic design within the broader contexts of traditional Japanese architecture and national life after 1945.The seven decades covered in the exhibition span postwar reconstruction, rapid economic expansion, bubble-era boom and bust, and deflationary stagnation, brought up to the present day. Material is organised ‘genealogically’ rather than chronologically, drawing together certain threads and traditions. It makes connections across time periods to suggest how the design of the Japanese house has dealt with sociological changes over this period, from the fracturing of the nuclear family and an increase in single-person households to an ageing population.
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Rajagopalan, Mrinalini. "Cosmopolitan Crossings:." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 77, no. 2 (June 1, 2018): 168–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2018.77.2.168.

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Between 1805 and 1836, the wealthy dowager ruler Begum Samrū built two large mansions and a Catholic church in North India. In both the makeup of her court and the character of her architecture, the begum's choices reflected her cosmopolitanism. The bishop of her church was from Rome, her closest political allies were English, and her main advisers were Indian. Her architecture, similarly, combined neoclassical façades and Italianate porticoes with Islamic detailing such as muqarnas and Mughal pietra dura; Indian elements such as hammams (bathhouses) sat alongside European-style salons. In Cosmopolitan Crossings: The Architecture of Begum Samrū, Mrinalini Rajagopalan analyzes the begum's architecture as a form of strategic cosmopolitanism—a kind of sociopolitical cunning that allowed Begum Samrū to reimagine the dichotomies between masculine and feminine spaces, domestic and political realms, and European and Indian decor while combining local religiosity with global networks of piety. Indeed, architecture was a key mechanism through which the begum consolidated power in the fraught political climate of nineteenth-century India.
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Vovk, V., and L. Misinkevych. "Legal regulation of building in Ancient Rome in the coordinates of the value and meaning universe of quirite." Uzhhorod National University Herald. Series: Law, no. 67 (January 16, 2022): 15–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.24144/2307-3322.2021.67.2.

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The article reveals little-studied issues of the organic relationship between the worldview of the ancient Romans and the legal regulation of construction in Rome. Based on the philosophical, legal, cultural, historical intelligence of domestic and foreign scholars, the author offers his own vision of the problems of legal regulation of construction in ancient Rome and its legal regulation. The article focuses on the fact of the city as a cultural phenomenon that shapes its own inner world, its value-hierarchical system, has an original landscape and relevant features, which leads to the emergence of Roman law as city law. It turns out that the city of Rome was a specific object, which is characterized by metaphysical and spiritual projections, within which there was a specific system of legal regulation. The author concludes that the queer had their own, original idea of space (different from the idea of space of the ancient Greeks), which had a specific material embodiment in architecture - closed and cramped living spaces and spacious and tall buildings for the public use and religious buildings. The peculiarity of the legal regulation of construction in ancient Rome was that it was initially limited to servitude law (regulation of the connection between land and plots and buildings built on them), and later legislative initiatives were preventive in nature, as they were aimed at preventing fires. In addition, the authors point out that the legal regulation of construction in ancient Rome was an organic combination of customary practice and conscious legislation of authorized persons. The article convincingly proves that Rome-city and everything that happens in it is a historically fixed state, and therefore its study is associated with the introduction of the subjectivity of the author, despite the academic rational narrowing of historical and legal phenomena that are studied and evaluated.
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Moles, Anna. "4 The past 15 years of archaeological work on Roman and Byzantine Crete." Archaeological Reports 69 (November 2023): 85–106. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0570608423000042.

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This article aims to overview the last 15 years of archaeological work on Crete (2007–2022) for the Roman and Byzantine periods. It is a resource that can provide the first step in the research process for those looking to investigate these time periods in Crete. It not only communicates recent discoveries and research, but also directs scholars to earlier key publications – which this article follows on from – and to an extensive bibliography of recently published research. After covering the main publications of the last 15 years and the workshops, congresses, and conferences that have taken place, it organizes the recent archaeological discoveries by site type. It begins by covering surveys of both the landscape and those conducted underwater that have been extensive across and around Crete. It then covers public buildings and infrastructure, domestic architecture, production and craft, and cemeteries. While it is not a complete listing of all finds, it summarizes the key discoveries, publications, and events in order to demonstrate the major developments for study of these time periods in Crete.
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Cesaris, Alessandra De, and Domizia Mandolesi. "Modular, Sustainable and Customized: Projects for the Contemporary Dwelling." Open House International 38, no. 3 (September 1, 2013): 39–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ohi-03-2013-b0006.

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The home is the place where the intimacy of living is manifested and where relationships with the outside world are formed. The truest sense of domestic space is expressed in the opposition between the interior dimension and collective aspirations. A society's needs and aspirations are reflected in the transformations of the dwelling, the city's basic unit and constituent element. The history of the dwelling can be read as the history of the relationship between the desire for the self-representation of an interior world and the desire for identification and recognition within a community. These considerations lie at the heart the research conducted by HousingLab - DiAP - Sapienza of Rome with the goal of developing low-cost residential projects that can be customized and tailored to individual needs. To meet the demands of a large and heterogeneous public, these projects must refer to industrial processes for the manufacturing of mass-produced goods. But how is it possible to reconcile industrialization and mass production with the need for individual expression or with the desire to freely give form to a home, modify it, and define its character according to individual tastes and its physical context? The goal is to create a catalogue of a system of a limited number of easy-to-assemble, standardized and prefabricated components that can generate controlled, but extremely varied and flexible, configurations of domestic space in order to accommodate different needs in relationship to individual taste and different locations. This article will present a series of projects designed by HousingLab - DiAP - Sapienza of Rome highlighting the relationship between architectural quality, energy use, environmental and economic sustainability, and innovation.
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Tybout, Rolf A. "Roman wall-painting and social significance." Journal of Roman Archaeology 14 (2001): 33–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047759400019814.

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During the last two decades a spate of publications forcefully brought to our attention the importance of the Roman house in the socio-political life of the élite in the late Republic and early Imperial period, both in Rome and in “provincial” towns like Pompeii, the metropolitan center of power setting the patterns for the lifestyle of local grandees. The focus is on the rôle of architecture in shaping the spatial, and thereby social, articulation of the domus. Literary sources concerning Roman domestic life and known for a long time are scrutinized for the light they might shed on the archaeological evidence, especially on the functions of rooms and other parts of the house. Roman wall-painting also attracts fresh attention in this context. The main focus in recent studies is on its synchronic formal variety, allowing painters, or perhaps rather their commissioners, to underline and at the same time refine the hierarchical organisation of space inherent in the architectural design.
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Ahmad, Abdullah, Pipit Mutiara Putri, Winanda Alifah, Indra Gunawan, and Solikhun . "ANALISIS JARINGAN SYARAF TIRUAN METODE BACKPROPOGATION DALAM MEMPREDIKSI KETERSEDIAAN KOMODITAS BERAS BERDASARKAN PROVINSI DI INDONESIA." Jurnal RESISTOR (Rekayasa Sistem Komputer) 2, no. 1 (April 21, 2019): 48–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.31598/jurnalresistor.v2i1.348.

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Food is a major human need that must be completed at any time. This right is one of human rights, stated in article 27 of the 1945 Constitution and in the Rome Declaration (1996). These considerations underlie the issuance of Law No. 7/1996 concerning Food. With these considerations, the Government always considers increasing food security related to increasing domestic production. This research is expected to contribute to the government in order to predict the contribution of rice by province in Indonesia. The data used is data from the National Statistics Agency through the website www.bps.go.id. The data is data on rice / rice production based on provinces in Indonesia in the period of 2010 to 2015. The algorithm used in this study is Artificial Neural Networks with the Backpropagation method. The input (input) variables used are data for 2010 (X1), data for 2011 (X2), data for 2012 (X3), data for 2013 (X4), data for 2014 (X5) and data for 2015 as targets with models training and testing architecture of 4 architectures namely 4-4-1, 4-8-1, 4-16-1, 4-32-1. The resulting output is the best pattern of ANN architecture. The best architectural model is 4-4-1 with 218 days, MSE 0.012728078 and an accuracy rate of 97%. From this model obtained from estimates obtained from provinces in Indonesia.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Architecture, domestic – rome – congresses"

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McIntosh, Gillian Elizabeth. "Re-thinking the Roman Domus: how architects and orators construct self, space, and language." Columbus, Ohio : Ohio State University, 2003. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc%5Fnum=osu1061239970.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2003.
Title from first page of PDF file. Document formatted into pages; contains viii, 220 p. Includes abstract and vita. Advisor: Erik T. Gunderson, Dept. of Greek and Latin. Includes bibliographical references (p. 203-220).
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Tice, Lisa Jane Neal. "Recreation and retreat garden casini in late sixteenth- and early seventeenth-century Rome /." 2009. http://hdl.rutgers.edu/1782.2/rucore10001600001.ETD.000051414.

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Books on the topic "Architecture, domestic – rome – congresses"

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Seminar, on Vernacular Settlement (1999 Faculty of Engineering University of Indonesia). Seminar on Vernacular Settlement: The role of local knowledge in built environment : proceedings. [Depok: Faculty of Engineering, University of Indonesia?, 1999.

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Lucifero, Roberto. Guida ai giardini perduti di Roma =: Vanished gardens of Rome : a guide book. Rome: Studio Lucifero, 1995.

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Montanaro, Caroline Vincenti. Palazzi and villas of Rome. Venezia: Arsenale, 1999.

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Moltesen, Mette. Excavations at La Giostra: A mid-republican fortress outside Rome. Rome: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider, 1994.

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Williams Symposium on Classical Architecture (3rd 2004 Rome, Italy). Imaging ancient Rome: Documentation, visualization, imagination : proceedings of the Third Williams Symposium on Classical Architecture, held at the American Academy in Rome, the British School at Rome, and the Deutsches Archäologisches Institut, Rome, on May 20-23, 2004. Portsmouth, R.I: Journal of Roman Archaeology, 2006.

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Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture. Meeting. The spirit of home: Proceedings of the 74th annual meeting of the Association of Collegiate Schools of Architecture, 1986. Edited by Quinn Patrick and Benson Robert Alan. Washington: ACSA, 1986.

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Gordon, McKay Alexander. Houses, villas, and palaces in the Roman world. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998.

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Housing, Awards Symposium (2nd 1990 Vancouver B. C. ). The 2nd Housing Awards Symposium, 1990: Housing young families affordably : proceedings, Vancouver, British Columbia, September 6 and 7, 1990. [Ottawa]: Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation, 1992.

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Convegno di studi maceratesi (28th 1992 Tolentino, Italy). Ville e dimore signorili di campagna del maceratese: Atti del XXVIII Convegno di studi maceratesi, Abbadia di Fiastra, Tolentino, 14-15 novembre 1992. Macerata: Centro di studi storici maceratesi, 1994.

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Benocci, Carla. Villa Piccolomini: Una residenza di campagna alle porte del Vaticano. Roma: Edindustria, 2005.

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Book chapters on the topic "Architecture, domestic – rome – congresses"

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Ault, Bradley A. "Greek Domestic Architecture." In A Companion to Science, Technology, and Medicine in Ancient Greece and Rome, 656–71. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118373057.ch40.

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de Haan, Nathalie. "Roman Domestic Architecture." In A Companion to Science, Technology, and Medicine in Ancient Greece and Rome, 711–29. Hoboken, NJ, USA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118373057.ch43.

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Storey, Glenn R. "Housing and domestic architecture*." In The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Rome, 151–68. Cambridge University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/cco9781139025973.012.

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Devlin, Eoin. "Architecture." In The Oxford History of British and Irish Catholicism, Volume II, 228—C12S5. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198843436.003.0013.

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Abstract Catholic architecture in the century after 1641, and more emphatically in the sixty years after the accession of James II & VII in 1685, shows a growing willingness by Catholic families to introduce the latest styles from Catholic Europe, often from Rome, and especially the assertive and ornate baroque style that originated there from the end of the sixteenth century. The development of a significant number of royal chapels, not only by James but by his mother, wives, and sister-in-law, set the trend and was much imitated in many private domestic chapels across the three kingdoms and in some public churches in Ireland. During the 1680s, the royal chapels were much visited not only by devout Catholics but by curious Protestants and indeed although paintings and furnishings tended to be by Italian artists, the buildings themselves tended to be designed by English architects such as Sir John Vanbrugh, and there was some crossover between otherwise hostile Catholic and Protestant aesthetics when it came to architecture.
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Fuller, Christopher J. "“Talking about Capturing bin Laden”: The Clinton Administration and the Legal Architecture of Lethal Force in Counterterrorism, 1993–2000." In See It/Shoot It. Yale University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300218541.003.0006.

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This chapter addresses the notion that the CIA's drone campaign lacks appropriate congressional oversight and domestic legal authorization, instead revealing that the agency sought extensive legal cover from both the executive branch and Congress before undertaking its role as aerial executioner. Introducing the concept of the covert action pendulum, the chapter argues that a historic cycle of agency excess followed by a backlash of congressional investigation and subsequently increased oversight became established. It also examines how the hard-learned lessons from these pendulum swings prompted Langley's cautious managers to insist upon the creation of the complex legal architecture that now underwrites the United States' drone campaign.
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Machado, Carlos. "Senatorial Houses as Centres of Power." In Urban Space and Aristocratic Power in Late Antique Rome, 201–30. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198835073.003.0007.

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Aristocratic houses played an important part in Roman society. They were symbols of aristocratic power, mobilizing architecture and decoration to express social standing and family history. At the same time, domestic spaces were the arena where aristocrats built their power bases, greeting friends and clients on a daily basis. This chapter analyses the importance of houses in aristocratic strategies and political life, consider how these spaces contributed to define aristocratic standing and clout in late antique Rome. By examining domestic rituals such as the morning salutatio and invitations for dinners and other social gatherings, it will show how these spaces could perform a crucial function in late antique city life.
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Smith, Christopher John. "Latium: The Archaeological Evidence." In Early Rome and Latium, 129–42. Oxford University PressOxford, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198150312.003.0009.

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Abstract A number of recurring themes dominate the archaeology of Latin sites in the sixth and early fifth centuries; domestic architecture, temple buildings, and votive deposits. There is a notable absence of any secure evidence concerning land use, and it is quite obvious that the houses of which we know represent no more than a small part of the habitations on the various sites. One presumes that they represent the houses of the aristocrats because of their size and permanence, in which case we are ignorant, as so often, of how and where the rest of the populace lived. We may begin with the three sites on the Via Salaria to the north of Rome. Antemnae has a large number of roof-tiles, ceramic ware, copper, and bronze, which seems to represent an increase in the number of buildings and an intense occupation, perhaps the most flourishing period of the city. In addition to the large numbers of buildings seen by Lanciani before the construction of the nineteenth-century fort, some of which may have had upper storeys in clay or rough bricks, there were found cisterns, wells, and a drainage system, which inspire comparison with the drainage of the centre of Rome at a similar period. There may also have been an internal road, part of the network joining the site to Rome. A wall and ditch protected the settlement; the wall may have encircled the site though possibly not of a regular height. An antefix of the Juno Lanuvina type has been attributed to the site and seems to date from the early fifth century, indicating a sanctuary preceding the Hellenistic phase, which is the earliest we know from other evidence.
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Robinson, Elizabeth C. "The Monuments and Artifacts." In Urban Transformation in Ancient Molise, 228–92. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190641436.003.0006.

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This chapter discusses the transformations that occur within the urban center of Larinum during the period of study. After a discussion of the early occupation of the site, it investigates the town’s architecture. Emphasis is on public architecture (the fortification wall, town planning, the presumed forum area, and the amphitheater), sacred architecture (the via Jovine sanctuary, the remains of a portico, and an early Imperial temple), domestic architecture (the atrium house), and a series of funerary monuments. The evidence shows that the commissioners of these works were engaged with trends that were popular throughout the Mediterranean, demonstrating their connection to the broader Hellenistic koiné. This chapter also discusses coins minted at Larinum in the third century bce and ceramics found at the site (both locally produced and imported wares). While the inscriptions show some attention to Rome, the artifacts show that the citizens’ attention was not predominantly focused on interactions with the capital. They provide evidence of Larinum’s links to sites throughout the Mediterranean. Many of the monuments and artifacts are made for a local audience and local trade networks, and serve to maintain the status of the elite families within local power networks. Items that had been identified in the past as markers of a Roman presence in the town, when considered in light of the continuity seen in the settlement patterns and the epigraphy, can now be seen to be commissioned by local people engaged in a Mediterranean-wide cultural and artistic discourse.
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Roux, Mispa, and Natalia Silva Santaularia. "Joint Reflection: South Africa and Colombia as Transitional Justice Societies." In Transitional Justice, Distributive Justice, and Transformative Constitutionalism, 463–68. Oxford University PressOxford, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780192887627.003.0025.

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Abstract This joint reflection considers the central tension in transitional justice between punishment for past wrongs and establishing a stable peace, and how that has been affected by the coming into being of the International Criminal Court (ICC). Prior to the ICC, South Africa’s transitional arrangements initially allowed for blanket amnesties in return for truth-telling. Given Colombia is a signatory to the Rome Statute, such an approach was not possible in the 2016 Peace Agreement, leading to its innovative institutional architecture. The joint reflection recognises that the South African approach was drawn from a different era and is no longer acceptable or desirable. However, it challenges a purely retributive approach to addressing past crimes and suggests an important evolution is taking place in the role of the ICC—whilst placing pressure for accountability for past wrongs, it is working in a dialogical and collaborative manner with domestic jurisdictions to support and empower their own transitional justice processes.
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Conference papers on the topic "Architecture, domestic – rome – congresses"

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Ochoa Caballero, María José. "Space, function and symbol. Architectural furniture in domestic spaces." In 3rd Valencia International Biennial of Research in Architecture, VIBRArch. València: Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/vibrarch2022.2022.15217.

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The Baldaquin of the Saint Peter’s Basilica in Rome represents the spiritual core of the building and holds a distinctive meaning for the complex and the people in it. This piece, defined for this research as architectural furniture, conditions the use of the space it belongs to, affects its scale, gives purpose to its routing, and defines the symbolic reading of the whole.This monumental object is used as a reference, and its personal, social, spatial, and functional implications are relayed across the field of architecture to the domestic space. An approach to furniture to create a home molded to the needs and desires of the individual and the society he belongs to is detected in the pieces of furniture by Ettore Sottsass and Joe Colombo, presented in the exhibition Italy, the new domestic landscape in 1972. This paper intends to indicate those concepts embodied in a selection of four contemporary housing renovation projects that have used furniture as a complex design element to shape homes.
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