No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2012
The rapid progress of archaeological research and discovery in Italy has made it difficult to appreciate the importance and interest of many of the results. Full reports of the more recent excavations are seldom available and many of the provisional accounts have appeared in publications not easily accessible to the English scholar. These notes attempt to call attention to some of the more important discoveries of the classical period and to indicate the sources from which further information may be drawn. The area covered is Rome and Latium, the Sabina and Samnium, Picenum, Umbria, the Ager Gallicus and north-east Italy, including Istria. It is hoped later to publish a second article covering the other provinces of Italy. While the greater number of the excavations and studies belong to the period since 1935, a few of earlier date have been included. Within these limits I have attempted to note all the more important discoveries. Less extensive finds or those about which little information is available have been omitted, as a full list is published in the Archäologischer Anzeiger of the German Archaeological Institute and elsewhere.
1 In preparing these notes I have been greatly indebted to many friends and scholars. In the first place to the Direzione Generale delle Belle Arti del Governatorato and Dr. A. M. Colini for permission to publish plates iv and v, i; to Dr.G. Moretti for similar permission in respect of pl. vi and vii; to Dr. G. Calza, Director of the Excavations of Ostia and Dr. V. Macchioro for the photographs of Ostia and of the Theatre at Trieste (pl. v, z, viii, ix, x, i, xi). In addition I would wish to thank Professor G. Lugli, Dr. A. Bartoli, Dr. E. Josi, and Dr. P. Sticotti for permission to visit sites and for information freely and courteously given. Finally I wish to thank Professor A. W. Van Buren and Dr. A. D. Trendall for advice and assistance in several ways and Mr. W. J. Craig who has read the article in MS.
2 Van Buren, A. W., Ancient Rome (London: Lovat Dickson, 1936)Google Scholar.
3 Longhi, Marchetti in Bullettino della Commissione Archeologica Communale lxiv, 83Google Scholar.
4 See also Lugli, , I Monumenti Antichi di Roma e Suburbio iii, 1938, 23Google Scholar.
5 Cf. Suetonius, Diu. Augustus 100, who records the ‘circumiectas silvas et ambulationes’.
6 Capitolium vi, 1930, 632Google Scholar.
7 Ibid. x, 1934, 457.
8 Studi Etruschi i, 1927, 145Google Scholar.
9 Capitolium x, 1934, 223Google Scholar.
10 G. Moretti, L' Ara Pacis Augustae (Itinerari dei Musei e Monumenti d'Italia).
11 N. d. Sc. vi (1937), xiii, 37Google Scholar.
12 Capitolium xiii, 1938, 399Google Scholar.
13 A complete report on the site is promised shortly in the Bollettino della Commissione Archaeologica Communale del Governatorato.
14 Civiltà romana 5. Montini, Il Ritratto di Augusto, p. 74 (Mostra Augustea).
15 For a notice indicating the scope and conclusions of these fascicules see JHS lvii, 269. The other fascicules published deal with the ‘Casa del Citarista’ and three houses in Reg. i, Ins. 7 at Pompeii, and with the tombs of the Leonesse, Vasi Dipinti, and Caccia e Pesca at Tarquînia.
16 L'Urbe, Fasc. 5 (1937)Google Scholar.
17 N. d. Sc. 1924, 353.
18 Capitolium xiii, 1938, 547Google Scholar.
19 Cf. Krautheimer, Corpus Basilicarum Christianarum Romae. This important work published by the Pontifical Institute of Christian Archaeology has now reached S. Clemente, following an alphabetical list of the Churches. (See JRS xxviii, 253 and below, p. 128 f.,)
20 Capitolium xiv, 1939, 89Google Scholar.
21 Ibid. xiii, 1938, 1.
22 Ibid. xiii, 1938, 5.
23 N. d. Sc. vi, 1938, xiv, 26Google Scholar.
24 Ephemeris Daco-Romana vi, 1935, 240Google Scholar.
25 Cf. Richmond, I. A. in JRS xxiii, 158Google Scholar ff.
26 Galli, E. in Bollettino dell' Arte, Ser. iii, Anno xxxi, 1936–1937Google Scholar.
27 CIL ix, 3019.
28 Palladio, 1937, 41.
29 N. d. Sc. 1937, 28.
30 Bollettino d' Arte, Ser. iii, Anno xxix, 1935, 297Google Scholar.
31 L'Orma di Roma nella Venezia Giulia.
32 Congresso di Studi Romani, 1931, i, 255;Google ScholarRivista mensile Città di Trieste, September, 1934.
33 Macchioro, Le Statue del Teatro Romano di Trieste, 1938.
34 Reviewed in JRS xxvii, 290.