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Cosa: The Black-Glaze Pottery 2 (Supplements to the Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome)

Cosa: The Black-Glaze Pottery 2 (Supplements to the Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome)
Author: Ann Reynolds Scott
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Category: Book

Buy New: $80.00



New (16) Used (7) from $79.48

Sales Rank: 2460924

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 304
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.8
Dimensions (in): 11.1 x 8.4 x 1

ISBN: 0472115855
Dewey Decimal Number: 930
EAN: 9780472115853
ASIN: 0472115855

Publication Date: March 5, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

This study of an important class of ceramics from the key coastal colonial site of Cosa in southwest Tuscany documents the rise of republican Rome to dominance in central Italy in the third and second centuries B.C. The town and territory of Cosa constitute one of the most extensively explored sites of the Roman republican period on the Italian peninsula. Excavation and survey work by the American Academy in Rome and others at Cosa over the past half century have greatly enriched our knowledge of the development of public and domestic urban and rural architecture, the organization and exploitation of the resources of the countryside, and the patterns of economic exchange to which they testify. These latter are particularly evident in the varieties of imported and locally made black-glaze pottery that have been recovered in the excavations. While we tend to think of the ubiquitous Greco-Italic amphorae as the commercial indicators par excellence of mid to late republican Italy, this class of tableware is no less important for understanding both the maritime and inland routes of exchange.

"Ann Scott presents our best picture of Late Republican black-glaze in central Italy from the third through the mid-first century B.C. In Cosa: The Black-Glaze Pottery 2, she reassesses and updates the material published fifty years ago by Doris Taylor as well as presenting more recent deposits of black glazed pottery from Cosa."
---Shelley Stone, Professor of Art History, California State University, Bakersfield

"This admirable study will quickly establish itself as the classic treatment of a topic of central importance for the archaeology of central Italy in the Roman republican period."
---Bernard Frischer, Director, Institute for Advanced Technology in the Humanities, and Professor of Art History and Classics, University of Virginia

Also of interest

  • Cosa: The Italian Sigillata by Maria Teresa Marabini Moevs
  • Cosa V: An Intermittent Town, Excavations 1991-1997 by Elizabeth Fentress
  • Cosa IV: The Houses, edited by Vincent J. Bruno and Russell T. Scott
  • Cosa III: The Buildings of the Forum: Colony, Municipium, and Village, edited by Frank E. Brown, Emeline Hill Richardson, and L. Richardson


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