Papers by John Muccigrosso
In summer 2011 a fourth season of excavation at the site of the Vicus Martis Tudertium was conduc... more In summer 2011 a fourth season of excavation at the site of the Vicus Martis Tudertium was conducted in the area to the north of that already investigated. Building remains exhibited similar preservation as that already found to the south, and small finds were also consistent with those from previous seasons. The earliest material found pushes back the site’s date slightly, into the late second century BCE. Despite a rising ground level, excavation again reached the water table.
FOLD&R Fasti On Line Documents & Research, 366, 2016
Over the course of the past three seasons (2012-2014) at the putative site of the Vicus Martis Tu... more Over the course of the past three seasons (2012-2014) at the putative site of the Vicus Martis Tudertium near the church of S. Maria in Pantano (Massa Martana, PG), excavation has focused on a large structure first observed in crop marks in fall 2008. We have uncovered a large building oriented along the putative Via Flaminia and possessing an apse at its eastern end, the precise function of which remains unclear. Excavation has also uncovered a series of early-medieval burials located just east of the structure.
Over the course of the past three seasons (2012-2014) at the putative site of the Vicus Martis Tu... more Over the course of the past three seasons (2012-2014) at the putative site of the Vicus Martis Tudertium near the church of S. Maria in Pantano (Massa Martana, PG), excavation has focused on a large structure first observed in crop marks in fall 2008. We have uncovered a large building oriented along the putative Via Flaminia and possessing an apse at its eastern end, the precise function of which remains unclear. Excavation has also uncovered a series of early-medieval burials located just east of the structure.
FOLD&R Fasti On Line Documents & Research, 327, 2015
In summer 2011 a fourth season of excavation at the site of the Vicus Martis Tudertium was conduc... more In summer 2011 a fourth season of excavation at the site of the Vicus Martis Tudertium was conducted in the area to the north of that already investigated. Building remains exhibited similar preservation as that already found to the south, and small finds were also consistent with those from previous seasons. The earliest material found pushes back the site’s date slightly, into the late second century BCE. Despite a rising ground level, excavation again reached the water table.
FOLD&R Fasti On Line Documents & Research, 227, 2011
On the original nature of the "Golden Calf" of Exodus 32.
In summer 2011 a fourth season of excavation at the site of the Vicus Martis Tudertium was conduc... more In summer 2011 a fourth season of excavation at the site of the Vicus Martis Tudertium was conducted in the area to the north of that already investigated. Building remains exhibited similar preservation as that already found to the south, and small finds were also consistent with those from previous seasons. The earliest material found pushes back the site’s date slightly, into the late second century BCE. Despite a rising ground level, excavation again reached the water table.
The scene on the Robinson skyphos was wrongly identified for years as a depiction of clay‐working... more The scene on the Robinson skyphos was wrongly identified for years as a depiction of clay‐working, either in a kiln or other preparation area. Recent scholarship has correctly identified it instead as one related to the grain harvest. This article presents a new examination of the scene, pointing out details the importance of which had not previously been noted. It also brings to bear comparanda from Egyptian art which put the identification of the scene beyond doubt.
From the Bowdoin College excavations of the late 1990s.
Religion in Roman Italy in the Mid- and Late Republican Eras ("Yale Classical Studies"), 2006
Page 1. THE BRINDISI ELOGIUM AND THE REJECTED LECTIO SENATUS OF APPIUS CLAUDIUS CAECUS' ... more Page 1. THE BRINDISI ELOGIUM AND THE REJECTED LECTIO SENATUS OF APPIUS CLAUDIUS CAECUS' In 1950 a fragmentary inscription was discovered in Brindisi. Dating to the mid-first c. AD, it was clearly identified ...
Language learners of tomorrow: Process and promise, 1999
Biochemical …, Jan 1, 1989
Book Reviews by John Muccigrosso
BrynMmawrCclassical Review, 2020
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Papers by John Muccigrosso
Book Reviews by John Muccigrosso
INDICE
Paul B. Harvey, Jr Bibliography
Foreword
by John Muccigrosso, Celia E. Schultz
John D. Muccigrosso
Populus as Army and the Preservation of Roman Legal Language
Glenn R. Storey
The Population of Rome: Remaining True to the Classical Comparative Perspective
Celia E. Schultz
Fulvia and the Bellum Perusinum
Mark Vessey
Face Book of the Common Reader? Prosopography and Self-Recognition in Augustine’s Confessions
Catherine Conybeare
Correcting a Heretic: the Conlatio cum Maximino
R. H. Cline
Valentinian III’s Novel 23: Pilfering Priests, Religious Sensibilities, and Power Dynamics in Mid-5th Century Rome
Dennis E. Trout
ICUR 8.20757: Poetry and Ambition at S. Agnese fuori le mura
William E. Klingshirn
Lived Religion in the Homilia de Sacrilegiis
Bibliography
Contributors