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From the death of a prince to his glorification: metamorphosis of a throne.
Nuncius, 2009
Full year results 2021 Brill shows significant growth in revenue, profit levels and eProduct sales in 2021
Via Cervignano 4 -20137 Milano Catalogo: www.lededizioni.com I diritti di riproduzione, memorizzazione elettronica e pubblicazione con qualsiasi mezzo analogico o digitale (comprese le copie fotostatiche e l'inserimento in banche dati) e i diritti di traduzione e di adattamento totale o parziale sono riservati per tutti i paesi. Le fotocopie per uso personale del lettore possono essere effettuate nei limiti del 15% di ciascun volume/fascicolo di periodico dietro pagamento alla SIAE del compenso previsto dall'art. 68, commi 4 e 5, della legge 22 aprile 1941 n. 633. Le riproduzioni effettuate per finalità di carattere professionale, economico o commerciale o comunque per uso diverso da quello personale possono essere effettuate a seguito di specifica autorizzazione rilasciata da: AIDRO, Corso di Porta Romana n. 108 -20122 Milano
Bryn Mawr Classical Review, 2017
2018
Proceedings of the second International Summer School «Water and the City: hydraulic systems in the Roman Age» (Feltre, 24th - 28th August 2015) Materiali della seconda International Summer School «Water and the City: hydraulic systems in the Roman Age» (Feltre, 24-28 Agosto 2015) [Seren del Grappa]: Edizioni DBS, 2018. - 242 pp.: ill. 262; 1,3 cm. ISBN 978-88-33680-04-0
A marble head discovered in the Roman villa at Cavallacci, a site near Albano, and now kept in the local Museo civico, was previously interpreted as a portrait of Tiberius Iulius Caesar Nero Gemellus. In reality, the particular technique used to sculpt the eyes makes it possible to rule out that the head represents a historical figure, leading to the possibility that its identity is instead mythological. The dating of the Albano head remains in either case that of the early Imperial Roman Period, and this datum combined with the particular site of the head's discovery and its iconography, orient the author to suggest that the piece is interpretable as an image of Ascanius/Iulus. Comparisons with portraits of Lucius Caesar, in particular, support the hypothesis of a commission aimed at the legitimization of the new dynastic policy inaugurated by Augustus Caesar. The production of this important find can therefore be placed in the context of the literary and artistic recovery of the Trojan myth of the origins of Rome functional to imperial propaganda.
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