Ebook: The Roman Forum
Author: David Watkin
- Series: Wonders of the World
- Year: 2009
- Publisher: Harvard University Press
- Language: English
- pdf
Editorial Reviews
“Offers a compact but comprehensive course, intended for sophisticated history buffs and travelers, on the history of the Forum...To help the tourist avoid confusion, Watkin embarks on a detailed tour of the place, revealing which structures--or, rather, portions of structures--are truly left from ancient Rome and which have been additions built over the course of the years since the fall of the Roman Empire. Systematic, knowledgeable, and even enthusiastic: just the formula to completely engage the reader wanting to know more about ancient Rome.”―Brad Hooper, Booklist
“For a walk through the Forum both in space and history, choose David Watkin's The Roman Forum...There are many books on Rome, but few as deeply urbane.”―Tom D'Evelyn, Providence Journal
“Edited by classicist Mary Beard, The Wonders of the World book series from Harvard University Press offers architecturally oriented views of various sites, ranging from the Alhambra to the Parthenon to St. Peters. The attractive books are hand-sized, cloth-bound, and illustrated with maps, photographs, engravings, and elevations, making them ideal for the armchair traveler.”―Architectural Record
“[Watkin] treats readers to an incisive and insightful history of the Forum with a focus on its evolution following the fall of the Roman Empire. In The Roman Forum, he deftly illuminates the fascinating changes that this once sacred space has undergone in the last millennium, and argues that our modern perception of the Forum, dictated by archaeological pursuits, tends to obscure those aspects of the Forum that are truly impressive. The Roman Forum is the latest entry in the Wonders of the World series from Harvard University Press, which provides in-depth, scholarly explorations of very specific subjects like the Rosetta stone or the Coliseum. Watkin's work in this volume is clearly a labor of love; his sincere appreciation for the Forum and for classical architecture at large is evident, and his expertise helps render an easily navigable portrait of the Forum in four dimensions. He traces the shifting attitudes and pivotal events that have shaped the Roman Forum from late antiquity, through the Middle Ages, all the way to the present day.”―Michael Patrick Brady, popmatters.com
“Though not strictly modern--well, not modern at all, really--the Wonders of the World series of books from Harvard University Press remains my favorite ongoing run of architectural tomes. Classicist Mary Beard is the series editor, and each of these trim volumes takes up the subject of a particular building. Ranging from Stonehenge to the Parthenon to the Temple of Jerusalem, imagine these scholarly works as biographies of buildings...[You should] race to add the newly released Roman Forum and Piazza San Marco to your collection...The well-illustrated little book traces the Forum from antiquity to today, and serves as an able roadmap to the historical eras and ideologies written across what may have been the most striking expression of Roman architecture. Popes, plunderers and preservationists all play roles in this book, and it's an ideal stocking stuffer for those who take their architecture with a solid dose of intellectual rigor. And that the book will tuck nicely into a blazer pocket is only a welcome bonus... Be sure to pick up the entire set yourself. I'm awfully glad I've got mine, and can't wait to tuck into the next one.”―Aaron Britt, Dwell.com
“An entertaining combination of travel guide, history and polemic.”―Francis X. Rocca, Wall Street Journal
About the Author
David Watkin is Emeritus Professor of the History of Architecture at the University of Cambridge.
“Offers a compact but comprehensive course, intended for sophisticated history buffs and travelers, on the history of the Forum...To help the tourist avoid confusion, Watkin embarks on a detailed tour of the place, revealing which structures--or, rather, portions of structures--are truly left from ancient Rome and which have been additions built over the course of the years since the fall of the Roman Empire. Systematic, knowledgeable, and even enthusiastic: just the formula to completely engage the reader wanting to know more about ancient Rome.”―Brad Hooper, Booklist
“For a walk through the Forum both in space and history, choose David Watkin's The Roman Forum...There are many books on Rome, but few as deeply urbane.”―Tom D'Evelyn, Providence Journal
“Edited by classicist Mary Beard, The Wonders of the World book series from Harvard University Press offers architecturally oriented views of various sites, ranging from the Alhambra to the Parthenon to St. Peters. The attractive books are hand-sized, cloth-bound, and illustrated with maps, photographs, engravings, and elevations, making them ideal for the armchair traveler.”―Architectural Record
“[Watkin] treats readers to an incisive and insightful history of the Forum with a focus on its evolution following the fall of the Roman Empire. In The Roman Forum, he deftly illuminates the fascinating changes that this once sacred space has undergone in the last millennium, and argues that our modern perception of the Forum, dictated by archaeological pursuits, tends to obscure those aspects of the Forum that are truly impressive. The Roman Forum is the latest entry in the Wonders of the World series from Harvard University Press, which provides in-depth, scholarly explorations of very specific subjects like the Rosetta stone or the Coliseum. Watkin's work in this volume is clearly a labor of love; his sincere appreciation for the Forum and for classical architecture at large is evident, and his expertise helps render an easily navigable portrait of the Forum in four dimensions. He traces the shifting attitudes and pivotal events that have shaped the Roman Forum from late antiquity, through the Middle Ages, all the way to the present day.”―Michael Patrick Brady, popmatters.com
“Though not strictly modern--well, not modern at all, really--the Wonders of the World series of books from Harvard University Press remains my favorite ongoing run of architectural tomes. Classicist Mary Beard is the series editor, and each of these trim volumes takes up the subject of a particular building. Ranging from Stonehenge to the Parthenon to the Temple of Jerusalem, imagine these scholarly works as biographies of buildings...[You should] race to add the newly released Roman Forum and Piazza San Marco to your collection...The well-illustrated little book traces the Forum from antiquity to today, and serves as an able roadmap to the historical eras and ideologies written across what may have been the most striking expression of Roman architecture. Popes, plunderers and preservationists all play roles in this book, and it's an ideal stocking stuffer for those who take their architecture with a solid dose of intellectual rigor. And that the book will tuck nicely into a blazer pocket is only a welcome bonus... Be sure to pick up the entire set yourself. I'm awfully glad I've got mine, and can't wait to tuck into the next one.”―Aaron Britt, Dwell.com
“An entertaining combination of travel guide, history and polemic.”―Francis X. Rocca, Wall Street Journal
About the Author
David Watkin is Emeritus Professor of the History of Architecture at the University of Cambridge.
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