The Mute Stones Speak: The Story of Archaeology in Italy
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About This Book
The book surveys the archaeology of Italy from prehistoric settlements, nuraghi, and Villanovan cultures through the complex Etruscan cities, early Rome, and Roman colonies, to imperial building programs and late antiquity. It examines material evidence—tombs, temples, forums, villas, inscriptions, mosaics, and urban plans—to reconstruct social, religious, and political life and to interpret artistic and architectural developments. Major builders and monuments are considered alongside engineering achievements such as roads, aqueducts, and baths. Pompeian sites and provincial villas are used to illuminate everyday life, and the narrative closes by tracing changes in burial and ritual practice as Christianity emerges.
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