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The Hills of Rome: Signature of an Eternal City
Hardback

The Hills of Rome: Signature of an Eternal City

$106.99
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Rome is ‘the city of seven hills’. This book examines the need for the ‘seven hills’ cliche, its origins, development, impact and borrowing. It explores how the cliche relates to Rome’s real volcanic terrain and how it is fundamental to how we define this. Its chronological remit is capacious: Varro, Virgil and Claudian at one end, on, through the work of Renaissance antiquarians, to embrace frescoes and nineteenth-century engravings. These artists and authors celebrated the hills and the views from these hills, in an attempt to capture Rome holistically. By studying their efforts, this book confronts the problems of encapsulating Rome and ‘cityness’ more broadly and indeed the artificiality of any representation, whether a painting, poem or map. In this sense, it is not a history of the city at any one moment in time, but a history of how the city has been, and has to be, perceived.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
13 September 2012
Pages
320
ISBN
9781107025974

Rome is ‘the city of seven hills’. This book examines the need for the ‘seven hills’ cliche, its origins, development, impact and borrowing. It explores how the cliche relates to Rome’s real volcanic terrain and how it is fundamental to how we define this. Its chronological remit is capacious: Varro, Virgil and Claudian at one end, on, through the work of Renaissance antiquarians, to embrace frescoes and nineteenth-century engravings. These artists and authors celebrated the hills and the views from these hills, in an attempt to capture Rome holistically. By studying their efforts, this book confronts the problems of encapsulating Rome and ‘cityness’ more broadly and indeed the artificiality of any representation, whether a painting, poem or map. In this sense, it is not a history of the city at any one moment in time, but a history of how the city has been, and has to be, perceived.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Country
United Kingdom
Date
13 September 2012
Pages
320
ISBN
9781107025974