{"title":"RODOLFO LANCIANI AND THE SOUTHWEST QUIRINAL: FROM EXCAVATION TO THE FORMA URBIS ROMAE","authors":"B. Brennan","doi":"10.1017/s0068246223000077","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In 1885, during excavations on the southwest slope of the Quirinal Hill, two magnificent Hellenistic bronzes were discovered by Rodolfo Lanciani. Although Lanciani dated the burial of the bronzes to the era of the barbarian attacks on the city of Rome, here it will be argued that the bronzes may have been excavated elsewhere by clandestine diggers and then reburied on the Quirinal slope, in a stash of robbers’ loot. Utilizing newly located archival sources that shed fresh light on the excavation, and interrogating Lanciani's published accounts of it, this paper presents a case study of this small area of the hill. This leads in turn to an investigation of Lanciani's practice as a cartographer in plate XXII of his Forma Urbis Romae where the hillside was subsequently depicted. Plate XXII has a wider relevance for any user of the FUR because a close analysis of this one plate suggests that Lanciani's representation of the southwest Quirinal is dominated by a cartographic rhetoric. This is composed of significant omissions, obfuscations and graphic hierarchies all of which are employed to influence and manipulate the reader. It is argued that plate XXII of Lanciani's map is a persuasive rendering rather than a disinterested record of the ancient structures that were found buried there. This has significance for any reader of the FUR.","PeriodicalId":44228,"journal":{"name":"Papers of the British School at Rome","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-08-15","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Papers of the British School at Rome","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1017/s0068246223000077","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In 1885, during excavations on the southwest slope of the Quirinal Hill, two magnificent Hellenistic bronzes were discovered by Rodolfo Lanciani. Although Lanciani dated the burial of the bronzes to the era of the barbarian attacks on the city of Rome, here it will be argued that the bronzes may have been excavated elsewhere by clandestine diggers and then reburied on the Quirinal slope, in a stash of robbers’ loot. Utilizing newly located archival sources that shed fresh light on the excavation, and interrogating Lanciani's published accounts of it, this paper presents a case study of this small area of the hill. This leads in turn to an investigation of Lanciani's practice as a cartographer in plate XXII of his Forma Urbis Romae where the hillside was subsequently depicted. Plate XXII has a wider relevance for any user of the FUR because a close analysis of this one plate suggests that Lanciani's representation of the southwest Quirinal is dominated by a cartographic rhetoric. This is composed of significant omissions, obfuscations and graphic hierarchies all of which are employed to influence and manipulate the reader. It is argued that plate XXII of Lanciani's map is a persuasive rendering rather than a disinterested record of the ancient structures that were found buried there. This has significance for any reader of the FUR.
1885年,在奎里纳尔山西南坡的发掘中,鲁道夫·兰恰尼发现了两件宏伟的希腊化青铜器。尽管Lanciani将这些青铜器的埋葬年代定为野蛮人袭击罗马城的时代,但在这里,有人认为这些青铜器可能是由秘密挖掘者在其他地方挖掘出来的,然后被重新埋葬在Quirinal斜坡上,藏在强盗的战利品中。利用新定位的档案来源,为挖掘工作提供了新的线索,并询问了Lanciani已发表的关于挖掘工作的描述,本文对这片小山丘进行了案例研究。这反过来又导致了对Lanciani作为制图师的实践的调查,在他的Forma Urbis Romae的第二十二版中,山坡随后被描绘出来。图版XXII对FUR的任何用户都有更广泛的相关性,因为对这一图版的仔细分析表明,Lanciani对西南奎里纳尔的描绘主要是由制图修辞所主导的。这是由重大遗漏、混淆和图形层次结构组成的,所有这些都被用来影响和操纵读者。有人认为,Lanciani地图的第二十二板块是一个有说服力的渲染图,而不是对埋葬在那里的古代结构的无私记录。这对FUR的任何读者都具有重要意义。
期刊介绍:
The Papers of the British School at Rome exists to publish work related to the archaeology, history and literature of Italy and other parts of the mediterranean area up to modern times, in the first instance by the staff of the School and by its present and former members. The Papers is edited by the Faculty of Archaeology, History and Letters of the Council of the BSR, and is a refereed journal.