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    Culture and Society at Lullingstone Roman Villa

    Posted By: step778
    Culture and Society at Lullingstone Roman Villa

    Caroline K. Mackenzie, "Culture and Society at Lullingstone Roman Villa"
    English | 2019 | pages: 74 | ISBN: 1789692903 | PDF | 40,3 mb

    Culture and Society at Lullingstone Roman Villa paints a picture of what life might have been like for the inhabitants of the villa in the late third and fourth centuries AD. The villa today, in the Darent Valley, Kent, has an unusual amount of well-preserved evidence for its interior decoration and architecture. Seventy years on from the commencement of the excavation of the site, this study draws on the original reports but also embraces innovative approaches to examining the archaeological evidence and sheds new light on our understanding of the villa’s use. For the first time, the site of Lullingstone Roman Villa is surveyed holistically, developing a plausible argument that the inhabitants used domestic space to assert their status and cultural identity.
    An exploration of the landscape setting asks whether property location was as important a factor in the time of Roman Britain as it is today and probes the motives of the villa’s architects and their client. Lullingstone’s celebrated mosaics are also investigated from a fresh perspective. Why were these scenes chosen and what impact did they have on various visitors to the villa? Comparison with some contemporary Romano-British villas allows us to assess whether Lullingstone is what we would expect, or whether it is exceptional. Examples from the wider Roman world are also introduced to enquire how Lullingstone’s residents adopted Roman architecture and potentially the social customs which accompanied it.
    Table of Contents
    Preface and Acknowledgements
    Chapter One: Introduction
    Chapter Two: The villa within its landscape setting and the role of topography in the owner’s self-representation
    Landscape setting
    Ancillary buildings
    Circular shrine and temple-mausoleum
    Granary
    Comparable villas
    A further case study: Chedworth
    Chapter Three: The choice and use of mosaics in the fourth century villa: how the patron presented his cultural identity and status through pavements
    Grand designs
    The central room
    The seasons
    Bellerophon
    The apse
    Europa and the bull
    The inscription
    An incongruous combination?
    Classical literature in other Romano-British villas
    Chapter Four: Additional reconstructions of the villa
    The villa within its landscape setting
    The villa’s interior space and decoration
    Summary of reconstructions
    Chapter Five: Conclusion
    Bibliography
    Online sources

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