Romanisation of a Faliscan Town – Nepi and its Hinterland
Dr Ulla Rajala was granted aÌýÌýSmall Grant for the study of the Roman pottery of the Nepi Survey Project in 2007. Dr Phil Mills () carried out the detailed analysis of the Roman surface material. The main fabric series was published in 2011 in theÌýPapers of the British School at Rome, but Rajala and Mills continue to publish more in depth papers that give new insights into the development of this minor town and its hinterland between the third century BC and seventh century AD. They also continue developing the theoretical and methodological concept ofÌýceramisceneÌýand its use in the characterisation of rural landscapes in the Mediterranean and beyond.
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Date range of Roman pottery
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Short bibliography
- Mills, P., and Rajala, U., 2011. ‘Interpreting a ceramiscene landscape – the Roman pottery from the Nepi Survey Project’, in D. Mladenović and B. Russell (eds.).ÌýTRAC 2010. Proceedings of the Twentieth Annual Theoretical Roman 91̽»¨ÊÓÆµ Conference, Oxford 2010, 1-17. Oxford: Oxbow.
- Mills, P., and Rajala, U., 2011. ‘The Roman ceramic material from the fieldwalking in the environs of Nepi’,ÌýPapers of the British School at RomeÌý79, 147-240.
- Mills, P., and Rajala, U.,Ìýin press. ‘Supply and Distribution of Late Roman Coarsewares from the Nepi Survey Project’, inÌýLRCW4, Late Roman Coarse Wares, Cooking Wares and Amphorae in the Mediterranean, Thessaloniki, 7-11 April 2011Ìý(BAR International Series). Oxford: Archaeopress.
- Rajala, U., and Mills, P.,Ìýin press. ‘Defining Edges and Districts – ceramiscene in the territory of Nepi (VT, Lazio, Italy)’, in J. Ikäheimo, A.-K. Salmi and T. Äikäs (eds.). NTAG 2012 (Monographs of the Archaeological Society of Finland 2).
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Acknowledgements
We want to thank theÌýÌýand the personnel ofÌýÌýfor their assistance