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The Forum of Trajan in Rome - A Study of the Monuments (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R17,732
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The Forum of Trajan in Rome - A Study of the Monuments (Hardcover)
Series: California Studies in the History of Art, 31
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Last, largest, and most splendid of the early imperial forums, the
Forum of Trajan (A.D. 112) was the acknowledged showplace of
ancient Rome. Ammianus Marcellinus called the Forum "a construction
unique under the heavens, as we believe, and admirable even in the
unanimous opinion of the gods." Yet, despite its formidable ancient
reputation, the Forum of Trajan has only once in the present
century been the subject of a close study. This three-volume
publication, the result of twenty-five years of labor, is the first
comprehensive study ever undertaken. It includes a history of the
site, an examination of all previous scholarship, a modern
reconstruction of it in beautiful architectural renderings, and
more.
The Forum suffered a harsh fate. Its buildings probably collapsed
during the earthquake of A.D. 801; from the sixteenth through the
eighteenth centuries, the site was quarried for its marble. In
recent times, none of the modern archaeological excavations, from
the first French investigations of 1811-14 through the great
campaign mounted by the Fascist Government of Italy in 1928-34, has
ever been properly published. Today some of the monuments--among
them the three triumphal arches through which visitors entered the
Forum and the West Colonnade and Hemicycle--are still buried more
than sixteen feet below the level of modern streets. Others are now
completely cleared.
After describing the Forum as a whole--its construction, history,
use in antiquity, destruction, and excavations--Packer focuses on
the buildings, the essential architectural texts for all further
study. He discusses the largest building in the Forum, the law
court known in antiquity as the Basilica Ulpia.Illustrations
document the most important architectural elements and the present
state of the site. Restored plans, sections, and elevations in both
color and black and white depict Packer's reconstructions as well
as those of previous scholars. Four exterior and interior views of
the principal buildings, restored in color, provide lively visual
impressions of the spatial effects and detailing. For scholarly
consultation, a catalogue raisonne of the major surviving
fragments, twelve appendices that discuss technical problems
involved in the reconstructions, and microfiche with 416
illustrations are included.
Volume I features 157 illustrations, including significant general
photographs of the site, historical photographs of the excavations
of 1928-34, new photographs of architectural fragments, and eleven
full-color reconstructions of the excavated buildings. Volume II
contains most of the remainder of the 859 illustrations, among them
new photographs of the site and reproductions of drawings made by
scholars and architects of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
A folder attached to the back cover houses the microfiche. The
Portfolio volume holds thirty-five drawings, twenty-four in black
and white that include a plan made after the excavations of 1928-34
and a new site map prepared in 1986-87, and eleven three-color
technical reconstructions of the excavated buildings.
PRODUCTION: Meticulous care has been taken with the design and
production of these volumes, only 1,000 sets of which will be made.
The text of this book is printed on 90-pound sheets of Mohawk
Superfine specially milled for this project. This paper is not only
acid-free, but also alum- and rosin-free, with a pHlevel above 7.5
and an alkaline buffer that will neutralize any acidity that might
develop in handling or storage. Accelerated aging tests indicate
permanence in excess of 300 years. The Portfolio illustrations are
printed on 60-pound St. Lawrence Matte, also an acid-free sheet.
The binding features Iris, a 100 percent solvent-free rayon cloth
made from natural fibers, with a neutral pH. It is applied over
binder's board of .098 thickness with a neutral pH. The title page
display type is taken from the letterpress proofs of Jan van
Krimpen's Romulus, designed for the Monotype Company in 1936. The
main text of Volumes I and II is set in Granjon. Chapter initials
are from an alphabet designed by Gianfrancesco Cresci in 1569 for
"Il perfetto scrittore" and based on the lettering from the Column
of Trajan. The interior of the Portfolio box is constructed of
binder's board of .080 thickness with a neutral pH, covered with
French Paper Company "Parchtone" material, the same paper as that
used for the endpapers of Volumes I and II.
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