110 research outputs found

    I bronzi votivi dal santuario di Ercole ad Alba Fucens

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    Between 2006 and 2009 the Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici dell’Abruzzo carried out a series of new archaeological excavations in the ancient city of Alba Fucens. Research also extended to the sanctuary of Hercules, and a great many small votive bronzes were found in the area. More than 60 items were recovered between complete and fragmentary examples,. This group of items comprised about 50 representations of Hercules, 2 female/male offerors, 7 clubs, 1 bovine and a few other fragments. According to the published information, the votive bronzes had been deposited in an area carefully organised when the sanctuary underwent reorganisation in the first half of the 1st century BC. This paper examines the votive bronzes found in the Sanctuary of Hercules at Alba Fucens with two main aims: classification with an ‘artisanal’-oriented approach and an attempt to analyse these types of items adopting an economic perspective

    Gods of value. Preliminary remarks on religion and economy in pre-Roman Italy

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    Despite a long tradition of studies in ancient Mediterranean economic history, a significant lack of studies can be noted in connection with pre-Roman Italy, by which I mean especially the central area of the Italian peninsula between the 8th BCE and the “Romanization”. The tight and profound relation of this area with wide sectors of the Mediterranean world (Phoenicians, Greeks, Iberian area…) and Rome is well known. In particular the Etruscans played a crucial political and commercial role in the Mediterranean setting at least in the Archaic period and the Italic world, with the later phenomenon of the mercatores, contributed to the globalized Mediterranean commercial network of the Hellenistic age. Rome itself, at least in its formative period and down to the beginning of the Republic, must be considered embedded in this network. In pre-Roman Italy sanctuaries and sacred areas are places in which alongside religious practices some fundamental political and economic functions are located, too. The ways in which such sanctuaries became places of storage and use of public goods are in part for us unknown. The process must be probably related to the emergence of the abstract concept of value that, not by chance, also in the Greek world has been connected to the development of the social urban form and to the emergence in particular of the regime of the votive offerings that, introducing the notion of quantitative value, sanctioned the distance with the qualitative expression of value, typical of the previous social organization. As far as the pre-Roman world is concerned we can perceive through the archaeological data the end of the process, in which the so-called religio votiva must be read (as it has been) on the one hand as a religious practice, but on the other hand it is undoubtedly a mean to improve the economic resources of the sanctuaries and consequently of the community itself through a passage of wealth from the private sphere to the public one. Unfortunately a large quantity of these offerings is irremediably lost because made of perishable materials or archaeologically represented by objects of apparently scarce value. But there is still a huge amount of data found in Etruscan and Italic sanctuaries that clearly speak of the function of deposit and management of great quantities of goods by local communities and whose informative potential has been definitely underestimated in scholarship. In particular I am referring to the well-known practice of offering metals in different forms (aes rude, coins, bronze statues and more in general metal objects, …). On these theoretical bases my paper aims to investigate the so-called religio votiva with an economic approach and to analyze the quantitative value of the votive offerings. To reach this goal, I will tackle especially a meaningful study case, a class of material widely investigated in previous researches but with a non-economic approach: the small votive bronzes. Representing both divinities and offerers, they have definitely played a major role in the votive practice both in Tyrrhenian and Adriatic regions between the 7th and the 1st c. BCE (i.e. both in a genuinely pre-Roman period and in a “Romanized” moment). These bronzes are often of poor quality and extremely repetitive, but they are definitely interesting as far as religious, cultural, artisanal and economic considerations are concerned. It is necessary to remember that these objects are made of metal and in particular of the same metal – bronze – that the majority of the most ancient coins in use in central Italy was made of. It is therefore evident that small votive bronzes did hold an intrinsic value and that the massive presence of them in a sanctuary represented a consistent deposit of metal. A direct consequence of these considerations is the fact that a detailed study of these artifacts, based on an accurate analysis that exploits both artisanal aspects and specific set of data concerning dimension and weight, could give us the possibility to shed light on a set of relevant economic aspects of pre-Roman and early “Romanized” Italy

    Dall’interno della chaîne opératoire. Attività produttive tra pubblico e privato a Falerii dall’età tardo arcaica al periodo ellenistico

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    The city of Falerii has been widely (although non-systematically) investigated over the last 150 years. A research project being carried out at the University of Southampton and at the British School at Rome aims to collect all the published/unpublished data concerning those excavations, with the purpose of analysing in depth the diachronic development of the settlement from the 8th c. BC to at least the final Roman conquest of the city (241 BC, according to historical sources). Within this framework, it has been possible to attempt to draw a comprehensive picture of the craft activities that are known presently in connection with the ancient Faliscan “metropolis”. Our papers aim to present on the one hand an updated topographical reconstruction of the currently known craft activities, and on the other hand to (re)consider some old and new excavations that have been carried out (especially in the last 30 years) on the Civita Castellana plateau

    A construção e a importância da rede de parceiros da CONITEC

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    A CONITEC ”“ Comissão Nacional de Incorporação de Tecnologias no SUS, tem por atribuição avaliar tecnologias em saúde e recomendar a sua incorporação ou exclusão do SUS - Sistema Único de Saúde. Para auxiliar nos estudos das tecnologias demandados à CONITEC foram estabelecidas parcerias com universidades e hospitais públicos de ensino. O objetivo deste trabalho foi descrever a importância da construção de uma rede de parceiros para a obtenção de estudos qualificados, para auxiliar nas recomendações da CONITEC, e descrever a importância da evolução dos conhecimentos sobre avaliação de tecnologias em saúde da rede. Na busca de melhores evidências disponíveis sobre eficácia, efetividade, segurança e na realização de estudos de avaliação econômica de medicamentos, produtos e procedimentos para o processo de avaliação das demandas de incorporação de tecnologias, como também na revisão dos Protocolos Clínicos e Diretrizes Terapêuticas (PCDT) e da Relação Nacional de Medicamentos (RENAME), foram estabelecidas parcerias com universidades e hospitais públicos de ensino com expertise reconhecida nestas áreas. Este tipo de cooperação é uma prática internacional que possibilita que se tenham maiores discussões sobre as avaliações dessas tecnologias, com repercussão na utilização de tecnologias com maior acurácia, segurança, eficácia e melhor custo efetividade

    Welt der wilden Wesen - orientalisierende Bilder

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    Breve inquadramento al fenomeno del bestiario fantastico di età orientalizzante nell'Italia preromana
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