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Book Cover
Book
Author Rykwert, Joseph, 1926-

Title The idea of a town : the anthropology of urban form in Rome, Italy and the ancient world / Joseph Rykwert
Published Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, [1976]
©1976

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 WATERFT ART&ARCH  711.409 Ryk/Ioa 1976  AVAILABLE
Description 242 pages : illustrations ; 26 cm
Summary Roman towns and their history are generally regarded as being the preserve of the archaeologist or the economic historian. In this famous, unusual and radical book which touches on such disparate themes as psychology and urban architecture, Joseph Rykwert has considered them as works of art. His starting point is the mythical, historical and ritual texts in which their foundation is recounted rather than the excavated remains, such texts having parallels not merely in ancient Greece but also further afield Mesopotamia, India and China. To achieve his reading of the Roman town, he has invoked the comparative method of the anthropologists, and he examines first of all the 'Etruscan rite', a group of ceremonies by which all, or practically all, Roman towns were founded. The basic institutions of the town, its walls and gates, its central shrines and its forum are all of them part of a pattern to which the rituals and the myths that accompanied them provide clues. Like in other 'closed' societies, these rituals and myths served to create a secure home for the citizen of Rome and to make him feel part of his city and place it firmly in a knowable universe. -- from Amazon.com
Notes Includes bibliographical references and index
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Cities and towns, Ancient.
City planning -- History.
LC no. 75031901
ISBN 0691039011