Paris, Librairie des Champs-Elysées, 1939 1 volume 18,5 x 23,6cm Broché sous couverture au 1er plat orné d'une vignette. 4 feuillets, 190p., 1feuillet; illustrations in texte. Bon état.
Reference : 6455
Evocation de Rome, la "ville éternelle", de la cité antique à Mussolini, par Charles CHESNELONG, avec 40 illustrations du graveur Robert CAMI (1900-1975). Tirage à 610 exemplaires; 1 des 600 sur vélin biblio, justifié n°104 (après 10 sur hollande).
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'' Rome ancienne - Rome souterraine et Byzantine - Rome Féodale et Papale - Rome moderne '' Rome, la capitale de l'Italie, est une ville riche en histoire, avec des couches d'histoire allant de l'Antiquité à la période moderne. Voici un aperçu des différentes périodes de l'histoire de Rome : Rome ancienne : La fondation légendaire de Rome remonte à 753 av. J.-C. selon la tradition romaine. Rome antique était le centre de l'Empire romain, qui a atteint son apogée au Ier siècle av. J.-C. et au Ier siècle de notre ère. C'était une période de grande prospérité, de développement architectural et de conquêtes militaires. Parmi les monuments les plus célèbres de cette époque, on trouve le Colisée, le Forum romain, le Panthéon et le Circus Maximus. Rome souterraine et Byzantine : Sous la Rome antique, il y avait un réseau complexe de catacombes souterraines utilisées pour l'inhumation. La période byzantine de Rome a commencé après la chute de l'Empire romain d'Occident en 476 de notre ère et a duré jusqu'à la conquête de la ville par les Lombards en 751. Pendant cette période, Rome est devenue une partie de l'Empire byzantin. Rome Féodale et Papale : Après la chute de l'Empire romain, Rome est devenue une ville importante dans le cadre du Saint-Empire romain germanique. Au Moyen Âge, Rome est devenue le siège du pouvoir papal et du christianisme. Les papes résidaient au Vatican, et la ville est devenue le centre de l'Église catholique romaine. Des bâtiments emblématiques tels que la basilique Saint-Pierre, la Chapelle Sixtine et le Palais du Latran ont été construits pendant cette période. Rome moderne : Au cours des siècles suivants, Rome est devenue une ville importante dans la Renaissance italienne, avec des artistes tels que Michel-Ange et Léonard de Vinci qui ont travaillé sur des projets importants à Rome. Au XIXe siècle, Rome est devenue la capitale du Royaume d'Italie unifié, mettant fin à des siècles de domination papale. Aujourd'hui, Rome est une ville moderne qui allie son histoire riche à une vie contemporaine animée. Elle est célèbre pour ses musées, ses galeries d'art, sa cuisine, et bien sûr, le Vatican, qui reste un centre religieux majeur. Chacune de ces périodes a laissé une empreinte significative sur la ville de Rome, et nous pouvons explorer ses différentes facettes en visitant ses nombreux sites historiques et culturels. fort volume in-4, 270x180, relié demi chagrin, dos à nerfs, frottements, toutes tranches dorées, 673 pages, poids 2,2 kg Ouvrage orné d'un joli panorama dépliant de Rome, signée de Rouargue et Doherty. L'ouvrage est complet de ses 25 planches par Rouargue (dont un plan dépliant) ainsi qu'un grand nombre de figures dans le texte. Paris Furnes, Libraire éditeur 1845
, Brepols, 2022 Paperback, xcv + 442 pages, Size:156 x 234 mm, Illustrations:63 b/w, 1 col., Language(s):English, Middle English. ISBN 9782503594675.
Summary The scene is Rome in the fifteenth century, Golden Rome, a magnet drawing pilgrims by its architectural attractions and the magnitude of its religious importance as the mother of faith. The Austin friar John Capgrave attended Rome for the Jubilee in 1450, including the Lenten stations, and his Solace of Pilgrimes, intended as a guide for subsequent pilgrims, was written up following the author's own pilgrimage. In three parts it covers the ancient monuments, the seven principal churches and the Lenten stations, and other churches of note, especially those dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary. The work has been described as the most ambitious description of Rome in Middle English. The present edition offers a new Text based on a transcription of the author's holograph manuscript. Parallel with the Text there is a modern English Translation. The illustrations, mostly from a period slightly later than the 1450 Jubilee, aim to give some visual clue as to what Capgrave saw. There is a full account of the multiple sources that he used, most of which is the product of new research. Following the Text there is a Commentary that aims to provide some background information about the buildings and monuments that Capgrave focuses on, and to explain and illuminate any difficulties or points of interest in the Text. Capgrave is an omni-present guide leading us towards what he considered an appropriate interpretation of the classical past as a foundation for the Christian present, which built on it and surpassed it. TABLE OF CONTENTS Preface Abbreviations Introduction Select Bibliography Editorial Procedure The Solace of Pilgrimes by John Capgrave OSA Part I Ancient Rome Introduction and list of chapters in Part I ch 1 The original founders of Rome ch 2 The gates, walls and towers of Rome ch 3 The bridges of Rome ch 4 The hills of Rome ch 5 The 'palaces' in Rome ch 6 The triumphal arches in Rome ch 7 The cymyteries 'catacombs' in Rome ch 8 Holy places and their pre-Christian names ch 9 The Angulla Sancti Petri 'St Peter's Obelisk' ch 10 Pagan temples turned to Christian use ch 11 The Capitol ch 12 The statue of the Dioscuri ch 13 The statue of Marcus Aurelius at the Lateran ch 14 The Coliseum ch 15 The Pantheon ch 16 Ara Celi ch 17 The Mausoleum of Augustus ch 18 The Septizodium ch 19 The Circus of Tarquinius Priscus ch 20 The Cantharus in the atrium in front of old San Pietro ch 21 The 'pyramid' or tomb of Romulus ch 22 The paleys 'temple' of Trajan ch 23 The conch-shaped font where Constantine was allegedly baptized ch 24 The place called Omnis Terra (= Monte Testaccio) ch 25 The rulers of Rome from the time of Romulus to the last king Tarquinius ch 26 The rulers of Rome from Tarquinius to the first emperor ch 27 The emperors of Rome from Julius Caesar to Frederick II (d 1250) Part II The seven principal churches and the stations for Lent Prologus ch 1 San Pietro ch 2 San Paolo fuori le Mura ch 3 San Sebastiano ch 4 San Giovanni in Laterano ch 5 Santa Croce in Gerusalemme ch 6 San Lorenzo fuori le Mura ch 7 Santa Maria Maggiore ch 8 The station at Santa Sabina ch 9 The station at San Giorgio in Velabro ch 10 The station at Santi Giovanni e Paolo ch 11 The station at San Trifone ch 12 The station at San Giovanni in Laterano ch 13 The station at San Pietro in Vincoli ch 14 The station at Santa Anastasia ch 15 The station at Santa Maria Maggiore ch 16 The station at San Lorenzo in Panisperna ch 17 The station at Santi Apostoli ch 18 The station at San Pietro ch 19 The station at Santa Maria in Domnica ch 20 The station at San Clemente ch 21 The station at Santa Balbina ch 22 The station at Santa Cecilia in Trast vere ch 23 The station at Santa Maria in Trast vere ch 24 The station at San Vitale ch 25 The station at Santi Marcellino e Pietro ch 26 The station at San Lorenzo fuori le Mura ch 27 The station at San Marco ch 28 The station at Santa Pudenziana ch 29 The station at San Sisto Vecchio ch 30 The station at Santi Cosma e Damiano ch 31 The station at San Lorenzo in Lucina ch 32 The station at Santa Susanna ch 33 The station at Santa Croce in Gerusalemme ch 34 The station at Santi Quattro Coronati ch 35 The station at San Lorenzo in Damaso ch 36 The station at San Paolo fuori le Mura ch 37 The station at San Martino ai Monti and the station at San Silvestro in Capite ch 38 The station at Sant'Eusebio ch 39 The station at San Nicola in Carcere ch 40 The station at San Pietro ch 41 The station at San Crisogono ch 42 The station at San Ciriaco in Thermis ch 43 The station at San Marcello al Corso ch 44 The station at Sant'Apollinare ch 45 The station at San Stefano Rotunda ch 46 The station at San Giovanni alla Porta Latina ch 47 The station at San Giovanni in Laterano ch 48 The station at Santa Prassede and the station at Santi Nereo e Achilleo ch 49 The station at Santa Prisca ch 50 The station at Santa Maria Maggiore ch 51 The station at San Giovanni in Laterano ch 52 The station at Santa Croce in Gerusalemme ch 53 The station at San Giovanni in Laterano ch 54 The station at Santa Maria Maggiore Part III Other churches of note, especially those dedicated to our Lady Prologus ch 1 Santa Maria Rotunda (= Pantheon) ch 2 Santa Maria in Aracoeli ch 3 Lacking ch 4 Santa Maria sopra Minerva ch 5 Santa Maria Annunziata ch 6 Santa Maria in Transpontina ch 7 Santa Maria in Palmis ch 8 Santa Maria del Populo ch 9 Santa Maria Antiqua ch 10 Santa Maria in Cosmedin ch 11 Santa Maria Imperatrice ch 12 Santa Maria della Consolazione ch 13 Santa Maria in Portico Further chapters lacking Commentary Appendix Index of Names and Places
, Brepols, 2024 Paperback, 619 pages, Size:230 x 280 mm, Illustrations:16 b/w, 154 col., 6 maps color, 5 musical examples, Language: English. ISBN 9782503613123.
Summary The thirty chapters in this book are based on the work of an international, multidisciplinary team of researchers and archivists brought together for the PerformArt project, funded by the European Research Council from 2016 to 2022. This project investigated the artistic patronage of the great Roman aristocratic families of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries through research in the extant archives. After the accession to the papal throne of Innocent X in 1644, and more so after the Peace of the Pyrenees in 1659 - which led to a greater loss of power for the pope in his relations with other European states - the Roman families stepped up their efforts to assert their social preeminence not only through architecture and the fine arts, but also through the ephemeral performing arts: music, theatre, and dance, which were omnipresent throughout the year and especially during the intense period of artistic production that was the Roman Carnival. The search for traces of these spectacles in the archives of these families reveals that their desire to display their magnificence - an ideal well documented in the literature of the period - gave rise to lavish expenditure on a scale that could only be justified by the benefits (if not tangible, then at least symbolic) they hoped to gain. The essays in this book, which draw on social economic history, the history of ideas, and the evolving artistic practices of the time, make a major contribution to our knowledge of courtly societies in Ancien R gime Europe by integrating the performing arts into their analyses in innovative ways. TABLE OF CONTENTS Overture Anne-Madeleine GOULET, Introduction - Prologue: The Roman Context Isabella CECCHINI and Anne-Madeleine GOULET, Some Thoughts about the Roman Context Irene FOSI, Magnificence and the Roman Nobility between the Papacy and Europe I. The Economy of Magnificence Beno t MAR CHAUX, Patrons, Aristocratic Patrimonies and Finance: Reconsidering the Economic Foundations of Private Magnificence in Rome (c. 1650-1700) Isabella CECCHINI, Instruments of Magnificence. Finance and Credit in Early Modern Rome Maurizio PEGRARI, The Costs of Magnificence, the Magnificence of Costs: Nobility, Economics, and Status in Seventeenth and Eighteenth-Century Rome Isabella CECCHINI and Anne-Madeleine GOULET, Celebrating a Wedding in the Lante della Rovere Family: An Exercise in Magnificence (1682-83) Cristina FERNANDES, Portuguese Patronage in Rome and the Economics of Magnificence: La Virt negl'amori by Alessandro Scarlatti at the Teatro Capranica (1721) - Intermezzo I. Into the Family Archives Marco CAVIETTI, Portraying the Family in Household Archives in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Orsetta BARONCELLI, The Computista and the Archivista: Two Key Figures in the Management of Roman Family Archives in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Letizia LELI, Reordering a Family Archive in the Seventeenth Century: The Case of the Lante della Rovere Archive II. Social Values and Moral Principles Aldo ROMA, Education to Magnificence: Aristocratic Schooling and College Academies in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Rome Sarah MALFATTI, Patronage and Pastoral Simplicity in Arcadia: Patronus nullus esto - the Case of Francesco Maria Ruspoli (1707-21) Diana BLICHMANN, Sumptuousness versus Sobriety: Magnificence in the Musical Productions at Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni's Teatro della Cancelleria (1710-12) Valeria DE LUCCA, Ars moriendi in Seventeenth-Century Rome: Staging Lorenzo Onofrio Colonna's Death - Intermezzo II. Some Thoughts on Method Manuela GRILLO and Michela BERTI, Magnificenza as a Paradigm in the Development of a Thesaurus: From Scientific Research to a Difficult Definition, and Back Again III. Conquering and Asserting Magnificence Sara Elisa STANGALINO, Lorenzo Onofrio Colonna 'L'Africano': Military and Artistic 'Campaigns' in Rome and Spain Barbara NESTOLA, 'Donna regale in auree scene t'apre il mondo in teatro': Maria Camilla Pallavicini Rospigliosi and Opera in Rome at the End of the Seventeenth Century Michela BERTI, The Conquest of Magnificence: The Performing Arts and the Social Ascent of the Vaini Family Huub VAN DER LINDEN, Boxes at the Teatro Capranica in 1732: Occupants, Financial Dealings, and Social Visibility - Intermezzo III. Brokers of Magnificence in the Noble Household Natalia GOZZANO, Maestri di casa: Masters of Roman Magnificence in the Old Regime Alexandra NIGITO, The Christmas Cantata in Rome: Papal Munificence and Self-promotion by the Majordomo (1676-1740) milie CORSWAREM, The Art of Appropriation: Girolamo Colonna and the Festivities Held at Rome for the Coronation of Ferdinand IV as King of the Romans (1653) IV. Magnificence on Stage Gloria GIORDANO, 'Si fatto di nuovo ma impiegandovi molte cose del vecchio': The Artifice of Magnificence in the Choreographic Episodes at the Seminario Romano Valentina PANZANARO, Monumentality and Magnificence: Dance and Dramaturgy in Seventeenth century Roman Visual and Musical Sources Jos Mar a DOM NGUEZ, Gloria GIORDANO, Chiara PELLICCIA, Beyond Magnificence: The Caduta and its Imagery in the Performing Arts in Seventeenth-Century Rome Teresa CHIRICO, Magnificence in Miniature: The Puppet Theatre of Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni in the Palazzo della Cancelleria (1694-c. 1712) - Intermezzo IV. The City as a Stage. The Roman Scene in the Early Eighteenth Century Antonella FABRIANI ROJAS, Nobility, Spectacle, and Competition: Reflections on Francesco Valesio's Diario (1700-42) V. The Glories of Fame: Reputation, Circulation, Market Chiara PELLICCIA, The Colonna Family and the Performing Arts in Villeggiatura at Marino lodie ORIOL, From the Reputation of the Artist to the Magnificence of the Prince: The Borghese Family and its Musicians in the Eighteenth Century Giulia VENEZIANO and Margaret MURATA, Rome, Naples, Opera and the 1720s in Rome Glossary Maps General Bibliography Sources and Archival Documents Names of Individuals and Communities Titles of Works Place Names
, Brepols, 2023 Paperback, xvi + 234 p, Size:216 x 280 mm, Illustrations:85 b/w, 43 col., 2 tables b/w., 12 maps b/w, 12 maps color, Language(s):English, Italian. ISBN 9782503603445.
Summary In the Late Republican period, Rome underwent monumental changes. Within the city, numerous building projects were undertaken by the wealthy and politically powerful as they jostled for power, while further afield, wars were fought and Rome's authority gradually expanded into new territories. One of the key players in this field was Julius Caesar, who took advantage of the fluid and fast-changing political and military alliances to position himself in the centre of power. During this time, he became the first to design a forum ? the Forum Iulium, now known as Caesar's Forum ? in his family's name. Today, this site, in the very heart of Rome, is home to The Caesar's Forum Project, where excavations have yielded new knowledge about both the long history of Rome, and the broader context of its global history and cultural heritage. Taking this project as its starting point, this volume draws together scholars working both on the excavations, and on Caesar more generally, to shed new light on the often enigmatic figure of Julius Caesar. The chapters gathered here offer insights into remains and sources from both the time of Caesar and from later periods, giving new perspectives not only on his life and death, but also on the central role that he has ever since continued to play in historiography since. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Illustrations Introduction 1. Caesar, Rome and Beyond: New and Old Sources Jan Kindberg Jacobsen, Rubina Raja, and Sine Grove Saxkj r Caesar and Rome 2. Sensing Change: Late Republican Architecture in Rome Penelope J. E. Davies 3. Find a Lover in Augustan Rome: How Ovid's Ars amatoria Became a Criticism of Augustus's Moral Politics Eric M. Moormann The Archaeology of Caesar's Military Ventures 4. The Archaeology of Julius Caesar: New Research on the Gallic Wars Nico Roymans and Manuel Fern ndez-G tz 5. Across the Rubicon to Rome: New Elements for the Identification of Caesar's Military Camp Annalisa Pozzi and Christian Tassinari 6. Caesar in Britain: Britain in Rome A. P. Fitzpatrick and Colin Haselgrove New Discoveries 7. Excavating the Forum Iulium: The Danish-Italian Excavations between Longue Dur e Perspectives and High-Definition Narratives Laura di Siena, Jan Kindberg Jacobsen, Gloria Mittica, Giovanni Murro, Claudio Parisi Presicce, Rubina Raja, Sine Grove Saxkj r, and Massimo Vitti 8. The So-Called Aquinum Portrait of Julius Caesar: From its Discovery to Research Development Giuseppe Ceraudo 9. The So-Called 'Caesar' of Aquinum: A Preliminary Analysis Giovanni Murro 10. L'immaginario cesariano tra visioni classicistiche e ideologie nazionalistiche: il caso di un ritratto emerso dalle acque del Rodano Mario Denti New Contributions on Caesar and Historiography 11. Julius Caesar and the Forum Caesaris: World History, Historiography, and Reception Investigated through Danish Biographies of Caesar from the Early Twentieth Century Trine Arlund Hass and Rubina Raja 12. Past Research Perspectives and Narrated Space: The Incident When Caesar Did Not Rise for the Senate, according to Georg Brandes (1918) and Hartvig Frisch (1942) Trine Arlund Hass Index
P., Imprimerie de Monsieur et Bossange, 1783/1792, 4 VOLUMES in 8 reliés en pleine basane, dos orné de filets dorés (reliures de l'époque), (manque de papier d'origine dans les marges extérieures ou inférieures des pages 129, 133 & 136 au tome 1), T.1: 38pp., (1), 623pp., T.2 : (2), 659pp., T.3 : (2), 611pp., T.4 (ATLAS) : 16pp., 80pp., 12 planches numérotées 1 à 8, 32 tableaux dépliants numérotés 1 à 7 pour l'ouvrage de ROME DE L'ISLE ; 8pp., 74pp., 1 planche dépliante pour l'ouvrage de SWEBACH DES FONTAINES
---- EDITION ORIGINALE ---- BEL EXEMPLAIRE ---- EX-LIBRIS Charles MONIER DE LA SIZERANNE ---- "ROME DE L'ISLE'S LAW OF THE CONSTANCY OF INTERFACIAL ANGLES" ---- "Romé De l'Isle shares the honor of having helped to found the science of crystallography along with Haüy, Steno and a few others". (Hoover Collection) ---- "Romé's chief scientific goal was the establishment of mineralogy on a firm basis of crystallography. His major contribution toward this end was the formulation of the law of the constancy of interfacial angles which became the cornestone of crystallography. Although earlier investigators - including Hooke, Erasmus Bartholin, Steno, Huygens, Philippe de la Hire and Guglielmini - had made incidental statements about such a constancy in one or two substances, Romé and Carangeot were the first to enunciate it as a general law of nature... His major work, the Cristallographie (1783), was first advertised as a second edition of his Essai, but instead it was expanded and comprised three volumes and an atlas describing more than 450 crystal forms. In this book rather than using any physical basis, Romé followed both Linnaeus and Domenico Guglielmini in classifying crystals by arbitrary primitive formes. Each crystal described was measured precisely. In the course of making terracotta models, Romé's assistant, Arnould Carangeot, had discovered the fundamental law of the constancy of interfacial angles ; and, using a contact goniometer invented for the purpose, he had made measurements of the interfacial angles (exact to about half a degree) of each mineral that Romé listed. Both these aspects - the tabulation of primitive forms and the measurement of interfacial angles - were of central importance to Romé's crystallography...". (DSB XI pp. 520/523)**4551/ARB5