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        <SubjectHeadingText>Alte Geschichte; Altertumswissenschaften; Antike; Archäologie; Geschichte; Herkulaneum; Klassische Archäologie; Militärgeschichte; Pferdegeschirr; Pompeji; Stabiae</SubjectHeadingText>
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        <Text language="eng" textformat="05">The following work serves as a thorough, typological investigation of the military equipment and horse harnesses found in the Vesuvian cities of Pompeii, Herculaneum, and Stabiae. The broad material basis of this research, and the fact that the original state of the findings can often still be reconstructed, serve to augment and expand upon the discoveries and interpretations that have been achieved in Rome’s northwestern border provinces. Additionally, the context of the Pompeian findings in particular makes it possible to draw conclusions about the significance of the military in a largely “demilitarized” Italian town. &lt;br/&gt;</Text>
        <Text language="ger" textformat="05">In dem vorliegenden Werk werden die militärische Ausrüstung und Pferdegeschirr aus den Vesuvstädten Pompeji, Herculaneum und Stabiae intensiv untersucht und typologisch eingeordnet. Die breite Materialbasis und die oft noch rekonstruierbaren Fundumstände vertiefen und erweitern die in den nordwestlichen Grenzprovinzen gewonnenen Erkenntnisse und Interpretationen. Gerade die pompejianischen Fundkontexte erlauben darüber hinaus auch Rückschlüsse auf die Bedeutung des Militärs in einer weitgehend ‚entmilitarisierten‘ italischen Kleinstadt. &lt;br/&gt;</Text>
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        <Text language="eng" textformat="05">The history of archaeological investigation in Pompeii, Herculaneum, and Stabiae now stretches back over 250 years. On the whole, this has been a history defined by sensational individual findings and monuments. However, with the exception of a few valuable items, little attention has been paid to military equipment and horse harnesses. One reason for this is the long disregard for everyday objects shown by archaeological research; additionally, the presence of the military among the largely “demilitarized” surroundings of the Vesuvian region had not been entirely clarified. At the same time, it is precisely the location of these cities on the “military periphery”, as well as the extraordinary preservation of the artifacts found there, that makes the Vesuvian cities so crucial for investigating and interpreting the civilian context of Roman military equipment.&lt;br/&gt; The catalog and the main body of this work provide an extensive typological study of offensive, defensive, and ceremonial weaponry, as well as of horse harnesses and their individual components. The study has shown that the majority of objects found in Vesuvian cities, with few exceptions, conform to the known spectrum of forms found in the northwestern provinces. This conformity speaks to the high degree of standardization in the equipment of Rome’s imperial army. However, the objects also display significant local variations and particularities unique to the Vesuvian region.&lt;br/&gt; Through its analysis of secondary sources and careful reconstruction of the original context where discoveries were made, and through its incorporation of a wide variety of epigraphic and other archaeological sources, this study produces a multifaceted and complex picture of the military presence in Vesuvian cities. It has long been assumed that soldiers were compelled to hand in all of their equipment before their honesta missio; if this is the case, the findings can only be explained by the presence of active soldiers. The evidence, however, argues for a different perspective: it suggests that certain veterans retained some of their equipment (above all, their swords) after quitting the active service, employing it in a “paramilitary” or private capacity – for example as craftsmen, tradesmen, city police, domestic security, or bodyguards – or holding onto it as a memento. The contexts in which the largely intact sets of horse harnesses have been discovered, on the other hand, are unambiguously civilian in nature, and demonstrate that it is nearly impossible to make typological distinctions between horse harnesses of a civilian and military nature in early imperial times. &lt;br/&gt;The broad material basis of this research, and the fact that the original state of the findings can often still be reconstructed, serve to augment and expand upon the discoveries and interpretations that have been achieved in Rome’s border provinces. The study not only sheds light on the relationship between veterans and the local populace – and the relationship between soldiers and the travelling Praetorian Guard – but also answers the question of whether weapons and horse harnesses belonged to the standard inventory of upper-class households in the Vesuvian region.&lt;br/&gt;</Text>
        <Text language="ger" textformat="05">Mehr als 250 Jahre lang prägten vor allem viele aufsehenerregende Einzelfunde und Monumente die archäologische Forschung in Pompeji, Herculaneum und Stabiae. Die militärische Ausrüstung und das Pferdegeschirr wurden dagegen – von wenigen Ausnahmen abgesehen – bisher kaum beachtet, obwohl sie außergewöhnlich gut erhalten sind. Aber Alltagsgegenstände lagen lange nicht im Blickfeld der Forschung, außerdem blieb die Frage nach der Präsenz des Militärs im weitgehend ‚entmilitarisierten‘ Umfeld der Vesuvregion größtenteils unbeantwortet. Dabei macht gerade die ‚militärische Randlage‘ die Vesuvstädte für die Erforschung und die Interpretation der römischen Militärausrüstung aus zivilen Kontexten so bedeutend. &lt;br/&gt;In der vorliegenden Studie werden Angriffs-, Schutz- und Paradewaffen sowie Pferdegeschirr mit seinen einzelnen Bestandteilen ausführlich typologisch untersucht. Sie zeigt, dass fast alle Objekte dem bereits aus den Nordwestprovinzen bekannten Formenspektrum entsprechen. Dies unterstreicht das hohe Maß an Standardisierung in der Ausrüstung der kaiserzeitlichen Armeen Roms. Es gibt aber auch deutliche lokale Unterschiede bzw. Besonderheiten in der Vesuvregion.&lt;br/&gt;Die antiquarische Analyse und die Rekonstruktion der Fundkontexte ergeben mit den zahlreichen epigraphischen und weiteren archäologischen Quellen ein ebenso vielfältiges wie komplexes Bild von der militärischen Präsenz in den Vesuvstädten. Bisher wurde angenommen, dass die Soldaten vor der honesta missio ihre gesamte Ausrüstung abgeben mussten. In diesem Fall müssten alle Funde mit der Anwesenheit aktiver Soldaten erklärt werden. Die Befunde sprechen aber für eine differenziertere Sichtweise: Es ist davon auszugehen, dass einige Veteranen Teile ihrer Ausrüstung – wohl vor allem ihre Schwerter – nach dem Ausscheiden aus dem aktiven Dienst behielten und im ‚paramilitärischen‘ Bereich oder privat nutzten – beispielsweise als Handwerker, Gewerbetreibende‚ Stadtpolizisten, Haus- und Leibwächter oder als Erinnerungsstücke. Die meist fast kompletten Pferdegeschirrsätze stammen dagegen eindeutig aus zivilen Fundkontexten. Sie zeigen, dass eine Unterscheidung zwischen zivilem und militärischem Pferdegeschirr in der frühen Kaiserzeit typologisch meist kaum möglich ist. &lt;br/&gt;Die breite Materialbasis und die oft noch rekonstruierbaren Fundumstände vertiefen und erweitern die in den Grenzprovinzen gewonnenen Erkenntnisse und Interpretationen. &lt;br/&gt;Die aus Hauptteil und Katalog bestehende Studie liefert zum einen Erkenntnisse über die Beziehung zwischen der lokalen Bevölkerung und den Veteranen sowie den durchreisenden Prätorianern und Soldaten. Zum anderen gibt sie auch Antworten auf die Frage, ob die Waffen und das Pferdegeschirr zur standardisierten Ausstattung gehobener Wohnhäuser in den Vesuvstädten gehörten.&lt;br/&gt;</Text>
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        <Text language="ger" textformat="05">„This book offers a detailed and and well thought out analysis of the surviving Roman military material and horse equipment from the area around Mt. Vesuvius and enables the reader to understand how the finds from this unique archaeological landscape compare to those of the wider Roman world  [...] [I]t can certainly be said, that Ortisi has produced a compelling and detailed analysis of military finds from Pompeii, Herculaneum, Stabiae and Boscoreale, allowing the reader to compare the relevant archaeological record of these cities with other parts of the Roman Empire. [...] [T]he vast number of finds and the excellent preservation of these cities as a whole, allows scholars to advance their understanding of Roman urbanism, including the origin and use of military equipment in such settings.“&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Von: Sebastian Schuckelt&lt;br/&gt;In: Journal of Roman Studies, Band 107, S. 394-395; DOI: 10.1017/S0075435817000272.&lt;br/&gt;--------------------------------&lt;br/&gt;„Die Studie liefert nicht nur Erkenntnisse über die Beziehung zwischen der lokalen Bevölkerung und den Veteranen sowie den durchreisenden Prätorianern und Soldaten, sondern gibt auch Antworten auf die Frage, ob die Waffen und das Pferdegeschirr zur standardisierten Ausstattung gehobener Wohnhäuser in den Vesuvstädten gehörten.“&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;In: &lt;a target="_blank" href="http://www.fachbuchkritik.de"&gt;www.fachbuchkritik.de&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br/&gt;--------------------------------&lt;br/&gt;„Salvatore Ortisi’s book can be recommended not only to researchers of  Roman weaponry, but also to historicans dealing with the social history of Campania. And more broadly, those interested in the social history of Rome. The phenomena described in the book can be treated  as a noteworthy illustration of similar social and cultural situations that no doubt also occurred in other regions of its empire.“&lt;br/&gt;&lt;br/&gt;Von: Edward Dabrowa&lt;br/&gt;In: Latomus 76/2, Juni 2017</Text>
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        <Text language="eng" textformat="05">Prof. Dr. Salvatore Ortisi completed his studies of Provincial Roman Archaeology, Prehistory and Early History, and Ancient Civilization in Munich and Cardiff. In 1998, he was appointed to the Department of Provincial Roman Archaeology at the Ludwig Maximilians University of Munich, with the research topic “City Walls in the Raetian Provincial Capital of Aelia Augusta – Augsburg”. In 2009, the present work was submitted as his habilitation to the Department of Archaeology of the Roman Provinces at the University of Cologne, where he was made Senior Researcher the same year. Since 2015, he has been a Professor of Archaeology of the Roman Provinces at the University of Osnabrück.&lt;br/&gt;</Text>
        <Text language="ger" textformat="05">Prof. Dr. Salvatore Ortisi, Studium der Provinzialrömischen Archäologie, Vor- und Frühgeschichte und Alten Geschichte in München und Cardiff. 1998 Promotion in Provinzialrömischer Archäologie an der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München zum Thema „Die Stadtmauer der raetischen Provinzhauptstadt Aelia Augusta – Augsburg“. 2009 Habilitation im Fach Archäologie der Römischen Provinzen an der Universität zu Köln mit der vorliegenden Studie, ab 2009 dort Oberassistent. Seit 2015 Professor für die Archäologie der Römischen Provinzen an der Universität Osnabrück.&lt;br/&gt;</Text>
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        <Text language="eng" textformat="05">With PALILIA, the German Archaeological Institute of Rome introduces a new series of publications, primarily monographs on archaeological research done in or starting from Italy. The series will deal with new approaches and innovative research methods, and subjects neglected in classical archaeology. The subject range includes central archaeological research areas, such as Graeco-Roman sculpture, iconography, architecture, urban research, and topographic studies, as well as topics from social and economic history, history of religion and of everyday life.</Text>
        <Text language="ger" textformat="05">Mit den  „PALILIA“ gibt das Deutsche Archäologische Institut in Rom eine neue Schriftenreihe heraus, in der monographische Arbeiten zur archäologischen Forschung in Italien und von Italien ausgehend veröffentlicht werden.&lt;br/&gt;Dabei sollen insbesondere neue Fragestellungen und innovative Forschungsmethoden, aber auch vernachlässigte Themenbereiche in der klassischen Archäologie zu Wort kommen. Neben den zentralen archäologischen Forschungsgebieten wie  griechisch-römische Plastik, Ikonographie, Architektur, Stadtforschung und topographische Untersuchungen werden auch Themen der Sozial-, Wirtschafts- und Religionsgeschichte sowie Materialien der Alltagskultur einbezogen.&lt;br/&gt;</Text>
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          <PriceType>02</PriceType>
          <PriceStatus>02</PriceStatus>
          <PriceAmount>59.90</PriceAmount>
          <CurrencyCode>USD</CurrencyCode>
          <Territory>
            <CountriesIncluded>US</CountriesIncluded>
          </Territory>
        </Price>
      </SupplyDetail>
    </ProductSupply>
  </Product>
</ONIXMessage>
