The Melite Civitas Romana Project: The Case for a Modern Exploration of the Roman Domus, Malta

Author:

Brown Robert1,Cardona David2,Lowe Benedict3,Tanasi Davide4,Wilkinson Andrew5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Archaeology, Australian National University/Intercontinental Archaeology, Banks Building , 44 Linnaeus Way , Acton , ACT 2601 , Australia

2. Phoenician, Roman and Medieval Sites, Heritage Malta , Rabat , Malta

3. Department of History, University of North Alabama/Intercontinental Archaeology , Florence (AL) , USA

4. Department of History, University of South Florida , Tampa (FL) , USA

5. Flinders University/Intercontinental Archaeology , Adelaide , Australia

Abstract

Abstract The Roman Domus in Mdina, Malta, has become an idealised example of the Roman presence in the Maltese Islands; the partial remains of a lavishly decorated domus that would have in its time been situated within the walls of the urbanised Roman city of Melite. The site, last excavated more than 100 years ago, is also home to the only museum in the Maltese Islands, which is solely dedicated to house and showcase a collection of artefacts that date from the Roman period in Maltese history. This site alone provides a unique perspective on Roman Malta, being our only substantial remnant from the Roman Maltese capital, and needs a refocused and renewed exploration. For a long time, the archaeology of Roman sites in Malta has suffered a distinct lack of priority, and it has only been in the last two decades that considerably more focus has been placed on understanding the Roman period. Most of the archaeological focus, in this respect, has centred on agricultural villas, and though this study has illuminated a better understanding of the Roman period, very little has been undertaken in the last century in piecing together the importance of urban Melite to the broader nature of life in the islands, as well as their place in the larger context of the central Roman Mediterranean. The Melite Civitas Romana Project offers the potential of new understanding of the domus and the surrounding archaeological environment through a modern exploration of the site and the promise of the first available assemblage of Roman material from an urban Roman context.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

Education,Archeology,Conservation

Reference24 articles.

1. Ashby, T . (1915). Roman Malta. Journal of Roman Studies, 5, 23–80.

2. Anastasi, M . (2019). Pottery from Roman Malta, Malta archaeological review supplement 1. Oxford, UK: Archaeopress Publishing Ltd.

3. Bonanno, A . (1997). The imperial portraits from Malta: Their contextual significance in Roman portraits artistic and literary

4. Acts of the third international conference on Roman portraits, Prague 25-29 September 1989 (pp. 62-64). Mainz: Verlag Philipp von Zabern.

5. Bonanno, A . (2005). Malta phoenician, punic and Roman. Malta: Midsea Books.

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