Abstract
Abstract
Scholarship on architecture and urbanism in antiquity has focused on building activity and investment in the fabric of cities as positive processes, typically starting from the assumption that such developments were welcomed by inhabitants – but were they? This article examines objections to urban renewal and the construction of monumental public building in the Roman world. Specifically, it focuses on the city of Prusa and the controversy surrounding the renovation of its civic centre by the local politician Dio Chrysostom in the early 2nd century AD. Using speeches and letters written at the time, the article presents both a new interpretation of this specific episode and brings to the fore the rarely articulated and yet highly controversial nature of building projects that are traditionally thought of as being beneficial. In the conclusion, we also see how this example contributes to research on the issue of heritage as a pre-modern phenomenon.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Urban Studies,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),History,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference9 articles.
1. The Roman law on the demolition of buildings;Phillips;Latomus,1973
2. Letters of Roman authorities on local dignitaries: the case of Vedius Antoninus;Kokkinia;Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik,2003
3. Imperial Building in the Eastern Roman Provinces
4. Dio Chrysostom : the Bithynian Years
5. Commemoration and Élite Benefaction of Buildings and Spectacles in the Roman World