Abstract
AbstractThis article draws on the notion of collective memory to address the experience of urban space in antiquity. Focusing on Timgad in the Severan period as a case study, it mainly engages with the city plan and its streets, the public buildings that lined them, and their honorific inscriptions. Based on top-down and bottom-up processes, it highlights how the built landscape was staged to create a memory of the urban space and its development, but also how the inhabitants themselves were able to contribute to fostering this memory through everyday urban practices.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference62 articles.
1. Inscriptions latines de Timgad;Doisy;Mélanges d'archéologie et d'histoire,1953
2. Reset in Stone