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Portraits of Children on Roman Funerary Monuments

Uses a wide selection of tombstones to assess how Roman parents commemorated their children and visualised childhood.

Jason Mander (Author)

9781107001022, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 18 October 2012

411 pages, 130 b/w illus.
26.4 x 22.5 x 2.4 cm, 1.4 kg

'Mander has produced a study of Roman childhood that is exemplary not only for the physical research that has gone into documenting this far-flung body of monuments but also for his rigorous, wide-ranging, and sober analysis of that corpus within its broader visual traditions and social-historical contexts. This is a book that any scholar with an interest in ancient childhood, the family, and social history will profit from reading.' Sinclair Bell, American Journal of Archaeology

Drawing on hundreds of tombstones from Rome, Italy and the Western provinces, this study assesses how parents visualised childhood. By considering the most popular funerary themes and iconographic models, it emphasises both the emotional and social investment placed in children, bringing to the fore many little-known examples. From Britannia to Dacia, Aquitania to Pannonia, it highlights the rich artistic diversity of the provinces and shows that not all trends were borrowed from the capital. With a wide range of social groups in evidence, including freedmen, soldiers and peregrini, it also considers the varying reasons which underlay child commemoration and demonstrates the importance of studying the material in context. Amply supported by a catalogue of examples and over a hundred images, it will be essential reading for anyone working on Roman childhood or family studies.

1. Introduction
2. Locating the Roman child
3. The iconography of childhood
4. Nuclear notions
5. Fluid families
6. Portraits in context
7. Conclusion
Catalogue.

Subject Areas: Classical Greek & Roman archaeology [HDDK], Social & cultural history [HBTB], Ancient history: to c 500 CE [HBLA], History of art: ancient & classical art,BCE to c 500 CE [ACG]

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