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Documents  New Haven And London Yale University Press | enregistrements trouvés : 2

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Cote : A00801

Catalogue d'exposition

Catalogue ; Exposition ; Orientaliste ; Peintre ; Renoir, Auguste

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Cote : 939 MAC

"The author of a classic work on the architecture of imperial Rome here broadens his locus to present an original study of urban architecture in Roman market torons, port cities, veterans' colonies, and major metropolitan centers throughout the empire.
"Simply the best book on Roman urbanism [that] I know. A formidable breakthrough. It brings to life the genius of Roman urbanism and reveals its continuing relevance for present urban planning and architecture."- Leon Krier, Architects Journal
"In this very fine book—the successor w his Introductory Study—William L. MacDonald lays before the reader the physical evidence of what a Roman city was
litre for its inhabitants. . . . The illustrations in An Urban Appraisal, this second volume of The Architecture of the Roman Empire, are superbly chosen, illuminating
the text as well as being interesting in themselves. . . . It is a joy to find a book so attractively designed, worthy of both its author and his subject."—Martin Henig, Times Literary Supplément
Winner of the 1986 Alice Davis Hitchcock Award of the Society of Architectural Historians for the most distinguished work of scholarship in architectural history.
William L. MacDonald, formerly A. P. Brown Professor of the History of Art at Smith College, is also the author of The Architecture of the Roman Empire, Volume I; An Introductory Study (revised edition, 1982), also available from Yale University Press." (4ème couv.)
"The author of a classic work on the architecture of imperial Rome here broadens his locus to present an original study of urban architecture in Roman market torons, port cities, veterans' colonies, and major metropolitan centers throughout the empire.
"Simply the best book on Roman urbanism [that] I know. A formidable breakthrough. It brings to life the genius of Roman urbanism and reveals its continuing relevance for present urban planning and ...

Rome antique ; Archéologie

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