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Field Report Issue 113.4

A New Plan for an Ancient Italian City: Gabii Revealed

Jeffrey A. Becker, Marcello Mogetta, and Nicola Terrenato

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The overall results of the magnetometry survey of Gabii.
The city of Gabii was one of the main centers of ancient Latium, yet very little of the settlement is known through archaeology. The site has been the focus of only sporadic exploration, and the available evidence for the urban history and development of the city is extremely fragmentary. New fieldwork has investigated the urban area with magnetometry and core sampling in preparation for a major campaign of new excavations. The results show that Gabii was orthogonally planned around a main, hitherto unknown thoroughfare and that significant structures and associated stratifications are relatively well preserved. The new work has the potential to yield much-needed information, not just about this important center but also about first-millennium B.C.E. urbanism in the Italian peninsula.

Author bios

Volume 113 No. 4   
October 2009   
Table of Contents

Articles

From Metallurgy to Bronze Age Civilizations: The Synthetic Theory
Nissim Amzallag

The Erotic Goddess of the Syme Sanctuary, Crete
Angeliki Lebessi

In Defense of the Ionic Frieze of the Parthenon
Barbara A. Barletta

Writing Paraphernalia, Tablets, and Muses in Campanian Wall Painting
Elizabeth A. Meyer

State of the Discipline

Greek Vase Painting
John H. Oakley

Museum Review

Not Silent in Church: Athenian Women and Religion
J. Michael Padgett

Review Article

Roman Republican Imperialism in Italy and the West
R. Bruce Hitchner

Book Reviews

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Books Received

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AJA Index

Contents of Volume 113 (2009)