توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Bathing in Public in the Roman World
نام کتاب : Bathing in Public in the Roman World
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : حمام کردن به صورت عمومی در دنیای روم
سری :
نویسندگان : Garrett G. Fagan
ناشر : Univ of Michigan Pr
سال نشر :
تعداد صفحات : 468
ISBN (شابک) : 0472108190 , 9780472108190
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 50 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Acknowledgments\n Contents\n Abbreviations\n Introduction\n Setting the Parameters of the Study\n The Sources\n The Bathing Ritual\n Chapter 1\n A Visit to the Baths with Martial\n Fashionable and Unfashionable Baths\n Dinner Parties and Invitations\n Nudity and Male/Female Mixed Bathing\n Irritating Bathers\n Violence, Eating, Drinking, Sex, and Thieves: Some Oversights in Martial\n Chapter 2\n The Growth of the Bathing Habit\n The Written Evidence: Plautus to Martial\n The Archaeological Evidence: The Public Baths of Pompeii\n Rome: The Evidence from the Aqueducts and Water Supply\n Chapter 3\n Accounting for the Popularity of Public Baths\n Chapter 4\n Baths and Roman Medicine\n Asclepiades of Bithynia and the Growth of the Bathing Habit\n Chapter 5\n Bath Benefactors 1: Rome\n The Republican Authorities and Emperors\n Private Citizens\n Chapter 6\n Bath Benefactors 2: Italy and the Provinces\n General Remarks\n 1*\n Emperors and Imperial Officials (nos. 1-45; see also nos. 288-91)\n Local Authorities and Private Benefactors (nos. 46-196; see also nos. 292-328)\n Social Status\n Nonconstructional Benefactions (nos. 197-252; see also nos. 329-39)\n Ancillary Information: Named Baths and Financial Details\n Chapter 7\n The Physical Environment: Splendor and Squalor\n chapter 8\n The Bathers\n The Emperor\n Senators, Equites, and the Elite\n Plebs, Commoners, and Others of Low Station\n Slaves as Attendants and Customers\n Social Mixing: The Baths as Social Levelers?\n Conclusion\n r\n o\n t lX\n «a\n ■W\n 11\n Ml\n •1i\n !’\n F- >\n -M*\n I-\n ED •\n Ltfl L J I\n <\n V AVfA-BEA\'f lSSiMCI THERMAS-i\n C J«\n j\'- \'A.l. i\n ij\n !\'.i\\ ?-l-lu .at\n TON\'CHCAXA\'AlJili/lvM ;■ .\n ,1\n ^1\n o\n V^! •*\n UVM\n gL C-b RI\n h-rr-ALiA?^\"^\'\n ifre-^i-fT^\n > \\ \'a 1 >\n t\n ! r]\n O-& i RCiN.\n C5\'\n {-JI ‘;-i.j\\)fr5ias\n i^s\n 1 .AVA\'i i /«\n • >/\n X,\n 5^^\n A\n Introduction to the Epigraphic Sample\n Greek Inscriptions\n Criteria for Inclusion in the Sample\n Dating\n Abbreviations for Collections of Inscriptions Consulted\n Abbreviations, Translations, and Epigraphic Conventions\n Other Notes on the Sample\n Part A\n Constructional Benefactions\n Part B\n Nonconstructional Benefactions\n Part C\n Nonbenefactory Texts\n Part D\n Greek Texts\n Appendix 1\n The Spread of Public Bathing in the Italian Peninsula to ca. a.d. 100\n Appendix 2\n The Distribution of Nonimperial Baths in Rome (and Some Possible Builders or Owners)\n Appendix 3\n Parts of Baths Mentioned in the Epigraphic Sample\n atoa\n Bibliography\n Index of Names\n Geographic Index\n Index of Topics\n Index of Ancient Sources\n Concordance of Inscriptions\nПустая страница