Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-sjtt6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-30T06:20:57.506Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Importazioni italiche in Tripolitania nella prima e media età imperiale

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2015

Sergio Fontana
Affiliation:
Missione Archeologicadell'Università RomaTre a Leptis Magna
Fabrizio Felici
Affiliation:
Missione Archeologicadell'Università RomaTre a Leptis Magna

Abstract

The present contribution considers Italic imports into Tripolitania between the end of the 1st century BC and the 3rd century AD with special reference to the city of Lepcis Magna and its territory. The imports consist mainly of fine ceramic tableware and amphorae. The archaeological context is varied and highlights the diverse use of Italic goods. A wealth of information has been derived from the study of subterranean tombs excavated in the suburbs of Lepcis by the Libyan Department of Antiquities and by the University of Rome III mission. The assemblages consist of grave goods dated to between the middle of the first century BC and the 3rd century AD. Here we consider a sample of ten subterranean tombs not all of which have been published. They are located in the necropolis of the western suburbs of Lepcis with the exception of a tomb at Gelda, in the southern suburbs, and the Ganima tombs in the countryside to the east of Lepcis. Burial in subterranean tombs apparendy was reserved for the nobility while the majority of the population were buried in surface cemeteries often nearby. A contextual study of the early and middle Imperial period of the villa of Wadi er-Rsaf—excavated between 1995 and 1998—provided more data. Further surface reconnaissance surveys of various sample areas near Lepcis were carried out by the same mission in 1999-2000. Special emphases is placed on the survey in the Silin area on the coast some 15 km west of Lepcis and another inland in W Tareglat, now semi-desert, 40 km SE of Lepcis. The quality of the documentation is uneven but good enough to reveal the presence of Italic goods in different contexts: the ritual setting of a necropolis, everyday life in a prosperous suburban home, and rural settlements in the hinterland.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Libyan Studies 2003

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bibliografia

Abd al-Rahman, A. S. 1995. Latest tomb findings at Leptis Magna and in the vicinity. Libia Antiqua 1:154–5.Google Scholar
Arthur, P. 1983. Hellenistic and Roman Sites at Marsa Gezirah, near Misurata. Libyan Studies 14:122–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bruzza, P. L. 1875. Scoperta di figuline in Pozzuoli. Bullettino dell'lnstituto di Corrispondenza Archeologica 47: 242–56.Google Scholar
Conspectus: Ettlinger, E.et al., Conspectus formarum terrae sigillatae Italico modo confectae. Mat. Röm-germ. Keramik 10.Google Scholar
Ciancio, S. 1967. Leontinoi - Lentini, Roma.Google Scholar
Cifani, G., Munzi, M. 2002. Fonti letterarie e archeologiche per la storia del Kinyps (Libia). Africa Romana 14: 1901–18.Google Scholar
Di Vita, A. 1968. Influences grecques et traditions orientales dans l'art punique de la Tripolitanie. MEFRA 80: 783.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Di Vita Evrard, G.et al. 1996. L'ipogeo dei Flavi a Leptis Magna presso Gasr Gelda. Libia Antiqua 2: 85133.Google Scholar
Di Vita Evrard, G.et al. 1997. Une tombe hypogée de la nécropole occidentale: Laurentii ou Claudii? Libia Antiqua 3: 119–38.Google Scholar
Dore, J. 1996. The UNESCO Libyan Valleys Archaeological Survey Pottery, in Martingly, D. (ed.), Farming the desert. The UNESCO Libyan Valleys Archaeological Survey, 2. Gazetteer and Pottery (London): 317–89.Google Scholar
Faraj, M. O.et al. 1996. La tomba presso la scuola elementare “al-Hadi al-Fergiani” a Khoms. Libia Antiqua 2: 135–50.Google Scholar
Felici, F., Pentiricci, M. 2002. Per una definizione delle dinamiche economiche e commerciali del territorio di Leptis Magna. Africa Romana 14: 18751900.Google Scholar
Fentress, E., 2001. Villas, wine and kilns: the landscape of Jerba in the late Hellenistic period. Journal of Roman Archaeology 14: 249–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fontana, S. 1995. I manufatti romani nei corredi funerari del Fezzan, in VI colloque internationale sur l'histoire et l archéologie de l'Afrique du nord: productions et exportations africaines, Actualités archéologiques (Paris): 405–20.Google Scholar
Fontana, S. 1996. Le necropoli di Leptis Magna: sepoltura e società nella Tripolitania romana. Tesi di Dottorato in Archeologia: insediamenti, economia, cultura, Vili ciclo, Università degli Studi di Pisa.Google Scholar
Fontana, S. 1996a. Le necropoli di Leptis Magna. Libia Antiqua 2: 7983.Google Scholar
Fontana, S. 2001. Leptis Magna. The Romanization of a major African city through burial evidence, in Keay, S. and Terrenato, N. (eds.), Italy and the West. Comparative Issues in Romanization (Oxford): 161–72.Google Scholar
Fontana, S., Usai, L. 1996. La tomba ipogea. Libia Antiqua 2: 162–63.Google Scholar
Fontana, S., Usai, L. 1998. Uadi er-Rsaf, area sud. La necropoli e la tomba ipogea a ovest della villa. Libia Antiqua 4: 195–9.Google Scholar
Fulford, M. 1989. To east and west: the Mediterranean trade of Cyrenaica and Tripolitania. Libyan Studies 20: 169–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fulford, M., Tomber, R. 1994. Excavations at Sabratha 1948-1951, II. The Finds, 2. The Finewares and Lamps. London.Google Scholar
Kenrick, P. M. 1985. The fine pottery. Excavations at Sidi Khrebish, Benghazi (Berenice) III.1. Libia Antiqua Suppl. 51 (Tripoli).Google Scholar
Kenrick, P .M. 1987. Tripolitanian Sigillata: A response. Libyan Studies: 18, 88.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menchelli, S. 1995. Ateius e gli altri: produzioni ceramiche in Pisa e nell'ager Pisanus fra tarda repubblica e primo impero, in Ateius e le sue fabbriche, La produzione di sigillata ad Arezzo, a Pisa e nella Gallia meridionale. Atti del convegno (Annali della scuola di Pisa): 25, 1–2, 333–50.Google Scholar
Munzi, M. 1998. Uadi er-Rsaf, area sud. Lo scavo della villa suburbana. Libia Antiqua 4: 189–94.Google Scholar
Munzi, M., Pentiricci, M. 1997. Lo scavo della villa suburbana di uadi er-Rsaf. Libia Antiqua 3: 272–6.Google Scholar
Munzi, M., Ricci, G. 1996. Lo scavo della domus suburbana. Libia Antiqua 2: 158–60.Google Scholar
OCK: Oxé, A., Comfort, H., Kenrick, P.. 2000. Corpus Vasorum Arretinorum, Second edition, Bonn.Google Scholar
Ostia I = Aa. vv., Ostia I, Studi Miscellanei 13. Roma, 1968.Google Scholar
Ostia III = Aa. vv., Ostia III, Studi Misællanei 21. Roma, 1973.Google Scholar
Pentiricci, M.et al. 1998. La villa suburbana di uadi er-Rsaf (Leptis Magna): il contesto ceramico di età antonina (150-180 d.C). Libia Antiqua 4: 4198.Google Scholar
Shakshuki, M. F., Shebani, R. 1998. The Romans kilns of Hai al-Andalus. Libya Antiqua 4: 279–82.Google Scholar
Soricelli, G. 1987. Tripolitanian sigillata: North African or Campanian? Libyan Studies 18: 7387.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soricelli, G.et al. 1994. L'Origine della Tripolitanian Sigillata/Produzione A della Baia di Napoli, in Olcese, G. (ed.), Ceramica romana e archeometria: Lo stato degli studi (Firenze): 6788.Google Scholar