Roman Imperial Portrait Practice in the Second Century AD

Marcus Aurelius and Faustina the Younger

Christian Niederhuber author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:18th Jul '22

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Roman Imperial Portrait Practice in the Second Century AD cover

It has long been thought that imperial portrait types were officially commissioned to commemorate specific historical moments and that they were made available to both the mint and the marble workshops in Rome, assuming a close correspondence between portraits on coins and in the round. All of this, however, has never been clearly proven, nor has it been disproven by a close systematic examination of the evidence on a broad material basis by those scholars who have questioned it. Through systematic case studies of Faustina the Younger's and Marcus Aurelius' portraits on coins and in sculpture, this book provides new insights into the functioning of the imperial image in Rome in the second century AD that move a difficult, much-discussed subject forward decisively. The new evidence presented here has made it necessary to adjust the established model; more flexibility is needed to describe the processes and practices behind the phenomenon of 'repeated' imperial portraits and how the imperial portrait worked in the mint of Rome and in the metropolitan marble workshops.

It does feature frequent, useful, and succinct summaries for a less specialist reader. * Greece & Rome *

ISBN: 9780192845658

Dimensions: 285mm x 227mm x 18mm

Weight: 986g

242 pages