ISBN-13: 9783565198627 / Angielski / Miękka / 264 str.
Beyond the marble monuments and imperial proclamations lies a different Rome-one shaped by the smell of bakeries at dawn, the noise of apartment buildings, the calculations of merchants in the forum, and the unspoken rules governing who could speak, move, or eat where.This book reconstructs daily existence across Rome's social spectrum, from senators negotiating political alliances over dinner to enslaved workers maintaining urban infrastructure, from women managing households within restrictive legal frameworks to immigrant communities preserving cultural practices in crowded neighborhoods. It asks: what did an ordinary day actually look like for people whose lives were never meant to be remembered?Drawing on archaeological finds-graffiti, kitchen tools, skeletal remains, tenant contracts, personal letters-it traces how social hierarchies were performed in clothing choices, enforced through spatial segregation, and occasionally challenged in tavern conversations. It examines how religious festivals structured time, how bathing rituals created temporary social mixing, how diet reflected both geography and status, and how entertainment-from chariot races to gladiatorial games-reinforced imperial ideology while offering moments of collective experience.This is not a romanticized portrait of ancient grandeur, but an excavation of the textures, tensions, and compromises that defined existence within a vast, unequal, yet remarkably interconnected empire.
In a Pompeii tavern, graffiti preserves what formal histories omit: a customer's complaint, a server's retort, the price of wine when inflation hit hardest.