This book provides a comprehensive account of the relationship between the architecture of Republican Rome and its politics. It covers the early Republic, the plebeians' struggle for equality, the years of Mediterranean expansion, and the gradual unraveling of senatorial control. The book closes with the dictatorship of Caesar, the first Republican to propose large-scale city planning.
This book provides a comprehensive account of the relationship between the architecture of Republican Rome and its politics. It covers the early Repub...