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The Roman Forum (Wonders of the World (Harvard University Press))
 
 
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The Roman Forum (Wonders of the World (Harvard University Press)) [Hardcover]

David Watkin (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0674033418 978-0674033412 December 15, 2009

One of the most visited sites in Italy, the Roman Forum is also one of the best-known wonders of the Roman world. Though a highpoint on the tourist route around Rome, for many visitors the site can be a baffling disappointment. Several of the monuments turn out to be nineteenth- or twentieth-century reconstructions, while the rubble and the holes made by archaeologists have an unclear relationship to the standing remains, and, to all but the most skilled Romanists, the Forum is an unfortunate mess.

David Watkin sheds completely new light on the Forum, examining the roles of the ancient remains while revealing what exactly the standing structures embody—including the rarely studied medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque churches, as well as the nearby monuments that have important histories of their own. Watkin asks the reader to look through the veneer of archaeology to rediscover the site as it was famous for centuries. This involves offering a remarkable and engaging new vision of a well-visited, if often misunderstood, wonder. It will be enjoyed by readers at home and serve as a guide in the Forum.

(20090915)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

Offers a compact but comprehensive course, intended for sophisticated history buffs and travelers, on the history of the Forum...To help the tourist avoid confusion, Watkin embarks on a detailed tour of the place, revealing which structures--or, rather, portions of structures--are truly left from ancient Rome and which have been additions built over the course of the years since the fall of the Roman Empire. Systematic, knowledgeable, and even enthusiastic: just the formula to completely engage the reader wanting to know more about ancient Rome.
--Brad Hooper (Booklist 20091115)

For a walk through the Forum both in space and history, choose David Watkin's The Roman Forum...There are many books on Rome, but few as deeply urbane.
--Tom D'Evelyn (Providence Journal 20091201)

Edited by classicist Mary Beard, The Wonders of the World book series from Harvard University Press offers architecturally oriented views of various sites, ranging from the Alhambra to the Parthenon to St. Peters. The attractive books are hand-sized, cloth-bound, and illustrated with maps, photographs, engravings, and elevations, making them ideal for the armchair traveler. (Architectural Record 20091216)

[Watkin] treats readers to an incisive and insightful history of the Forum with a focus on its evolution following the fall of the Roman Empire. In The Roman Forum, he deftly illuminates the fascinating changes that this once sacred space has undergone in the last millennium, and argues that our modern perception of the Forum, dictated by archaeological pursuits, tends to obscure those aspects of the Forum that are truly impressive. The Roman Forum is the latest entry in the Wonders of the World series from Harvard University Press, which provides in-depth, scholarly explorations of very specific subjects like the Rosetta stone or the Coliseum. Watkin's work in this volume is clearly a labor of love; his sincere appreciation for the Forum and for classical architecture at large is evident, and his expertise helps render an easily navigable portrait of the Forum in four dimensions. He traces the shifting attitudes and pivotal events that have shaped the Roman Forum from late antiquity, through the Middle Ages, all the way to the present day.
--Michael Patrick Brady (popmatters.com 20091215)

Though not strictly modern--well, not modern at all, really--the Wonders of the World series of books from Harvard Universtiy Press remains my favorite ongoing run of architectural tomes. Classicist Mary Beard is the series editor, and each of these trim volumes takes up the subject of a particular building. Ranging from Stonehenge to the Parthenon to the Temple of Jerusalem, imagine these scholarly works as biographies of buildings...[You should] race to add the newly released Roman Forum and Piazza San Marco to your collection...The well-illustrated little book traces the Forum from antiquity to today, and serves as an able roadmap to the historical eras and ideologies written across what may have been the most striking expression of Roman architecture. Popes, plunderers and preservationists all play roles in this book, and it's an ideal stocking stuffer for those who take their architecture with a solid dose of intellectual rigor. And that the book will tuck nicely into a blazer pocket is only a welcome bonus... Be sure to pick up the entire set yourself. I'm awfully glad I've got mine, and can't wait to tuck into the next one.
--Aaron Britt (dwell.com 20110326)

An entertaining combination of travel guide, history and polemic.
--Francis X. Rocca (Wall Street Journal )

About the Author

David Watkin is Professor Emeritus of the History of Architecture at the University of Cambridge.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press (December 15, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674033418
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674033412
  • Product Dimensions: 7.4 x 4.5 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #594,733 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Indispensable for the serious visitor, February 9, 2010
By 
J. Hardin "camdenhouse" (Spring Island, SC United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Roman Forum (Wonders of the World (Harvard University Press)) (Hardcover)
This slim volume is packed with information that is indispensable for the serious visitor to the forum. It reveals which structures were destroyed in recent decades to create the forum as we now see it, and how others were created more or less arbitrarily in the 1930s. It is especially interesting with regard to the Senate building, which was until the past century hidden within a Baroque church, and thus preserved. The bare brick of the interior does not reflect what was undoubtedly a rich marble wall. You will see the forum in a somewhat different light but be sure to take the book with you to work with it on site.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Excellent for Post-Classical history of the Roman Forum, January 2, 2011
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This review is from: The Roman Forum (Wonders of the World (Harvard University Press)) (Hardcover)
Historical survey of the Roman Forum site from Antiquity to the modern age. Unlike most other books concerning the site, this book traces in great detail the post-classical history of the site and its buildings.
The archaeological exploration and partial reconstructions of some of the buildings are also covered extensively but the architectural aspect is not. The author relies too much on Piranesi as a guide and injects too many of his own opinions concerning archaeologists and their impacts on the forum for my taste. Book construction for edition printed in the United States: The book is cloth bound and is printed on alkaline paper. Unfortunately the pages are adhesive bound-not sewn as are other books in the series (The Parthenon, The Colosseum, etc.)
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars David Watkins loves Piranesi and hates archeologists..., March 22, 2011
This review is from: The Roman Forum (Wonders of the World (Harvard University Press)) (Hardcover)
The book started out promising enough and right off the bat I learned some really stunning things about which buildings in the Forum are truly "ancient" and which are just modern reconstructions, restorations, or remodelings. But even in delivering this great information Watkins general attitude was already shining through, as he seemed to be almost giddy in dropping all these little bombs on us: "That's not really old and that's not really old and that's not really old- see! It's all just a scam!" I loved what he was telling me, but his tone put me on guard.

Watkins then proceeds on a tour of the Forum which he insists "is magical place" even though he just called it "baffling, ugly, and frustrating" (producing quotes from great men like Joyce to back up the claim that the site is just a overblown tourist trap). So how can it be magical? Well you must approach it as David Watkins does and only as David Watkins does. And the way he approaches it is through the lens of 18th century engraver Giovanni Piranesi (who he simply asserts is "the greatest engraver of all time" like it was an objective fact. Albrecht Durer anyone?). Half the book then, is just a (fawning) study of Piranesi, which would be great if I had bought a book on Pirenesi, but I bought a book on the Roman Forum...

And here is where we get down to it: Watkins wants the Forum to be like it is in his beloved Piranesi engravings and it isn't anymore and that really really ticks him off. Every couple of pages he finds an opportunity to lash out at the evil archeologists, those no-good dirt grubbers who have ruined the Forum for David Watkins. He has nothing good to say about the contributions archeology has made to our understanding of the Roman world and instead heaps scorn upon scorn upon them for digging where they should be admiring. He is forever contrasting the beautiful glory of the engravings with the modern site, which has been dug out by those rotten archeologists who, I'm serious, seem to have done this all for intentionally malicious reasons. It become clear pretty quick that this book is a polemic against archeology as much as it is a guidebook to a fascinating place.

In his defense I think it is worth noting that Watkins is a professor of Architecture, rather than, say, History or (god forbid) Archeology. He clearly loves the buildings (mostly churches) that sprang up around the Forum later and thinks we have done ourselves a great disservice by neglecting all that in the pursuit of information about the Romans. But this gets him into repeated trouble because you get the sense that not only does he really like the newer stuff, but he really hates the older stuff, he calls it "bits of rubble" and "puzzling scraps of often minor buildings." Which I can understand him saying- architecturally speaking, the Forum aint so hot. But, my god, historically speaking, every one of those "incomprehensible foundations" is proof positive that the Roman Empire, probably the most important civilization the Western World has ever seen, was centered RIGHT HERE- RIGHT WHERE YOU ARE STANDING. And even though it's just a foundation, or a bit of a broken column it is still a living connection to that world- which, pardon me for disagreeing with you sir, I find magical to the nth degree. Certainly more magical that yet another pretty church.

I give The Roman Forum 2 stars because I did learn things from it, but I wish Watkin's editor had gone through and stripped out the endless (and mean-spirited) editorializing. Or better yet, found someone who actually appreciates Roman History to write the damn thing.













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