Artigo Revisado por pares

The Origin and Plan of Roman Florence

1965; Cambridge University Press; Volume: 55; Linguagem: Inglês

10.2307/297435

ISSN

1753-528X

Autores

Colin Hardie,

Tópico(s)

Historical and Religious Studies of Rome

Resumo

There has been much argument and little agreement about the date of the foundation of Florentia, about the purpose of its foundation with regard to Faesulae, and about the relation of the city's site and orientation to the Consular road which joined Arretium and Luca, the Via Cassia, and to the crossing of the River Arnus by the Roman equivalent of Ponte Vecchio. Although the Via Cassia is agreed to belong to the second century B.C., its precise date is uncertain, and for the stretch from Arretium to Faesulae and Florentia two different routes are recorded, one on the north bank (after the first few miles out of Arretium) and the other on the south as far as Ponte Vecchio. It is agreed that the southern route is later, but not whether it and the crossing of the Arno is a cause or a consequence of the foundation of Florentia.

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