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Gabii

Coordinates: 41°53′13″N 12°42′57″E / 41.88694°N 12.71583°E / 41.88694; 12.71583
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Gabii
Ruins in the residential quarter of Gabii
Gabii is located in Italy
Gabii
Shown within Italy
LocationOsteria dell'Osa, Lazio, Italy
RegionLatium
Coordinates41°53′13″N 12°42′57″E / 41.88694°N 12.71583°E / 41.88694; 12.71583
TypeSettlement
Site notes
ManagementSoprintendenza Speciale per il Colosseo, il Museo Nazionale Romano e l'Area Archeologica di Roma
WebsiteParco archeologico di Gabii (in Italian)
Ancient Latium. Gabii is directly east of Roma, south of Collatia.
Altar of the Twelve Gods from Gabii, dated to 1st century AD (Louvre, Paris).

Gabii was an ancient city of Latium, located 18 km (11 mi) due east of Rome along the Via Praenestina, which was in early times known as the Via Gabina. [1] It was on the south-eastern perimeter of an extinct volcanic crater lake,[2] approximately circular in shape, named the Lacus Gabinus, and then during later times called the Lago di Castiglione, "lake of the fortification", after Castiglione, a mediaeval tower erected on the site of the ancient acropolis, or arx, of Gabii.[3] A necropolis is adjacent on that side of the lake. At present, the former lake is entirely agricultural land. The ruins of the ancient city project from the fields next to the cliffs overlooking it, on both sides of the via. A municipium in Roman times, Gabii is currently located in the frazione of Osteria dell'Osa 10 km (6.2 mi) from the comune of Monte Compatri, of which it is a part, in the Province of Rome, Region of Lazio. The site is under new seasonal archaeological excavation.

Historical geography

To what degree the lake was sedimented in ancient times remains unknown. Some of the earliest huts are down in the crater. Two streams flowing north to south flanked the lake on the west: the Fosso del'Osa, and the east: Fosso di San Giuliano. These originated in another body of water, believed to be Lacus Regillus, on the south side of the road. The streams cut the road on either side of Gabii and were crossed by bridges; in other words, Gabii was constructed at a defensible location on an isthmus between two lakes.[4] The isthmus was isolated by streams on either side. The quadrangle so formed contained its own water supply and straddled a major route on the east flank of Rome. It could not, as history demonstrated, be ignored by Rome. The two streams flow north to the Anio river, which flows west into the Tiber river on the north side of Rome.

In 1846 Gell reported that the Osa came from "a large marshy plain, extending almost to the Via Labicana." Passing by Lake Gabino it was connected to the latter by "artificial canals", which were in the process of draining the lake:[5]

The water of the lake has been very much lowered by this canal, and more draining is yet in contemplation, although there are already many square miles of uncultivated ground in the vicinity.

The draining of the lake was a project of the Borghese family, which had purchased it in 1614 from the Colonna family. Octavian Blewitt's handbook was able to report in 1850 (only four years later):[6]

The lake was drained a few years ago by prince Borghese, who has converted it from the state of a pestilential marsh into a district of great fertility.

Near the river a small inn had been placed, the Osteria dell'Osa ("Inn of the Osa"), north of which was the main necropolis of Gabii. The habitation today has expanded into the center of a frazione.

The marshy plain was the last trace of the quasi-legendary lake near which the Battle of Lake Regillus decided whether the Roman Republic would continue or the kings of Rome would be restored by the intervention of the Latin League, to which Gabii belonged. The site of the battle is still a matter of dispute, which, on the unwarranted assumption that the location of the battle reveals the location of the lake, has extended into a dispute over the location of the lake. To modern topographers the deep lake basin, now kept dry, and the aqueducts that drew water, and still draw water, from its sources leave no doubt that the lake was located in the basin.[7]

Lake Regillus varied in size and depth over the centuries but was certainly between the Via Labicana and the Via Praenestina east of Finocchio and north of Colonna (ancient Labicum), the last remnant at Pantana Borghese having been drained by the Borghese family in conjunction with the restitution of the first part of the Acqua Alexandrina as the Acqua Felice under Pope Sixtus V in the years 1585–1587.[8] The two roads joined on the outskirts of Rome. The Pantana was the low point; from springs on its hillside exuded the water that filled the lake. During the thousand years of the post-classical period a much smaller Rome (totally abandoned at one point under the Goths) had lived on a greatly reduced water supply due to the broken and unrepaired aqueducts.

Gabii had kept its lake until the completion of the Acqua Alexandrina in 226 AD. The Romans captured springs or mountain streams for drinking water; they never fed the waters of the marsh into the aqueduct. It led from springs over the Pantana through underground conduits on the south side of the Via Praenestina to the outskirts of Rome, where it was carried on arched conduits above ground into the city. The Acqua Felice had more altitude at this point. By 226 the lake must have receded enough to have left a corridor along the road, as the Romans would not have been able to sink a conduit under the swamp. Having its source water drained away, the lake receded drastically. The aqueduct is still in use. In 1915 it shunted some 22,000 m3 (5,800,000 US gal) per day into the city of Rome. If these sources were not diverted, Lake Regillus would soon return.

Meanwhile, the basin marks the location of the former lake. It is now entirely agricultural land, except that the community of Lago Regillo has been placed in it near Gabii. Osteria del Finocchio marks the western limit, as it is heavily settled and is on higher ground. Lake Regillus therefore cannot have been in the vicinity of Frascati, regardless of where the battle was fought.

Prehistory

Scattered surface pottery has been found from the Middle Bronze Age outside the necropolis located below Castiglione, from which nothing can be deduced concerning the settlement at Gabii. The Late Bronze Age is missing. The Final Bronze Age is represented by minimal Latial I (1000-900 BC) material around the inside of the crater on the southern side, indicating low-density settlement at the water's edge there.[9]

Bronze Age findings around Lacus Buranus

Definitive settlement at Gabii is believed to have begun with Latial IIA (900-830 BC) when the cemeteries of Castiglione, some 60 tombs of only IIA, and Osteria del'Osa, over 600 tombs primarily of II and III (900-630 BC), and some of IV (730-580 BC), began. Both of these necropoli are dated entirely before the foundation of Rome and well before the classical city of Gabii. The location of the settlements producing these cemeteries was an issue of some mystery until aerial reconnaissance revealed a string of six "Iron Age hamlets" on the isthmus and more along the ridge to the east.[10] Latial IIA is regarded as pre-urban and IIB as proto-urban; that is, at some time during 830-730 BC the settlements acquired a common geopolitical identity. By the end of IV (580 BC) the name Gabii must have been in place as the name of the city, as by then the history was well into the events of its legends.

The most archaeological work has been done on the cemetery of Osteria dell'Osa. The tombs are divided into 14 groups, each exhibiting a set of distinctive traditions and each believed to represent one community of roughly 100 persons, round numbers. The earliest two, contemporaneous and dated to IIA, termed the northern and southern groups from their location within the cemetery, evidence the presence of a male warrior class. At the center of the cluster is a small set of male-only cremation burials, some in hut-urns. Around them is a greater group of inhumations of men, women and children. The richer cremation burials included grave gifts of miniaturized bronze tools and weapons and miniaturized pottery forms. The inhumations lacked weapons. Women were buried with jewelry and spindle-whorls (used in weaving).[11]

The northern group (25 tombs) covered the mouth of the burial jar (dolium) with a travertine slab, made ovicaprine food offerings, left serpentine fibulae, razors of quadrangular shape and spearheads with sockets for wooden handles. The pottery is decorated. The southern group (30 tombs) used an impasto lid on the burial jars, left serpent-fibulae of a different-style, a razor of lunate shape and one-piece cast spears. The pottery is undecorated.[11]

Urbanization of the area probably did not begin before the start of the second half of the 8th century BC.[2] This process most likely finished by the end of the 7th century BC, and, at its height, the city's borders enclosed 0.75 square miles (1.9 km2).[2]

Legend and legendary history

The early date of the prehistoric Gabii suggests that the Roman writers could have little traditional memory of its foundation or of who founded it. The surviving traditions are therefore in the legend category; there may or may not be elements of truth in them. The tradition is two-fold: Gabii was founded either by the Latin kings of Alba Longa (according to Vergil[12] and Dionysius of Halicarnassus[13]) and therefore was aboriginal Latin in ethnic descent, or by the Sicels[1] as the Siculi, a substrate population of east Italy expelled by the Italics to Sicily. They became one of the three major indigenous tribes of ancient Sicily,[14] giving their name to it.

The legend of a Siculian foundation of Rome comes from fragments of early Roman annalists, who asserted that the Siculi occupied several cities of Latium before the arrival of the aborigines (Latins): Rome, Tibur, Fescennium, Falerii, Antemnae, Caenina and a few others.[15] Gabii is mentioned as one of them by Gaius Julius Solinus.[16] According to him two Siculian brothers founded it and named it by combining their names, Galatus and Bins. Fanciful etymologies such as the above are not taken seriously but there is a sober case for a Sicilian and Siculian influence on early Latium. For example, the Cloelii claimed to be from Alba Longa and used the cognomen Siculus. Prisons called lautumia were cut into the sides of the early Capitoline Hill. Syracuse used quarries, called latomiai, for a similar purpose. Most of the similarities can be attributed to an influence on early Rome from Greek Sicily; however, the case of a Sicul substrate also is possible.

Plutarch[17] relates the legend that Romulus and Remus were raised by Faustulus, the servant of Amulius, in Gabii, where they learned everything from literature to the use of Greek weapons.[1] From there they went on to found Rome.

War with Rome under Tarquinius Superbus

The Latin League (Latini) was brought under Roman jurisdiction by the last king of Rome, Lucius Tarquinius Superbus. Addressing their council and claiming that, because all the Latin cities were founded from Alba Longa and Tullus Hostilius had made a treaty by which Alba was ceded to Rome along with all its colonies, Rome had a legal claim over the Latins, he offered them protection from any chance devastation that should inflict their country and a share in Roman prosperity if they would resume the treaty, which they did. Thenceforward Latin troops fought beside Roman within the Roman army.[18]

Gabii reneged from the Latin treaty with Rome for unknown reasons. Tarquinius' son, Sextus Tarquinius, went to Gabii, pretending to be in revolt against his father and asking for assistance.[19] He was accepted, and after successfully commanding various military expeditions, he was appointed as the leading general of the army of Gabii. As general, he commanded a number of minor but successful skirmishes against Roman forces, with the complicity of the Roman king.[20]

He sent a message to the king asking what to do next. Receiving the messenger in the garden the king said nothing at all (for which he might have been held liable later) but strolled around lopping off the heads of the tallest poppies with a stick. Sextus took this to be a message to destroy the aristocrats of Gabii including Antistius Petro whom according to legend Sextus accused of plotting with Tarquinius Superbus Sextus' return to Rome dead or alive, thereby provoking the Gabines to stone Antistius to death.[21][22] Tarquinius Superbus was able to take advantage of the ensuing confusion and bring Gabii into submission without battle.[20]

Dionysius of Halicarnassus states[23] that Tarquin was lenient with Gabii, and their subsequent treaty, whose original text was written on a bullock's skin and draped over a wooden shield, was said by Dionysius of Halicarnassus to be still extant in his day in the Roman temple of Sancus.[24]

After the overthrow of the Roman monarchy, Sextus fled to Gabii but was killed by the leaders of the city in revenge for his past actions.[25]

History under Roman control

Gabii was an ally of Rome after 493 BC.[26]

In the late Republican period, the city became depopulated due to the extensive use of the lapis Gabinus quarry, which was just under the archaic city. Cicero mentioned it in the 1st century BC as a small and insignificant place.[27]

The Augustan poets used Gabii when demonstrating a city that had fallen from its old heights.[28] From inscriptions we learn that from the time of Augustus or Tiberius onwards it enjoyed a municipal organization. Its baths were well known,[26] and Hadrian, who was responsible for much of the renewed prosperity of the small towns of Latium, appears to have been a very liberal patron, building a senate-house (Curia Aelia Augusta) and an aqueduct.[29]

After the 3rd century, Gabii practically disappears from history, though its bishops continue to be mentioned in ecclesiastical documents till the close of the 9th century.[30]

The "Braschi" Diana, a Roman marble excavated in 1792 by Gavin Hamilton and sold to Luigi Braschi Onesti, who sold it to Ludwig of Bavaria (Glyptothek. Munich)

Cultural influences

Gabii's importance in the earliest history of Rome is also apparent elsewhere: the adoption of the cinctus Gabinus (a method of draping the toga that leaves both arms free) by the Romans for certain ceremonies,[26][31] the unique role it played for the augurs[26] as seen from the specific term ager Gabinus used by these priests[1] (Varro, Ling. 5,33), and its presence in a Roman formula of devotio.[1][32]

Archaeology

Temple of Juno

Temple of Juno, back

The most conspicuous ruin remaining at the site of Gabii is a temple, generally attributed to Juno, which had six Ionic or Corinthian columns in the front and six on each side, excluding the back.[30] The temple was composed of a single room (cella), and it was made of lapis Gabinus, a fire-resistant rock that was found in the quarries around Gabii and that also made its way into some of the buildings of Rome itself. The temple was situated in the middle of a podium, which had a colonnade of Doric columns along the back and extending around the sides. This colonnade stood in front of rooms of unknown function, perhaps multi-functional, for such uses as temple shops.[28] The temple was excavated and published by the Spanish School at Rome in the 1960s and 1970s.

The temple was constructed 150-100 BC. A painted inscription (IVN) on an antefix identifies it as a temple of Juno. Around the rear of the temple (on the cliff side), which faced and towered above the road, were about 55 pits for planting trees representing a sacred grove. The site began as sacred in the 7th century BC featuring such a grove in which one tree was especially worshipped. In the 4th century BC a small shrine was constructed next to the grove around and in connection with which caches of anatomical terra cotta statuettes were found. This type of statuette modeled an organ or section of the human body and was given as a votive offering at a healing sanctuary, of which a great many have been found in Latium, in hope that divinity would turn its attention to healing the organ of the dedicator.[33] Also found were some votive pedestals inscribed to Fortuna. A pavement was inscribed to Jupiter Jurarius ("of oaths"), indicating possible state functions of the site. There were two other shrines at the location.

The subsequent temple to Juno remained in use during the empire, after the town was abandoned.

Forum

To the east of the temple lay the supposed area of the forum, where excavations were made by Gavin Hamilton in 1792.[28] Hamilton discovered a large cache of statues that were initially placed in the Borghese collection, although many of them subsequently were carried off to Paris by Napoleon, and still remain in the Louvre. The statues and busts are especially numerous and interesting (38 in all); besides the deities Venus, Diana, Nemesis, etc., they comprise Agrippa, Tiberius, Germanicus, Caligula, Claudius, Nero, Trajan and Plotina, Hadrian and Sabina, Marcus Aurelius, Septimius Severus, Geta, Gordian III and others. The inscriptions relate mainly to local and municipal matters.[30]

Tower of Castiglione

The citadel of Gabii is now marked by the ruins of the medieval tower of Castiglione.[30]

Fieldwork since the 1990s

Via Gabina, later Prenestina

New fieldwork has been undertaken to the east of Gabii along the lines of the ancient city wall where a sanctuary has been excavated by Marco Fabbri close to one of the city's gates. Other work at the site has been carried out by Stefano Musco, the local inspector of the Soprintendenza Speciale per i Beni Archeologici di Roma (SSBAR). These excavators, led by Marco Fabbri, reported the discovery of an Archaic building that they identified as a 'regia' in March 2010.[34]

Gabii Project

In early 2007 the multi-institution Gabii Project,[35] led by Nicola Terrenato of the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, was launched. It began its investigations by conducting a large-scale geophysical survey of the former urban center of Gabii. This survey had two prongs: a magnetometry survey and a core-sampling survey including both manual and machine collected cores. The survey data revealed a regularized pattern of streets latent in the subsurface layers, together with archaeological deposits.[36] The Gabii Project commenced large-scale excavations in two areas of the site in June 2009.[37] In late March 2010 the Gabii Project reported [1] the discovery, in July 2009, of a half-ton lead encased inhumation burial that has tentatively been dated to the Roman Imperial period, likely the second or third centuries A.D.[38] Evidence for early elite burials, in this case those of infants, also emerged in 2009, suggesting the development of social hierarchy in the eighth through sixth centuries BC.[39] The discovery of an important but fragmentary Republican Latin inscription also came in 2009 and was published in 2011.[40][41] The excavations of the Gabii Project continued in 2010 and 2011,[37] during which time substantial portions of several ancient city blocks were brought to light. Not only is evidence for multi-period infrastructure clearly present, but the remains of urban architecture of the later first millennium BC have also become apparent. The award of a major collaborative research grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities supports the next phase of excavations from 2012 to 2015.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Gabii". Brill's New Pauly: Encyclopaedia of the Ancient World: Antiquity. Vol. 5, EQU–HAS. Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers. 2004. pp. 630–631. ISBN 978-9004122680.
  2. ^ a b c Bietti Sestieri, Anna Maria (1992). The Iron Age Community of Osteria Dell'Osa. Cambridge: Cambridge UP. pp. 50–77.
  3. ^ Gell & Bunbury (1846), p. 266.
  4. ^ Holloway (1996), p. 103.
  5. ^ Gell & Bunbury (1846), p. 264.
  6. ^ Blewitt, Octavian (1850). "Excursions from Rome: Gabii". A hand-book for travellers in central Italy; including the Papal states, Rome, and the cities of Etruria. London: J. Murray. pp. 583–585.
  7. ^ Evans, Harry B. (2002). Aqueduct Hunting in the Seventeenth Century: Raffaele Fabretti's De aquis et aquaeductibus veteris Romae. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press. pp. 96–100. ISBN 0-472-11248-1.
  8. ^ MacVeagh, Fanny Davenport Rogers; Ruzicka, Rudolph (Illustrator) (1915). Fountains of papal Rome. New York: C. Scribner's Sons. pp. 145–152.
  9. ^ Smith (1996), p. 61.
  10. ^ Holloway (1996) pp. 103-104.
  11. ^ a b Cornell (1995), pp. 51-53.
  12. ^ Publius Vergilius Maro. "Book VI, line 774". The Aeneid. A second Silvius after these appears; Silvius Aeneas, ... Who, late restor'd, in Alba shall be crown'd. ... they, who crown'd with oaken wreaths appear, Shall Gabian walls and strong Fidena rear; Nomentum, Bola, with Pometia, found; And raise Collatian tow'rs on rocky ground
  13. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus. "Book I.53". Roman Antiquities. There was a city of the Latins, which had been founded by the Albans, distant one hundred stades from Rome and standing upon the road that leads to Praeneste. The name of this city was Gabii
  14. ^ Brea, LB (1957). Sicily Before the Greeks. Thames and Hudson. pp. 147–149.
  15. ^ Pais, Ettore (1908). "XX Siceliot Elements in the Earliest History of Rome". Ancient Italy: Historical and Geographical Investigations in Central Italy, Magna Graecia, Sicily, and Sardinia. Translated by C. Densmore Curtis. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 233–302.
  16. ^ Solinus, Gaius Julius. "II.10". de Mirabilibus Mundi.
  17. ^ Plutarch. "VI". Life of Romulus.
  18. ^ Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.52
  19. ^ Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.53
  20. ^ a b Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.54
  21. ^ George Crabb (1833). Universal Historical Dictionary: Or Explanation of the Names of Persons and Places in the Departments of Biblical, Political and Eccles. History, Mythology, Heraldry, Biography, Bibliography, Geography, and Numismatics. Baldwin and Cradock. p. 100.
  22. ^ Ruggiero Bonghi (1888). Storia del Roma: I re e la repubblica sino all'anno 283 di Roma. 1888. Fratelli Treves. p. 217.
  23. ^ Dion. Hal. Ant. Rom. 4,58.
  24. ^ LacusCurtius. Ed. Bill Thayer. 05/11/2007 <http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/home.html>.
  25. ^ Livy, Ab urbe condita, 1.60
  26. ^ a b c d Hornblower, Simon; Spawforth, Antony (1996). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. {{cite encyclopedia}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  27. ^ Cicero, Marcus Tullius. "IX [23]". Pro Plancio. Tusculum to Lavicum, or Gabii, or Bovillae ... municipal towns in which you can now hardly find a single citizen to bear a part in the Latin holidays
  28. ^ a b c Princeton encyclopedia (1976).
  29. ^ Ashby 1911, pp. 379–380.
  30. ^ a b c d Ashby 1911, p. 380.
  31. ^ Livy 5,46.
  32. ^ Macrobius Saturnalia 3,9,13.
  33. ^ Lesk Blomerus, Alexandra L (1999). "The Anatomical Votive Terracotta Phenomenon: Healing Sanctuaries in the Etrusco-Latial-Campanian Region During the Fourth through First Centuries B.C" (PDF). erechtheion.org. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 October 2007. Retrieved 28 July 2009.
  34. ^ "Nuove scoperte all' interno dell'antica città latina di Gabii". beniculturali.it. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
  35. ^ "The Gabii Project". sites.lsa.umich.edu. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
  36. ^ Becker, Mogetta, and Terrenato 2009, 629-42
  37. ^ a b "FASTI - All Records". fastionline.org. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
  38. ^ "Lead "Burrito" Sarcophagus Found Near Rome". news.nationalgeographic.com. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
  39. ^ Becker and Nowlin 2011
  40. ^ "ZPE". ifa.phil-fak.uni-koeln.de. Retrieved 2 August 2016.
  41. ^ Fortson and Potter 2011

Sources

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainAshby, Thomas (1911). "Gabii". In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 379–380.
  • Cornell, Timothy J (1995). "The Origin of Rome: Archaeology in Rome and Old Latium: the Nature of the Evidence". The Beginnings of Rome: Italy and Rome from the Bronze Age to the Punic Wars (c. 1000-264 BC). The Routledge History of the Ancient World. Routledge. pp. 48–80. ISBN 978-0-415-01596-7.
  • Gell, William; Bunbury, Edward Herbert (1846). "Gabii". The topography of Rome and its Vicinity (New, Revised and Enlarged ed.). London: Henry G. Bohn. pp. 260–269.
  • Holloway, R. Ross (1996). "8: Osteria del'Osa". The archaeology of early Rome and Latium. Routledge. pp. 103–113. ISBN 978-0-415-14360-8.
  • Richardson, L., Jr (2009) [1976]. "GABII (Castiglione) Italy". In Stillwell, Richard (ed.). Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites. Princeton, Medford: Princeton University Press, Tufts University.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Smith, Christopher John (1996). "Latial Period II: Osteria dell'Osa". Early Rome and Latium: economy and society c. 1000 to 500 BC. Oxford, New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 57–71.
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  • Nicola Terrenato, A. Gallone, Jeffrey A. Becker, and S. Kay. 2010. "Urbanistica Ortogonale a Gabii: Risultati delle nuove prospezioni geofisiche e prospettive per il futuro." In Lazio e Sabina VI: Atti del Convegno. Sesto Incontro di Studi sul Lazio e la Sabina. Roma 4-6 marzo 2009'', edited by G. Ghini, 237-48. Rome: Edizioni Quasar.
  • Jeffrey A. Becker and J. Nowlin. 2011. "Orientalizing Infant Burials from Gabii, Italy." BABESCH 86:27-39.
  • Benjamin Fortson and avid Potter. 2011. "A Fragmentary Early Republican Public Inscription from Gabii." Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 178:255-60.
  • Sophie Hellas. 2014. "Gabii/Latium. Die Befestigungen von archaischer bis in mittelrepublikanische Zeit." Kölner und Bonner Archaeologica 3/2013:145-166.
  • M. Mogetta and J. A. Becker, 2014. "Archaeological Research at Gabii, Italy: The Gabii Project Excavations 2009-2011." American Journal of Archaeology 118(1): 171-88.
  • M. Mogetta, 2014. "From Latin Planned Urbanism to Roman Colonial Layouts: the Town-planning of Gabii and its Cultural Implications." In E. Robinson (ed.), Papers on Italian Urbanism in the First Millennium B.C. (Journal of Roman Archaeology, Suppl. 97): 145-74. Portsmouth, R.I.: Journal of Roman Archaeology.