Giacomo Savani’s research while affiliated with University of Leeds and other places

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Publications (3)


A misleading source: the fortuna of a sixteenth-century engraving and its impact on the history of Roman baths studies
  • Article

July 2019

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5 Reads

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1 Citation

Classical Receptions Journal

Giacomo Savani

In this article, I follow the mixed fortunes of a woodcut depicting a cutaway view of a set of ancient baths, so far neglected by modern scholarship. First published in a mid-sixteenth-century treatise on balneology and based on a misinterpretation of Vitruvius (5.10.1), it reappeared as a copy of a Roman wall-painting in several eighteenth-century antiquarian works. The remarkable resonance enjoyed by this image in specialist and popular publications until the early twentieth century makes it one of the most influential and controversial sources in the history of Roman baths studies. In exploring the reasons behind the enduring, uncritical acceptance of this depiction, I raise broader questions concerning the nature and extent of intellectual networks in eighteenth-century Europe.


A Mosaic Menagerie: Creatures of Land, Sea and Sky in Romano-British Mosaics. By P. Witts. BAR British series 625. British Archaeological Reports Ltd, Oxford, 2016. Pp. xix + 266, illus. Price: £53.00.isbn 9781407315416.

March 2018

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24 Reads

Britannia

A Mosaic Menagerie: Creatures of Land, Sea and Sky in Romano-British Mosaics. By P. Witts. BAR British series 625. British Archaeological Reports Ltd, Oxford, 2016. Pp. xix + 266, illus. Price: £53.00. isbn 9781407315416. - Giacomo Savani


An Elusive Legacy: The Rediscovery of Roman Baths in Eighteenth-Century Britain

October 2017

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59 Reads

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2 Citations

Britannia

In this paper, I investigate how eighteenth-century antiquarians engaged with the remains of Roman bath buildings in Britain and discuss their multifaceted attitude towards the ancient practice of bathing, with a focus on the city of Bath. I also examine the interests and priorities of Georgian scholars in studying Roman baths and their structure, highlighting their sometimes uncritical use of classical sources and tracking the origins of their misconceptions regarding the components and function of these facilities. Finally, I briefly address the elusive socio-cultural legacy of Roman baths and bathing in eighteenth-century Britain, stressing influences and differences in practice and architecture.