Papers by Filmo Verhagen
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Paleo-aktueel 25, 41-47., Dec 2014
The article discusses the results of surface surveys conducted in March 2014 around the Roman set... more The article discusses the results of surface surveys conducted in March 2014 around the Roman settlements of Forum Appii and Ad Medias (Lazio, Central Italy) within the framework
of the Minor Centres Project. This project, constituting the most recent phase of GIA’s longrunning Pontine Region Project, aims to study the function and chronology of several Roman road stations in the area and to study the connection between these stations and their hinterland. During the campaign of March 2014, the focus was on the hinterland of Forum Appii and
Ad Medias, both Roman road stations along the via Appia in the lower part of the Pontine Plain. Seven new sites were discovered, which adds more evidence to the emerging picture of a densely settled landscape around both sites
throughout the Roman period.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Articles by Filmo Verhagen
TMA53, 2015
Latium Vetus witnessed a rapid development of city-states in the region from the sixth until the ... more Latium Vetus witnessed a rapid development of city-states in the region from the sixth until the beginning of the fifth century BC. With an average distance of 10-15 km in between these city-states, intensive interaction is assumed. In this paper such interaction is demonstrated by using the theory of Peer Polity Interaction (or PPI), introduced by Colin Renfrew in 1986. PPI assumes that neighbouring socio-politically independent polities – in this case city-states of equal complexity such as Ardea, Lanuvium, Velletri, Satricum and Lavinium – compete with each other through various networks of interaction and communication. This case study illustrates how contact between these cities resulted in a temple building competition amongst them.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Conference Presentations by Filmo Verhagen
PhD-project Daily life in the Roman Republican countryside, 2018
My doctoral research focuses on how daily life changed in the Pontine region due to the integrati... more My doctoral research focuses on how daily life changed in the Pontine region due to the integration of the area into the Roman Republic. Through the study of change and continuity in the production, distribution and consumption of cooking wares, it aims at offering new perspectives on the effect of socioeconomic processes on everyday life in the Roman countryside.
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Book Reviews by Filmo Verhagen
Opuscula Annual of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome, 2020
Bookmarks Related papers MentionsView impact
Uploads
Papers by Filmo Verhagen
of the Minor Centres Project. This project, constituting the most recent phase of GIA’s longrunning Pontine Region Project, aims to study the function and chronology of several Roman road stations in the area and to study the connection between these stations and their hinterland. During the campaign of March 2014, the focus was on the hinterland of Forum Appii and
Ad Medias, both Roman road stations along the via Appia in the lower part of the Pontine Plain. Seven new sites were discovered, which adds more evidence to the emerging picture of a densely settled landscape around both sites
throughout the Roman period.
Articles by Filmo Verhagen
Conference Presentations by Filmo Verhagen
Book Reviews by Filmo Verhagen
of the Minor Centres Project. This project, constituting the most recent phase of GIA’s longrunning Pontine Region Project, aims to study the function and chronology of several Roman road stations in the area and to study the connection between these stations and their hinterland. During the campaign of March 2014, the focus was on the hinterland of Forum Appii and
Ad Medias, both Roman road stations along the via Appia in the lower part of the Pontine Plain. Seven new sites were discovered, which adds more evidence to the emerging picture of a densely settled landscape around both sites
throughout the Roman period.