«Liberare i segni di Roma». Archaeology and historic centre, the example of Brescia (1823-1941) The author reconstructs the formation of the urban archaeological site of the city of Brescia (the most homogeneous and important in North of Italy) and tries to explain the reasons for the partial failure of that ambitious program. Since the early years of 19th century to the first half of 20th century, some ambitious programs were partially carried out in this area. Some reconstruction works were proposed – which required substantial economic and technical resources - with the purpose of enhancing the last fragments of those celebrated ancient buildings. The story starts in the early years of the nineteenth century with the excavations and the following partial reconstruction of the Tempio Capitolino, and ends in the 1950s with a town-planning scheme (1957) which, with regard to the historic city centre, inspired by the original proposal, developed between the two world wars (in particular, on the occasion of celebrations for the Augustus Bimillenary, 1936-37). It unveiled (not without some related demolition of several houses) an archeological area that was even larger than the universally condemned urban demolition of the Piazza Vittoria area, by Marcello Piacentini (1932).

"liberare i segni di Roma". Archeologia e centro storico ne l caso di Brescia (1893-1941)

TRECCANI, Gian Paolo
2009-01-01

Abstract

«Liberare i segni di Roma». Archaeology and historic centre, the example of Brescia (1823-1941) The author reconstructs the formation of the urban archaeological site of the city of Brescia (the most homogeneous and important in North of Italy) and tries to explain the reasons for the partial failure of that ambitious program. Since the early years of 19th century to the first half of 20th century, some ambitious programs were partially carried out in this area. Some reconstruction works were proposed – which required substantial economic and technical resources - with the purpose of enhancing the last fragments of those celebrated ancient buildings. The story starts in the early years of the nineteenth century with the excavations and the following partial reconstruction of the Tempio Capitolino, and ends in the 1950s with a town-planning scheme (1957) which, with regard to the historic city centre, inspired by the original proposal, developed between the two world wars (in particular, on the occasion of celebrations for the Augustus Bimillenary, 1936-37). It unveiled (not without some related demolition of several houses) an archeological area that was even larger than the universally condemned urban demolition of the Piazza Vittoria area, by Marcello Piacentini (1932).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11379/30665
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