Researching Roman Mortars from the Danube Region - Archaeological Perspective of the MoDeCo2000 Project
Апстракт
Lime mortar is a building material that has been used since the 8th millennium BC. For thousands of years, people used it to make floors or plaster walls, while it was used as structural mortar from the period of the Roman Republic, after the beginning of the 2nd century BC (Artioli, Secco and Addis 2019: 172-173). The addition of pozzolanic materials enabled the development of Roman cement opus cementicium) and the erection of monumental and durable buildings (Adam 2005: 116-156). The first constructions built with lime mortar on the territory of modern-day Serbia appear in the 1st century AD, after the Roman conquest of these areas and their inclusion into the Roman Empire. Historical sources and fresco depictions testify to the manner of preparation and use of lime mortar during Antiquity. However, these sources mainly refer to the territories of modern-day Italy. The only sources for studying the technology of making lime mortar and the use of raw materials in the territory of Moes...ia Superior and Pannonia Inferior are the physical remains of the buildings built using this material, as well as the remains of the mortar-making process (e.g., lime slacking pits).
Кључне речи:
Roman mortars / Danube region / MoDeCo2000Извор:
1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes -, Viminacium, Serbia, June 27th – July 1st 2022. Book of abstracts, 2022, 40-43Издавач:
- Belgrade : Institute of Archaeology
Финансирање / пројекти:
- MoDeCo2000 - Mortar Design for Conservation - Danube Roman Frontier 2000 Years After (RS-ScienceFundRS-Promis-6067004)
Институција/група
Археолошки институт / Institute of ArchaeologyTY - CONF AU - Jovičić, Mladen PY - 2022 UR - http://rai.ai.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1298 AB - Lime mortar is a building material that has been used since the 8th millennium BC. For thousands of years, people used it to make floors or plaster walls, while it was used as structural mortar from the period of the Roman Republic, after the beginning of the 2nd century BC (Artioli, Secco and Addis 2019: 172-173). The addition of pozzolanic materials enabled the development of Roman cement opus cementicium) and the erection of monumental and durable buildings (Adam 2005: 116-156). The first constructions built with lime mortar on the territory of modern-day Serbia appear in the 1st century AD, after the Roman conquest of these areas and their inclusion into the Roman Empire. Historical sources and fresco depictions testify to the manner of preparation and use of lime mortar during Antiquity. However, these sources mainly refer to the territories of modern-day Italy. The only sources for studying the technology of making lime mortar and the use of raw materials in the territory of Moesia Superior and Pannonia Inferior are the physical remains of the buildings built using this material, as well as the remains of the mortar-making process (e.g., lime slacking pits). PB - Belgrade : Institute of Archaeology C3 - 1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes -, Viminacium, Serbia, June 27th – July 1st 2022. Book of abstracts T1 - Researching Roman Mortars from the Danube Region - Archaeological Perspective of the MoDeCo2000 Project EP - 43 SP - 40 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1298 ER -
@conference{ author = "Jovičić, Mladen", year = "2022", abstract = "Lime mortar is a building material that has been used since the 8th millennium BC. For thousands of years, people used it to make floors or plaster walls, while it was used as structural mortar from the period of the Roman Republic, after the beginning of the 2nd century BC (Artioli, Secco and Addis 2019: 172-173). The addition of pozzolanic materials enabled the development of Roman cement opus cementicium) and the erection of monumental and durable buildings (Adam 2005: 116-156). The first constructions built with lime mortar on the territory of modern-day Serbia appear in the 1st century AD, after the Roman conquest of these areas and their inclusion into the Roman Empire. Historical sources and fresco depictions testify to the manner of preparation and use of lime mortar during Antiquity. However, these sources mainly refer to the territories of modern-day Italy. The only sources for studying the technology of making lime mortar and the use of raw materials in the territory of Moesia Superior and Pannonia Inferior are the physical remains of the buildings built using this material, as well as the remains of the mortar-making process (e.g., lime slacking pits).", publisher = "Belgrade : Institute of Archaeology", journal = "1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes -, Viminacium, Serbia, June 27th – July 1st 2022. Book of abstracts", title = "Researching Roman Mortars from the Danube Region - Archaeological Perspective of the MoDeCo2000 Project", pages = "43-40", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1298" }
Jovičić, M.. (2022). Researching Roman Mortars from the Danube Region - Archaeological Perspective of the MoDeCo2000 Project. in 1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes -, Viminacium, Serbia, June 27th – July 1st 2022. Book of abstracts Belgrade : Institute of Archaeology., 40-43. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1298
Jovičić M. Researching Roman Mortars from the Danube Region - Archaeological Perspective of the MoDeCo2000 Project. in 1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes -, Viminacium, Serbia, June 27th – July 1st 2022. Book of abstracts. 2022;:40-43. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1298 .
Jovičić, Mladen, "Researching Roman Mortars from the Danube Region - Archaeological Perspective of the MoDeCo2000 Project" in 1st International Conference with Workshop - Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes -, Viminacium, Serbia, June 27th – July 1st 2022. Book of abstracts (2022):40-43, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_rai_1298 .