Nicola Terrenato
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Nicola Terrenato (b. October 22, 1963 in Rome, Italy) is a contemporary scholar of ancient Italy.
A Classical archaeologist teaching at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Nicola Terrenato's expertise includes the Romanization of Italy and the archaeology of Etruria. He has excavated at Rome (Palatine Hill and Auditorium site), at Volterra and in the Cecina Valley, and in Basilicata. Terrenato is the director of the Cecina Valley Survey in Northern Tuscany.
[edit] Selected bibliography
- F. Cambi, N. Terrenato, Introduzione all'archeologia dei paesaggi, Roma, Nuova Italia Scientifica, 1994
- N. Terrenato, "Tam firmum municipium: the Romanization of Volaterrae and its cultural implication" Journal of Roman Studies 99 (1998) 94-114.
- N. Terrenato, “The Romanization of Italy: global acculturation or cultural bricolage?”, in C. Forcey, J. Hawthorne, R. Witcher, eds., TRAC 97, Oxford 1998, 20-27.
- M. Munzi, N. Terrenato, eds., Volterra. Il teatro e le terme, Florence, Insegna del Giglio, 2000
- E. Regoli, N. Terrenato, eds., Guida al Museo Archeologico di Rosignano Marittimo. Paesaggi e insediamenti in Val di Cecina, Siena, Nuova Immagine, 2000
- N. Terrenato, ed., Archeologia Teorica, Florence, Insegna del Giglio, 2000
- S. Keay, M. Millett, S. Poppy, J. Robinson, J. Taylor, N. Terrenato, “Falerii Novi: a New Survey of the Walled Area”, Papers of the British School at Rome 68 (2000) 1-93.
- S. Keay, N. Terrenato, eds., Italy and the West. Comparative issues in Romanization, Oxford, Oxbow, 2001
- N. Terrenato. "The Auditorium site and the origins of the Roman villa." Journal of Roman Archaeology 14 (2001) 5-32.
- N. Terrenato. "Ancestor Cults: the perception of ancient Rome in Italian culture." In R. Hingley, ed., Images of Rome, Portsmouth, Journal of Roman Archaeology, 2002, pp. 71-89.
- N. Terrenato, “The innocents and the skeptics. Classical Archaeology and Antiquity”, Antiquity 76 (2002) 1104-11.
- N. Terrenato, "“Start the revolution without me!” Recent debates in Italian. Classical archaeology." In Papers in Italian Archaeology VI: Communities and Settlements from the Neolithic to the Early Medieval Period, edited by P. Attema, A. Nijboer and A. Zifferero (2005).