1000 resultados para Torregrossa (Catalunya) -- Arqueologia
Resumo:
El territorio de Valentia está siendo analizado en el contexto de un nuevo proyecto de investigación, Valentia Landscape Project, que busca modelizar la evolución de paisaje cultural valenciano desde la protohistoria a época moderna. Una parte importante de este proyecto se centra en el período romano, puesto que uno de los principales objetivos es la revisión, a través de un nuevo análisis arqueomorfológico, de las hipótesis propuestas hasta la fecha para la red viaria y los parcelarios antiguos. Se presentan los primeros resultados.
Resumo:
Descripció de diferents materials ceràmics d'època romana trobats a Llafranc
Resumo:
El artículo presenta el estudio de un área arquitectónicamente compleja, integrada dentro del denominado Foro Provincial de Tarraco . El análisis de la estratigrafía arquitectónica y de los procesos de construcción, ha representado un instrumento fundamental para la interpretación de un área caracterizada por una compleja evolución urbanística, poniendo en evidencia el desarrollo del proyecto constructivo de una obra de gran envergadura como la del Foro Provincial. Desafortunadamente, la ausencia de datos procedentes de las excavaciones arqueológicas, ha limitado la definición de una cronología absoluta exacta. El proceso de monumentalización de la cima de la colina tarraconense iniciado, según las fuentes históricas y numismáticas, en época julio-claudia, culminó en época Flavia con la finalización del complejo monumental distribuido en tres terrazas. El sector que se examina, situado junto al circo, se encuadra dentro de un sistema de substructiones que a menudo caracterizan los conjuntos forense y sacro organizados en terrazas.
Resumo:
This paper presents a brief description of the archaeological research in the territory and in the city of Tarraco, the ancient capital of provincia Hispania Tarraconensis and one of the main centres for the spread of Hispanic Christianity. Althoug Tarraco was the last capital under imperial control and the firs Hispanic metropolitan see, the city had only a secondary role by comparison with other Hispanic cities during late antiquity. This evolution shaped the development of Tarraco during the 7th century, but archaeologists identify an important architectural vitality still in the 6th century at the same time as other episcopal cities were evolving. During this period, the final Christianization of the symbolic spaces of ancient paganism took place, establishing the ideological basis of medieval urbanism that is still preserved today. The paper also interprets the sites through raising key questions as well as describing rural settlements, where archaeological knowledge is not so far advanced, due in part to the difficult nature of archaeological research, and in part to the need to study new construcitve models, as well as to the systematic collection of the relevant material culture.
Resumo:
The city of Tarragona houses an important architectural heritage mainly from its past as ‘Tarraco’, capital of the Roman province of Hispania Citerior, but also from its medieval and late 19th century history. The archaeological ensemble of Tarraco was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2000, but although many efforts have been devoted by archaeologists and historians to unveil and understand the history and aspect of the Roman city, many aspects remain unknown. This is largely caused by the absence of a coherent body of historiographical material, which is todays cattered across several institutions and, specially, the lack of precise and useful graphical representations of the remains and of the existing city that allows in-depth analysis and interpretations of future findings. In recent years, researchers from the Catalan Institute of Classical Archaeology (ICAC) and the Architecture School of the URV (ETSA) have teamed up to produce comprehensive, detailed graphic materials, including a new set of plans and sections of the old city, of the grandiose areas of representation of the Provincial capital, and of the hidden structures beneath the city’s surface. These have been executed with the latest technologies (fotogrammetry, laser scanning) but also with traditional methods (measurement, topography), on t op of a mixture of existing materials (hand-drafted cartography from municipal master plans) and of historical and archaeological documentation.
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La catedral de Tarragona es el edificio más importante de la Edad Media en la ciudad. Se asienta en una zona arqueológica de primera magnitud como es la parte alta de Tarragona, en medio de la gran plaza del recinto de culto imperial de Tarraco, lugar en el cual después se erigió la sede visigoda de la ciudad. La ejecución del Plan Director de la Catedral de Tarragona, proyecto de los arquitectos Joan Figuerola y Joan Gavaldà, conlleva la realización de una serie de importantes actuaciones arqueológicas tanto en el subsuelo como en arqueología vertical. Con esta comunicación presentamos un primer avance de los trabajos realizados entre los años 2000 y 2002, con la siguiente evolución: época flavia (construcción del recinto sagrado imperial, con restos conservados de nueve metros de alto); antigüedad tardía (desmontaje del recinto de culto y construcción de nuevas estancias posiblemente relacionables con la ocupación habitada de la zona -¿episcopio?-); edad media (construcción de la canóniga cardenalicia y templo sobr el antiguo emplazamiento cultural romano. Estructura monástica adaptada a los precedentes romanos. Apertura de capillas en el claustro); época moderna y contemporánea (reformas y transformaciones de la catedral).
Resumo:
An integrated geophysical survey was conducted in September 2007 at the Cathedral of Tarragona (Catalonia, NE Spain), to search for archaeological remains of the Roman temple dedicated to the Emperor Augustus. Many hypotheses about its location have been put forward, the most recent ones suggesting it could be inside the present cathedral. Tarragona’s Cathedral, one of the most famous churches in Spain (12th century), was built during the evolution from the Romanesque to Gothic styles. As its area is rather wide, direct digging to detect hidden structures would be expensive and also interfere with religious services. Consequently, the use of detailed non-invasive analyses was preferred. A project including Electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) and Ground probing radar (GPR) was planned for a year and conducted during a week of intensive field survey. Both ERT and GPR provided detailed information about subsoil structures. Different ERT techniques and arrays were used, ranging from standard Wenner-Schlumberger 2D sections to full 3D electrical imaging using the MYG array. Electrical resistivity data were recorded extensively, making available many thousands of apparent resistivity points to obtain a complete 3D image after full inversion. The geophysical results were clear enough to persuade the archaeologists to excavate the area. The excavation confirmed the geophysical interpretation. In conclusion, the significant buried structures revealed by geophysical methods under the cathedral were confirmed by recent archaeological digging as the basement of the impressive Roman Temple that headed the Provincial Forum of Tarraco, seat of the Concilium of Hispania Citerior Province.