Home arrow Newsitems arrow FRAGMENTA 2
FRAGMENTA 2 PDF Print E-mail
fragmenta_2The second number of the new periodical of the KNIR is out. 'Fragmenta. Journal of the Royal Netherlands Institute in Rome' includes 13 articles that were presented during the congress 'Archaeology and National Identity in Italy and Europe 1800-1950', held in 2007 at the Institute. Editors of Fragmenta are Nathalie de Haan, Martijn Eickhoff and Marjan Schwegman. Fragmenta can be ordered online via the publisher's Brepols website. Find the table on contents below.

Fragmenta 2
Archaeology and National Identity in Italy and Europe 1800-1950

- Editors
Nathalie de Haan
Martijn Eickhoff
Marjan Schwegman


Table of Contents

Archaelogy and National Identity in Italy and Europe 1800-1950: an Introduction
Martijn Eickhoff, Nathalie de Haan and Marjan Schwegman

Pompeii, and the Last Days of the Italian Risorgimento. Giuseppe Garibaldi, Alexandre Dumas and Giuseppe Fiorelli in Naples
Marjan Schwegman

Where Caesar never trod. Classical Archaeology and Ideology in Nineteenth and Twentieth Century America
Stephen L. Dyson

The Urge to Exhibit. The Egyptian and Etruscan Museums in the Vatican at the Dawn of a Nationalist Era in Europe (1815-1840)
Mirjam Hoijtink

The Instituto di Corrispondenza Archeologica
Horst Blanck

The Crown Prince and his Ambassador: two Persons in the Service of Roman Archaeology
Jürgen Krüger

Archaeology Without Identity? Antiquity and French Archaeological Research Around the Mediterranean (1850-1945)
Philippe Foro and Sara Rey

Italian Prehistoric Archaeology in the International Context
Alessandro Guidi

Archaeology and National Identity in the Work of Rodolfo Lanciani
Domenico Palombi

The German Archaeological Institute (DAI) between Transnational Scholarship and Foreign Cultural Policy
Christian Jansen

The Study on the Lombards and the Ostrogoths at  the German Archaeological Institute of Rome, 1937-1943
Thomas Fröhlich

Giulio Emanuele Rizzo. Lo studio della grecità contro la romanescheria fascista
Rachele Dubbini

Umberto Zanotti Bianco and the Archaeology of Magna Graecia during the Fascist Era
Nathalie de Haan

Meaningful silence? Alexander W. Byvanck and the Archaeology of Fascist Rome
Martijn Eickhoff