Undergraduate Programme and Module Handbook 2024-2025
Module CLAS2631: Roman Buildings & their Decoration
Department: Classics and Ancient History
CLAS2631: Roman Buildings & their Decoration
Type | Open | Level | 2 | Credits | 20 | Availability | Available in 2024/2025 | Module Cap | Location | Durham |
---|
Prerequisites
- CLAS1301 or CLAS1781 or ARCH1131 or ARCH2091
Corequisites
- None
Excluded Combination of Modules
- None
Aims
- To equip students with a broad overview of the basic developments in Roman art during the period 500 B.C. -and A.D. 500.
- To give students some understanding of a selection of the most important or best-known objects and monuments of Roman culture.
- To help students to develop skills in different ways of looking at visual material (including painting, sculpture and buildings) and/or to consolidate skills in using the language of visual criticism.
- To enable students to evaluate architecture in a more detailed and contextual way and to make independent stylistic, aesthetic and historical judgments in order to be able to assess visual evidence for the ancient world.
- To enhance students' study of literary and historical modules relating to the Roman world by helping them to acquire a fuller understanding of how buildings and their decoration are related to ancient culture and society and of how they have been used, studied and appreciated up to the present day.
- To develop knowledge and practise evaluative skills through essays, seminar presentations and project-based learning and to test these skills by essay and written examination.
Content
- The module studies the forms and meanings of Roman buildings in terms of both their structure and decoration. It is intended to be accessible to all second-year students with a broad historical knowledge of the Roman world, and in particular to students having completed the first-year module CLAS1781.
- The module adopts both a chronological and a thematic approach, considering both private and public buildings from across the period between the Etruscan era and the fourth century A.D. and focusing on a range of approaches to visual material already introduced in the first-year module CLAS1781.
- The module will involve close visual analysis of a selection of buildings from Italy and the Roman world.
- Specific subjects covered may include any of the following: 1. General consideration of the nature of architecture and the role and status of the architect, of traditional and innovative scholarly approaches to Roman buildings, and of methodological aims and problems. 2. The walls and gates of Roman cities. 3. The impact of Etruscan and Greek ideas on the art and architecture of Roman Italy 4. The Roman atrium house and its decoration with portraiture and painting 5. The sanctuaries of Roman Italy. 6. Temples of imperial Rome and the provinces. 7. Basilicas and their decoration. 8. Displays of sculpture in public and private architecture. 9. Historical reliefs on arches and other monuments. 10. Tomb buildings and their contents, including sarcophagi 11. Theatre buildings and associated statuary. 12. Bath buildings, libraries and fountain structures.
- A range of different kinds of visual material will be studied, particularly architecture, but also sculpture, painting and mosaic, as well as selected extracts of literary sources in translation, in particular from the treatise On Architecture by the Roman architect Vitruvius.
Learning Outcomes
Subject-specific Knowledge:
- A knowledge of architecture and associated painting, sculpture, and mosaic between 500 B.C. and A.D. 400, based on an acquaintance with individual examples and some literary evidence.
- Awareness of the principal framework of scholarly debate relating to Roman buildings and their decoration, including the classification and evaluation of such material, the status of architects and artists, and the reception of art and architecture in its own time and at later periods by users and viewers.
Subject-specific Skills:
- An ability to handle a range of methodologies appropriate for a higher-level understanding of a diverse range of visual artifacts and structures.
- An ability to look at buildings, painting, and sculpture and to explore their meaning, and an ability to use a critical vocabulary appropriate for the evaluation of visual material and to make stylistic and aesthetic judgments.
- An ability to raise and to start to answer valid questions in response to critical archaeological and art-historical literature.
- An ability to present ideas and arguments in written and oral form according to academic conventions and to engage in discussion and debate on individual visual examples with the lecturer and with peers.
- An ability to assemble material of different kinds in order to undertake a sophisticated analysis of an individual building and to use appropriate methodologies to reconstruct its original appearance.
Key Skills:
- The skills needed to analyse, evaluate, and synthesise a wide range of evidence, but especially visual material, and to select and apply methodologies appropriate to the material discussed.
- The capacity to sustain a clear, well structured, and well-defended argument in written or oral form.
- The ability to work with peers in creating a constructive engagement with material.
- The ability to organize material for a small-scale research project.
- The ability to respond constructively and imaginatively to visual signs and especially to the built environment.
- The ability and self-discipline to work autonomously, and the capacity for organization required to meet deadlines and to negotiate competing claims on finite resources.
- Facility with key IT resources, in particular word-processors, online databases, and architectural design software, and to make profitable and selective use of relevant internet resources.
Modes of Teaching, Learning and Assessment and how these contribute to the learning outcomes of the module
- Lectures are appropriate and the most effective means of imparting information about architectural types and explaining methods of interpretation, both in the presentation of ancient evidence and in the synthesis of modern scholarship. However, they are conducted with both formal and informal elements, and open discussion of spaces and ideas is encouraged. The material is therefore developed through a combination of didactic learning and group work activities in which the students examine themes and issues as they appear in particular buildings. This enables direct engagement with, and provides opportunities for research in and informed collective discussion of, the varieties of visual material addressed in the module.
- Seminars on broad issues of decorating buildings, supported by exploration of individual examples, enable direct engagement with, and provide opportunities for research into, and informed collective discussion of, the varieties of visual material addressed in the module and the wider theoretical themes raised.
- Reading classes facilitate critical understanding and discussion of Vitruvius' work On Architecture in relation to surviving Roman buildings.
- Project workshops contribute to the critical handling of evidence and facility of discussion and develop skills of essay writing and project management, facilitating the organisation of data for a digital reconstruction and a small-scale research project and providing opportunities for independent learning and study in a controlled environment.
- The research project demonstrates the student's ability to evaluate and organize a range of archaeological and written material in relation to a specific small-scale research project.
- The digital reconstruction tests skills of architectural understanding and visualisation in relation to the assembling of archaeological data in a digital form.
Teaching Methods and Learning Hours
Activity | Number | Frequency | Duration | Total/Hours | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lectures | 18 | 2 per week | 1 hour | 18 | ■ |
Seminars | 5 | 5 in Michaelmas Term | 1 hour | 5 | ■ |
Reading classes | 2 | 2 in Michaelmas Term | 1 hour | 2 | ■ |
Project workshops | 2 | 2 in Michaelmas Term | 1 hour | 2 | ■ |
Field Trip | 1 | 1 in Michaelmas Term | 2 hours | 2 | ■ |
Preparation for formative tasks | 20 | ||||
Preparation for summatives | 100 | ||||
General preparation and background reading | 51 | ||||
Total | 200 |
Summative Assessment
Component: Portfolio 1: Digital Reconstruction | Component Weighting: 30% | ||
---|---|---|---|
Element | Length / duration | Element Weighting | Resit Opportunity |
Digital reconstruction of a building with written critical evaluation | 1000 words | 100% | A written evaluation of a digital reconstruction |
Component: Portfolio 2: Research Project | Component Weighting: 70% | ||
Element | Length / duration | Element Weighting | Resit Opportunity |
Research project | 4000 words | 100% | An exercise on visual material and skills |
Formative Assessment:
One formative exercise
■ Attendance at all activities marked with this symbol will be monitored. Students who fail to attend these activities, or to complete the summative or formative assessment specified above, will be subject to the procedures defined in the University's General Regulation V, and may be required to leave the University