Abstract
[Machine translation] The literary and epigraphic texts examined in this essay (in particular Cassio Dione, 60,11,3-5; Plinio, epist. 6,31,15-17; CIL, IX, 5894 [Ancona] = ILS 298 [EDR 094000]: Plin. paneg. 29.2; Anth. 387 R. = 382 S.B.) show how the imperial policy of building maritime ports and infrastructures has ideological and propaganda connotations of great interest, since this type of public works transmits the image of the prince who dominates the natural elements — the sea, the land and the coastline — and places them at the service of humanity.
| Translated title of the contribution | [Machine translation] Ports and emperors in Rome: survey profiles |
|---|---|
| Original language | Italian |
| Title of host publication | Epistulae a familiaribus |
| Publisher | Edizioni dell'Orso |
| Pages | 289-298 |
| Number of pages | 10 |
| Publication status | Published - 2022 |
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