Multimedia guides as a tool for disseminating Italic mosaics
Keywords:
archaeological heritage, Italica, mosaics, dissemination, multimedia guideAbstract
In a world where technology has infiltrated our jobs, studies, our daily activities… It is logical that it is also found in the heritage area. The mosaics of the Archaeological Ensemble of Itálica are a benchmark in the archaeological heritage of both our autonomous community (Andalucía) and Spain.
With this research we want to revalue this archaeological complex through a contextualization of its mosaics. We propose the development of a multimedia guide that, through texts, images, audios and videos, will manage to attract the visitor and create interest in this site while also providing a correct understanding of Itálica.
Downloads
References
AMORES, F y J. BELTRÁN (2012): “Prólogo”, en Itálica 1912-2012. Centenario de la Declaración como monumento Nacional, Sevilla, Fundación Itálica de Estudios Clásicos, pp. 39-51.
APIANO: “Historia de Roma sobre Iberia”, en V. M. Ostaríz (Trad), Zaragoza, CreatSpace Independent Publishing Platform, pp. 95-110.
BARCELO, P. (2001): “Roma y Cartago”, en Breve Historia de Grecia y Roma, Madrid, Alianza Editorial, pp. 229-237.
BLANCO, A. (1978): Corpus de mosaicos de España II. Mosaicos romanos de Itálica (I): Mosaicos conservados en colecciones públicas y privadas de la ciudad de Sevilla, Madrid, CSIC.
BLANCO, A. (1978): Mosaicos romanos de Itálica, Madrid, Instituto Español de Arqueología Rodrigo Caro.
BLÁZQUEZ, J.M.: (2005) “Mosaicos de la España tardo-antigua documentados sólo en dibujos”, Atti del I Convegno Internazionale di Studi ‘La Materia e isegni della storia ‘. Apparatti musivi antichi nell’area del Mediterraneo, Piazza Armerina 9-13 de abril de 2003, Cuaderni di Palazzo Montalbo (4), pp. 175-185.
CABALLOS, A. (1994): Itálica y los italicenses. Apoximación a su historia, Sevilla, Consejería de Cultura.
CABALLOS, A.; J. MARÍN y J.M. RODRÍGUEZ (1999): Itálica Arqueológica, Sevilla, Editorial de la Universidad de Sevilla.
CABALLOS, A. (2010): Itálica-Santiponce: Municipio y Colonia Aelia. Hitos de la Historia de Itálica. Sevilla, Universidad de Sevilla.
CABALLOS, A. (2014): De Roma a las provincias: las elites como instrumento de proyección de Roma, Sevilla, Universidad de Sevilla.
FERNÁNDEZ, F. (1998): “Las excavaciones de Itálica y D. Demetrio de los Ríos a través de sus escritos”, Revista de Arqueología, 2 (4), p. 50.
GARCÍA, F.J. (2012): “Cartago a las puertas: Turdetania en los albores de la Segunda Guerra Púnica”, en S. Remedios, F. Prados and J. Bermujo (eds.), Aníbal de Cartago, historia y mito, Madrid, Polifemo, pp. 379-428.
GARCÍA Y BELLIDO, A. (1960): Colonia Aelia Augusta Itálica, Madrid, CSIC.
HIDALGO, R. (2003): “En torno a la imagen urbana de Itálica”, Romula, 2 (3), pp.89-126.
MAÑAS, I. (2005): Dos mosaicos báquicos en casas de Itálica, Sevilla, MGRX.
MAÑAS, I. (2010): Pavimentos decorativos de Itálica (Santiponce, Sevilla): un estudio arqueológico, Oxford, BAR 2081.
MAÑAS, I. (2011): La Ciudad de Itálica. En mosaicos romanos de Itálica, Sevilla, CSIC.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
1. Authors retain copyright and grant the journal the right to be the first to publish the work and to do so under a "Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Spain" (CC-by-nc-sa) licence, unless otherwise indicated.
2. This licence allows others to share, copy, distribute and publicly communicate the work, as well as to make derivative works as long as the work is attributed to the author(s), is not used for commercial purposes and is shared under the same licence.
You can consult the informative version and the legal text of the licence here. This must be expressly stated in this way when necessary.
3. Authors may separately enter into additional agreements for the non-exclusive distribution of the version of the work published in the journal (e.g. placing it in an institutional repository or publishing it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this journal.
4. Authors are allowed and encouraged to disseminate their work electronically (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their own website) before and during the submission process, as it may lead to productive exchanges, as well as earlier and higher citation of published work (see The Effect of Open Access).