
Matteo Cadario
Educations
- Ph.D. in Archaeology (Greek and Roman Archaeology), Università degli Studi, Perugia (discussed 03/02/2003).
- Specialization Diploma in Classical Archaeology, Università degli Studi, Milano (Marks: 70/70 cum laude, 14/03/2000).
- First degree in Classics, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano (Marks: 110/110 cum laude, 30/03/1994),
Full Professor of Classical Archaeology at the Università degli Studi di Udine
- Ph.D. in Archaeology (Greek and Roman Archaeology), Università degli Studi, Perugia (discussed 03/02/2003).
- Specialization Diploma in Classical Archaeology, Università degli Studi, Milano (Marks: 70/70 cum laude, 14/03/2000).
- First degree in Classics, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Milano (Marks: 110/110 cum laude, 30/03/1994),
Full Professor of Classical Archaeology at the Università degli Studi di Udine
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Books by Matteo Cadario
In this book as author: La Lombardia romana, pp. 15-29; I luoghi dello spettacolo e del benessere, pp. 69-99; La scultura e il modello romano, pp. 169-211; Il collezionismo di statue antiche, pp. 297-315. The first paper is on the history of Lombardia in Roman times. The book is about Lombardia in Roman times with papers on the temples, the public buildings, theaters, amphitheaters and baths, the roman sculpture, the roman painting, the christian art, the luxury and the collecting of Antiquities in modern times.""
In this book as author: Le sculture della Collezione Velo provenienti dalle Terme di Caracalla, pp. 47-97; Le sculture della Collezione Velo cedute come compenso dai Musei Vaticani, pp. 101-197.
The book is about the collection of Girolamio Egidio di Velo, the man who did one of the most important excavations in the Caracalla's Baths in the 19th century, I have studied the statues unearthed from the Baths and the statues that the Musei Vaticani gave to him.
SOMMARIO: Introduzione – Parte I. Statue loricate: un genere plurale: L’introduzione della corazza ellenistica - L’età ellenistica: l’uniformità - Augusto e Mars Ultor: la varietà - L’uso dell’immagine loricata tra età augustea e giulio-claudia – Parte II. Le statue loricate di tipo ellenistico dalla metà del I sec. a.C. all’età antonina: Loricati con corazza anatomica tra la seconda metà del I sec. a.C. e la prima metà del I sec. d.C. - Loricati con corsetto cilindrico tra la seconda metà del I sec. a.C. e la fine del I sec. d.C. - Loricati con corazza anatomica nella seconda metà del I sec. d.C.: le pteryges frangiate ‘barocche’ - Il revival del loricato ellenistico nel II sec. d.C. - La varietà nelle statue loricate.
Papers by Matteo Cadario
Capital on archaeological research and sets a deadline in 1885,
when the major excavations in the Forum ended and the real estate crash began, temporarily placating the appetites of speculators. To better contextualize the period, however, it seems useful to also look at papal archaeology in the years following 1849.
baths were in fact closely linked to the world of athletic competition and usually hosted athletic images, even in Rome. Inside the baths, the iconography of the athletic games could in fact fulfil the dual function of
commemorating or anticipating the agones and the consequent imperial involvement in their organization. During the Tetrarchic Age, the imperial sponsorship of the games had more space to show the Roman people
that the emperor shared their pleasures. When the model of the great imperial baths was exported from Rome to the new Imperial seats, as Aquileia, the new buildings also had to be ready to host or celebrate games, and had to have their decorative programs adapted to this task.