Virgilio Hipolito-Correia
Archaeologist educated at the Universities of Oporto and Coimbra.
Worked at the Regional Archaeological Service of the Southern Portugal and later in Conimbriga which Museum he he directed between 1999 and 2017.
Researcher at the Center for Classical and Humanistic Studies (University of Coimbra).
Author of more than a hundred published papers on subjects from the Bronze Age to the management of the Archaeological Heritage, with special emphasis on the pre-Latin writing of SW Iberia, archaic jewelry and Roman archeology, namely Conimbriga and its domestic architecture.
Worked at the Regional Archaeological Service of the Southern Portugal and later in Conimbriga which Museum he he directed between 1999 and 2017.
Researcher at the Center for Classical and Humanistic Studies (University of Coimbra).
Author of more than a hundred published papers on subjects from the Bronze Age to the management of the Archaeological Heritage, with special emphasis on the pre-Latin writing of SW Iberia, archaic jewelry and Roman archeology, namely Conimbriga and its domestic architecture.
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This is the synopsis of the volume (https://doi.org/10.14195/978-989-26-2149-4) published by Coimbra University Press which is available, full version, at http://monographs.uc.pt/iuc/catalog/book/243
The main case-study is, of course, the town of Conimbriga, given the largest set of data available, but the other most relevant examples are mentioned, both in regard to the urban network in the west of the province and to the main known monuments.
An interpretative model for the phenomenon of the romanization of housing practice and, in general, of the culture of society is proposed.
This is the synopsis of the volume (https://doi.org/10.14195/978-989-26-2149-4) published by Coimbra University Press which is available, full version, at http://monographs.uc.pt/iuc/catalog/book/243
The main case-study is, of course, the town of Conimbriga, given the largest set of data available, but the other most relevant examples are mentioned, both in regard to the urban network in the west of the province and to the main known monuments.
An interpretative model for the phenomenon of the romanization of housing practice and, in general, of the culture of society is proposed.