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Tiber River (Rome, Italy)

 Subject
Subject Source: Local sources

Found in 34 Collections and/or Records:

[Rome (Italy), Rione Trastevere, aerial view of Piazza in Piscinula, from Ponte Cestio to San Michele a Ripa. Oblique Panorama view, S.W.], 1977-05-30

 Photographic Materials
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The goal was to provide high quality images of Rome, as few were available at the time. Of the thousands of photographs that Aronson and Millon took during the two flights, only 300 of the clearest images were selected for the publication of the Portfolio. Aronson published the Portfolio in 1979 through his company, Aerpicfoto, which at the time was located in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Dates: 1977-05-30

[Rome (Italy), Rione Trastevere, aerial view of San Michele a Ripa and Porto di Ripa Grande. Oblique view, N.W.], 1977-05-30

 Photographic Materials
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The goal was to provide high quality images of Rome, as few were available at the time. Of the thousands of photographs that Aronson and Millon took during the two flights, only 300 of the clearest images were selected for the publication of the Portfolio. Aronson published the Portfolio in 1979 through his company, Aerpicfoto, which at the time was located in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Dates: 1977-05-30

[Rome (Italy), Rione Trastevere, aerial view of San Michele a Ripa (N.E. half). Plan Oblique view, N.W.], 1977-05-30

 Photographic Materials
Scope and Contents From the Collection:

The goal was to provide high quality images of Rome, as few were available at the time. Of the thousands of photographs that Aronson and Millon took during the two flights, only 300 of the clearest images were selected for the publication of the Portfolio. Aronson published the Portfolio in 1979 through his company, Aerpicfoto, which at the time was located in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Dates: 1977-05-30

Van Deman Notes, 1907 - 1929

 Collection
Identifier: PA.AAR.VD.N.
Abstract Esther Van Deman's work focuses on building materials, working to establish a chronology of construction for the ancient sites. In 1907, while attending a lecture in the Atrium Vestae in Rome, Van Deman noticed that the bricks blocking up a doorway differed from those of the structure itself. Such differences in building materials provided a key to discovering the chronology of ancient structures. Van Deman's basic methodology, with few modifications, became the standard procedure in Roman...
Dates: 1907-1929