THE LEISURE IN ANCIENT ROME: CHRONICLES OF AN EMPIRE RISE

<span>The present research is aimed at describing scientifically how the citizenship practiced the leisure in Ancient Rome ranging from I B.C and I D. C centuries. Almost 123 years of history that deserves being uncovered. Readers who wish having clear how leisure conformed in High Empire shou...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Maximiliano KORSTANJE
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitatii Suceava 2009-12-01
Series:Revista de Turism: Studii si Cercetari in Turism
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistadeturism.ro/rdt/article/view/99
Description
Summary:<span>The present research is aimed at describing scientifically how the citizenship practiced the leisure in Ancient Rome ranging from I B.C and I D. C centuries. Almost 123 years of history that deserves being uncovered. Readers who wish having clear how leisure conformed in High Empire should refer to classical biographers such as Cornelius Tacitus and Caius Suetonius. In different manners, both have contributed to understand further about how Romans lived. Like in Greece, mythology encouraged the conflict confronting sons against their fathers. The glory, fame and power were values that a child learned from the cradle. For that, in the lapse of few decades Rome transformed in a military and economic power that subdued all known world for more than four centuries. Under such a circumstance, leisure worked as a vehicle towards hegemony and ideology preventing social fragmentation as well as encouraging a rural migration to urban cities.</span>
ISSN:1844-2994