Nicola Terrenato

Curriculum Vitae

Current position

Since 2015Esther B. Van Deman Collegiate Professor of Roman Studies, Department of Classical Studies, University of Michigan.

Education

1990-94 University of Pisa.PhD in Roman Archaeology. Dissertation title: “Cities and territories of Northern Etruria in Roman Times”.

1992 University of Michigan. Visiting Scholar.

1983-88University of Rome “La Sapienza”. Cum laude degree in Roman Archaeology. Thesis title: “The lower Cecina valley survey”.

Appointments

2003-12American Academy in Rome. Director of the Summer Program in Archaeology

2009-15Professor of Classical Archaeology, University of Michigan.

2007-09Associate Professor of Classical Archaeology, University of Michigan.

2004-07Associate Professor of Classics, University of North Carolina.

1998-04Assistant Professor of Classics, University of North Carolina.

1996-98University of Durham.Leverhulme Visiting Research Fellow.

1996-98University of Siena.Part-time lecturer.

1994-95Colgate University Venice Study Group. Lecturer (Fall semesters).

1992-96University of Rome “La Sapienza”.Teaching and Research Assistant.

Awards, grants and fellowships

2017Michigan Humanities Collaboratory Grant. $ 475,000.

2017Michigan Humanities Collaboratory Development Grant.$ 80,000.

2017Michigan Humanities Award

2016NEH Collaborative Grant. Gabii Project.$ 245,000.

2015Loeb Foundation Grant. Gabii Project. $ 30,000.

2014Distinguished Faculty Award, University of Michigan

2013 MCubed Grant, university of Michigan, $ 40,000.

2013William D. Loughlin Senior Fellow.

Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton.

2013NSF Grant. S. Omobono Project. $ 244,000.

2011 NEH Collaborative Grant. Gabii Project.$ 250,000.

2010Michigan Humanities Award.

2010NGS Exploration Grant. S. Omobono. $ 23,000.

2010-14Loeb Foundation Grants. S. Omobono.$ 135,000.

2007NGS Exploration Grant. Gabii Project.$ 25,000.

2004Phillip and Ruth Hettleman Prize for Artistic and Scholarly Achievements by Young Faculty.UNC-Chapel Hill.

2003Cullen Prize, for "the most promising contribution to archaeology by a younger author". Antiquity Board of Trustees.

2000-01British Academy.Visiting Fellow.

2000-01 Churchill College, Cambridge.By-Fellowship.

1989-90M. Aylwin Cotton Foundation. “Daniela Fusaro” Scholarship.

Research projects

2007-pres.GabiiProject.Director.

2008-pres.S. Omobono project, co-Director.

2014-2018Regia Publication Project, co-Director.

2001-2005Torre di Donoratico Excavation. Principal Investigator.

2003Villa delle Grotte (Grottarossa). Principal Investigator.

1987-2002Cecina valley field survey and excavations at Cosciano and San Mario.Principal Investigator.

1997Falerii Novi Hinterland project. Principal Investigator.

1997Botromagno (Gravina) Interpretation of surface evidence and GIS data processing. Principal Investigator.

1996Excavations at the Auditorium site, Rome. Field director.

1985-96 Excavations on the Northern slope of the Palatine. Area supervisor.

1990-96Excavations at the roman villas of S. Pietro - Tolve and S. Gilio - Oppido in the Bradano valley (Basilicata).Field director.

1987-89Excavations at the Roman Theatre in Volterra.Field co-director.

Seminars and conferences

Endowed lectures

Distinguished Lecture, Archaeology Center at Stanford University, “The location of Archaeology”, April 2008.

Lora Bryning Redford Lecture in Archaeology, University of Puget Sound, “The Gabii Project”, February 2011

Bertrand Lecture in Classics, San Francisco State University, “The embryology of the central Italian city”, October 2012.

Arnold Lecture, Gonzaga University, “Elite negotiation and consensus building.
Rewriting early Roman imperialism”, November 2016.

Cinelli Lecture, University of Pittsburgh-AIA, “The Earliest Gateway of Rome”, March 2017.

Collegiate Inaugural Lecture, University of Michigan, “Imperialism by Dialogue and Inclusion: the Other Story of the Roman Expansion”, March 2017.

Ridgway Lecture, University of Puget Sound, “Elite negotiation and consensus building. Rewriting early Roman imperialism”, October 2017.

Keynote addresses:

The theory, history and methodology of regional archaeological projects, Leiden 1996;

Sixth Conference of Italian Archaeology, Groningen 2003;

The Etruscans and the Others, NYU 2004;

Religiöse Vielfalt und soziale Integration, Dresden 2007;

Critical Roman Archaeology Conference, Stanford 2008;

Local Identities in the Ancient Mediterranean, Berkeley 2008;

Rebuilding the city, Texas 2014;

Monetization in the Ancient World, Auckland 2014;

Romanisation – Romanization ?!?, Heidelberg 2017.

Invited speaker:The Roman State from the Etruscan Kings to the Plebeian Consuls, Columbia University, New York, 2002; Side-by-side survey, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 2002; Les mutations de la fin de l’âge du Fer, Cambridge, 2005; With the Adriatic in the Middle: Comparative Issues in Romanized Landscapes in Italy and the Eastern Mediterranean, Leiden, 2009; Archaeological Survey and the City, Cambridge, 2010; Roman Colonization Under The Republic: Towards A New Interpretative Framework, European Science Foundation Exploratory Workshop, Nijmegen University, 2010; Housing and Habitat in the Mediterranean World, Monash University, Prato, 2011; Multidisciplinary Approaches to the Diachronic Analysis of Landscapes, Trento, 2011; Whither Colonization?, Rome 2012; The Age of TarquiniusSuperbus, Rome 2013; LangfristperspektivenarchäologischerStätten, Zürich 2015; La societàgentilizianell’Italiaanticatrarealtà e mitostoriografico, Pavia 2015; Reframing Roman Luxury, Ann Arbor 2016; The Dawn of Roman Law, Heidelberg 2017.

Conference organizer:Archeologiateorica, Siena 1999; State formation in the Mediterranean and beyond, Chapel Hill, October 2003 (with D. Haggis); Roman Archaeology Conference 8, Ann Arbor, April 2009; Regias Reconsidered, American Academy in Rome, 2016.

Session organizer: “Italy and the West”, European Association of Archaeologists Conference, Ravenna 1997 (with Simon Keay); “Cultural hegemony and local identities under the expanding Roman Republic”, Roman Archaeology Conference 3, Glasgow 2001 (with P. Van Dommelen); “State Formation in the Mediterranean: beyond evolutionism”, AIA Meeting, New Orleans 2003 (with D. Haggis); “Ancient and modern colonialism”, Joint AIA-APA Workshop, Boston 2005 (with P. Vasunia); “Roman Republican Villas: Architecture, Context, and Ideology”, Joint AIA-APA Colloquium, San Diego 2007 (with J. Becker); “Survey and Measurement on Excavation - New Perspectives on Traditional Metrics”,5th International Conference on Remote Sensing in Archaeology, Duke 2014 (with R. Opitz); “Destruction and the Rhetoric of Architectural Excavation”, SAA Annual Meeting, Orlando 2016 (with R. Opitz); “The Regia Reconsidered: A New Interpretation of the AmericanExcavations Results” (with P. Brocato), AIA Meeting, Toronto 2017.

Session/colloquium chair:Burial, Society and Context in theRoman World, Durham 1997;Studisull'Italiarepubblicana, British School at Rome, 2003;AIA Meeting, San Francisco 2004; AIA Meeting, Chicago 2008; Archaeology and the Cities of Asia Minor in Late Antiquity, Ann Arbor 2008; Housing and Habitat in the Mediterranean World, Monash University, Prato, 2011; The religious life of things, Ann Arbor, 2013.

Discussant/respondent/panelist:Journée d’Etude sur la Romanisation de l’Occidentromain, École des HautesÉtudesen Sciences Sociales, Paris, presentation of Italy and the West (eds. S. Keay, N. Terrenato), 2000; Society for American Archaeology Meeting, San Juan 2006; The Hellenistic West, BSR Workshop, Rome 2006; Society for American Archaeology Meeting, Austin 2007; AIA Gold Medal Colloquium, Philadelphia 2009; AIA Meeting, Philadelphia 2012; AIA Presidential Plenary Symposium, Seattle 2013; AIA Meeting, Seattle 2013; Memoria Romana, Getty Institute, 2013; Central Italy and the creation of a cultural koinè?, BSR-KNIR, Rome 2014, AIA Meeting, New Orleans 2015; presentation ofNuovistudisullaRegiadi Roma (eds. P. Brocato, N. Terrenato), 2017, American Academy in Rome, July 2017.

Invited seminars and other public lectures: Universities:Berlin FU, Bologna, British Columbia (3), Bryn Mawr, Calabria, Cambridge (3), Chicago,Christchurch (NZ), Colorado, Durham, Glasgow (2), Harvard, Hillsdale, Queen’s Kingston, Leiden, London (UCL, KCL), McGill, Michigan, Oberlin, Oulu, Oxford (4), Paris 13, Pisa, Princeton (3), Puget Sound, Rome I, Siena, Southampton, St. Andrews, Stanford, Trento, Tufts, Verona, Wellington; Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton; AIA Chapters: Appleton, Carolina, Niagara Peninsula, Winnipeg; DeutschesArchäologischesInstitut, Zentrale, Berlin; British School at Rome; American Academy in Rome; Royal Netherlands Institute in Rome; ConsiglioNazionaledelleRicerche (Rome); Parlitalia (Vancouver), MuseoGuarnacci (Volterra).

Papers given at:La cartografiaarcheologica, Pisa, 1988; Papers in Italian Archaeology 4, London, 1990; Archeologia del paesaggio, Siena, 1991; POPULUS, Siena 1994; GIS-Internet, Siena, 1995; I residuinelloscavoarcheologico, Rome, 1996; European Association of Archaeologists Conference, Riga, 1996; Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference, Nottingham, 1997; Theoretical Archaeology Group, Bournemouth, 1997; Further Approaches to the Tiber Valley, Rome, 1998; Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference, Leicester, 1998; Roman Archaeology Conference 2, Durham, 1999; Archeologiateorica, Siena, 1999; Society for American Archaeology Meeting, Philadelphia, 2000; Secondo Congresso di ArcheologiaMedievale, Brescia, 2000; Society for American Archaeology Meeting, New Orleans, 2001; AIA Meeting, Philadelphia, 2002; Society for American Archaeology Meeting, Denver, 2002; State formation in the Mediterranean and beyond, Chapel Hill, October, 2003;AIA Meeting, San Francisco, 2004;AIA Meeting, Boston, 2005; SuburbiumII, ÉcoleFrançaise de Rome, 2005; Roman Archaeology Conference 6, London, 2007; AIA Meeting, Philadelphia, 2009, Lazio e Sabina, Rome, 2009; AIA Meeting, Anaheim, 2010; Roman Archaeology Conference, London, 2010; AIA Meeting, San Antonio, 2011;AIA Meeting, Philadelphia 2012, AIA Meeting, New Orleans, 2015.

Posters presented at:Geofisica per l'Archeologia, Rome 1988; AIA Meeting, Chicago 2008; AIA Meeting, Anaheim 2010; AIA Meeting, Philadelphia 2012; AIA Meeting, Chicago 2014.

Academic reviewing and refereeing

Editorial Board Member, Journal of Field Archaeology, 2009-present;American Journal of Archaeology, 2013-2016;FACTA. Journal of Roman Material Culture Studies. 2007-2012; Mouseion, 2012-present; Bibliotheca Archaeologica, 2012-present; Analysis Archaeologica, 2015-present.

Advisory Editor: Antiquity. 2001-2002.

Advisory Board Member: Spatial Archaeometry Research Collaborations, University of Arkansas. 2014-present; Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference, 2014-present; PleiadesProject, 2004-2007.

PRIN 2016 Funding Cycle Board Member.Ministero dell’Università, Italy.

Rome Prize Jury. American Academy in Rome.2006-2008.

External review committees: UNC-Chapel Hill, Classics, 2013 (chair).

AIA Fellowship Commitee Member. 2009-2011.

Reviewer of manuscripts submitted for publication: Cambridge University Press (8);Princeton University Press (5);Chicago University Press; Oxford University Press;Columbia University Press; Johns Hopkins University Press(2);Blackwell(2);Routledge;Ashgate; ScuolaNormaleSuperiore, Pisa;American Journal of Archaeology (2);Papers of the British School at Rome(2); Journal of Roman Archaeology (5); Classical Antiquity (2); Historia; European Journal of Archaeology; American Antiquity(2);Journal of Field Archaeology (4);Journal of Archaeological Science;Studies in Mediterranean Archaeology; FOLD&R; Journal of Structural Geology;Internet Archaeology; Archaeological Dialogues; OpusculaRomana (4); FACTA.

Grant application reviewer: National Science Foundation (7); National Geographic Society(3); SSHRC; European Research Council;Institute for Advanced Study (4);Earthwatch Institute; Belgian Science Policy Office; National Research Council, Italy; Ministry of University and Research, Italy (6); University of Siena; South Africa’s National Research Foundation; FreieUniversität Berlin.

External recruitment/tenure/promotion assessor: Rice University; Cornell University; University of Texas, Austin(2);University of Cincinnati;Florida State University; University at Buffalo; Queen’s University, Kingston(2); King’s College, London; University of St Andrews; University of Glasgow; Hebrew University, Jerusalem; University of Cape Town.

Doctoral Advising – committee chair

Former Student / Current position
H. W. Becker / Assistant Professor, SUNY-Binghampton
J. A. Becker / Visiting Assistant Professor, SUNY-Binghampton
R. Vander Poppen / Associate Professor, Rollins College
W. McCall / Project Archaeologist, Detritus Consulting
E. Robinson / Assistant Professor, University of Dallas
K. Dicus / Assistant Professor, University of Oregon
M. Mogetta / Assistant Professor, University of Missouri
L. Banducci / Assistant Professor, Carleton University
J. Farr / Lecturer, St. Mary’s University
I. Cangemi / Post-Doc, University of Michigan
A. Brock / Lecturer, University of Michigan
D. Diffendale / Lecturer, University of Michigan

List of Publications:

Book Series

M. Mogetta, R. Opitz, N. Terrenato, eds., The Gabii Archaeological Reports, Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press, 1 vol. published, 1 vol accepted for publication, 4 volsin preparation.

Books

I)F. Cambi, N. Terrenato, 1994, Introduzione all'archeologia dei paesaggi, Roma, Nuova Italia Scientifica, 364 pp.

II)M. Munzi, N. Terrenato, eds., 2000, Volterra. Il teatro e le terme, Florence, Insegna del Giglio, 220 pp.

III)E. Regoli, N. Terrenato, eds., 2000, Guida al Museo Archeologico di Rosignano Marittimo. Paesaggi e insediamenti in Val di Cecina, (Museum Catalogue), Siena, Nuova Immagine, 184 pp.

IV)N. Terrenato, ed., 2000, Archeologia Teorica, Florence, Insegna del Giglio, 390 pp.

V)S. Keay, N. Terrenato, eds., 2001, Italy and the West. Comparative issues in Romanization, Oxford, Oxbow, 234 pp.

VI)P. Van Dommelen, N. Terrenato, eds., 2007, Articulating local cultures: Power and identity under the expanding Roman Republic, Portsmouth, Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series 63, 144 pp.

VII)N. Terrenato, D.C. Haggis, eds., 2011, State Formation in Italy and Greece. Questioning the Neoevolutionist Paradigm, Oxford, Oxbow, 281 pp.

VIII)J. A. Becker, N. Terrenato, eds., 2012, Roman Republican Villas: Architecture, Context, and Ideology,Papers and Monographs of the American Academy in Rome 32, Ann Arbor, UM Press, 152 pp.

IX)P. Brocato, N. Terrenato, eds., 2012, Nuove ricerche nell’area archeologica di S. Omobono – Roma, Arcavacata di Rende, Univ. della Calabria, 110 pp.

X)R. Opitz, M. Mogetta, N. Terrenato, eds., 2016,A Mid-Republican House from Gabii, (The GabiiArchaeological Reports, 1), Ann Arbor, University of Michigan Press.

XI)P. Brocato, M. Ceci, N. Terrenato, eds., 2016, Ricerche nell’area dei templi di Fortuna e Mater Matuta (Roma). Arcavacata di Rende, Univ. della Calabria, 234 pp.

XII)P. Brocato, N. Terrenato, eds., 2017, Nuovi studi sulla Regia di Roma, Cosenza, Pellegrini, 186 pp.

XIII)N. Terrenato,The early Roman expansion into Italy. Elite negotiation and family agenda, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, forthcoming.

XIV)N. Terrenato, An Archaeology of Italy, under contract with Cambridge University Press.

Articles

1)N. Terrenato, 1987, “Alcuni echi della grande guerra in lettere del roveretano F. Halbherr a Domenico Comparetti”, Atti Accademia degli Agiati, VI, 27, 43-54.

2)E. Regoli, N. Terrenato, 1989, “Dall'Albegna al Cecina: l'impostazione di un progetto di ricognizione archeologica”, in Pasquinucci, M., Menchelli, S., eds., La Cartografia Archeologica. AttidelConvegnoInternazionale, Pisa, 207-215.

3)E. Regoli, N. Terrenato, 1991, “Rilevamenti geofisici in un progetto di ricognizione archeologica: la bassa Val di Cecina”, in Atti del Seminario "Geofisica per l'Archeologia", Roma, CNR, 293-296.

4)N. Terrenato, 1992, “Potenza ed il potentino”, in De Lachenal, L., ed., Da Leukania a Lucania, Roma, 33-39.

5)N. Terrenato, 1992, “Velia and Carinae: some observations on an area of archaic Rome”, in E. Herring, R. Whitehouse, J. Wilkins, eds., New Developments in Italian Archaeology. Papers of the Fourth Conference of Italian Archaeology, 4, London, Accordia, 31-47.

6)N. Terrenato, 1992, “La ricognizione della Valle del Cecina: l'evoluzione di una metodologia di ricerca”, in Bernardi, M., ed., Archeologia del Paesaggio, Firenze, Insegna del Giglio, II, 561-596.

7)A. Carandini, N. Terrenato, P. Brocato, G. Ricci, P. Carafa, 1992, “Palatino, Pendici Settentrionali. Lo scavodellemura palatine”, Bollettino di Archeologia, 16-18, 111-138.

8)L. Motta, L. Camin, N. Terrenato, 1993, “Un sito rurale nel territorio di Volterra”, Bollettino di Archeologia, 23-24, 109-116.

9)M. Munzi, N. Terrenato, 1994, “La colonia di Volterra. La prima attestazione epigrafica ed il quadro archeologico”, Ostraka, III.1, 31-42.

10)N. Terrenato, A. Saggin, 1994, “Ricognizioni nel territorio di Volterra. La pianuracostiera”, Archeologia Classica, 46, 465-482.

11)N. Terrenato, 1995, “La sepoltura dell’infante”, “La Fase 3. Le seconde mura”, “La Fase 4. Le terze mura”, “La Fase 5. Le quarte mura”, “La Fase 6. L’ultimo allestimento nella zona delle fortificazioni”, “La topografia”, in A. Carandini, P. Carafa, eds., Palatium e Sacra Via I, Bollettino di Archeologia, 31-33, 159-160, 161-174, 175-181, 181-185, 185-188, 200-214.

12)N. Terrenato, A. J. Ammerman, 1996, “Visibility and Site Recovery in the Cecina Valley Survey, Italy”, Journal of Field Archaeology, 23, 91-109.

13)W. Alvarez, A. J. Ammerman, P. R. Renne, D. B. Karner, N. Terrenato, A. Montanari, 1996, “Quaternary fluvial-volcanic stratigraphy and geochronology of the Capitoline hill in Rome”, Geology, 24, 751-754.

14)N. Terrenato, 1996, “Murus Romuli”, in Lexicon Urbis Romae 3, Rome, Quasar, 315-317.

15)N. Terrenato, 1996, “Roma (Ambiente, Età regia)”, in Enciclopedia dell’Arte Antica, Secondo Supplemento, IV, Rome, Enciclopedia Italiana, 785-790, 809-811, 818-821.

16)N. Terrenato, 1996, “Field Survey Methods in Central Italy (Etruria and Umbria). Between local knowledge and regional traditions”, Archaeological Dialogues, 3.2, 216-230.

17)A. Ammerman, N. Terrenato, 1996, “Nuove osservazioni sul Colle Capitolino”, Bullettino Comunale, 97, 35-46.

18)N. Terrenato, 1997, review of C. Smith, Early Rome and Latium, Oxford, 1996, American Journal of Archaeology, 101.2, 419-420.

19)N. Terrenato, 1997, “L'uso di documenti HTML per la didattica museale: il caso del Museo Archeologico di Rosignano Marittimo”, in A. Gottarelli, ed., Sistemi Informativi e reti geografiche in archeologia: GIS-INTERNET, Firenze, Insegna del Giglio, 211-216.

20)N. Terrenato, 1997, “La morfologia originaria di Roma”, in A. Carandini, La nascita di Roma, Torino, Einaudi, 587-594.

21)A. Carandini, G. Ricci, M.T. D’Alessio, C. De Davide, N. Terrenato, 1997, “La villa dell’Auditorium dall’età arcaica all’età imperiale”, Römische Mitteilungen, 104, 117-148.

22)N. Terrenato, 1998, “The Romanization of Italy: global acculturation or cultural bricolage?”, in C. Forcey, J. Hawthorne, R. Witcher, eds., TRAC 97, Oxford, Oxbow, 20-27.

23)N. Terrenato, 1998, “Tam firmummunicipium: the Romanization of Volaterrae and its cultural implications”, Journal of Roman Studies, 88, 94-114.

24)N. Terrenato, 1998, “Fra tradizione e trend. Gli ultimi venti anni (1975-1995)”, in M. Barbanera, L’archeologia degli italiani, Rome, Editori Riuniti, 175-192.

25)N. Terrenato, G. Ricci, 1998, “I residui nella stratificazione urbana”, in F. Guidobaldi, C. Pavolini, Ph. Pergola, eds., I materiali residui nello scavo archeologico, Rome, Ecole Française, 89-104.

26)N. Terrenato, 1999, “Pectuscum Palatii”, in Lexicon Urbis Romae 4, Rome, Quasar, 74-75.

27)G. Ricci, N. Terrenato, 1999, “Ideological Biases in the Urban Archaeology of Rome: a Quantitative Approach”, in P. Baker, C. Forcey, S. Jundi, R. Witcher, eds., TRAC 98, Oxford, Oxbow, 163-171.

28)N. Terrenato, 2000, “Antropologia, Archeologia e”, “Campionatura”, “Cartografia Archeologica”, “Contesto”, “Marxista, Archeologia”, “New Archaeology”, “Post-processuale, Archeologia”, “Quantitativa, Archeologia”, “Residuo”, “Sito/Non sito”, “Teorica Archeologia”, in R. Francovich, D. Manacorda, eds., Dizionario di Archeologia, Rome, Laterza, 10-14, 47-49, 49-53, 90-92, 184-186, 204-206, 220-222, 237-240, 241-242, 279-280, 336-339.

29)N. Terrenato, 2000, review of M. Bonghi Iovino, C. Chiaramonte Treré, eds.,Tarquinia. Testimonianze archeologiche e ricostruzione storica, Rome 1997, American Journal of Archaeology, 104, 404-405.

30)A. Augenti, N. Terrenato, 2000, “Le sedi del potere nel territorio di Volterra: una lunga prospettiva (secoli VII a.C.-XIII d.C.)”, in G. P. Brogiolo, ed., II Congresso Nazionale di Archeologia Medievale, Firenze, Insegna del Giglio, 298-303.

31)N. Terrenato, “Coerenza culturale e origine della modernità”, in N. Terrenato, ed., 2000, Archeologia Teorica, Florence, Insegna del Giglio, 281-291.

32)N. Terrenato, 2000, “Surface thoughts: Future Directions in Italian Field Surveys”, in J. Bintliff, M. Kuna, N. Venclová, eds., The Future of Surface Artefact Survey in Europe, Sheffield, Sheffield Academic Press, 21-28.

33)N. Terrenato, 2000, “The visibility of artefact scatters and the interpretation of field survey results: towards the analysis of incomplete distributions”, in R. Francovich, H. Patterson, eds, Extracting Meaning from Ploughsoil Assemblages (The Archaeology of Mediterranean Landscapes 5), Oxford, Oxbow, 60-71.

34)S. Keay, M. Millett, S. Poppy, J. Robinson, J. Taylor, N. Terrenato, 2000, “Falerii Novi: a New Survey of the Walled Area”, Papers of the British School at Rome, 68, 1-93.

35)N. Terrenato, J. Taylor, 2000, “Analisi quantitativa della distribuzione dei manufatti in superficie sulla collina di Botromagno”, in Il parco della pietra e dell'acqua, Gravina, SIDIN, 59-110.

36)N. Terrenato, 2001, “The Auditorium site and the origins of the Roman villa”, Journal of Roman Archaeology, 14, 5-32.

37)N. Terrenato, 2001, A tale of three cities: the Romanization of northern coastal Etruria, in S. Keay, N. Terrenato, eds., 2001, Italy and the West. Comparative issues in Romanization, Oxford, Oxbow, 54-67.

38)N. Terrenato, 2002, “La ricognizione: metodi della ricerca sul campo e interpretazione dei dati”, “L'archeologia ambientale”, in Il Mondo dell'Archeologia, vol. I, Roma, Enciclopedia Italiana, 153-157, 213-215.

39)N. Terrenato, 2002, “Ancestor Cults: the perception of ancient Rome in Italian culture”, in R. Hingley, ed., Images of Rome, Portsmouth, Journal of Roman Archaeology Supplementary Series 44, 71-89.

40)N. Terrenato, 2002, “The innocents and the skeptics. Classical Archaeology and Antiquity”, Antiquity, 76, 1104-11.

41)S. Keay, M. Millett, S. Poppy, J. Robinson, J. Taylor, N. Terrenato, 2004, “New approaches to Roman urbanism in the Tiber valley”, N. Terrenato “The historical significance of Falerii Novi”, in H. Patterson, ed., Bridging the Tiber. Approaches to regional archaeology in the middle Tiber valley, London, British School at Rome, 223-236.

42)N. Terrenato, 2004, “Sample size matters! The paradox of global trends and local surveys”, in S. Alcock, J. Cherry, eds.,Side-by-Side Survey: Comparative Regional Studies in the Mediterranean World, Oxford, Oxbow, 36-48.

43)N. Terrenato, 2004, review of A. ZaccariaRuggiu, More regiovivere, Rome, 2003, Journal of Roman Archaeology, 17, 526-30.

44)N. Terrenato, 2005, review of S. L. Dyson, The Roman countryside, London, 2003, Classical Philology, 100, 193-198.

45)N. Terrenato, 2005, “The deceptive archetype. Roman colonialism and post-colonial thought”, in H. Hurst, S. Owen, eds., Ancient Colonizations. Analogy, Similarity and Difference, London, Duckworth, 59-72.