Samuel Lysons and His Circle: Art, Science and the Remains of Roman Britain

This paper critically evaluates the social and intellectual influences which shaped Samuel Lysons’ (1763–1819) interests in the archaeological remains of Roman Britain, and assesses the extent to which his work was innovative. While Romano-British archaeologists have long admired his achievements, t...

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Main Author: Sarah Ann Scott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2013-09-01
Series:Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.archaeologybulletin.org/article/view/516
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spelling doaj-6382a5feeeb54bf6a1ff76665413f77a2020-11-25T01:06:50ZengUbiquity PressBulletin of the History of Archaeology1062-47402047-69302013-09-01232Art. 310.5334/bha.2323Samuel Lysons and His Circle: Art, Science and the Remains of Roman BritainSarah Ann ScottThis paper critically evaluates the social and intellectual influences which shaped Samuel Lysons’ (1763–1819) interests in the archaeological remains of Roman Britain, and assesses the extent to which his work was innovative. While Romano-British archaeologists have long admired his achievements, there has been no detailed examination of the factors influencing the development of his interests and approach. This paper will outline how Lysons’ social networks, his genuine concern for preserving and recording Romano-British remains, his broad scholarly interests, and the support of an intellectual elite involved with the expansion of national institutions during a period characterized by intense international rivalry, resulted in his exemplary approach to the excavation and publication of the remains of Roman Britain. Scrutiny of newspaper reports, diaries, correspondence, and the previously unpublished contents of his personal library, and an examination of his publications in relation to contemporary Classical and scientific scholarship, shows how and why his work was at the forefront of archaeological scholarship in this period. The results of this study support his reputation as a founding father of Romano-British archaeology and show that both he and his associates deserve far wider recognition of their contributions to the development of archaeology as a whole.http://www.archaeologybulletin.org/article/view/516LysonsRomanBritainVillasMosaics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah Ann Scott
spellingShingle Sarah Ann Scott
Samuel Lysons and His Circle: Art, Science and the Remains of Roman Britain
Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
Lysons
Roman
Britain
Villas
Mosaics
author_facet Sarah Ann Scott
author_sort Sarah Ann Scott
title Samuel Lysons and His Circle: Art, Science and the Remains of Roman Britain
title_short Samuel Lysons and His Circle: Art, Science and the Remains of Roman Britain
title_full Samuel Lysons and His Circle: Art, Science and the Remains of Roman Britain
title_fullStr Samuel Lysons and His Circle: Art, Science and the Remains of Roman Britain
title_full_unstemmed Samuel Lysons and His Circle: Art, Science and the Remains of Roman Britain
title_sort samuel lysons and his circle: art, science and the remains of roman britain
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Bulletin of the History of Archaeology
issn 1062-4740
2047-6930
publishDate 2013-09-01
description This paper critically evaluates the social and intellectual influences which shaped Samuel Lysons’ (1763–1819) interests in the archaeological remains of Roman Britain, and assesses the extent to which his work was innovative. While Romano-British archaeologists have long admired his achievements, there has been no detailed examination of the factors influencing the development of his interests and approach. This paper will outline how Lysons’ social networks, his genuine concern for preserving and recording Romano-British remains, his broad scholarly interests, and the support of an intellectual elite involved with the expansion of national institutions during a period characterized by intense international rivalry, resulted in his exemplary approach to the excavation and publication of the remains of Roman Britain. Scrutiny of newspaper reports, diaries, correspondence, and the previously unpublished contents of his personal library, and an examination of his publications in relation to contemporary Classical and scientific scholarship, shows how and why his work was at the forefront of archaeological scholarship in this period. The results of this study support his reputation as a founding father of Romano-British archaeology and show that both he and his associates deserve far wider recognition of their contributions to the development of archaeology as a whole.
topic Lysons
Roman
Britain
Villas
Mosaics
url http://www.archaeologybulletin.org/article/view/516
work_keys_str_mv AT sarahannscott samuellysonsandhiscircleartscienceandtheremainsofromanbritain
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