The morphological study of medieval urban fabric experiments new methods to process all available information. Within the debate between continuity and discontinuity of classical rural settlements and the medieval castles, some small towns in different regions of Europe show analogies and close continuity between the roman villae rusticae system and the fortified hill-top towns through a hill-edge phase prior to the fortification. The knowledge of the diachronic series of documents on the ownership of single lots is a prerequisite for further testing an established method of analysis, proposed here to reconstruct the growth phases of a small town. Overlapping data from the morphological analysis, the distribution of praedial toponyms, the series of imperial diplomas, the quantitative analysis of notarial medieval sources, the series of maps, views, and cadastres, and the mosaic of current cadastral ground plans, it is possible to outline the history of a settlement, in cases where the

Urban Morphology and architectural design in medieval small towns: San Vito Romano / Camiz, Alessandro. - STAMPA. - VOL. I – Sessions A, C Resources of the territory Biological diversity:(2014), pp. 197-207. (Intervento presentato al convegno 6th International Congress on “Science and Technology for the Safeguard of Cultural Heritage in the Mediterranean Basin” tenutosi a Athens, Greece nel 22 – 25 October 2013).

Urban Morphology and architectural design in medieval small towns: San Vito Romano

CAMIZ, Alessandro
2014

Abstract

The morphological study of medieval urban fabric experiments new methods to process all available information. Within the debate between continuity and discontinuity of classical rural settlements and the medieval castles, some small towns in different regions of Europe show analogies and close continuity between the roman villae rusticae system and the fortified hill-top towns through a hill-edge phase prior to the fortification. The knowledge of the diachronic series of documents on the ownership of single lots is a prerequisite for further testing an established method of analysis, proposed here to reconstruct the growth phases of a small town. Overlapping data from the morphological analysis, the distribution of praedial toponyms, the series of imperial diplomas, the quantitative analysis of notarial medieval sources, the series of maps, views, and cadastres, and the mosaic of current cadastral ground plans, it is possible to outline the history of a settlement, in cases where the
2014
6th International Congress on “Science and Technology for the Safeguard of Cultural Heritage in the Mediterranean Basin”
urban morphology; architecture; Small towns; urban design; urban history; PROTECTION AND RESTORATION
04 Pubblicazione in atti di convegno::04b Atto di convegno in volume
Urban Morphology and architectural design in medieval small towns: San Vito Romano / Camiz, Alessandro. - STAMPA. - VOL. I – Sessions A, C Resources of the territory Biological diversity:(2014), pp. 197-207. (Intervento presentato al convegno 6th International Congress on “Science and Technology for the Safeguard of Cultural Heritage in the Mediterranean Basin” tenutosi a Athens, Greece nel 22 – 25 October 2013).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/555734
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