Pietro Romanelli
Pietro Romanèlli (born in Rome, Italy in 1889 – died in Rome, Italy in 1981) was an Italian archaeologist.[1][2]
Born in Rome, he carried out excavations at Tarquinia, Ostia Antica, the Palatine Hill in Rome, at the Forum Romanum and at Leptis Magna in Libya.[3][2] Among his students was the Roman archaeologist and researcher at Ostia Antica Maria Floriani Squarciapino (1917-2003).
Necrology
- A. M. Colini. "Pietro Romanelli" StRom 30 (1982), 358–65.
Sources
Fabrizio Vistoli, s.v. "Pietro Romanelli", in Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, vol. 88, Roma, Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 2017, pp. 221-224.
gollark: You can, apparently, propel spaceships very slightly by releasing light.
gollark: Defining information as weapons seems very problematic. Especially the encryption thing, which was apparently worked around by exporting cryptography stuff as books and as very short perl programs on T-shirts.
gollark: I see.
gollark: How does it work?
gollark: Yes. Earth had it coming.
References
- A. M. Colini. "Pietro Romanelli" StRom 30 (1982), 358–65. (necrology)
- http://www.treccani.it/enciclopedia/pietro-romanelli/
- Pietro Romanelli; Sandro Stucchi (1976). Cirene e la Grecia. L'ERMA di BRETSCHNEIDER. pp. 285–. ISBN 978-88-7062-065-8.
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