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Roman Malta: architecture and archaeology - D. Cardona 2021. Roman Architecture in Malta. Heritage Malta Monographs 2. Kalkara, Malta: Heritage Malta Publishing. Pp. 272. ISBN 978-99932-57-86-8 (cloth).

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D. Cardona 2021. Roman Architecture in Malta. Heritage Malta Monographs 2. Kalkara, Malta: Heritage Malta Publishing. Pp. 272. ISBN 978-99932-57-86-8 (cloth).

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 March 2023

R. J. A. Wilson*
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia
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Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

The Maltese islands, famed for their Neolithic temples, are not well known for their Roman antiquities. After pioneering work by the polymath Sir Themistocles Zammit in the early decades of the 20th c.,Footnote 1 the baton was picked up again by Anthony Bonanno, who singlehandedly has greatly advanced knowledge of Roman Malta over the past 50 years through copious influential papers in journals and conference proceedings, as well as in two books.Footnote 2 Monographs by others have been dedicated to such subjects as the Roman economy of the Maltese islands, and Roman pottery from Malta and Gozo, both local products and imports.Footnote 3 Until now, however, there has been no single volume devoted exclusively to the Roman structures that have been excavated or recorded (and in some cases survive), nor to the disiecta membra of many others, which have in the past been largely ignored. A warm welcome, therefore, to this handsome volume, which is magnificently illustrated in color throughout, apart of course from historical images that have been taken from the archives. The color photographs are by Daniel Cilia, who has made major contributions to Maltese archaeology in other publications over the years.Footnote 4 His stunning aerial views in this book of the villa at Ta’ Kaċċatura (46) and of the temples at Ras ir-Raħeb (48) and Tas-Silġ (202–3) are a particular feast for the eye.

The intended readership is nowhere stated, but the book is clearly aimed at two quite distinct groups of readers. The first is the non-specialist one: introductory sections on Roman architecture, the domus, and the classical orders are clearly intended for that market. But the book will be welcomed also by scholars for its wealth of detail and the comprehensiveness of its contents, together with footnotes throughout and copious references. After introductory matter, the core of the book is contained in two chapters, “Building activity in Roman Malta” (47–85), with a largely chronological framework, and “Buildings and their decoration in Roman Malta” (87–221), which presents the relevant material in detail. A short chapter on “Materials and techniques” (223–43) and a brief conclusion (245–53) round off the book.

So what are the distinctive characteristics of Maltese architecture in the Roman period, when the islands administratively formed part of the province of Sicily? There are three main types of structure: urban buildings, rural villas, and temples; but the dossier of information on each (through no fault of the author) is not as complete as one would like, nor is it particularly plentiful. The full inventory, including very fragmentary remains and structures found long ago and no longer visible, totals just 59 sites, including five that are listed twice and two record inscriptions belonging to temples that have never been found (79–81).Footnote 5 Curiously the sanctuary site of Ras il-Wardija on a clifftop on the western tip of Gozo (see below) is not listed. The book is full of justifiable complaints about the inadequacy of the records of the early excavators and the non-publication of major research projects in the later 20th c., mainly by foreign teams.

Little is known of the topography of the two principal towns, Rabat on Malta (the ancient Melita) and Rabat (Victoria) on Gozo (Gaulus). The hint, on admittedly fragmentary evidence, that both seem to have had defensive walls is of interest, but, like Palermo's and those at S. Teresa on Pantelleria, these seem to me to be more likely of Punic date than Roman.Footnote 6 Pride of place goes to the domus in Rabat on Malta, with its fine Late Hellenistic mosaics (ca. 100 BCE?), including three figured emblemata (one of them in imitation of Sosos of Pergamon's famous composition of doves drinking: Plin. HN 36.184).Footnote 7 Borders include a pattern of stepped swastika meander and squares in perspective, and rich floral and fruit designs incorporating theater masks, of the type seen at Palermo and Pompeii as well as on Delos. Cardona (hereafter C.) does not speculate about who is likely to have laid them, but the three-dimensional variety of Greek wave pattern on a pavement with the satyr and nymph emblema is unknown in the Greek East and finds its only parallel at Tyndaris in Sicily.Footnote 8 This might suggest the presence in Malta of craftsmen from Sicily,Footnote 9 hardly surprising since the Maltese islands were part of the same province. The entablature of the peristyle at the Rabat domus is typical of Late Hellenistic Doric; this and the Sicilian version of Hellenistic Corinthian were the preferred choices in this period. How long the Rabat domus was occupied is unknown, but it was long enough for one of the pavements to be extensively (and crudely) patched. A new project by Heritage Malta and the University of South Florida on the houses adjacent, poorly excavated a century ago, might provide some welcome chronological exactitude, although some or all of these may be later if the conclusion that stone from the rich house was robbed for building them is correct.Footnote 10 A set of half a dozen marble statues found in the house, including one of Claudius and an exquisite one of a young woman here identified as his daughter Claudia Antonia,Footnote 11 is taken as a striking sign of loyalty to the imperial house by a high-ranking resident; or do these statue fragments belong to an abandonment phase, transferred here from elsewhere, already in part broken up and awaiting the lime kiln?

Little is known in detail of the public buildings of either town, represented by broken pieces of architrave, or capitals, or column shafts, all lovingly recorded by the author, or else referred to in inscriptions, like a temple of Apollo at Rabat on Malta or another of Proserpina on the Mtarfa hill nearby.Footnote 12 It is not known exactly when marble construction first reached the Maltese islands, but datable capitals and architraves in that material are not earlier than the 2nd c. CE, and the preponderance of Proconnesian among white marbles, estimated at 78 percent of the total, might point to the same conclusion.Footnote 13 The standard range of polychrome marbles from Tunisia, Greece, and Turkey have, however, (rather surprisingly) not so far been recognized in Maltese archaeology apart from a very few fragments (228). A few of the better-preserved limestone entablatures, including some known since the 17th c.,Footnote 14 are not readily paralleled anywhere in their particular style and combination of elements, and suggest the work of an imaginative local workshop or workshops. C. has also identified a genuinely original Maltese contribution in a variety of the Corinthian capital in marble, in which the central helices at the top are replaced by a long-stemmed fleuron with leaves on either side (144, 250).

Of rural sites (161–89), the most intelligible is the villa at Ramla Bay on the north coast of Gozo, in a gorgeous seaside location. It was first excavated over a century ago when there was no attempt to understand its phasing or overall chronology.Footnote 15 Of the residential part, only a half dozen rooms in the south and west wings were explored. The layout of the annexed bath-suite is more understandable: a changing room, square frigidarium with marble-slab floor, two tepidaria with a sudatorium opening off the first, and finally a small caldarium, are all clearly identifiable.Footnote 16 There are two small pools, one opening off the frigidarium and the other accessible from the caldarium. The villa's remans were backfilled to ensure its preservation, but the site is in increasing danger from marine erosion: an additional structure of ashlar blocks has been exposed in more recent years on the beach to the north of the known villa, and lidar surveying suggests as much as a third of this complex still lies buried.Footnote 17

Another villa, Ta’ Kaċċatura, also uncovered in the early 20th c. (1910–15), is still visible, although it is badly in need of a mise en valeur.Footnote 18 This is a small villa of a dozen or so rooms, but clear marks of a staircase on the wall of one room shows that the dwelling had, at least in part, an upper floor. There is a small central court with four columns per side. C. includes an excavation photo of three small blocks with cavetto and astragal, and one piece of gray marble has three letters of a text on it. Otherwise, there was nothing much in the way of flamboyant decoration (there are no mosaics, either here or at Ramla Bay); a very small set of baths has, however, recently been recognized at Ta’ Kaċċatura, too late for inclusion in C.'s book. No clear date for the villa is given by him, although he suggests there were “a number of building phases” (163). Ashby was convinced that some of the walls belonged to an earlier villa on the site and indicated that he thought these might be pre-Roman.Footnote 19 He did at least present some of the pottery that he found, and it included 4th/5th-c. CE African red slip ware, even though that was not recognized as such at the time.Footnote 20 It may be (if this is not a post-abandonment garbage deposit) that the villa was still occupied then, even though the visible structure may well have been built much earlier in the Imperial period, with a possible predecessor before that.Footnote 21

The outstanding feature of Ta’ Kaċċatura is its almost perfectly preserved, partly rock-cut cistern situated alongside, just above the villa, with a flat roof of large ashlar blocks supported by huge freestanding stone pillars (163–66). It is not clear if it is contemporary with the villa or belongs to some earlier period, such as the Punic or later Hellenistic (4th/3rd c. BCE?). There are other, smaller examples of the same type of cistern elsewhere in Malta; one at Ta’ Ġawhar is illustrated by C. (212–13).Footnote 22 This stands beside a round tower, 15 m in diameter and with walls 3 m thick, one of a group of six such towers in the Maltese landscape (but they are not found on Gozo). David Trump, who excavated at Ta’ Ġawhar in 1960 and found evidence for destruction levels of the 3rd c. CE, was convinced that they were Roman,Footnote 23 and C. follows him in that chronology (210). If that is right, it is reasonable to assume that the adjacent cistern is of Roman date too, and presumably the one at Ta’ Kaċċatura as well. The military function of the towers is now supported by the very recent discovery of two pieces of ring-mail body-armor among the 1960 finds.Footnote 24 But there is no military reason why such powerful towers need have been erected on the island during the long centuries of the pax Romana, and ascribing them to the troubled times of the First Punic War perhaps makes more sense, especially since Ta’ Ġawhar has also produced pottery of Punic date, and the use of ring-mail is not incompatible with such a chronology.Footnote 25 If it is of that date, the type of cistern with flat-slab roof may also belong to the 3rd c. BCE rather than (much) later, suggesting that it supported a farm at Ta' Kaċċatura of the same period, underneath the visible villa.Footnote 26 This is another conundrum of Maltese archaeology that needs unpicking by future research.

A further old excavation is of rural baths with geometric mosaics at Għan Tuffieħa, uncovered in 1929–30 but sadly backfilled in 2021 to prevent further degradation. C. tentatively suggests (186) that “the idea of this bathing complex serving a private residence may not be entirely ruled out,” but stand-alone rural baths do not make sense without a villa nearby to serve.Footnote 27 In fact, the long corridor with a series of small mosaic-paved rooms and a large (ornamental?) pool adjacent to the south (away from the baths) may themselves be part of the villa to which the known bath-suite was attached. The suggestion that these rooms formed (a problematic) part of the baths, and were “used as changing rooms, sleeping quarters for visitors, or for the gratification of carnal lusts” (187) is unnecessary if they formed part of the villa proper. The date proposed by Zammit, the original excavator, of “the late first to the early second century AD,” is noted without comment,Footnote 28 but the geometric polychrome mosaics look to me to be later (ca. 150/225?).Footnote 29 Recent work, so far unpublished, may tell us more; certainly, this is a site that would repay extensive modern excavation.

The multi-phase plan of another villa at San Pawl Milqi, uncovered by an Italian mission, is more or less incomprehensible (177), but C. does his best to guide us through the excavation results, so far as they are known, with full discussion of the architectural fragments that the site has yielded, mostly in all likelihood Late Hellenistic.Footnote 30 That seems to have been the phase when the site prospered most; in the later Imperial period, three olive presses were installed in a large courtyard, while what had once been residential rooms with frescoes of the 2nd c. BCE show no sign of later redecoration.Footnote 31 Żejtun is yet another villa where much more work is needed to yield a coherent plan and more precise dating evidence.Footnote 32 C. presents some interesting pieces of entablature from there with overhanging rounded cavetto cornices in the Punic tradition,Footnote 33 perhaps demonstrating their continued use into the Roman period (late 2nd/1st c. BCE?), when the villa appears to have been built. The recent suggestion that pottery evidence points to the likely existence of a Punic sanctuary underlying the villa, however, leaves open the possibility that the cornices come from an earlier building.Footnote 34 Another major point of interest at Żejtun is a further Roman olive-oil processing plant, of the kind for which there is considerable evidence all over the Maltese islands.Footnote 35

Three temples have been uncovered in Malta and Gozo. Two of them (191) are dramatically situated on cliff-tops, Ras ir-Raħeb on Malta and Ras il-Wardija on Gozo.Footnote 36 Both were poorly excavated, but they appear to be of the open-plan Punic type built on the flat, common in Roman north Africa, without a hint of raised podia or other Roman influence.Footnote 37 The chronology, however, is uncertain: they probably belong to the Republican period when Punic influence in Malta (as in western Sicily too) was still strong. Pottery from the Italian mission at Ras il-Wardija, which stretches from the 3rd/2nd c. BCE to the 1st/2nd c. CE, may support that conclusion. At Ras ir-Raħeb, a coin of Constantius II (337–61 CE) documents a Late Roman visitor, but whether the temple was in ruins by then is unclear. A case can and has been made for it to be identified as the site of the temple of Hercules mentioned by Ptolemy, although available evidence is slight.Footnote 38 Both sites would repay modern scientific excavation.

The third temple, Tas-Silġ on Malta (191–207), is a remarkable site, situated on a hilltop with a magnificent sweeping panorama over the eastern part of the island.Footnote 39 One of two adjacent megalithic temples of late Neolithic date (ca. 3000/2500 BCE) was reused anew as a shrine in Phoenician times (8th/7th c. BCE). Either then or later, fresh walls were provided in front of it, together with a new entrance. Then in Late Hellenistic times, when politically Malta was under Roman control, the Phoenician/Punic forecourt was demolished, and in its place was built an open paved piazza on a grand scale, with spacious porticoes surrounding it on three sides. The latter, paved in opus signinum with white tessera inlay, were probably built in the late 2nd or early 1st c. BCE.Footnote 40 The columns, all of limestone, were mostly in the Doric order, but Sicilian Corinthian was used as well, apparently on the east side near the temple entrance.Footnote 41 The paving of the court respected some largely demolished Phoenician walling, being laid up to but not over it.Footnote 42 This is truly a place of memory, with later builders aware of, and respectful of, preceding shrines of Phoenician and Neolithic date. Numerous inscribed votive potsherds indicate worship of Astarte here. Cicero mentions the sanctuary in the same breath as Hera's on Samos for their antiquity and sanctity,Footnote 43 Astarte having now been transformed into Juno Regina through interpretatio Romana.Footnote 44 It is the veiled head of Astarte/Juno that features on Melita's coinage from the end of the 3rd c. to the 1st c. BCE, almost certainly a reference to this shrine.Footnote 45 Ongoing excavation at Tas-Silġ as well as study of unpublished earlier records continues to yield fresh information.Footnote 46

Of particular interest, but mentioned only in passing by C. (205), is an apparent restoration in Augustan times or later which deserved fuller treatment. A marble slab with Egyptianizing relief decoration, now in a private collection but taken from Tas-Silġ, shows side by side a snake (probably with a human head), a stylized atef-crown (in the center), and a large uraeus on the right, also stylized.Footnote 47 The slab is broken off here, but may have been balanced by a further atef-crown and a further snake. Parallels elsewhere suggest that the snake with human head symbolizes Serapis as the Agathodaimon (“the good spirit”), whereas the atef-crown, originally worn by Osiris, came to be associated with Isis. The uraeus, originally linked with the cobra-goddess Wadjet, was used ubiquitously as the symbol of both royal and divine power in ancient Egypt. That the relief came from Tas-Silġ is demonstrated by the discovery of small fragments with identical motifs in an identical arrangement during the Italian excavations of 1963–70, at various points on the site, indicating that one of the buildings there was once decorated with an architectural marble frieze with a repeat pattern featuring these elements. We know that there was apparently some Augustan building work at Tas-Silġ, because a fragmentary Latin inscription, probably the oldest in that language in Malta, honors a certain ]EMPRO] / ]TRATIN[ / [A]VG IMP[. This must refer to L. Sempronius Atratinus, the suffect consul of 34 BCE and augur, whose award of the title imp(erator) for his victories in Africa in 21 BCE means that the Tas Silġ inscription can be ascribed to a date between then and Atratinus's death in 7 CE.Footnote 48 Bonzano has suggested that the building work carried out by him included the erection of the Egyptianizing marble frieze, which she therefore sees as Augustan, and she suggests that it might have adorned at eye-level the walls of one or other of the two small square side rooms which flank the central entrance to the main temple.Footnote 49 Even if the location suggested for the frieze is plausible, if unprovable, the Augustan date is more uncertain. If correct, it would be the earliest recorded instance (by over a century) of marble used in construction work anywhere in the Maltese islands.Footnote 50 More significantly, the use of the so-called running drill, clearly visible on the relief, is more appropriate to work at the end of the 1st c. CE and in the first half of the 2nd c. (and later) rather than earlier.Footnote 51 So while the Atratinus inscription appears to indicate building activity of some sort at Tas-Silġ under Augustus, there might have been further work later, a little before or somewhat after ca. 100 CE, which included the Egyptianizing frieze.Footnote 52

How long the temple remained in use is unclear, but African red slip pottery and lamps show continuing activity into the 4th and 5th c. Whether that activity was still religious in nature is hard to gauge: there seems to have been no new building work in the Late Roman period. Perhaps the sanctuary's very antiquity removed any desire to alter such a venerated place, running repairs apart. Later still, a small church was inserted, probably in the 6th c., with a baptismal font set in the middle of the Neolithic structure. Remarkably, even if with interruptions, Tas-Silġ remained a sacred site for millennia.

One striking aspect of C.'s book is the absence of any structures from the Late Roman period. There is pottery of this date from sites like Tas-Silġ and Ta’ Kaċċatura (as noted above) but no clear structural evidence of that period, and there appear to be no Late Roman villas. Yet the Maltese islands were not in decline then: there are a handful of Late Roman inscriptions, both public and private, and the rich catacomb evidence, not only in an urban setting (at Rabat) but also in scattered rural locations all over both islands (but especially on Malta), show a continuing, dense occupation in Late Antique times.Footnote 53 Field survey, not fully developed as yet in the islands, may well change this picture in the future,Footnote 54 but excavation of key Late Roman sites, both urban and rural, is an urgent desideratum. This is a challenge (along with the need to fill several other lacunae noted above) that, one hopes, present and future generations of Maltese archaeologists will be able to take on, funding permitting.Footnote 55 The lack of a secure chronology for so many of the Hellenistic and Roman buildings in the Maltese islands is a long-standing and on-going problem.

At times, more contextualization of the material presented in C.'s book would have been useful; often the focus is too firmly fixed on the Maltese islands, without looking at the wider world.Footnote 56 Ta’ Kaċċatura's cistern, for example, has close structural parallels in well-preserved examples of the same type near Scordia in southeast Sicily, as well as at Syracuse and elsewhere. All are likely to be pre-Imperial,Footnote 57 strengthening the conclusion that the Maltese examples of the same type, with flat, large-slab roofs, all also belong to the 3rd/1st c. BCE rather than later. The satyr in telamon pose from Ramla Bay recalls one in a similarly private context in a Late Hellenistic house at Centuripe, also in eastern Sicily.Footnote 58 The bibliography is full, but additional items in a few cases would have made it even more helpful.Footnote 59 The great strength, however, of C.'s handsome book is that, in presenting a wealth of informative detail about Roman structures and their decoration in the Maltese archipelago, he has rendered an important service to scholarship by bringing this little known material to a wider audience. For that he warmly deserves both thanks and praise.

Footnotes

1 Zammit was responsible for initiating or continuing excavations at the Domus Romana in Rabat, the villa at Ramla Bay, and the baths at Għan Tuffieħa mentioned below.

2 Bonanno Reference Bonanno1992; Bonanno Reference Bonanno2005. For a complete list of his publications (up to and partially including 2017): Vella et al. Reference Vella, Frendo and Vella2018, 13–27.

3 Bruno Reference Bruno2004; for an English edition, Bruno Reference Bruno2009. Pottery: Anastasi Reference Anastasi2019.

4 Notably (for Roman material) Bonanno Reference Bonanno2005.

5 The five listed twice are the Rabat Domus, San Pawl Milqi, Żejtun, Ta’ Kaċċatura, and Tas- Silġ, as there are separate lists for Republican and Imperial sites. For the inscriptions (sites II and A) to Apollo and Proserpina, see n. 12 below.

8 Von Boeselager Reference Von Boeselager1983, 45. There are other parallels with Sicilian Hellenistic mosaics, e.g., Palermo and Taormina (von Boeslager Reference Von Boeselager1983, pls. VI–XIII).

9 So too Gouder Reference Gouder1983, 11 (or southern Italy), referring to the emblemata; Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a, 257, implies that the latter may have come from the East, “perhaps Alexandria or Pergamon.” Wootton (Reference Wootton2002, 265) suggests that the Palermo emblema is local or Campanian.

10 So Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a, 258. For the 3-D scanning project of both the whole of the visible site and the objects in the museum, see now Tanasi et al. Reference Tanasi, Hassam, Kingsland, Trapani, King and Calì2021. Both coins and pottery belonging to the 3rd and 4th c. CE seem to be frequent from the area of housing to the north of the Domus (Lowe Reference Lowe2021, 46).

11 C. is here following Bonanno Reference Bonanno2018b. I prefer to see her as Livilla, Claudius's sister, on the basis of the continuous row of curls around the forehead, shared by (for example) a comparable head in Berlin: Wilson Reference Wilson2020, 531, n. 57, and so also Boschung Reference Boschung1993, 64, no. Qa, who refers to it as Typus Leptis-Malta, “Livilla als wahrscheinlichste Lösung” (I am grateful to C. Murer for this reference).

12 Apollo: CIL X 7495; ILS 5415. Proserpina: CIL X 7494. For a very recent summary of what is known about the Roman town at Rabat (on Malta), Lowe Reference Lowe2021.

13 The one exception may be the Augustan (?) marble fragments from the sanctuary of Tas-Silġ (but see below).

14 Three were first recorded in Abela Reference Abela1647, 220 (reproduced by C. on 10), and two of them are illustrated here with photographs (13, 124, 137, and 209).

15 The plan here (181) is that of Ashby (Reference Ashby1915, folding plan, fig. 25); Zammit's plan of 1910 is also reproduced (on 184–85).

16 The identifications are my own; C. does not discuss the layout in detail, and Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a, 259, mostly follows Ashby (e.g., in describing the cold pool alone as the frigidarium). Ashby reckons that five rooms had hypocausts, but one is clearly a service area for firing the praefurnia of the heated rooms (contrast Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a, 261, who thinks the praefurnium was in what I call the caldarium; but in that case, its hot pool would be isolated and inaccessible to bathers).

17 Mifsud Reference Mifsud2021, which of course appeared too late for use in the book under review.

18 Ashby Reference Ashby1915, 52–66.

19 Ashby (Reference Ashby1915, 52–53) described the earlier walls as Punic (from examples in Motya and Carthage), being in what would now be called opus Africanum, with orthostats at intervals, but the style continued to be used into the Imperial period too.

20 Ashby (Reference Ashby1915, fig. 24) calls it “imitation samian.” The stamp types he illustrates in nos. 2 and 4 occur on Hayes ARS forms 59a, 61a, 62a, 64, 67, and 83, all datable to between about 320 and 460 CE. All finds from this site are sadly now lost (so Anastasi and Vella Reference Anastasi, Vella, Vella, Frendo and Vella2018, 278).

21 An Italian sigillata stamp of L. Rasin(ius) Pis(anus) in planta pedis is recorded (Ashby Reference Ashby1915, 65), which might be a hint of activity at the site (the building of the main visible villa or a period of its occupation?) in the period 50/120 CE (Oxé et al. Reference Oxé, Comfort and Kenrick2000, no. 1690), and a marble inscription ]PII[ is allegedly “in good characters of the latter half of the second century of our era” (64–65).

22 Others are at Tal-Ħlas and Il-Brolli (Bonanno Reference Bonanno2005, 107) and probably at the Żejtun villa (Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a, 263). The latter has been only partially excavated because of safety concerns; preliminary examination of pottery from one of the cistern heads suggests it may have been built as early as the 4th c. BCE (Bonanno and Vella Reference Bonanno, Vella and Abela2012, 24), but full details are awaited.

23 Trump Reference Trump1972, 89; cf. also 87, 128. Cardona Reference Cardona2021, 238, says that Trump “uncovered compelling evidence … in favour of their attribution to the Roman period.”

24 Cardona Reference Cardona2021, 242, fig. 14. Ring-mail (erroneously often called chain-mail, as by C.) was developed in the Celtic world and adopted by Rome in Republican times, but few finds of that date are known archaeologically (Bishop and Coulston Reference Bishop and Coulston2006, 63; Fischer Reference Fischer2019, 299).

25 On the likely date, Bonanno Reference Bonanno2005, 91–92 and 294–97. On the ring-mail, see n. 24.

26 See also n. 57 below (Sicilian examples).

27 Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a, 260, is emphatically in favour of the idea that a villa lay adjacent.

28 Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a, 261, suggests 50/150 CE.

29 E.g., the elaborate overlapping-scales mosaic in the frigidarium (what C. calls the apodyterium, but it has a cold pool opening off it) is unlikely to be earlier than the mid-2nd c. (e.g., at Corinth, probably ca. 150/200 CE: Dunbabin Reference Dunbabin1999, 213, fig. 225), and the second floor from the west of the square rooms is also found in the same villa at Corinth and at Marsala, not before ca. 200 (von Boeselager Reference Von Boeselager1983, 146).

30 On this site, see also Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a, 261–62.

31 The olive-presses are considered to belong to the latest phase of the site, ca. 225–300 CE: see Locatelli Reference Locatelli2005–6 and Locatelli Reference Locatelli, González, Ruggeri, Vismara and Zucca2008, and now Anastasi and Vella Reference Anastasi, Vella, Vella, Frendo and Vella2018, 281.

32 Abela Reference Abela2012, 18, fig. 11 for a more up-to-date plan. The original excavations here ignored stratigraphy, in contrast to those of 2006–12, but the latter await detailed publication. The villa's floruit seems to have been the 2nd/1st c. BCE, but its olive-pressing facility, “built sometime after the second century BC,” was still active in the Late Roman period (Anastasi Reference Anastasi2019, 22 and 28). See also n. 22 above. A further villa at Tad-Dawl, 8 km south of Valletta, now destroyed, is not included by C.: see Bonanno Reference Bonanno2005, 306–7; Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a, 262–63 (both with plan).

33 An example of this moulding can still be seen in situ in a standing building, at Żurrieq (C. 52–53), but its dating is controversial – is it Punic, i.e., pre-Roman (late 4th/3rd c. BC?), 6th/5th c. BCE (so Hölbl Reference Hölbl1989, 146–49), or “Hellenistic” period (2nd c. BCE?) (Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Bonacasa, Naro, Portale and Tullio1998, 226)?

34 On the Punic period at Żejtun, see Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a, 264. It is mentioned only in passing by C. (170: “the site also provides evidence of use quite possibly as early as the Phoenician period”). Latest work suggests, however, that this earlier phase (4th/2nd c. BCE?) is more likely to be a farm than a religious site because of the clear evidence there of trenches for vines. Finds include contemporary, locally made flat-bottomed wine amphorae, trading of which is attested beyond the Maltese islands at Pantelleria, Jerba, and in southern Sardinia (Anastasi Reference Anastasi, Brun, Garnier and Olcese2020).

35 See now Anastasi and Vella Reference Anastasi, Vella, Vella, Frendo and Vella2018, who list 23 sites. For Żejtun, see also n. 32 above.

36 For the latter, see now Azzopardi Reference Azzopardi2017.

37 Identification of these as temples must be right, pace Wilson Reference Wilson and Talbert2000, 720, who listed Ras ir-Raħeb as a farm, following Bonanno Reference Bonanno1977. Bonanno (Reference Bonanno2016, 256), too, now sees this as a sanctuary site.

38 Ptol. Geog. 4.3.13. C. (in a caption on p. 49) accepts the identification without question. See Bonanno Reference Bonanno2016 for a balanced discussion.

39 The most recent excavation report is Bonanno and Vella Reference Bonanno and Vella2015, mentioned in passing by C. (196) but not cited in his references; little of the volume in fact concerns the Roman period.

40 The date of this phase is suggested by fragments of Dressel 1A amphorae, sealed beneath, and the style of the architectural fragments: see Bonzano Reference Bonzano2017a, 53–136 (81 for the dating), with a complete catalogue (137–69) of all 68 architectural fragments of this period found. For an important review of Bonzano Reference Bonzano2017a, see Bonanno Reference Bonnano and Bonzano2019.

41 Bonzano Reference Bonzano2017a, 88, fig. 114, and 109, fig. 135, speculates on their position.

42 E.g., the earlier walls of the so-called archaic antae and an off-center altar, both in the central paved court of the sanctuary (Bonzano Reference Bonzano2017a, 81–82 with fig. 52a–b on 54–55, nos. 6 and 9). On “memory” in the Late Republican sanctuary, see also Bonzano Reference Bonzano2017b.

43 Cic. Verr. 2.4.103: ab eo oppido non longe in promontorio fanum est Iuonis antiquum (“not far away from that town [Melita, Rabat], on a promontory is an ancient temple of Juno”; transl. author); 2.5.184: . . . Iuno Regina, cuius duo fana duabus in insulis posita sociorum, Melitae et Sami, sanctissima et antiquissima (“. . . Juno Regina, whose two temples, both very sacred and very old, located in two islands of our allies, Malta and Samos . . .”; transl. author).

44 The term was coined by Tacitus, Germania 43, in a somewhat different context to its modern use: Lund Reference Lund2007.

45 On Malta's coinage, Burnett et al. Reference Burnett, Amandry and Ripollès1992, 180, nos. 672–74; Perassi Reference Perassi2018. In brief, Bonanno Reference Bonanno2005, 156–59; Frey-Kupper Reference Frey-Kupper2013, 194–95 and 436–37 with references (nos. 1174–77).

46 For a valuable update, with excellent reconstructions showing the site in its different phases, see now Airoldi et al. Reference Airoldi, Bonzano, Cazzella, De Grossi Mazzorin, Grassi, Notarstefano, Perassi, Recchia, Sannazaro and Semeraro2022.

48 Tansey Reference Tansey2008; AE 1969–70, no. 204; AE 2008, no. 602; I.Sicily 003353. Atratinus's name also appears on Sicilian civic coinage (Marsala and Entella), probably struck in 36 BCE: Burnett et al. Reference Burnett, Amandry and Ripollès1992, nos. 653–55.

49 Bonzano Reference Bonzano2006–7 and Bonzano Reference Bonzano2012. A few scraps of marble Corinthian capitals are also believed by Bonzano Reference Bonzano2012 (160, fig. 6) to be Augustan. Po Valley sigillata signed by L. Sarius Surus is further evidence of Augustan activity (Airoldi et al. Reference Airoldi, Bonzano, Cazzella, De Grossi Mazzorin, Grassi, Notarstefano, Perassi, Recchia, Sannazaro and Semeraro2022, 70; Oxé et al. Reference Oxé, Comfort and Kenrick2000, nos. 1667/1795/2013, ca. 10 BCE/15 CE).

50 As noted earlier, there is no other evidence at present elsewhere for the architectural use of marble in the islands until the early 2nd c. CE.

51 Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Bonacasa, Naro, Portale and Tullio1998, 218, suggested, for example, a Flavio-Trajanic date. Strong and Claridge Reference Strong, Claridge, Strong and Brown1976, 199, note how use of the drill in “earlier periods” of marble sculpture was carefully disguised. Bonzano Reference Bonzano and Mazzilli2020, 134, mentions some architectural scraps which may be Severan.

52 There are two rectangular rooms, part of the precinct wall, and two drains which are marked on C.'s multi-phase plan (200–1) as “Roman,” but details are lacking of precisely when they were built. A more recently published phase-plan (Airoldi et al. Reference Airoldi, Bonzano, Cazzella, De Grossi Mazzorin, Grassi, Notarstefano, Perassi, Recchia, Sannazaro and Semeraro2022, 63) has changed these rooms and walls to “late Republic” and a drain to “Punic”; the “Roman” (i.e., Imperial) period has disappeared from that plan altogether.

53 On the catacombs (which belong to the 4th–7th c. CE), Buhagiar Reference Buhagiar1986; Buhagiar Reference Buhagiar2007; Buhagiar and Bonnano Reference Buhagiar, Bonanno and Bonacasa Carra2002; Rizzone and Sabatini Reference Rizzone and Sabatini2008. C. himself has very recently published an overview of the catacomb and hypogea evidence: Cardona Reference Cardona, Castrorao Barba, Tanasi and Miccichè2023.

54 Docter et al. Reference Docter, Vella, Cutajar, Bonanno and Pace2012 is a promising first step. See also, in brief, Stoddart et al. Reference Stoddart, Pace, Cutajar, Vella, McLaughlin, Malone, Meneely, Trump, French, Hunt, Grima, McLaughlin, Stoddart and Malone2020, 250, with reference to two others, the Cambridge Gozo survey (with an emphasis on the prehistoric) and that at Mġarr ix-Xini, also in Gozo (on the south coast).

55 A manifesto has recently been published elsewhere by C. (2021) on the present status quaestionis and some plans for future directions (I would have emphasized in addition the need for fresh dating evidence of already known sites).

56 Bonzano Reference Bonzano and Mazzilli2020, published of course too late for C. to use, discusses part of the same material with occasional reference to Sicilian comparanda.

57 (1) S. Basilio near Scordia: Lagona Reference Lagona1984–85, 808; (2) Syracuse, Railway Station: Orsi Reference Orsi1904, 280–82; (3) Syracuse, S. Nicolo dei Cordari: Gentili Reference Gentili1973, 71–73. Imperial-period cisterns in Sicily all have barrel-vaulted roofs of concrete (Wilson Reference Wilson and Jansen2001, 11–12 and 21–22).

58 As was pointed out, for example, by Bonzano Reference Bonzano2017a, 204, fig. 252. For the Centuripe example, Wilson Reference Wilson and Henig1990, 71, fig. 5.6; Frasca Reference Frasca, Osanna and Torelli2006, 197, fig. 14.

59 For example, of the directly relevant works cited in the notes above, the following are not mentioned by C.: Abela Reference Abela2012; Anastasi and Vella Reference Anastasi, Vella, Vella, Frendo and Vella2018; Azzopardi Reference Azzopardi2017; Bonanno Reference Bonanno2016; Bonanno Reference Bonanno, Marzano and Métraux2018a; Bonanno Reference Bonanno2018b; Bonanno and Vella Reference Bonanno and Vella2015; Bonzano Reference Bonzano2017b; Gouder Reference Gouder1983; Locatelli Reference Locatelli2005–6; von Boeselager Reference Von Boeselager1983. Such is the author's modesty that he does not even cite his own work, e.g., Cardona Reference Cardona, Bonanno and Militello2008; Cardona Reference Cardona2008–9.

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