«Conoscere per ricercare». Juan de Mata Carriazo Arroquia y su interés por el urbanismo romano antiguo
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2026
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Libros Pórtico
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Salas Alvarez, J. (2026). «Conoscere per ricercare». Juan de Mata Carriazo Arroquia y su interés por el urbanismo romano antiguo. Historiografía y Recepción De La Antigüedad En España, Portugal e Iberoamérica. Vol II, by Mirella Romero Recio, Jesús Salas Álvarez, Paloma Martín-Esperanza Montilla y Mikel Gago Gómez De Luna (Eds.), 419–436. https://doi.org/10.13039/501100011033
Abstract
Tras la finalización de la Exposición Iberoamericana de Sevilla de 1929, Juan de Mata Carriazo y Arroquia, Catedrático de Prehistoria e Historia de España Antigua y Medieval en la Universidad de Sevilla, se hizo cargo de la dirección de las excavaciones arqueológicas en el yacimiento de Itálica (Santiponce, Sevilla). En este trabajo analizaremos su viajes a Italia, realizados con la intención de conocer de primera mano la metodología arqueológica empleada en Pompeya, Herculano y Ostia Antica, para, posteriormente, aplicarla a sus investigaciones arqueológicas en el yacimiento italicense que, por aquel entonces, era uno de los lugares más importantes dentro del panorama arqueológico español.
After the completion of the Ibero-American Exposition of Seville in 1929, Juan de Mata Carriazo y Arroquia, Professor of Prehistory and the History of Ancient and Medieval Spain at the University of Seville, took charge of the direction of archaeological excavations at the site of Itálica (Santiponce, Seville). In this paper, we will analyze his trips to Italy, made with the intention of firsthand learning first-hand the archaeological methodology employed in Pompeii, Herculaneum and Ostia Antica, in order to later apply it to his archaeological research at the Italica site, which, at that time, was one of the most important sites in the Spanish archaeological landscape.
After the completion of the Ibero-American Exposition of Seville in 1929, Juan de Mata Carriazo y Arroquia, Professor of Prehistory and the History of Ancient and Medieval Spain at the University of Seville, took charge of the direction of archaeological excavations at the site of Itálica (Santiponce, Seville). In this paper, we will analyze his trips to Italy, made with the intention of firsthand learning first-hand the archaeological methodology employed in Pompeii, Herculaneum and Ostia Antica, in order to later apply it to his archaeological research at the Italica site, which, at that time, was one of the most important sites in the Spanish archaeological landscape.













