RT Book, Section T1 Imperium Romanum Tributim Discriptum 2.0 A1 Fasolini, Donato A2 Álvarez Martínez, José María A2 Nogales Basarrate, Trinidad A2 Rodà de Llanza, Isabel AB ABSTRACT : New technologies allow the complete and exhaustive updating of works that are of fundamental importance in the study of Ancient History, as well as the best analysis and evaluation of archaeological materials, which arescattered to such an extent that all traditional methods of data collecting would prove themselves very arduous. On this occasion I would like to present a new database dedicated to a specific kind of artifacts, that are epigraphic supports showing Roman citizens’ tribal ascription, with the aim of supplying a tool for the constant updating of the late 19th century cornestone that is Imperium romanum tributim discriptum, Praha 1889, by Wilhelm Kubitschek. This fundamental work, which is to this day the only existing catalogue raisonné concerning the tribal ascription in the Roman empire, proves itself to be timeworn by now as regards documentation that has considerably increased in more than one century of archaeological investigations and discoveries, although it still offers topical causes for reflection PB Museo Nacional de Arte Romano SN 978-84-617-3697-3 (Obra completa) SN 978-84-606-7624-9 (Volumen 1) SN 978-84-606-7949-3 (Volumen 2) YR 2014 FD 2014 LK https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/112335 UL https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14352/112335 LA spa NO Este artículo se ha realizado en el marco del Proyecto de Investigación del grupo ORDO Alcalá, HAR2011-29108-C04-02 (El taller de ORDO: representaciones gráficas de la influencia y el poder de las élites en la Pars occidentalis del Imperio romano), financiado con fondos públicos del Plan Nacional de Investigación Básica del Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación, bajo la dirección del Prof. Joaquín Gómez-Pantoja. NO Fundación Española para la Ciencia y la Tecnología DS Docta Complutense RD 19 mar 2026