American Academy in Rome

Posted by Carolyn on July 11, 2011 at 11:20 pm

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The American Academy in Rome is one of those buildings you take a deep gulp before entering. Built on top of one of Rome’s famous hills with incredible views over the city, it has the sort of imposing air designed to shock and awe. Thankfully, its residents are delightful, welcoming souls, one of whom, Fritz Haeg, kindly invited me there last week to speak about Food and Rome. It is a subject close to my heart, since, when I was at the British School at Rome, I had studied an area of the city around the Theatre of Marcellus, the site of the ancient Roman food markets, as well as the S.Angelo fish market, Rome’s main purveyor of pescine products for nine hundred years.

Putting my lecture together made me realise how little about food and cities really changes. For instance, fish in the medieval city could only be sold from slabs in the S.Angelo Market, which made ownership of one extremely lucrative: the slabs were worth more than a house; and were, needless to say, owned by noble families, not by the fishmongers who sold from them:

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Equally impressive is Monte Testaccio, Rome’s ‘Eighth Hill’, which is made up of all the shattered amphorae that once brought food to the city. There could be no greater monument to the extraordinary effort it took to feed Rome, than that its waste packaging should still constitute a significant piece of geography two millennia later:

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Fritz, by the way, is currently working on a wonderful project called Roma Mangia Roma, interviewing five generations of Romans about their food stories, the subject of a forthcoming book. You can find out more about his project here:

Roma Mangia Roma


One Response

  1. Natalie Jurdeczka Says:

    Hi,
    I am coming to a talk you are doing this week in Sydney. I have only just discovered Lapham’s Quartlerly and their Summer issue is about food. I have been to turkey and coincidently read the author’s novels but I thought you might like this.

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