In this 1907 work, Strong argues for the aesthetic importance of Roman sculpture, usually considered as inferior to Greek.Roman sculpture had been regarded as the 'poor relation' of what was seen as the superior art of Greece, but in this highly illustrated 1907 work Eug?nie Strong (18601943) argues both for its particular aesthetic qualities and also for its importance as a bridge between pagan and Christian art.Roman sculpture had been regarded as the 'poor relation' of what was seen as the superior art of Greece, but in this highly illustrated 1907 work Eug?nie Strong (18601943) argues both for its particular aesthetic qualities and also for its importance as a bridge between pagan and Christian art.Eug?nie Strong (n?e Sellers, 18601943) studied classics at Girton College, Cambridge, and then classical archaeology in London. Her translations of Schuchardt's account of Schliemann's excavations at Troy, and of F?rtwangler's Masterpieces of Greek Sculpture, are also reissued in this series. Among other distinctions, she was the first female student of the British School at Athens, and in 1909 (partly as a result of the 1907 publication of this book) was appointed assistant director of the British School at Rome. Roman sculpture had consistently been regarded as the 'poor relation' of what was seen as the superior art of Greece, but in this highly illustrated work, covering the period from Augustus to Constantine, Strong argues both for its particular aesthetic qualities and also for its importance as occupying a special place 'at the psychological moment when the Antique passes from the service of the Pagan State into that of Christianity'.Preface; Chronological table; Introduction; 1. The Augustan age; 2. Augustan decoration; 3. Augustus to Nero; 4. The Flavian age; 5. Flavian relief; 6. The principate of Trajan; 7. The column of Trajan; 8. The Trajan column (cont.); 9. The principate of Trajan (cont.); 10. Principate of Hadrian; 11. Hadrianic sarcophagi; 12. ThlĂ-