This book is an account of an almost completely neglected archaeological
epic, the uncovering and restoration of all the classical monuments of
Rome during the French occupation (1809-14). This was the first
large-scale archaeological programme in the city. Based on archives in
Rome and Paris, the archaeology of these five years is placed against
its essential background: the fate of the monuments since antiquity and
the contemporary Napoleonic political and cultural history. Mr Ridley
describes the enormously complicated organisation which carried out the
work and identifies the leading administrators, archaeologists and
architects. The bulk of the work is a detailed account of the excavation
and restoration work on the Forum Romanum, the Colosseum and the Forum
of Trajan, the main classical monuments. There are numerous
illustrations of the monuments both before and after the French
intervention, as well as unpublished plans from the archives. There is
an extensive specialist index. The book is intended for anyone
interested in archaeology, in Napoleonic Europe and above all, in Rome.