Research:
PhD candidate in Archaeology, Classical curriculum (40th cycle), with a research project aimed at investigating the role of flat-bottomed amphorae produced along the Tiber Valley within the framework of the Roman economy during the Imperial period. This interdisciplinary study aims to redefine the typology and chronology of the so-called "Spello" amphorae and reconstruct their distribution across the main consumption centres—particularly Rome and Ostia—within the commercial networks associated with the wine trade. The research employs an integrated approach that combines morphological and archaeometric analyses of ceramic materials with digital tools (GIS, databases) and a critical review of excavation records.
Graduate of the international Erasmus Mundus Joint Master Degree in Archaeological Materials Science (EMJMD-AMS) (academic year 2023/2024), with a thesis entitled: “The ‘Spello’ Amphorae: Typology and Archaeometric Analysis of the Assemblage Found in the Roman Cistern at Spoletino (VT)”, focused on the integrated analysis of amphorae fragments to explore manufacturing processes and patterns of distribution.
Master’s Degree in Archaeology from Sapienza University of Rome (a.y. 2021/2022), with a thesis in Roman Provincial Archaeology entitled: “La ceramica comune con decorazione dipinta di tradizione iberica proveniente dal sito di Laminium” (“Common Ware with Painted Iberian-Style Decoration from the Site of Laminium”), centred on the analysis of ceramic assemblages as indicators of cultural continuity and transregional interactions in the context of Roman Hispania.
Bachelor’s Degree in Archaeology from the same university (a.y. 2017/2018), with a thesis entitled: “Manifestazioni del culto celtico delle Matronae-Junones nella Gallia Cisalpina” (“Manifestations of the Celtic Cult of the Matronae-Junones in Cisalpine Gaul”), focusing on the study of religious and iconographic evidence related to the worship of female deities in the Romanised context of northern Italy.