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The Victory Monument of Augustus at Nicopolis, Volume III
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27 February 2026

The publication of The Victory Monument of Augustus at Nicopolis – The Tropaeum of the Sea Battle of Actium is completed with the release of the third volume, bringing to conclusion a long-term and demanding research programme of international scope.
The Monument erected by Augustus to commemorate his naval victory at Actium in 31 B.C., over the combined fleet of Mark Antony and Queen Cleopatra of Egypt, dominates the hill on which he had established his headquarters, on the outskirts of the newly founded city of Nicopolis. Closely associated with the emergence of the Roman Empire, the monument ranks among the most significant archaeological discoveries of the twentieth century on account of its historical, ideological, and artistic importance.
This monumental complex combines a permanent victory tropaeum with an organized cult space, at the centre of which stood a monumental Altar of Pentelic marble adorned with an elaborate sculptural programme.
The third volume focuses on the systematic and fully documented reconstruction of the thousands of fragments deriving from the decoration of the Altar and of the monument as a whole. This study makes a substantial contribution to the understanding of public art in the Age of Augustus and of the visual language shaped through the creative interaction of Greek and Roman traditions.
The volume is the result of many years of sustained and methodical research conducted by Konstantinos Zachos and his international team of collaborators. It offers a fully documented and extensively illustrated presentation of the Monument and brings the trilogy to completion with a synthetic and scholarly assessment of its place in the history of art and in the ideological formation of early Imperial Rome.
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Archaeology, Archaeology by period / region, Ancient history
Konstantinos L. Zachos is emeritus curator of Antiquities of the Greek Ministry of Culture. He served as President of the Scientific Committee of Dodona and as President of the Scientific Committee of Nicopolis, which were responsible for the conservation, restoration and promotion of the monuments of these two iconic sites. He established the new Archaeological Museums of Leucas, Nicopolis and Arta (ancient Ambracia), and the renovation of the Archaeological Museum of Ioannina, where he also curated a number of special exhibitions. He was awarded the ?uropa Nostra Award/European Union Award for Cultural Heritage for the restoration works on the monuments of Nicopolis.