Patterns in the economy of Roman Asia Minor

書誌事項

Patterns in the economy of Roman Asia Minor

editors, Stephen Mitchell and Constantina Katsari ; contributors, David Braund ... [et al.]

Classical Press of Wales , Distributor in the U.S.A., David Brown Book Co., 2005

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注記

Derived from a conference held at the University of Exeter in July 2002

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Asia Minor under Rome was one of the wealthiest and most developed parts of the Empire, but there have been few modern studies of its economics. The twelve papers in this book, by an international team of scholars, work from literary texts, inscriptions, coinage and archaeology. They study the direct impact of Roman rule; the organisation of large agricultural estates; changing patterns of olive production; threats to rural prosperity from pests and the animal world; inter-regional trade in the Black Sea; the significance of civic market buildings; the economic role of temples and sanctuaries; the contribution of private benefactors to civic finances; and, monetization in the third century AD, and the effect of transitory populations on local economic activity.

目次

  • Stephen Mitchell and Constantina Katsari, 'Introduction: the economy of Roman Asia Minor'
  • Thomas Corsten (Heidelberg), 'Estates in Roman Asia Minor: the case of Kibyratis'
  • Johannes Nolle (Munich), `Boars, bears and bugs: farming in Asia Minor and the protection of men, animals and crops'
  • Stephen Mitchell (Exeter), 'Olive cultivation in the economy of Roman Asia Minor'
  • David Braund (Exeter), 'Across the Black Sea: patterns of maritime exchange on the periphery of Roman Asia Minor'
  • Veli Kose (Cologne), 'The origin and development of market buildings in Hellenistic and Roman Asia Minor'
  • Arjan Zuiderhoek (Amsterdam), 'The icing on the cake: benefactors, economics and public buildings in Roman Asia Minor'
  • Giovanni Salmeri (Pisa), 'Central power intervention and the economy of the provinces in the Roman Empire: the case of Pontus and Bithynia'
  • Beate Dignas (Michigan), 'Sacred revenues in Roman hands: the economic dimension of sanctuaries in western Asia Minor'
  • Margherita Facella (Pisa), 'Coinage and the economy of Commagene'
  • Stanley Ireland (Warwick), 'Coinage in Roman Pontus and Paphlagonia: problems of evidence and interpretation'
  • Constantina Katsari (Galway), 'The monetization of Roman Asia Minor from Septimius Severus to Gallienus'
  • Hugh Elton (Ankara), 'Military supply and the south coast of Anatolia in the third century AD'
  • Turhan Kacar (Balikesir), 'Church councils and their impact on the economy of the cities in Roman Asia Minor'.

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