Urban Craftsmen and Traders in the Roman World
Herausgeber: Wilson, Andrew; Flohr, Miko
Urban Craftsmen and Traders in the Roman World
Herausgeber: Wilson, Andrew; Flohr, Miko
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This edited collection, featuring sixteen contributions from leading Roman historians and archaeologists, sheds new light on approaches to the economic history of urban craftsmen and traders in the Roman world.
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This edited collection, featuring sixteen contributions from leading Roman historians and archaeologists, sheds new light on approaches to the economic history of urban craftsmen and traders in the Roman world.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Oxford Studies on the Roman Economy
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 408
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. April 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 164mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 854g
- ISBN-13: 9780198748489
- ISBN-10: 0198748485
- Artikelnr.: 47865557
- Oxford Studies on the Roman Economy
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 408
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. April 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 164mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 854g
- ISBN-13: 9780198748489
- ISBN-10: 0198748485
- Artikelnr.: 47865557
Andrew Wilson is Professor of the Archaeology of the Roman Empire at the University of Oxford. Miko Flohr is a postdoctoral researcher in the Institute for History at Leiden University.
* Introduction
* Part I: Approaches
* 1: Miko Flohr and Andrew Wilson: Roman Craftsmen and Traders: Towards
an Intellectual History
* 2: Carla Salvaterra and Alessandro Cristofori: Twentieth Century
Italian Research on Craftsmen, Traders, and their Professional
Organizations in the Roman World
* 3: Jean-Pierre Brun: The Archaeology of Ancient Urban Workshops: A
French Approach?
* Part II: Strategies
* 4: Candace Rice: Mercantile Specialization and Trading Communities:
Economic Strategies in Roman Maritime Trade
* 5: Kai Ruffing: Driving Forces for Specialization: Market, Location
Factors, Productivity Improvements
* 6: Carol van Driel-Murray: Fashionable Footwear: Craftsmen and
Consumers in the North-West Provinces of the Roman Empire
* 7: Nicolas Monteix: Contextualizing the Operational Sequence:
Pompeian Bakeries as a Case Study
* Part III: People
* 8: Christel Freu: Disciplina, patrocinium, nomen: The Benefits of
Apprenticeship in the Roman World
* 9: Lena Larsson Lovén: Women, Trade, and Production in the Urban
Centres of Roman Italy
* 10: Wim Broekaert: Freedmen and Agency in Roman Business
* 11: Nicolas Tran: The Social Organization of Commerce and Crafts in
Ancient Arles: Heterogeneity, Hierarchy, and Patronage
* 12: Ilias Arnaoutoglou: Hierapolis and its Professional Associations:
A Comparative Analysis
* Part IV: Space
* 13: Penelope Goodman: Working Together: Clusters of Artisans in the
Roman City
* 14: Kerstin Dross-Krüpe: Spatial Concentration and Dispersal of Roman
Textile Crafts
* 15: Orsolya Láng: Industry and Commerce in the City of Aquincum
* 16: Jeroen Poblome: The Potters of Ancient Sagalassos Revisited
* Index
* Part I: Approaches
* 1: Miko Flohr and Andrew Wilson: Roman Craftsmen and Traders: Towards
an Intellectual History
* 2: Carla Salvaterra and Alessandro Cristofori: Twentieth Century
Italian Research on Craftsmen, Traders, and their Professional
Organizations in the Roman World
* 3: Jean-Pierre Brun: The Archaeology of Ancient Urban Workshops: A
French Approach?
* Part II: Strategies
* 4: Candace Rice: Mercantile Specialization and Trading Communities:
Economic Strategies in Roman Maritime Trade
* 5: Kai Ruffing: Driving Forces for Specialization: Market, Location
Factors, Productivity Improvements
* 6: Carol van Driel-Murray: Fashionable Footwear: Craftsmen and
Consumers in the North-West Provinces of the Roman Empire
* 7: Nicolas Monteix: Contextualizing the Operational Sequence:
Pompeian Bakeries as a Case Study
* Part III: People
* 8: Christel Freu: Disciplina, patrocinium, nomen: The Benefits of
Apprenticeship in the Roman World
* 9: Lena Larsson Lovén: Women, Trade, and Production in the Urban
Centres of Roman Italy
* 10: Wim Broekaert: Freedmen and Agency in Roman Business
* 11: Nicolas Tran: The Social Organization of Commerce and Crafts in
Ancient Arles: Heterogeneity, Hierarchy, and Patronage
* 12: Ilias Arnaoutoglou: Hierapolis and its Professional Associations:
A Comparative Analysis
* Part IV: Space
* 13: Penelope Goodman: Working Together: Clusters of Artisans in the
Roman City
* 14: Kerstin Dross-Krüpe: Spatial Concentration and Dispersal of Roman
Textile Crafts
* 15: Orsolya Láng: Industry and Commerce in the City of Aquincum
* 16: Jeroen Poblome: The Potters of Ancient Sagalassos Revisited
* Index
* Introduction
* Part I: Approaches
* 1: Miko Flohr and Andrew Wilson: Roman Craftsmen and Traders: Towards
an Intellectual History
* 2: Carla Salvaterra and Alessandro Cristofori: Twentieth Century
Italian Research on Craftsmen, Traders, and their Professional
Organizations in the Roman World
* 3: Jean-Pierre Brun: The Archaeology of Ancient Urban Workshops: A
French Approach?
* Part II: Strategies
* 4: Candace Rice: Mercantile Specialization and Trading Communities:
Economic Strategies in Roman Maritime Trade
* 5: Kai Ruffing: Driving Forces for Specialization: Market, Location
Factors, Productivity Improvements
* 6: Carol van Driel-Murray: Fashionable Footwear: Craftsmen and
Consumers in the North-West Provinces of the Roman Empire
* 7: Nicolas Monteix: Contextualizing the Operational Sequence:
Pompeian Bakeries as a Case Study
* Part III: People
* 8: Christel Freu: Disciplina, patrocinium, nomen: The Benefits of
Apprenticeship in the Roman World
* 9: Lena Larsson Lovén: Women, Trade, and Production in the Urban
Centres of Roman Italy
* 10: Wim Broekaert: Freedmen and Agency in Roman Business
* 11: Nicolas Tran: The Social Organization of Commerce and Crafts in
Ancient Arles: Heterogeneity, Hierarchy, and Patronage
* 12: Ilias Arnaoutoglou: Hierapolis and its Professional Associations:
A Comparative Analysis
* Part IV: Space
* 13: Penelope Goodman: Working Together: Clusters of Artisans in the
Roman City
* 14: Kerstin Dross-Krüpe: Spatial Concentration and Dispersal of Roman
Textile Crafts
* 15: Orsolya Láng: Industry and Commerce in the City of Aquincum
* 16: Jeroen Poblome: The Potters of Ancient Sagalassos Revisited
* Index
* Part I: Approaches
* 1: Miko Flohr and Andrew Wilson: Roman Craftsmen and Traders: Towards
an Intellectual History
* 2: Carla Salvaterra and Alessandro Cristofori: Twentieth Century
Italian Research on Craftsmen, Traders, and their Professional
Organizations in the Roman World
* 3: Jean-Pierre Brun: The Archaeology of Ancient Urban Workshops: A
French Approach?
* Part II: Strategies
* 4: Candace Rice: Mercantile Specialization and Trading Communities:
Economic Strategies in Roman Maritime Trade
* 5: Kai Ruffing: Driving Forces for Specialization: Market, Location
Factors, Productivity Improvements
* 6: Carol van Driel-Murray: Fashionable Footwear: Craftsmen and
Consumers in the North-West Provinces of the Roman Empire
* 7: Nicolas Monteix: Contextualizing the Operational Sequence:
Pompeian Bakeries as a Case Study
* Part III: People
* 8: Christel Freu: Disciplina, patrocinium, nomen: The Benefits of
Apprenticeship in the Roman World
* 9: Lena Larsson Lovén: Women, Trade, and Production in the Urban
Centres of Roman Italy
* 10: Wim Broekaert: Freedmen and Agency in Roman Business
* 11: Nicolas Tran: The Social Organization of Commerce and Crafts in
Ancient Arles: Heterogeneity, Hierarchy, and Patronage
* 12: Ilias Arnaoutoglou: Hierapolis and its Professional Associations:
A Comparative Analysis
* Part IV: Space
* 13: Penelope Goodman: Working Together: Clusters of Artisans in the
Roman City
* 14: Kerstin Dross-Krüpe: Spatial Concentration and Dispersal of Roman
Textile Crafts
* 15: Orsolya Láng: Industry and Commerce in the City of Aquincum
* 16: Jeroen Poblome: The Potters of Ancient Sagalassos Revisited
* Index