How to Cite

Bentz , Martin and Heinzelmann, Michael (Eds.): Sessions 4–5, Single Contributions, Heidelberg: Propylaeum, 2023 (Archaeology and Economy in the Ancient World: Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Classical Archaeology, Cologne/Bonn 2018, Volume 54). https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.1005

Identifiers

ISBN 978-3-96929-134-4 (PDF)
ISBN 978-3-96929-135-1 (Softcover)

Published

01/18/2023

Authors

Martin Bentz (Ed.), Michael Heinzelmann (Ed.)

Sessions 4–5, Single Contributions

Economic aspects permeate all areas of public and private life in ancient societies, whether in urban development, religion, art, housing, or in death. Research on ancient economies has long played a significant role in ancient history. Increasingly in the last decades, awareness has grown in archaeology that the material culture of ancient societies offers excellent opportunities for studying the structure, performance, and dynamics of ancient economic systems and economic processes. Therefore, the main objective of this congress was to understand economy as a central element of classical societies and to analyse its interaction with ecological, political, social, religious, and cultural backgrounds. The theme of the congress was addressed to all disciplines that deal with Greco-Roman civilization and their neighbouring cultures from the Aegean Bronze Age to the end of Late Antiquity.
In this collective volume, single contributions of sessions 4 and 5 deal with questions on the exploitation of resources such as metals and marble in the Roman imperial period and also on distribution, trade and networks in general in antiquity. Thematically, the studies range from trade and cultural contacts in the Iron Age and Archaic Mediterranean, Greek and Roman coinage, to Roman trade and transport systems.

Martin Bentz is a Professor of Classical Archaeology at the University of Bonn. He is the director of the excavation project at the potter’s quarter in Selinous, Sicily.

Michael Heinzelmann, Professor and chair of Classical Archaeology, Institute of Archaeology at the University of Cologne; previous positions: researcher at the German Archaeological Institute at Rome; director of the German Protestant Institute of Archaeology at Jerusalem; professor for Mediterranean Archeology at the University of Berne.

Chapters

Table of Contents
Pages
PDF
Titelei
a-iv
Contents
v-x
Martin Bentz , Michael Heinzelmann
Preface
xi
Dagmara Wielgosz-Rondolino
Polish Studies on Marbles from Asia Minor
19-20
Peter F. Bang, Mark L. Lawall, John Lund
53-55
Elizabeth Jane Shepherd
Roman CBM Cargoes in the Mediterranean
149-151
Alice Landskron, Mariarosaria Barbera
181-182
Cristina Corsi
New Perspectives on Road- and River-Stations and Communication Networks in Roman Italy
207-220
Mark R. Groenhuijzen, Philip Verhagen
Testing Archaeological Hypotheses of the Dutch Part of the Roman Limes through Spatial Analysis and Network Science
235-239
Andrea Celestino Montanaro
The Influences of the Orientalizing Period and the Relations with Greeks and Etruscans
243-265
Lorenzo Zamboni
Weighing Systems and Proto-Currencies
279-300
Pablo Ozcáriz Gil
Propuesta de sistematización para la elaboración de un corpus
385-395
Marta Bajtler
An Attempt to Understand the Process Based on Examples of Finds from Berenike (Egypt) and Risan (Montenegro)
397-400
423-437
497-510

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