How to Cite

Limbergen, Dimitri van and Taelman, Devi (Eds.): The Exploitation of Raw Materials in the Roman World: A Closer Look at Producer-Resource Dynamics: Panel 4.4, Heidelberg: Propylaeum, 2021 (Archaeology and Economy in the Ancient World: Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Classical Archaeology, Cologne/Bonn 2018, Volume 27). https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.706

Identifiers

ISBN 978-3-948465-71-1 (PDF)
ISBN 978-3-948465-72-8 (Softcover)

Published

08/25/2021

Authors

Dimitri van Limbergen (Ed.), Devi Taelman (Ed.)

The Exploitation of Raw Materials in the Roman World: A Closer Look at Producer-Resource Dynamics

Panel 4.4

Compared to other pre-modern economies, the Roman world stands out for having developed a highly specialised and very productive manufacturing sector. This development led to the widespread and large-scale extraction of raw materials. Even in a territory as large as the Roman Empire, such activities put major
pressure on the land. Strategies of resource exploitation and conservation were thus essential in dealing successfully with the limited availability of these resources in the medium or long term, and to ensure the sustainability of the Roman exploitation model. This volume deals with the various ways in which natural resources were exploited and managed in the Roman world. It focuses on if, when, where and how the Romans pursued a harmonious balance between the limited availability of a particular resource and the law of supply and demand. The case studies in this volume cover various key areas of the Western Roman world – from Italy and the island of Elba, over coastal Croatia to Central-Eastern Gaul and the Pannonian limes – and discuss in particular the fi sh industry, iron smelting, deforestation and forest management, the stone trade and the exploitation of thermo-mineral resources.

Dimitri Van Limbergen, PhD (2015) is currently a Senior Postdoctoral Fellow of the Research Foundation – Flanders (FWO) at Ghent University. His main areas of research are Roman archaeology and economic history. He has published widely on viticulture and olive cultivation, trade, demography, landscape use and diet in Roman Italy.

Devi Taelman is post-doctoral fellow at the department of Archaeology of Ghent University. His research focuses on the provenance, use and trade of marbles and other ornamental stones in the Roman Mediterranean.

Chapters

Table of Contents
Pages
PDF
Titelei
Inhalt
Martin Bentz, Michael Heinzelmann
Fabian Becker, Raphael A. Eser, Brigitta Schütt
New Perspectives on the Ancient Bloomery Smelting Landscape of Elba Island (Tuscany, Italy)
15-29
Christophe Vaschalde, Corinne Rousse, Benoît Brossier, Gaetano Benčić
Premiers résultats de l’étude archéologique et anthracologique
31-45
Gabrielle Kremer, Sophie Insulander, Erich Draganits, Michaela Kronberger, Beatrix Moshammer, Martin Mosser, Andreas Rohatsch
47-62
Maddalena Bassani
The Exploitation of Thermomineral Sources in Artisan Activities
79-98

Comments