How to Cite

Da Vela, Raffaella (Ed.): The Economic Contribution of Migrants to Ancient Societies. Technological Transfer, Integration, Exploitation and Interaction of Economic Mentalities: Panel 1.3 , Heidelberg: Propylaeum, 2022 (Archaeology and Economy in the Ancient World: Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Classical Archaeology, Cologne/Bonn 2018, Volume 2). https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.929

Identifiers

ISBN 978-3-96929-097-2 (PDF)
ISBN 978-3-96929-098-9 (Softcover)

Published

02/16/2022

Authors

Raffaella Da Vela (Ed.)

The Economic Contribution of Migrants to Ancient Societies. Technological Transfer, Integration, Exploitation and Interaction of Economic Mentalities

Panel 1.3

Archaeological studies on migrants usually focus on their role in production activities, either as part of the labour force, or as specialized craftsmen dependent on local entrepreneurs, families or public institutions. This book aims to overcome this unidirectional discourse on dependency and to propose an alternative approach, examining migrants as actors in the economic life of ancient societies. The economic dimension of migration is thus analysed as part of the complex dynamics of integration and segregation in local communities. Migrants are considered as consumers, cultural mediators, social climbers, promoters of different lifestyles, and as ‘triggers’ for innovation. The papers in this volume suggest new methodologies and interpretative paths, dealing with a wide spectrum of case studies from the Middle Kingdom Egypt to the Bronze and Iron Age of the western Mediterranean, from Classical Greece to Hellenistic Etruria, concluding with the Przeworsk Culture of Pannonia. Overcoming the binary oppositions usually set up between colonists and indigenous peoples, locals and incomers, this book points out how economic mentalities are part of a greater entanglement of personal, social and economic identities.

Raffaella Da Vela is postdoctoral researcher at the Collaborative Research Center SFB 1070 "ResourceCultures. Sociocultural Dynamics and the Use of Resources" of the University of Tübingen, funded by DFG. She is a spokesperson of the study group ‘Etruscans and Italic Cultures’ of the German Association of Archaeologists (Arbeitsgemeinschaft Etrusker & Italiker, DArV e.V.).

Chapters

Table of Contents
Pages
PDF
Titelei
a-iv
Contents
v
Martin Bentz, Michael Heinzelmann
vii
Raffaella Da Vela
Technological Transfer, Integration, Exploitation and Interaction of Economic Mentalities
1-6
Lukas Bohnenkämper
Migration im ägyptischen Mittleren Reich
7-25
Jeremy Hayne
Economic Considerations with Special Reference to Nuraghe S’Urachi, San Vero Milis (OR)
27-43
Jan Bulas
Migrants from the North in the Upper Tisa Basin, in the 3rd Century AD
87-99

Comments