How to Cite

Attema, Peter and Schörner, Günther (Eds.): The Rural Foundations of The Roman Economy. New Approaches to Rome’s Ancient Countryside from the Archaic to the Early Imperial Period: Panel 11.1, Heidelberg: Propylaeum, 2022 (Archaeology and Economy in the Ancient World: Proceedings of the 19th International Congress of Classical Archaeology, Cologne/Bonn 2018, Volume 50). https://doi.org/10.11588/propylaeum.930

Identifiers

ISBN 978-3-96929-099-6 (PDF)
ISBN 978-3-96929-100-9 (Softcover)

Published

01/19/2022

Authors

Peter Attema (Ed.), Günther Schörner (Ed.)

The Rural Foundations of The Roman Economy. New Approaches to Rome’s Ancient Countryside from the Archaic to the Early Imperial Period

Panel 11.1

The aim of the AIAC 2018 session “The Rural Foundations of the Roman Economy, new approaches to Rome's ancient countryside from the Archaic to the Early Imperial period” was to bring together methodologically informed, data-driven studies to shed light on the drivers and performance of the Central Italian rural economy during the Archaic to Imperial periods. The session resulted in a coherent collection of papers by a broad range of international scholars in the field who approach the Roman agricultural economy from various disciplinary angles and at different scales. The collection has a sharp focus on the suburbium of Rome sensu lato. Topics range from rural settlement dispersal, economic and demographic modelling to survey artefact analysis and the study of pollen and plant macro-remains.

Peter Attema is professor of Classical and Mediterranean Archaeology at the Groningen Institute of Archaeology, University of Groningen and specialized in settlement and landscape archaeology of proto-historical and Roman Italy.

Günther Schörner is professor of Classical Archaeology at the Institut für Klassische Archäologie of the University of Vienna and specialized in Roman archaeology with a focus on rural settlement.

Chapters

Table of Contents
Pages
PDF
Titelei
a-iv
Contents
v
Martin Bentz, Michael Heinzelmann
vii
Peter Attema, Günther Schörner
New Approaches to Rome's Ancient Countryside from the Archaic to the Early Imperial Period: Introduction
1-4
José Ernesto Moura Knust
Explaining Rural Settlement Dispersal within Roman, Mediterranean and Global Frameworks
5-18

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