ABSTRACT

The economies of classical and Mediterranean antiquity are currently a battleground. Some scholars see them as lively and progressive, even proto-capitalist: others see them as static, embedded in social action and status relationships.
Focusing on the central period of the Mediterranean 330-30 BC, this book contributes substantially to the debate, by juxtaposing general questions of theory and model-building with case-studies which examine specific areas and kinds of evidence.
It breaks new ground by distilling and presenting new and newly-reinterpreted evidence for the Hellenistic era, by opening the debate on how we should replace Rostovtzeff's classic view of this period, and by offering a compelling new set of interpretative ideas to the debate on the ancient economy.

part |6 pages

PART I SETTING THE SCENE

part |3 pages

PART III GEOGRAPHIES AND PLACE: REGIONAL ECONOMIES

part |1 pages

PART V MOVEMENTS AND MARKERS

chapter 10|28 pages

SHIPWRECKS AND HELLENISTIC TRADE

chapter 11|36 pages

THE ANTIGONIDS: PATTERNS OF A ROYAL ECONOMY

part |1 pages

PART VI DESTINATIONS

chapter 12|9 pages

HELLENISTIC ECONOMIES: THE CASE OF ROME

chapter 13|7 pages

AWAY FROM ROSTOVTZEFF: A NEW SEHHW