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Eastern Wines on Western Tables: Consumption, Trade and Economy in Ancient Italy: Mnemosyne, Supplements / Mnemosyne, Supplements, History and Archaeology of Classical Antiquity, cartea 435

Autor Paulina Komar
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 30 sep 2020
Eastern Wines on Western Tables: Consumption, Trade and Economy in Ancient Italy is an interdisciplinary and multifaceted study concerning wine commerce and the Roman economy during Classical antiquity. Wine was one of the main consumption goods in the Mediterranean during antiquity, and the average Roman adult male probably consumed between 0,5 - 1 litre of it per day. It is therefore clear that the production and trading of wine was essential for the Roman economy. This book demonstrates that wines from the Eastern Mediterranean and the Aegean region in particular, played a crucial part in wine commerce. Moreover, it sheds new light on economic dilemmas that have long puzzled scholars, such as growth and market integration during antiquity.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004433700
ISBN-10: 9004433708
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Mnemosyne, Supplements / Mnemosyne, Supplements, History and Archaeology of Classical Antiquity


Cuprins

Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Tables

In Search of Lost Wines: Perspectives and Limits
1History of Investigations
2Sources and Methodology
3Primary Commodity or Multi-purpose Containers?
4Reuse—Exception or Rule?
5Identifying the Origin of Amphoras
6Identifying the Content of Amphoras
7Tituli picti
8Pros and Cons of an Interdisciplinary Approach
9Synopsis

1 Vinum contra temetum: the Role of Wines from the Eastern Mediterranean in the Origins of Viticulture and Winemaking in Italy
1From vitis silvestris to vitis domestica
2Wine: a Local Invention or a Foreign Influence?
3The Beginnings of the Consumption of Wines from the Eastern Mediterranean
4The Economic Transformation of Italy during the 5th and 4th c. BC
5Eastern Wines in Italy: Types and Chronology
6Conclusions

2 De gustibus disputandum est—‘Fame’ or Ordinary Wines?
1In Search of Lost Tastes—Wines in Classical Antiquity
2Republican Wines of Some Repute
3Imperial Common Imports
4Epigraphic Enigmas
5Conclusions

3 Mass or Limited? Wine Importations to Italy during the Early Imperial Age
1Roma—the Eternal City
2Campania felix
3Portus and Its Neighbourhood
4Adriatic Italy
5ORBIS Transport Costs and Wine Importations
6Conclusions

4 Aristocratic Luxuries or Mass Beverages?
1Luxuries for the Elite
2Wines for Common People
3Conclusions

5 Petty Traders or Wealthy Wholesalers? Who Imported Wines to Italy?
1Free Romans and Local Elites
2Italian Freedmen
3Free Greeks, Slaves and Greeks with Roman Citizenship
4Incerti
5Conclusions

6 Twilight or Bloom: Eastern Mediterranean Wines in Italy during Late Antiquity
1Amphoras or Barrels?
2Late Roman Wines in the Urbs
3Late Roman Wines in Adriatic Italy (Aquileia, Verona, Padua)
4ORBIS Transport Costs and Wine Importations
5Conclusions

Conclusions: The Economics of the Wine Trade

Appendix 1: A Catalogue of Greek and Latin Texts That Mention Wines from the Eastern Mediterranean
Appendix 2: List of Authors That Mention Eastern Mediterranean Wines Quoted by Athenaeus
Appendix 3: Catalogue of Amphoras Classified as Wine Containers Discovered in Italy between the 1st c. BC and Late Antiquity
Bibliography
Index

Notă biografică

Paulina Komar, Ph.D. (2015), Wrocław University, is an archaeologist educated in Warsaw, Liverpool and Wrocław. She is currently an assistant professor at Warsaw's Cardinal Stefan Wyszyński University. Her primary research interests concern wine consumption, trade and economics in Classical antiquity.

Recenzii

"Komar offers an exemplary analysis of the Eastern Mediterranean wine trade and its role in the wider economy. Debates overthe scale and organisation of the Roman economy are bedevilled by the disjunction between archaeology and history. By an exhaustive study of a wide range of archaeological, epigraphic, literary, comparative and oenological evidence for a single commodity, Komar provides an authoritative analysis and an exemplar of the potential that this has for our understanding of the social and economic functioning of the Roman world." Benedict Lowe, The Classical Review 71.2 479–482.