Settlement, Urbanization, and Population
Andrew Wilson editor Alan Bowman editor
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:11th Oct '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Hardback£145.00(9780199602353)
This volume presents a collection of studies focussing on population and settlement patterns in the Roman empire in the perspective of the economic development of the Mediterranean world between 100 BC and AD 350. The analyses offered here highlight the issues of regional and temporal variation in Italy, Spain, Britain, Egypt, Crete, and Asia Minor from classical Greece to the early Byzantine period. The chapters fall into two main groups, the first dealing with the evidence for rural settlement, as revealed by archaeological field surveys, and the attendant methodological problems of extrapolating from that evidence a view of population; and the second with city populations and the phenomenon of urbanization. They proceed to consider hierarchies of settlement in the characteristic classical pattern of city plus territory, and the way in which those entities are defined from the highest to the lowest level: the empire as 'city of Rome plus territory', then regional and local hierarchies, and, more precisely, the identity and the nature of the 'instruments' which enable them to function in economic cohesion.
'This book emerges from one of the many fruitful colloquiums organised as part of the Oxford Roman Economy Project . . . this volume ultimately achieves what it intends; that is, to assess and analyse quantifiable data on the Roman economy as well as to provide interpretations for how these data fit within wider categories of economic behaviour, institutions, and processes.' * Bryn Mawr Classical Review *
ISBN: 9780198788515
Dimensions: 217mm x 139mm x 19mm
Weight: 514g
384 pages