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Philip Kay examines the economic change in Rome between the Second Punic War and the middle of the 1st century BC. He focuses on how the increased flow of bullion and expansion of the availability of credit resulted in real per capita economic growth in the Italian peninsula, radically changing the composition and scale of the Roman economy.
Roman history --- Rome --- Economic conditions --- Social conditions --- Conditions économiques --- Conditions sociales --- Conditions économiques --- E-books --- Rome - Economic conditions - 510-30 B.C.
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"In this, the first comprehensive one-volume survey of the economies of classical antiquity, twenty-eight chapters summarise the current state of scholarship in their specialised fields and sketch new directions for research. The approach taken is both thematic, with chapters on the underlying determinants of economic performance, and chronological, with coverage of the whole of the Greek and Roman worlds extending from the Aegean Bronze Age to Late Antiquity. The contributors move beyond the substantivist-formalist debates that dominated twentieth-century scholarship and display a new interest in economic growth in antiquity. New methods for measuring economic development are explored, often combining textual and archaeological data that have previously been treated separately. Fully accessible to non-specialist, the volume represents a major advance in our understanding of the economic expansion that made the civilisation of the classical Mediterranean world possible."--Publisher's website.
Greece --- Rome --- Grèce --- Economic conditions --- Conditions économiques --- 330.93 --- Social sciences Economics History Ancient world --- Grèce --- Conditions économiques --- Greece - Economic conditions - To 146 B.C. --- Rome - Economic conditions - 510-30 B.C. --- Économie politique --- Méditerranée (région) --- Antiquité
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Numismatics, Roman. --- Coinage --- Numismatique romaine --- Monnaie --- History. --- Frappe --- Histoire --- Rome --- Economic conditions --- Economic policy --- Conditions économiques --- Politique économique --- Numismatics, Roman --- History --- Conditions économiques --- Politique économique --- Classical antiquities --- Rim --- Roman Empire --- Roman Republic (510-30 B.C.) --- Romi (Empire) --- Byzantine Empire --- Rome (Italy) --- Economic policy. --- Coinage - Rome - History --- Rome - Economic conditions - 510-30 B.C --- Rome - Economic policy --- Conditions economiques --- Politique monetaire
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This volume breaks new ground in approaching the Ancient Economy by bringing together documentary sources from Mesopotamia and the Greco-Roman world. Addressing textual corpora that have traditionally been studied separately, the collected papers overturn the conventional view of a fundamental divide between the economic institutions of these two regions. The premise is that, while controlling for differences, texts from either cultural setting can be brought to bear on the other and can shed light, through their use as proxy data, on such questions as economic mentalities and market developme
Babylonia -- Economic conditions. --- Economic history -- To 500. --- Egypt -- Economic conditions -- 332 B.C.-640 A.D. --- Rome -- Economic conditions -- 30 B.C.-476 A.D. --- Rome -- Economic conditions -- 510-30 B.C. --- Economic history --- Business & Economics --- Economic History --- Babylonia --- Rome --- Egypt --- Economic conditions. --- Economic conditions --- Vavilonii︠a︡ --- Bavel --- Bābil --- Babylonien --- Sumer --- E-books
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Rome's transformation from a regional force in Latium into a Mediterranean superpower (4th to 1st centuries BCE) was accompanied by an accelerated change of economic realities. The persistent influx of vast natural and monetary resources from abroad deeply altered the basis of Rome's military. As income skyrocketed, the exercise of political influence at Rome became increasingly intertwined with issues of personal finance. Despite claims for frugality, the political power of senatorial families was always determined through the accumulation of wealth. By the 1st century BCE, the competition of these families for rank and recognition was dramatically wrapped up with access to monetary capital and economic resources. When the republic finally fell, this was also due to a financial crash that hit the very centre of Roman society. Examining monetary and financial assets, this volume discloses how economic power and 'real' capital augmented the nature of aristocratic power at Rome. Papers are grouped in three topical clusters: Currencies of Power, Money and State Action, Wealth and Status.
Money --- Power (Social sciences) --- Finance, Public --- Monnaie --- Pouvoir (Sciences sociales) --- Finances publiques --- Political aspects --- Aspect politique --- Rome --- Politics and government --- Economic conditions --- Politique et gouvernement --- Conditions économiques --- Wealth --- Social classes --- Economic history. --- Money. --- Politics and government. --- Social conditions. --- Power (Social sciences). --- Wealth. --- Social classes. --- History --- 510-30 B.C. --- Rome (Empire). --- Social conditions --- Conditions économiques --- Coins --- Congresses --- Rome - Economic conditions - 510-30 B.C. - Congresses
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Rome --- Economic conditions --- Social conditions --- Conditions économiques --- Conditions sociales --- Politics and government --- 937 --- AA / International- internationaal --- 330.41 --- 331.100 --- 331.151 --- Geschiedenis van Rome tot 476 --- Economisch en sociaal denken van de oudheid. --- Economische geschiedenis: algemeenheden. --- Geldwezen in de oudheid. --- -Social conditions. --- -937 --- 937 Geschiedenis van Rome tot 476 --- -Rome --- Conditions économiques --- Economisch en sociaal denken van de oudheid --- Economische geschiedenis: algemeenheden --- Geldwezen in de oudheid --- Social conditions. --- History --- Addresses, essays, lectures --- 937 History of ancient Rome (to 476 AD) --- History of ancient Rome (to 476 AD) --- Rome - Economic conditions - 510-30 B.C --- Rome - Social conditions --- Rome - Politics and government - 30 BC-476 AD
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This volume presents the proceedings of the international interdisciplinary founding conference of the division "Documenta Antiqua" at the Institute for the Study of Ancient Culture of the Austrian Academy of Sciences (Vienna), held in 2014. The research focus of the new division are the source disciplines of ancient history: mainly epigraphy, numismatics and papyrology. The book contains an introductory essay as well as 17 contributions on various aspects of ancient infrastructure and on the flow of money, goods and services in ancient economies: in the classical and Hellenistic Greek world, the Roman Empire and in ancient Iran, from Neo-Assyrian times to the Parthian and Sasanian periods. In a general perspective, there is a special emphasis on numismatic contributions. So far, numismatics hardly played a part in modern research on the ancient infrastructure, although money and financial services are universally acknowledged to be indispensable elements of the infrastructure of modern societies. Hence, in this volume numismatics is fully integrated into research on the circulation of goods and the infrastructure of the ancient world for the very first time. Among the topics covered in these innovative contributions the following may be singled out: the economic implications of the extensive countermarking of Hellenistic silver coinages in Asia Minor; the importation and monetary use of blocks of foreign and obsolete bronze coins; patterns of coin production and coin distribution in the Roman Empire in the principate; structures of minting in ancient Iran in the Arsacid and Sasanian periods.
History, Ancient. --- Economics --- Economic history --- Commerce --- Trade --- Business --- Transportation --- Economic conditions --- History, Economic --- History --- Greece --- Rome --- Iran --- República Islâmica do Irã --- Irã --- Persia --- Northern Tier --- Islamic Republic of Iran --- Jumhūrī-i Islāmī-i Īrān --- I-lang --- Paras-Iran --- Paras --- Persia-Iran --- I.R.A. --- Islamische Republik Iran --- Islamskai︠a︡ Respublika Iran --- I.R.I. --- IRI --- ايران --- جمهورى اسلامى ايران --- Êran --- Komarî Îslamî Êran --- Rim --- Roman Empire --- Roman Republic (510-30 B.C.) --- Romi (Empire) --- Byzantine Empire --- Rome (Italy) --- Griechenland --- Grèce --- Hellas --- Yaṿan --- Vasileion tēs Hellados --- Hellēnikē Dēmokratia --- République hellénique --- Royaume de Grèce --- Kingdom of Greece --- Hellenic Republic --- Ancient Greece --- Ελλάδα --- Ellada --- Ελλάς --- Ellas --- Ελληνική Δημοκρατία --- Ellēnikē Dēmokratia --- Elliniki Dimokratia --- Grecia --- Grčija --- Hellada --- اليونان --- يونان --- al-Yūnān --- Yūnān --- 希腊 --- Xila --- Греция --- Gret︠s︡ii︠a︡ --- E-books --- Conferences - Meetings --- Traffic (Commerce) --- Merchants --- Congresses --- Greece - Commerce - History - Congresses --- Rome - Commerce - History - Congresses --- Greece - Economic conditions - To 146 B.C. - Congresses --- Rome - Economic conditions - 510-30 B.C. - Congresses --- To 30 B.C. --- Greece. --- Rome (Empire) --- Iran. --- Ir --- Islamskai͡a Respublika Iran --- República Islâmica do Ir --- Roman Republic --- Italy --- Gret͡sii͡
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