This study attempts to evaluate the social implications of economic changes that occurred in Roman North Africa between the fall of Carthage in 146 BC and the arrival of the Vandals in the mid-5th century AD. Several authors have argued that Africa experienced significant economic growth during this period. Some have even argued that this increase in economic activity resulted in the lower orders being substantially better off by late Antiquity than they had been previously. Here, as well as assembling much quantitative information, I examine the qualitative elements which characterised this specific period of expansion in economic activity, manifested most clearly in the increasing exportation of African ceramics to Rome in the late 2nd ce...
With the Roman conquest, the entire African soil became property of the Roman people (ager publicus ...
With the Roman conquest, the entire African soil became property of the Roman people (ager publicus ...
This remarkable history foregrounds the most marginal sector of the Roman population, the provincial...
This study attempts to evaluate the social implications of economic changes that occurred in Roman N...
This study attempts to evaluate the social implications of economic changes that occurred in Roman N...
Matthew S. Hobson 2015, Portsmouth R.I., Journal of Roman Archaeology, Supplementary Series 100. 8 1...
Matthew S. Hobson 2015, Portsmouth R.I., Journal of Roman Archaeology, Supplementary Series 100. 8 1...
One of the difficulties that the Roman empire faced was to adapt the resources of its provinces to t...
One of the difficulties that the Roman empire faced was to adapt the resources of its provinces to t...
(En) This paper presents a critical analytical study of agricultural legislation in the African stat...
International audienceCeramic evidence is one of the main sources of study for the economy of Roman ...
International audienceCeramic evidence is one of the main sources of study for the economy of Roman ...
Studying North Africa poses a variety of problems. Historical as well as archaeological research bea...
When one thinks of the once mighty Roman Empire, a vision of the proverbial “eternal city” of ...
When one thinks of the once mighty Roman Empire, a vision of the proverbial “eternal city” of ...
With the Roman conquest, the entire African soil became property of the Roman people (ager publicus ...
With the Roman conquest, the entire African soil became property of the Roman people (ager publicus ...
This remarkable history foregrounds the most marginal sector of the Roman population, the provincial...
This study attempts to evaluate the social implications of economic changes that occurred in Roman N...
This study attempts to evaluate the social implications of economic changes that occurred in Roman N...
Matthew S. Hobson 2015, Portsmouth R.I., Journal of Roman Archaeology, Supplementary Series 100. 8 1...
Matthew S. Hobson 2015, Portsmouth R.I., Journal of Roman Archaeology, Supplementary Series 100. 8 1...
One of the difficulties that the Roman empire faced was to adapt the resources of its provinces to t...
One of the difficulties that the Roman empire faced was to adapt the resources of its provinces to t...
(En) This paper presents a critical analytical study of agricultural legislation in the African stat...
International audienceCeramic evidence is one of the main sources of study for the economy of Roman ...
International audienceCeramic evidence is one of the main sources of study for the economy of Roman ...
Studying North Africa poses a variety of problems. Historical as well as archaeological research bea...
When one thinks of the once mighty Roman Empire, a vision of the proverbial “eternal city” of ...
When one thinks of the once mighty Roman Empire, a vision of the proverbial “eternal city” of ...
With the Roman conquest, the entire African soil became property of the Roman people (ager publicus ...
With the Roman conquest, the entire African soil became property of the Roman people (ager publicus ...
This remarkable history foregrounds the most marginal sector of the Roman population, the provincial...