Macro-models make a significant contribution to our understanding of economic performance and economic inequality in the Roman empire. Comparative framing is essential for guiding our thinking on these matters by imposing some discipline on our conjectures. The application of Bayesian modeling improves on earlier estimates of Roman imperial GDP. The scope for estimating Roman income inequality is strongly constrained by GDP estimates and historical comparanda
The vast Roman Empire. stretching from northern England to the Arabian deserts, the only world empir...
* Provides an overall view of, and original insights into, the economics of land and resources in th...
The nature of the Roman economy, and its development in time and place, have since long been a subje...
Reflecting current concerns about economic inequality, scholars who study the pre-modern past are in...
History is a reality that can be observed only through the traces it has left. Some are words and im...
Abstract: This paper introduces current approaches to the study of the Roman economy. It discusses w...
The paper compares the standard of living of labourers in the Roman Empire in 301 AD with the standa...
Recent years have witnessed a paradigm shift in the study of the Roman economy. Methodologically mod...
Was the Euro-Mediterranean region at the time of the Roman empire and its Western successor states, ...
The paper compares the standard of living of labourers in the Roman Empire in 301 AD with the standa...
Between the Second Punic War and the Early Principate several sources of evidence indicate that the ...
The Roman Empire has long held pride of place in the collective memory of scholars, politicians, and...
Until quite recently, GDP growth between ca. 1 ce and the late Middle Ages was considered non-existe...
Ancient Rome was the largest and most populous empire of its time, and the largest pre-industrial st...
Using recent economic statistics from the peak period of Byzantine political and economic influence,...
The vast Roman Empire. stretching from northern England to the Arabian deserts, the only world empir...
* Provides an overall view of, and original insights into, the economics of land and resources in th...
The nature of the Roman economy, and its development in time and place, have since long been a subje...
Reflecting current concerns about economic inequality, scholars who study the pre-modern past are in...
History is a reality that can be observed only through the traces it has left. Some are words and im...
Abstract: This paper introduces current approaches to the study of the Roman economy. It discusses w...
The paper compares the standard of living of labourers in the Roman Empire in 301 AD with the standa...
Recent years have witnessed a paradigm shift in the study of the Roman economy. Methodologically mod...
Was the Euro-Mediterranean region at the time of the Roman empire and its Western successor states, ...
The paper compares the standard of living of labourers in the Roman Empire in 301 AD with the standa...
Between the Second Punic War and the Early Principate several sources of evidence indicate that the ...
The Roman Empire has long held pride of place in the collective memory of scholars, politicians, and...
Until quite recently, GDP growth between ca. 1 ce and the late Middle Ages was considered non-existe...
Ancient Rome was the largest and most populous empire of its time, and the largest pre-industrial st...
Using recent economic statistics from the peak period of Byzantine political and economic influence,...
The vast Roman Empire. stretching from northern England to the Arabian deserts, the only world empir...
* Provides an overall view of, and original insights into, the economics of land and resources in th...
The nature of the Roman economy, and its development in time and place, have since long been a subje...