Feeding the Democracy: The Athenian Grain Supply in the Fifth and Fourth Centuries BCOUP Oxford, 25. okt. 2007 - 440 sider The reliance of democracies on vital supplies of energy from distant and non-democratic sources is probably the most pressing and dangerous problem of modern times, but it is not a new phenomenon. Classical Athens, the birthplace of democracy and the largest and historically most important of the ancient Greek city-states, depended for its survival on the constant importation of grain from overseas lands as remote as Ukraine and southern Russia, and this trade was ultimately controlled by powerful politicians, wealthy landowners, and kings. Alfonso Moreno examines how this resource need determined Athenian foreign policy, prompting recourse to military conquest and ruthless resettlements, and how uncomfortable realities (especially elite control) were made acceptable to popular audiences.This study of ancient trade and politics reveals a Greek world as globalized as our own, and convulsed by the same problems that such interdependence and sophistication entail. |
Fra bogen
Resultater 1-5 af 53
Side vi
... nearsufficient Athens. But the overall result is deeply puzzling. The Classical period, the age of Athens as a Mediterranean cultural power, is now presented as an age of essentially localized production and trade in grain,
... nearsufficient Athens. But the overall result is deeply puzzling. The Classical period, the age of Athens as a Mediterranean cultural power, is now presented as an age of essentially localized production and trade in grain,
Side vii
... production and trade in grain, the most important of staples. If this is correct, the movement of this bulk commodity not only did not drive (or even play a substantial role in) the interactive processes that give meaning to the terms ...
... production and trade in grain, the most important of staples. If this is correct, the movement of this bulk commodity not only did not drive (or even play a substantial role in) the interactive processes that give meaning to the terms ...
Side xi
... Production I. The Land II. Use of the Land III. Crop Yields IV. Population V. Consumption VI. Conclusion 3 11 14 26 28 31 32 PART II. ARCHAEOLOGY 2. Euonymon: The Agriculture and Economy of the Classical Athenian Deme I. Euonymon ...
... Production I. The Land II. Use of the Land III. Crop Yields IV. Population V. Consumption VI. Conclusion 3 11 14 26 28 31 32 PART II. ARCHAEOLOGY 2. Euonymon: The Agriculture and Economy of the Classical Athenian Deme I. Euonymon ...
Side xv
... British School at Athens 61 (with the permission of the British School at Athens). Map 3. The Cimmerian Bosporus. Copyright Alice and Caspar Meyer. 78–9 145 Tables 1. Attic grain production according to Jarde ́, Garnsey, Osborne, Maps.
... British School at Athens 61 (with the permission of the British School at Athens). Map 3. The Cimmerian Bosporus. Copyright Alice and Caspar Meyer. 78–9 145 Tables 1. Attic grain production according to Jarde ́, Garnsey, Osborne, Maps.
Side xvi
... production according to Jarde ́, Garnsey, Osborne, and Sallares 2. Land-use on Euboea 3. Estimates based on the Grain-Tax Law of 374/3 4. The Atheno-Bosporan network: their relations and services 5. Land-Leases 10 86 111 177 328 ...
... production according to Jarde ́, Garnsey, Osborne, and Sallares 2. Land-use on Euboea 3. Estimates based on the Grain-Tax Law of 374/3 4. The Atheno-Bosporan network: their relations and services 5. Land-Leases 10 86 111 177 328 ...
Indhold
35 | |
PART III LITERATURE | 209 |
CONCLUSION | 309 |
Appendix 1 Relevant Measures | 325 |
Appendix 2 LandLeases | 327 |
Appendix 3 Athenian Law Taxing Lemnos Imbros and Scyros 3743 BC GHI II 26 | 330 |
Appendix 4 The Regulation of the Grain Market | 334 |
Appendix 5 Gazetteer of Grain Sources | 337 |
Bibliography | 345 |
Index Locorum | 373 |
General Index | 394 |
Andre udgaver - Se alle
Feeding the Democracy: The Athenian Grain Supply in the Fifth and Fourth ... Alfonso Moreno Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2007 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
accepted according Aeschylus agricultural amount ancient Andocides Androtion appears archaeological argument Arist aristocratic Athenian Athenian grain Athens Attica barley Black Sea Bosporan Bosporus carrying Chapter citizen Classical clear cleruchs connection cultivable decree deme democratic demos Demosthenes early economic especially Euboea Euonymon evidence example fact fifth figure fourth century Garnsey gives grain supply Greek half Hansen Ibid Imbros important inscription interesting island kings land later least Lysias meaning medimnoi mentioned merchant nature Osborne overseas Panticapaeum passage period Plut political politicians population possible present probably production references remains rhetoric role Sallares says Scythian seems seen settlement ships shows similar sources speech suggests term territory Thuc Thucydides Trachones trade turn walls wealthy yield