Roman Rural Archaeology
Society, Economy, and Culture
Astrid Van Oyen editor Gijs Willem Tol editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Publishing:31st Jul '26
£150.00
This title is due to be published on 31st July, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Explores the socio-cultural, economic and ideological importance of the countryside in creating the successful society of ancient Rome.
As a pre-industrial society, the success of ancient Rome was anchored in its countryside. It was in rural areas that the agricultural crops that sustained an expanding empire were grown. This volume highlights the socio-cultural, economic and ideological importance of Roman rural areas.The Roman world was a rural world. Most of the Roman population lived in the countryside and had their immediate rural surroundings as their social and economic frame of reference. For much of the Roman period, rural property provided the basis for political power and urban development, and it was in rural areas that the agricultural crops that sustained an expanding empire were grown and many of the most important Roman industries were situated. Rural areas witnessed the presence of some of the most durable symbols of Roman imperial hegemony, such as aqueducts and paved roads. It was mainly here that native and Roman traditions collided and were negotiated. This volume, containing 30 chapters by leading scholars, leverages recent methodological advancements and new interpretative frameworks to provide a holistic view, with an empire-wide reach, of the importance of Roman rural areas in the success of ancient Rome.
ISBN: 9781316510995
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
500 pages