Commerce and Social Standing in Ancient Rome / John H. D'Arms.

  • D'Arms, John H.
Date:
[2013]
  • E-books
  • Online

About this work

Also known as

Commerce and Social Standing in Ancient Rome (Online)

Description

John D'Arms explores here a question of central importance for the social economic history of the Roman world: which sectors of society were actively engaged in trade? In the late Roman Republic and early Empire senators were prohibited by law from direct participation in seaborne commerce; trade was not considered a respectable pursuit. Yet large fortunes were amassed by men of rank through a variety of lucrative enterprises. Exploiting the evidence of literature, archaeology, and inscription, D'Arms constructs case histories which reveal how senators realized commercial profits by indirect involvement: freedmen, municipal notables, and "friends" often served as the equivalent of partners or agents of aristocrats with large holdings in land. In demonstrating a flexibility in upper-class attitudes toward commercial activity, he offers a study in the adaptation of a social system to economic realities.

Publication/Creation

Cambridge, MA : Harvard University Press, [2013]

Edition

Reprint 2013

Languages

Holdings

  • Full text available: 1981.

Permanent link

Identifiers

ISBN

  • 9780674331198 (online)