ABSTRACT

The cultural wealth of the classical Greek world was matched by its material wealth, and there is abundant textual and archaeological evidence for both. However, radically different theoretical and methodological approaches have been used to interpret this evidence, and conflicts continue to rage as these different starting points produce clashing views on the significance and distribution of money, labour and land.
Money, Labour and Land reflects the current explosion in ideas and research by assembling case-studies from an international selection of renowned US, British and European scholars. Drawing on comparative historical and anthropological approaches, sociological, economic and cultural theory, and developments in epigraphy, legal history, numismatics and spatial archaeology, this volume will be of interest to all students and scholars of ancient economies.

chapter 1|7 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 2|36 pages

HARD SURFACES

chapter 3|8 pages

SMALL CHANGE AND THE MONEYED ECONOMY

chapter 5|33 pages

WORKSHOP, MARKETPLACE AND HOUSEHOLD

The nature of technical specialization in classical Athens and its influence on economy and society

chapter 6|13 pages

An unprofitable masculinity

chapter 12|10 pages

THE HIRELING AND THE SLAVE

A transatlantic perspective

chapter 13|15 pages

A SIMPLE CASE OF EXPLOITATION?

The helots of Messenia

chapter 14|9 pages

THE STRATEGIES OF MR THEOPOMPOS

chapter 15|12 pages

ACCESS TO RESOURCES IN CLASSICAL GREECE

The egalitarianism of the polis in practice