Structure and scale of Roman urban economies: the case of Pompeii

While Pompeii has been at the centre of scholarly attention for over two centuries, there has been relatively little debate about the economy of the city and its hinterland, and its role in local, regional and Mediterranean networks of trade and exchange. Recent years have seen a revival of interest in the material remains of Pompeii’s shops, workshops and infrastructure, which has led to some fundamental changes in our ideas about economic life in the city. Yet in current debates about the Roman economy, Pompeii plays little or no role, despite its unique material remains.

This conference brings together Pompeii specialists and leading economic historians of the Roman world to explore what Pompeii’s unique remains have to offer to the larger debates about structure and scale in the Roman economy. In doing so, the conference will foster debate contributing to both our understanding of Pompeii and that of the Roman economy. Pompeian studies, often too exclusively focused on Pompeii alone, could profit from the context provided by discussing Pompeii in the wider debate on the Roman economy; economic historians will be provided with a detailed case study of an urban economy on the micro-scale. Such case studies are essential in refining the macro-scale economic models currently dominating the field.

The topic will be approached from a variety of angles, with papers addressing issues of commerce, manufacturing, trade, transport, agriculture, finance and living standards. A wide array of evidence will be covered, including shops, workshops, the street network, villas, coins, wax-tablets, and archaeobotanical remains.

The conference is organized by the Oxford Roman Economy Project in collaboration with the Network on Structural Determinants of Economic Performance in the Roman World (Flanders Research Foundation). Confirmed speakers include: Wim Broeckaert (Gent), Philippe Borgard (Aix), Steven Ellis (Cincinnati), Miko Flohr (Oxford), Richard Hobbs (British Museum), Willem Jongman (Groningen), Estelle Lazer (Sydney), Nicolas Monteix (Rouen), Eric Poehler (UMass Amherst), Nick Ray (Leicester), Damian Robinson (Oxford), Erica Rowan (Oxford), Ferdinando de Simone (Oxford), Koen Verboven (Gent), and Andrew Wilson (Oxford).

 

Programme

Download the programme.

 

Friday 29 June

Session 1: Urban economies through the ages

09.00

Andrew Wilson (University of Oxford)

Introduction to the conference and its theme

09.30

Wim Broeckaert (Ghent University)
Lucius Lawless. Conflicts, contract enforcement and business communities in the Bay of Naples

10.30

Coffee break

11.00

Ferdinando de Simone (Oxford)
Beyond Pompeii: settlement pattern and agricultural produce on the dark side of Vesuvius

12.00

Miko Flohr (Oxford)
Quantifying Pompeii? Inequality, consumption and the Pompeian Economy

13.00

Lunch break

14.00

Nicolas Monteix (Rouen)
Production in the Pompeian economy? Difficile est

15.00

Philippe Borgard (Aix‐en‐Provence)

Teindre à Pompei. De l'analyse archéologique à l'archéologie expérimentale

16.00

Tea break

16.30

Koen Verboven (Gent)

Currency and credit in 1st c. AD Bay of Naples

17.30
Richard Hobbs (British Museum)

Bes, bulls and bankers: the life of coinage at Pompeii

18.30

Drinks

18.30

Conference Dinner (speakers only)

 

Saturday, 30 June

09.30

Damian Robinson (Oxford)

The economy of an urban neighbourhood:   Insula VI.i in its wider economic context

10.30

Steven Ellis (Cincinnati)

Early developments in Pompeii's retail economy

11.30

Coffee break

12.00

Eric Poehler (UMass Amherst)

Urban transport and the Pompeian economy

13.00

Lunch Break

14.00

Nick Ray (Leicester)

Consumer Behaviour in the Ancient World: Theory and Evidence

15.00

Erica Rowan (Oxford)

Drains, archaeobotany and diet at Pompeii and Herculaneum

16.00

Tea break

16.30
Estelle Lazer (Sydney)

Pompeian skeletal remains and the health situation at Pompeii

17.30
Willem Jongman (Groningen)

Conference Response

18.30 Drinks

 

 

pompeii eumachia building