Harvesting the Sea

Harvesting the Sea

The Exploitation of Marine Resources in the Roman Mediterranean

 

Annalisa Marzano

Oxford Studies on the Roman Economy, Oxford University Press, 2013

 

Harvesting the Sea provides the first systematic treatment of the exploitation of various marine resources, such as large-scale fishing, fish salting, salt and purple-dye production, and oyster and fish-farming, in the Roman world and its role within the ancient economy.

Bringing together literary, epigraphic, and legal sources, with a wealth of archaeological data collected in recent years, Marzano shows that these marine resources were an important feature of the Roman economy and, in scope and market-oriented production, paralleled phenomena taking place in the Roman agricultural economy on land. The book also examines the importance of technological innovations, the organization of labour, and the use of the existing legal framework in defence of economic interests against competitors for the same natural resource.

For more information, and to order, see the OUP Catalogue.

 

Introduction

1: Fishing

2: Large-scale Fishing

3: Fish-salting

4: Salt production

5: Murex, purple dye production, and other fruits of the sea

6: Oysters and shell-fish

7: Aquaculture

8: The sea and fishing in Roman law and juridical thought

9: Demand, prices, and distribution

10: Conclusions

 

Harvesting the Sea