Money, culture, and well-being in Rome's economic development, 0-275 CE
by Daniel Hoyer
Introduction: approaching the imperial Roman economy -- Central aims of the book -- Who will read this? Target audiences -- Lingering questions about imperial Rome -- The many faces of Roman economic history -- From fine-grained to 'big picture': methods and treatment of the evidence -- The contribution of modern thinking to ancient problems -- Book organization -- Terms and definitions -- The gift that kept on giving: perpetual endowments and the role of prosociality in Rome's economic development -- The evolution of prosocial traits from the early days of Rome -- Prosociality, charity, and social capital: how elite benefaction came to be -- Perpetual foundations: the gift that kept on giving -- What lies under the epiphenomena? -- Investing in the Roman economy : material evidence for economic development -- Benefactions as wealth generators -- Investment opportunities in the Roman economy -- Money in the Roman economy : the numismatic evidence -- Supplying the demand : coinage, monetization, and market development -- Aligning public and private interests: public building, private money, and urban development -- Public needs and private incentives -- Rome : a world of cities -- Public building in the cities of Roman Africa: a case study -- Urbanization and the development of the non-agrarian sectors -- The surprisingly short reach of the Roman state -- The public deeds of private citizens -- Aligning interests -- Measuring economic performance beyond GDP : economic growth, income inequality, and Roman living standards -- Real growth in the pre-modern world? : debates, controversies, and confusion in Roman economic history -- Proxy evidence : extrapolation or hypothesis testing? -- Rome's 99% : economic capacity and the distribution of wealth -- Sharing the spoils of success : increasing living standards with public goods -- Collective action and prosociality in the creation of public goods -- From prosociality to civil strife : conflict, stagnation, and growing regional divides in the third century ce -- An overview of the 'crises' of the third century -- What really happened after 235 CE? -- Money, investment, and markets -- Production and exchange -- The end of Roman prosociality? -- Conclusion : Rome's place in a global history of development
Year of publication: |
[2018]
|
---|---|
Authors: | Hoyer, Daniel |
Publisher: |
Leiden : Brill |
Subject: | Lebensstandard | Standard of living | Wirtschaftswachstum | Economic growth | Investition | Investment | Wirtschaftsgeschichte | Economic history | Altertum | Ancient history | Römisches Reich | Wirtschaftsentwicklung | Wohlfahrt | Geschichte 1-275 |
Description of contents: | Table of Contents [gbv.de] |
Saved in:
Erscheint auch als (Online-Ausgabe):
Money, culture, and well-being in Rome's economic development, 0-275 CE. - Leiden : Brill, 2018. - 1 Online-Ressource (xiii, 215 Seiten)
Erscheint auch als (Online-Ausgabe):
Money, culture, and well-being in Rome's economic development, 0-275 CE. - Leiden : Brill, 2018. - 1 Online-Ressource (XIII, 215 Seiten)
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011857510
Saved in favorites
Similar items by subject
-
Roselaar, Saskia T., (2010)
-
Agriculture and industry in south-eastern Roman Britain
Bird, David, (2017)
-
The economic future in historical perspective
David, Paul A., (2003)
- More ...