
H 245 x W 174 mm
134 pages
11 figures
Published Jul 2024
ISBN
Paperback: 9781803278070
Digital: 9781803278087
Keywords
Ancient Economy; Amphorae; Commerce; Red Sea; Pilgrimage; Cliometrics; Negev Desert; Third Palestine
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Archaeopress Roman Archaeology 119
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Includes PDF
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This book provides a comprehensive examination of the evidence for the economy of the later Roman province of Third Palestine, which roughly corresponds to southern Jordan, the Negev desert in Israel, and the Sinai Peninsula.
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Geography, settlements, and administration of Third Palestine
Interpreting the ancient economy
The traditional debate: ‘primitive’ or ‘modern’
The rise of neoliberal interpretations of the ancient economy
Market or bazaar economy?
Chapter 2: ‘Between the desert and the sown’: Agriculture and pastoralism in Third Palestine
Agriculture
The pastoralists of Third Palestine
Conclusion
Chapter 3: Urban economy, manufacturing, and resources
The urban economy
Industry: Ceramic production
Industry: Copper mining and smelting
Conclusion
Chapter 4: Regional exchange
Ceramic analysis of trade routes
Gaza amphora (LR4)
Palestinian Bag Jar (LR 5)
Egyptian amphorae
Aila amphora
Maritime animal products in Third Palestine
The date trade
One caravan’s records
Conclusion
Appendix 1: Amphorae descriptions
Gaza amphorae (LR 4)
Bag jars (LR 5)
Egyptian amphorae (LR 7)
Aila amphorae
Chapter 5: International exchange with the Red Sea and Mecca
Red Sea trade
Brief historical outline of Red Sea trade
Aila
Iotabe
Meccan trade
Nature of trade: Origins and caravans
Commodities
Conclusion: The economic implications of international trade on Third Palestine
Chapter 6: Monasticism, pilgrimage, and the economy
Monasticism in Third Palestine
Transportation and infrastructure
Supplying the Sinai monasteries
Conclusion
Chapter 7: Conclusion
A primitive or modern economy in Third Palestine… or something else?
Bibliography
Walter D. Ward is Professor and Chair of the History Department at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He is the author of two books, Mirage of the Saracen: Christians and Nomads in the Sinai Peninsula in Late Antiquity (2014) and Near Eastern Cities from Alexander to the Successors of Muhammad (2019), and the editor of The Socio-economic History and Material Culture of the Roman and Byzantine Near East: Essays in Honor of S. Thomas Parker (2017).
‘Overall, this is a good book that provides a valuable account of the region’s economy as well as the place of Third Palestine in late antiquity in general. Ward makes full use of the diverse evidence … and brings to life many of the daily rhythms of its inhabitants. Ward’s Third Palestine is full of vitality, with significant trade and manufacturing. … If there is a quibble, it is that although he touches on the province’s relationship to the imperial centre, I think there was scope for a fuller discussion of taxation and the law.
Still, the breadth of coverage is significant, and Ward has managed to squeeze as much insight as possible from what evidence we have. To that end, Ward has managed to collect all the material we have for the province’s economy. Regarding Ward’s second goal, although he has revealed the limited role the province has played in wider discussions of the economy, I hazard that this book would be valuable to others interested in the economy of other Roman provinces, whether of the high or late empire. Indeed … Ward has done the province a valuable service. He has shown the way forward on how to integrate the varied evidence (amphorae, environmental, papyrological) to uncover details of wider import for the Mediterranean economy.’ – Conor Whatley (2025): Bryn Mawr Classical Review