Germania inferior am Beginn und am Ende der römischen Herrschaft. Beiträge des deutsch-niederländischen Kolloquiums in der Katholieke Universiteit Nijmegen (27. bis 30.06. 2001)
This paper is an adaptation of the publication Aarts, J., 2015: A frog’s eye view of the Roman ma... more This paper is an adaptation of the publication Aarts, J., 2015: A frog’s eye view of the Roman market: the Batavian case, in: Spek, R. J. v. d., B. v. Leeuwen & J. L. v. Zanden (ed), Market Performance in Pre-industrial Societies: the Case of Babylonia (c. 600-60 BC) in Comparative Perspective, London, 394-409. The text is identical, but the figures are in colour.
Abstract Until now, the Roman economy has been discussed primarily in economic terms. After the v... more Abstract Until now, the Roman economy has been discussed primarily in economic terms. After the vehement debate between substantivist and formalists in the 1960s and 1970s, most historians and archaeologists have embraced an essentially substantivist perspective. Although this ...
Journal of Archaeology in the Low Countries, Jan 1, 2009
The introduction of money in the form of standardised objects of value made of metal and bearing ... more The introduction of money in the form of standardised objects of value made of metal and bearing images marked a new phenomenon in the pre-Roman societies of Western and Central Europe. In the Late Iron Age, the Lower Rhine region formed part of the northern ...
Germania inferior am Beginn und am Ende der römischen Herrschaft. Beiträge des deutsch-niederländischen Kolloquiums in der Katholieke Universiteit Nijmegen (27. bis 30.06. 2001)
This paper is an adaptation of the publication Aarts, J., 2015: A frog’s eye view of the Roman ma... more This paper is an adaptation of the publication Aarts, J., 2015: A frog’s eye view of the Roman market: the Batavian case, in: Spek, R. J. v. d., B. v. Leeuwen & J. L. v. Zanden (ed), Market Performance in Pre-industrial Societies: the Case of Babylonia (c. 600-60 BC) in Comparative Perspective, London, 394-409. The text is identical, but the figures are in colour.
Abstract Until now, the Roman economy has been discussed primarily in economic terms. After the v... more Abstract Until now, the Roman economy has been discussed primarily in economic terms. After the vehement debate between substantivist and formalists in the 1960s and 1970s, most historians and archaeologists have embraced an essentially substantivist perspective. Although this ...
Journal of Archaeology in the Low Countries, Jan 1, 2009
The introduction of money in the form of standardised objects of value made of metal and bearing ... more The introduction of money in the form of standardised objects of value made of metal and bearing images marked a new phenomenon in the pre-Roman societies of Western and Central Europe. In the Late Iron Age, the Lower Rhine region formed part of the northern ...
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