City and Country in the Greek World
Edward Harris University of Durham
SÉMINAIRE HYBRIDE / ΥΒΡΙΔIΚΟ ΣΕΜΙΝΑΡΙΟ / HYBRID SEMINAR
- Fondation Nationale Hellénique de la Recherche, salle des séminaires – Vas. Konstantinou 48 / National Hellenic Research Foundation, conference room – Vas. Konstantinou 48 / Εθνικό Ίδρυμα Ερευνών, Αίθουσα Σεμιναρίων – Βασ.Κωνσταντίνου 48
- Inscription au webinaire / Webinar registration / Εγγραφή στο webinar
Περίληψη / Resume / Résumé
Not very long ago, the standard view of the ancient Greek city and its territory was one of a cellular unit whose economic activities were nearly all internally oriented – an almost closed system, where exchanges beyond the territory’s borders were limited to the importation of a few luxuries for elites and any key commodities (e.g., metals) that could not be got locally. Most residents, furthermore, lived in the countryside. The relationship between the city residents and country residents was parasitic: the city-dwelling elite drew rents from country-dwellers to fund its lifestyle and provide it with the leisure to pursue politics. This is the Greek city of the ‘New Orthodoxy’ of M.I. Finley and his school. Finley of course recognised that large, dynamic commercial cities existed; but he treated these as rarities, and furthermore played down the role of manufacturing even there.
Recent research into the full range of ancient Greek cities, their territories, and their resources – but also, crucially, their entanglement with the broader interstate trading economy – renders this model outdated. This talk aims to survey the current state of the subject. Comprehensive coverage is impossible, so we will focus on a series of case studies from the Classical and early Hellenistic periods. Several issues will be examined: the size-range of Greek city states, looking both at the overall number of known cities and what the ‘typical’ city and territory size was; agriculture and settlement patterns; the uneven resource-base of the Greek cities; the specializing in local advantages. These case studies illustrate how cities large and small were integrated into the broader trading economy, but to differing degrees.
Co-organised by the Institute of Historical Research of the NHRF, the Department of History and Archaeology of the National Kapodistrian University of Athens and the École Française d’Athènes.
Collaboration par l’Institut de la Recherche Historique de la FNRS, l’Université Nationale et Capodistrienne d’Athènes et l’École Française d’Athènes.Programme 2022-23…#SemGRAnt
secretariat.dir_etudes@efa.gr
+ 30 210 36 79 904Nolwenn Grémillet
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