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The Transport Amphorae from Euesperides : The Maritime Trade of a Cyrenaican City 400–250 BC

Göransson, Kristian LU (2007) In Acta Archaeologica Lundensia. Series in 4° 25.
Abstract
The present thesis is a study of Mediterranean trade 400-250 BC through an examination of transport amphorae from the ancient Cyrenaican city of Euesperides (Benghazi), Libya. The material comes from excavations conducted from 1999-2006 by the Society for Libyan Studies. Amphorae were used for the transportation of commodities such as wine and olive oil. Found in great numbers at the site they testify to the city's trading contacts in the ancient Mediterranean After an introduction to the subject of amphora studies (Chapter 1) and an historical and archaeological background (Chapter 2), the different classes and types of amphorae are presented (Chapter 3) with drawings and photographs. For certain types lists of parallels are given.... (More)
The present thesis is a study of Mediterranean trade 400-250 BC through an examination of transport amphorae from the ancient Cyrenaican city of Euesperides (Benghazi), Libya. The material comes from excavations conducted from 1999-2006 by the Society for Libyan Studies. Amphorae were used for the transportation of commodities such as wine and olive oil. Found in great numbers at the site they testify to the city's trading contacts in the ancient Mediterranean After an introduction to the subject of amphora studies (Chapter 1) and an historical and archaeological background (Chapter 2), the different classes and types of amphorae are presented (Chapter 3) with drawings and photographs. For certain types lists of parallels are given. Analysis of the ceramic fabrics is an important part of the method used in the study. It is emphasised that amphora morphologies must always be studied together with fabrics. The fabrics provided the key to the identification of the local or regional Cyrenaican amphorae, which are presented in detail. All the 1392 studied rims, bases and handles (RBH) were quantified by count in order to present the relative proportions of each type. Amphorae from selected contexts were also fully quantified, i.e. including bodysherds, in order to study potential variations between different levels of precision in the quantification. As a result, the RBH quantification was deemed reliable for a broadly dated and large set of material such as this. In Chapter 4 Mediterranean maritime trade is discussed and a number of inter-regional trade routes for the amphorae are suggested. The quantities and various provenances of the amphorae demonstrate that trade in amphora-borne commodities was undertaken over great distances and on a large scale. As much as 77% of the amphorae are imported, 5% from the Punic world and the remaining 72% from various parts of ancient Greece. The remaining 23% of the amphorae are Cyrenaican. The amphorae from Euesperides contribute significantly to altering our views on the extent and organisation of maritime trade for the period studied. Trade was not regionally-bounded; instead commodities were traded over long distances and along many parallel, inter-regional trade routes. Euesperides was a node in this system of inter-locking Mediterranean markets. The thesis thus demonstrates how a study of quantified amphorae can give a much fuller and richer understanding of trading contacts than traditional approaches focusing on stamped amphora handles. The results obtained provide a set of data from Euesperides which can be used as a point of reference and departure for other studies. (Less)
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author
supervisor
opponent
  • Dr Lund, John, The National Museum of Denmark
organization
publishing date
type
Thesis
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Antikens och forntidens historia, Ancient history, Hellenistic, pottery, ancient economy, trade, Cyrenaica, amphorae, Arkeologi, Archaeology
in
Acta Archaeologica Lundensia. Series in 4°
volume
25
pages
252 pages
publisher
Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Lund University
defense location
Sal 201, Institutionen för kulturvetenskaper, Biskopsgatan 7, Lund
defense date
2007-03-03 10:15:00
ISSN
0065-1001
ISBN
978-91-22-02164-3
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
656926b1-8925-4324-95bf-88d83856a12f (old id 26803)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 16:00:15
date last changed
2019-05-21 09:27:52
@phdthesis{656926b1-8925-4324-95bf-88d83856a12f,
  abstract     = {{The present thesis is a study of Mediterranean trade 400-250 BC through an examination of transport amphorae from the ancient Cyrenaican city of Euesperides (Benghazi), Libya. The material comes from excavations conducted from 1999-2006 by the Society for Libyan Studies. Amphorae were used for the transportation of commodities such as wine and olive oil. Found in great numbers at the site they testify to the city's trading contacts in the ancient Mediterranean After an introduction to the subject of amphora studies (Chapter 1) and an historical and archaeological background (Chapter 2), the different classes and types of amphorae are presented (Chapter 3) with drawings and photographs. For certain types lists of parallels are given. Analysis of the ceramic fabrics is an important part of the method used in the study. It is emphasised that amphora morphologies must always be studied together with fabrics. The fabrics provided the key to the identification of the local or regional Cyrenaican amphorae, which are presented in detail. All the 1392 studied rims, bases and handles (RBH) were quantified by count in order to present the relative proportions of each type. Amphorae from selected contexts were also fully quantified, i.e. including bodysherds, in order to study potential variations between different levels of precision in the quantification. As a result, the RBH quantification was deemed reliable for a broadly dated and large set of material such as this. In Chapter 4 Mediterranean maritime trade is discussed and a number of inter-regional trade routes for the amphorae are suggested. The quantities and various provenances of the amphorae demonstrate that trade in amphora-borne commodities was undertaken over great distances and on a large scale. As much as 77% of the amphorae are imported, 5% from the Punic world and the remaining 72% from various parts of ancient Greece. The remaining 23% of the amphorae are Cyrenaican. The amphorae from Euesperides contribute significantly to altering our views on the extent and organisation of maritime trade for the period studied. Trade was not regionally-bounded; instead commodities were traded over long distances and along many parallel, inter-regional trade routes. Euesperides was a node in this system of inter-locking Mediterranean markets. The thesis thus demonstrates how a study of quantified amphorae can give a much fuller and richer understanding of trading contacts than traditional approaches focusing on stamped amphora handles. The results obtained provide a set of data from Euesperides which can be used as a point of reference and departure for other studies.}},
  author       = {{Göransson, Kristian}},
  isbn         = {{978-91-22-02164-3}},
  issn         = {{0065-1001}},
  keywords     = {{Antikens och forntidens historia; Ancient history; Hellenistic; pottery; ancient economy; trade; Cyrenaica; amphorae; Arkeologi; Archaeology}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Department of Archaeology and Ancient History, Lund University}},
  school       = {{Lund University}},
  series       = {{Acta Archaeologica Lundensia. Series in 4°}},
  title        = {{The Transport Amphorae from Euesperides : The Maritime Trade of a Cyrenaican City 400–250 BC}},
  volume       = {{25}},
  year         = {{2007}},
}