The academic discourse on economic developments in the Roman Empire and its successor kingdoms during Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages has long engaged scholars, generating a range of evolving perspectives on this complex process. A series of case studies sheds light on economic developments in specific regions – Tripolitania, coastal western Hispania, Rome and the Upper Adriatic, as well as northern Gaul with the imperial residence at Trier. The goods examined include finewares, cooking wares, lamps, and amphorae, as well as glass and millstones. These studies reveal a world of dynamic networks, shifting trade routes, and enduring commercial connectivity. They address broader questions that remain relevant today: how economic regions emerge and dissolve, how supply chains react to political disruption, and how local production interacts with long-distance trade in times of profound change.
Commerce in the Late Antique West
Approaches to Analyse Trade Networks in Times of Change
This volume focuses on the late and post-Roman West and brings together recent research on economic life between the fourth and sixth centuries AD. Drawing on archaeological evidence, methodological approaches, and nautical perspectives, the contributions explore how commodities and ships moved over long distances.
