Money in Ptolemaic Egypt: From the Macedonian Conquest to the End of the Third Century BCThis book explores the impact of Alexander the Great's introduction of coined money on the economy and society of Egypt and its political implications for the formation of the Ptolemaic state. It argues that the introduction of coinage happened slowly, spreading gradually from Alexandria into the chora. Under Ptolemy II, however, Egypt was aggressively monetised. Using both numismatic and papyrological evidence, the workings of a rural monetary economy are reconstructed where coinage was in high demand, but in short supply. It is argued that by the middle of the third century BC Egypt was much more thoroughly monetised than is usually assumed, but that the degree of monetisation was sustained only by an extensive credit economy as well as ad hoc commutation of monetary payments into kind. Contextualising the complexities of credit and banking in rural Egypt, the book offers a fresh picture of their function in the ancient economy. |
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Contents
Monetising the countryside | 58 |
Taxes | 84 |
Bronze and silver | 111 |
Rents | 118 |
Wages | 130 |
Formal loans | 153 |
Table 7 Loans against pledge made by Zenons agents between | 164 |
Table 8 cont | 178 |
Table 8 cont | 180 |
Extending the credit economy | 181 |
Table 10 Loans against future produce | 193 |
Table n Credit sale | 199 |
Table 12 Arrha | 201 |
Leases and labour contracts | 205 |
Credit in a social context | 227 |
Banks and the money supply | 257 |
BGUXI965 | 179 |
Banking and business | 280 |
Other editions - View all
Money in Ptolemaic Egypt: From the Macedonian Conquest to the End of the ... Sitta von Reden No preview available - 2010 |
Common terms and phrases
administration agents Alexandria Amun Apollonios apomoira aroura arrha Arsinoite nome artabas of wheat Artemidoros atokos attested banker Bogaert bronze coinage cash cent chˆora chalkoi Clarysse and Thompson cleruchic coins CPR XVIII cultivators dˆorea demotic documents drachms drachms 3 obols drachms bronze Egypt Egyptian Fayum finance financial first fixed gold grain Greek Hamb hoard identified interest Kšoln katerga kind labour land lease loan contracts Lond Maresch minted monetary monetisation month moreover obols official olyra opsˆonion Oxyrhynchite P. L. Bat paid papyrus payment PCZ III Pestman Petr PrŽeaux pre-payment Ptolemaic Egypt Ptolemaic period Ptolemy II purchase receipt received Reekmans relationship rent Revenue Royal bank salary salt-tax seed significance silver stater sitometria slaves specific stater suggests surety tax-farmers Tebt Tebtunis temple tenants Thebaid third century Tholthis toparchy vineyards wages WChr wine Zenon Zenon archive
References to this book
Rome and China: Comparative Perspectives on Ancient World Empires Walter Scheidel Limited preview - 2009 |