Naukratis Trade in Archaic Greece

by
Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 2001-03-22
Publisher(s): Oxford University Press
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Summary

Archaic Naukratis was a busy trading place in the Western Delta of the Nile, renowned for its sanctuaries and courtesans, granting the Greeks access to Egyptian grain and luxury items. Now, more than one hundred years after the discovery and excavation of Naukratis, the author offers the firstfull-length analysis of the archaeology and archaic history of this important site. Although Naukratis always features in modern accounts of ancient Greek colonization, it was not a place where the Greeks could freely establish their own political and social organization - it was under the strict control of the Egyptian pharaoh and his officials. To understand the special status ofNaukratis, the author takes the port of trade model, surveying the political, social, and economic background of both Late Period Egypt and archaic Greece. A major section of the book comprises an archaeological re-evaluation of the topography of archaic Naukratis and its material finds. The sanctuaries, archaic pottery styles, terracottas, faiences, statuettes, and other small finds are examined in the light of recent scholarship, and an in-depthstudy of the literary evidence is brought to bear on the archaeological material. This book comprises a significant contribution to our understanding of Graeco-Egyptian relations during the seventh and sixth centuries BC and also demonstrates that Polanyian economic theory can play an invaluable role in the ongoing debate about the concepts best employed to analyse the ancientGreek economy.

Author Biography

Astrid Moller, recently a Fellow at the Centre for Hellenic Studies, Washington DC, currently holds a Feodor-Lynen scholarship in Perugia, Italy.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
xii
Plates xii
Figures
xii
List of Abbreviations
xiii
Introduction
1(7)
Karl Polanyi's Anthropological Theory of Economy
8(18)
The Formal and the Substantive Approaches to Economic Theory
9(2)
Patterns of Integration
11(2)
Analysis of the Institutions
13(6)
Money uses
13(1)
External trade
14(3)
Market elements
17(2)
The `Port of Trade'
19(7)
Egypt under the Saite Dynasty
26(13)
Egyptian Society and Economy as a Redistributive System
26(6)
Relations between Egypt and Greece
32(7)
Greek mercenaries in Egypt before Amasis
33(3)
Amasis and the Greeks
36(3)
The Greek Economy and Its Market Elements
39(50)
The Organization of External Exchange: Modes of Trading
39(9)
The Personnel of External Exchange: The Traders
48(12)
The Homeric period
48(6)
The Archaic period
54(6)
The Place of External Exchange: The emporion
60(11)
The Development of a Market-place: The agora
71(18)
Excursus: The economic background of the twelve poleis mentioned in Herodotus 2. 178
75(14)
The Archaeological Material from Naukratis
89(93)
Problems relating to the Archaeological Material
90(2)
A Historical Survey of the Excavations
92(2)
The Topography
94(25)
The Temenos of Apollo
94(5)
The Temenos of the Dioskouroi
99(2)
The Temenos of Hera
101(1)
The Temenos of Aphrodite
102(2)
The Temenos of Zeus
104(1)
The Hellenion
105(3)
The Great Temenos
108(5)
The faience workshop
113(2)
Naukratis' situation on the Canobic branch of the Nile
115(1)
The overall layout of the emporion
116(3)
Finds from Naukratis
119(63)
Pottery
119(17)
Corinthian pottery
Athenian pottery
Laconian pottery
Wild Goat style
Fikellura style
Chian pottery
Excursus: The production of Chian pottery at Naukratis
136(9)
Clazomenian pottery
Bird bowls, rosette bowls, and eyebowls
Vroulian bowls
Ionian bowls and Little Master cups
Bucchero pottery---Hera cups
Excursus: Situlae
145(1)
Figure vases
146(2)
Terracottas
148(2)
Faience figures
150(2)
Scarabs
152(1)
Statuettes
153(8)
Excursus: Cypriots at Naukratis?
161(2)
Miscellanea
163(1)
Alabastra---Tridacna shells
163(3)
Inscriptions
166(16)
Chios
Teos
Phocaea
Clazomenae
Rhodes
Cnidus
Halicarnassus
Phaselis
Mytilene
Aegina
Samos
Miletus
Varia
Naukratis as `Port of Trade'
182(34)
The Literary Evidence
182(2)
Naukratis---a Polis?
184(8)
The Role of Amasis
192(4)
The Traders and Inhabitants of Naukratis
196(7)
Trade in Naukratis
203(11)
Summary
214(2)
APPENDIX: Lists of Selected Finds from Naukratis 216(52)
1. Pottery
217(44)
a. List of Corinthian Vases
217(5)
b. List of Athenian Vases
222(17)
c. List of Laconian Vases
239(2)
d. List of Wild Goat Style Vases
241(3)
e. List of Fikellura Vases
244(4)
f. List of Chian Vases
248(5)
g. List of Clazomenian Vases
253(2)
i. List of Bird Bowls, Rosette Bowls, and Eye-Bowls
255(1)
j. List of Vroulian Vases
256(1)
k. List of Ionian Bowls
257(2)
l. List of Ionian Little Master Cups
259(1)
m. List of Bucchero Vases
259(1)
n. List of Unspecified East Greek Vases
260(1)
2. Faience Figures
261(2)
3. Scarabs
263(5)
Selected Bibliography 268(17)
Index 285(6)
Figures 291(6)
Plates 297

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