Bringing together specialists in ancient history, archaeology and Roman law, this book provides new perspectives on long-distance trade in the Roman world. Recent archaeological work has shown that maritime trade across the Mediterranean intensified greatly at the same time as the Roman state was extending its power overseas. This book explores aspects of this development and its relationship with changes in the legal and institutional apparatus that supported maritime commerce. It analyses the socio-legal framework within which maritime trade was conducted, and in doing so presents a new understanding of the role played by legal and social institutions in the economy of the Roman world.Chapters cover: Roman maritime trade, the influence of commercial considerations on navigational decision making, Roman legal responses to the threat of piracy, the conduct of Roman maritime trade from a socio-legal perspective, the role of written documentation in the transport process, maritime finance and the insights provided by the juristic interpretation of contracts of carriage-by-sea into aspects of Roman private law.
About the AuthorPeter Candy, Early Career Fellow in Legal History, University of Edinburgh. Emilia Matai Ferrandiz, Postdoctoral Researcher at the Centre for European Studies, University of Helsinki.
Book InformationISBN 9781474478144
Author Peter CandyFormat Hardback
Page Count 224
Imprint Edinburgh University PressPublisher Edinburgh University Press