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The Cambridge Ancient History, 1994, Vol.6, p.661-677
1994

Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Greek agriculture in the classical period
Ist Teil von
  • The Cambridge Ancient History, 1994, Vol.6, p.661-677
Ort / Verlag
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Erscheinungsjahr
1994
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Cambridge Core All Books
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • INTRODUCTIONThroughout Greek antiquity the ownership and cultivation of the land remained fundamental preoccupations at all levels of society, no less during the fifth and fourth centuries than at any other period. The Homeric scene of ‘two men with measures in their hands, quarrelling over boundaries in the shared ploughland’ finds its counterpart in the fourth-century lawsuit between neighbours in Attica concerning flood damage caused by one to the other's property. Instructions in the Athenian decree c. 422 for Demeter's cult at Eleusis, that ‘first-fruits of the harvest are to be offered to the Goddesses according to ancestral custom and the oracle at Delphi’ stem from the same concerns which prompted Hesiod's precept to his brother, ‘Work, so that hunger may hate you and revered Demeter may love you and fill your barn with food.’ If basic preoccupations remained unchanged, the question then arises whether or not agricultural methods and results underwent any transformation in the classical period. If they did, was this in part a response to developments in scientific thought? to increasing demand for food and growing pressure on the land? to progress made elsewhere in the ancient world? or simply to changes in climate and physical environment? If, on the other hand, they did not, was this mainly because there was no need for change, in that increased demand (generally assumed to have occurred) was satisfied by cultivating marginal land, by emigration, or by importing grain? Or, if change was needed but did not occur, was this due to the Greeks’ failure to advance technologically, or to an ingrained conservatism that preserved traditional farming practices even in the face of repeated shortfalls? Or did the proverbial poverty of Greek farmland and the harshness of the climate make further modification of technique impractical before the development of modern farm machinery and fertilizers? Had Greek agriculture already progressed as far as it could?
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISBN: 0521233488, 9780521233484
DOI: 10.1017/CHOL9780521233484.026
Titel-ID: cdi_cambridge_histories_CBO9781139054331A031
Format
Schlagworte
Ancient history, Classical studies

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