
Olisipo (Lisbon, Portugal) and its place in the Roman trade.
Author(s) -
Víctor Filipe
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
spal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.283
H-Index - 4
eISSN - 2255-3924
pISSN - 1133-4525
DOI - 10.12795/spal.2021.i30.22
Subject(s) - principate , peninsula , harbour , geography , chronology , black sea , roman empire , mediterranean climate , period (music) , archaeology , mediterranean sea , empire , ancient history , west coast , history , economy , political science , art , oceanography , politics , geology , computer science , law , economics , programming language , aesthetics
Although usually considered the most important city of Lusitania - after Augusta Emerita - and the main maritime harbour of the whole Atlantic peninsular façade, there remains a generalized absence of studies that highlight the role that Olisipo played in the most western of the Roman provinces’ economy and commercial relations. This work aims to address that absence, by focusing on the research on Olisipo, located at the Tagus estuary, during the period encompassing the Republic and the Principate, and based on the study of amphorae. The dataset resulting from the analysis of the amphorae from Lisbon discloses the existence of a vast network of commercial relations with the diverse areas of the Mediterranean throughout all of the considered chronology, thus revealing a cosmopolitan city, with an active and central role in the complex commercial exchanges of the West of Iberian Peninsula with the rest of the Roman Empire. These results underline Olisipo’s importance as a trading post in the Atlantic coast during the Roman period, a role that has been recognized long ago, allowing to draw in a more accurate way how the city’s economic history was shaped.