Live Stream: Economies of the Edge. Frontier Zone Processes at Regional, Imperial, and Global Scales (300 BCE – 300 CE) 19th – 21st September 2019
Live Stream: Economies of the Edge. Frontier Zone Processes at Regional, Imperial, and Global Scales (300 BCE – 300 CE) 19th – 21st September 2019
The conference will explore economic processes in frontier zones of
ancient empires and their wider impact on inter-imperial exchanges in
the Afro-Eurasian World region. It is part of the broader project of
re-thinking “Silk-Road” exchange, which so far has been looked at mostly
from the perspective of imperial centers and final destinations rather
than regions that—for various reasons and in different ways—were
involved in inter-imperial contacts and exchange.
Global exchange in the ancient world has been a vibrant field of
study over the past 10 years, leading to different research directions
and interests. Many scholars working from different disciplinary angles
have brought our attention to the ideological underpinnings of the
concept of the Silk Road, or Silk Routes. Others have looked at specific
aspects of interaction through particular types of evidence—coins,
transmitted and excavated texts, and the archaeology of maritime and
terrestrial networks—in order to understand better the nature of the
connections that stimulated exchange and interaction in the
Afro-Eurasian world region. This research has brought to the fore the
necessity of finding different and novel ways of thinking about
Afro-Eurasia as a connected world region.
While questions of production, consumption, and distribution remain
important foci of economic history in the narrower sense, we hope to
integrate broader processes into the discussion. The spread of urbanism,
for example, has been examined both from economic and from political
and ideological perspectives, but can these approaches be integrated?
Similarly, the construction and use of physical infrastructure has
complex causes, processes and consequences. How might this complexity be
incorporated into our understanding of the economy?
The emergence and spread of local currencies present similar
opportunities for scholars combining traditional economic questions of
exchange with questions of political development and identity formation.
In addition, the project of identifying the emergence and spread of
market-based, commercial exchange has historically dominated the study
of ancient economic networks. What other institutions facilitated
exchange and what forms did these exchange-relationships take? Is the
Polanyian tripartite division of reciprocity, redistribution, and market
exchange still helpful?
These examples illustrate some possibilities for broadening the scope
of economic history to include other realms of human activity, but we
would also like to explore the possibility of incorporating ecological
and environmental perspectives. How does the interdependence of mountain
and valley ecologies affect economic processes at different scales? Can
similar interdependencies between maritime, coastal, and inland
ecologies be identified? Finally, what types of proxies can we use as
evidence to study these different processes? By taking an expansive view
of economic activity, we hope to better understand how the development
of frontier zones allowed for the articulation of global-scale networks
and how those networks, in turn, impacted the development of
inter-imperial regions.=
A high degree of multidisciplinary communication is necessary to move
from granular datasets rooted in specific disciplinary and
methodological approaches, to research on large-scale processes. The
central challenge, however, remains in finding appropriate parameters
for integrating data from the various scales, regions, and scholarly
approaches outlined above. By bringing together focused case studies
from very different micro regions, we hope to foster discussion about
how to link this data to broader questions about global exchange and its
political and social consequences.
This conference will focus on the last three centuries BCE and the
first three centuries CE, which we identify as a time of heightened
empire building alongside a marked intensification of inter-imperial
exchanges across the Afro-Eurasian region. The geographical focus of the
conference is more selective and follows the particular areas of
attention of the BaSaR research team: South Asia and the Indian Ocean
maritime region, the Central Asian borderlands, the Chinese-steppe
region, as well as Southwest Asia from the Black Sea to Egypt and the
Red Sea. In addition, some contributions will adopt a distinctly global
perspective on the Afro-Eurasian macro-zone.
Thursday, 19th September
Introduction
13:00 – 13:30
Political Power and Economies I
Mark Altaweel (University College London)
Revolutionizing a World: From Small States to Universalism in the Pre-Islamic Near East
13:30 – 14:15
K. Rajan (Pondicherry University)
Emergence of Empires and Economies: Experiencing Early Historic South India
14:15 – 15:00
Coffee break
15:00 – 15:45
Political Power and Economies II
Maxim Korolkov (Heidelberg University)
The Southern Contact Zone, Empire Building, and Economic Change in the Eastern Zhou, Qin, and Han Eras (ca. 500 BCE – 300 CE)
15:45 – 16:30
Shailendra Bhandare (Ashmolean Museum, Oxford)
Money in Liminal Times: Coin Circulation at the End of the Indo-Greek Kingdom
17:15 – 18:00
Friday, 20th September
Nodes: Ports and Border Markets I
Miguel John Versluys (Leiden University)
Network Power? Object Flows and Innovation in Hellenistic Eurasia
9:00 – 9:45
Sören Stark (ISAW, New York University)
Between Desert and Oasis: Border Markets and their Role in Economic Networks in Southwestern Central Asia
9:45 – 10:30
Coffee break
10:30 – 11:15
Nodes: Ports and Border Markets II
Stefan Hauser (University of Konstanz)
The Arsacid Center of Trade: Charax Spasinou, Capital of Mesene
11:15 – 12:00
Steven E. Sidebotham (University of Delaware) and Marianne Bergmann (University of Göttingen)
Sculptural Finds as a Reflection of the Cosmopolitan Life at Berenike: A Ptolemaic-Roman Port on the Red Sea Coast of Egypt
12:00 – 12:45
Lunch break
12:45 – 14:00
Links: People in Motion I
Paul Kosmin (Harvard University)
Trading Values: The Southern Sea as Merchant Space
14:00 – 14:45
Federico de Romanis (Tor Vergata University of Rome)
Translata Pecunia: The Use of Roman Coins on the Other Side of the Indian Ocean
14:45 – 15:30
Coffee break
15:30 – 16:15
Links: People in Motion II
Eivind Heldaas Seland (University of Bergen)
Water, Climate and Connectivity in the Roman-Period Syrian Desert
16:15 – 17:00
Saturday, 21st September
Centers and Peripheries
Andrew Bauer (Stanford University)
(Re)placing the ‘Hinterland’: Perspectives on Empire and Indian Ocean Trade from the Early Historic Interior Deccan
9:30 – 10:15
Luca M. Olivieri (ISMEO Italian Archaeological Mission in Packistan)
Double-Crop Pocket Zones and Empires: The Case of Swat
10:15 – 11:00
Coffee break
11:00 – 11:30
Inter-imperial Exchange I
Marek Olbrycht (University of Rzeszów)
The Parthian Empire and the Long-Distance Trade in the Caspian Basin
11:30 – 12:30
Lunch break
12:30 – 14:00
Inter-imperial Exchange II
Joe Cribb (British Museum)
The Sino-Kharoshthi Coinage of Khotan: Cultural and Political Links between Gandhara and Xinjiang, First to Second Century CE
14:00 – 14:45
Armin Selbitschka (Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich)
Versus the Silk Trade Myth: The Movement of Luxury Goods in China and Chinese Central Asia (Third Century BCE to Third Century CE)
14:45 – 15:30
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