Emporium (antiquity)

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Template:Short description An emporium refers to a trading post, factory, or market of classical antiquity, derived from {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Template:Transliteration, which becomes {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} in Latin. The plural is emporia in both languages, although in Greek the plural undergoes a semantic shift towards Template:Gloss.<ref>Template:LSJ</ref> Emporium is a term that has also been used to describe the centres of heightened trade during the Early Middle Ages.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Emporia varied greatly in their level of activity. Some seem to have functioned much like the permanent European trading colonies in China, India and Japan in the early modern period or those of the mediaeval Italian maritime republics in the Levant. Others were probably annual events for a few days or weeks like the medieval Champagne fairs or modern trade fairs.

Examples

Famous emporia include:

  • Olbia, which exported cereals, fish and slaves;

In the Hellenic and Ptolemaic realm, emporia included the various Greek, Phoenician, Egyptian and other city-states and trading posts in the circum-Mediterranean area. Among these commercial hubs were cities like Avaris and Syene in Lower Egypt, Thebes in Upper Egypt, and Opone, Elim, Elat and other Red Sea ports. For the Hittites, it encompassed Kanesh and Kadesh. For Phoenicia, it included Cádiz, Carthage, Leptis Magna, and Cyrene, among others (although Cyrene had been founded by Greeks).

Ancient Greek writers described certain locations in ancient India<ref>Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Contacossyla</ref><ref>Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Maesolia</ref><ref>Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnica, B168.5</ref><ref>Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Tagara</ref> and Taprobana<ref>Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), Talacory</ref> as emporia.

See also

Sources

References

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Template:Phoenician cities and colonies


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