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Technology and Society in the Ancient Greek and Roman Worlds

Tracey Rihll

Historical Perspectives on Technology, Society, and Culture, Issue: 1st

Swansea University Author: Tracey Rihll

Abstract

This book describes well developed and significant technologies of the ancient Greeks and Romans in culturally critical domains. It emphasizes technological variation, mobility, diffusion and development, failure, and endurance, focusing on everyday technologies that were embodied in the material cu...

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Published in: Historical Perspectives on Technology, Society, and Culture
ISBN: 978-0872292017
Published: Washington DC The American Historical Association and the Society for the History of technology 2013
URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa15131
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first_indexed 2013-07-23T12:13:53Z
last_indexed 2018-02-09T04:46:52Z
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spelling 2018-02-06T14:56:37.6622850 v2 15131 2013-06-25 Technology and Society in the Ancient Greek and Roman Worlds 1bc10e170e481442b544ff38c33c5092 Tracey Rihll Tracey Rihll true false 2013-06-25 ACLA This book describes well developed and significant technologies of the ancient Greeks and Romans in culturally critical domains. It emphasizes technological variation, mobility, diffusion and development, failure, and endurance, focusing on everyday technologies that were embodied in the material culture of the lives of relatively large numbers of people. It argues that technology was the sine qua non of ancient Greek and Roman culture. There are chapters on the production and distribution of food, the collection and distribution of water, the construction of public and private buildings, textile production, mining and metallurgy. The substantive chapters are preceeded by a theoretical discussion, on the mechanisms of productivity and growth in ancient economies. The text is supported with colour illustrations of surviving material. Book Historical Perspectives on Technology, Society, and Culture 1st The American Historical Association and the Society for the History of technology Washington DC 978-0872292017 History, history of technology, social history, material culture, ancient Greece, ancient Rome. 30 4 2013 2013-04-30 COLLEGE NANME Classics COLLEGE CODE ACLA Swansea University 2018-02-06T14:56:37.6622850 2013-06-25T12:16:36.4800646 Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences School of Culture and Communication - Classics, Ancient History, Egyptology Tracey Rihll 1
title Technology and Society in the Ancient Greek and Roman Worlds
spellingShingle Technology and Society in the Ancient Greek and Roman Worlds
Tracey Rihll
title_short Technology and Society in the Ancient Greek and Roman Worlds
title_full Technology and Society in the Ancient Greek and Roman Worlds
title_fullStr Technology and Society in the Ancient Greek and Roman Worlds
title_full_unstemmed Technology and Society in the Ancient Greek and Roman Worlds
title_sort Technology and Society in the Ancient Greek and Roman Worlds
author_id_str_mv 1bc10e170e481442b544ff38c33c5092
author_id_fullname_str_mv 1bc10e170e481442b544ff38c33c5092_***_Tracey Rihll
author Tracey Rihll
author2 Tracey Rihll
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container_title Historical Perspectives on Technology, Society, and Culture
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publishDate 2013
institution Swansea University
isbn 978-0872292017
publisher The American Historical Association and the Society for the History of technology
college_str Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofhumanitiesandsocialsciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences
department_str School of Culture and Communication - Classics, Ancient History, Egyptology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Culture and Communication - Classics, Ancient History, Egyptology
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description This book describes well developed and significant technologies of the ancient Greeks and Romans in culturally critical domains. It emphasizes technological variation, mobility, diffusion and development, failure, and endurance, focusing on everyday technologies that were embodied in the material culture of the lives of relatively large numbers of people. It argues that technology was the sine qua non of ancient Greek and Roman culture. There are chapters on the production and distribution of food, the collection and distribution of water, the construction of public and private buildings, textile production, mining and metallurgy. The substantive chapters are preceeded by a theoretical discussion, on the mechanisms of productivity and growth in ancient economies. The text is supported with colour illustrations of surviving material.
published_date 2013-04-30T03:17:15Z
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