Landowners and Tenants in Roman Egypt

Jane Rowlandson

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Author
Jane Rowlandson
Publish Date
1996-07-25
Subtitle
The Social Relations of Agriculture in the Oxyrhynchite Nome
Book Type
Hardcover
Number of Pages
412
Publisher Name
5054
ISBN-10
019814735X
ISBN-13
9780198147350
citemno
271733
SKU
9780198147350

Description

Oxyrhynchus in Egypt is the best documented provincial city of the Roman empire. This book uses the thousands of papyrus documents found there to examine how its urban landowners derived their wealth from the rural hinterland. After an introductory chapter discussing the topography and agricultural conditions of the region, the book analyses the conditions of tenure under which land was held; the social status of landholders (who included both men and women) and the nature of their holdings; the transmission of ownership by inheritance and sale; and finally the role of short-team leasing among methods of land management. Together with social convention, the system of land tenure, rules of inheritance, and the law of sale and lease formed an immensely complex web articulating the social relationships between landowners and tenants. The papyri from Oxyrhynchus, by illustrating in detail how individuals negotiated their way through this web, provide an unparalleled insight into the character of landownership in a Roman province.