The rise and fall of viticulture in the Late Antique Negev Highlands reconstructed from archaeobotanical and ceramic data

The international scope of the Mediterranean wine trade in Late Antiquity raises important questions concerning sustainability in an ancient international economy and offers a valuable historical precedent to modern globalization. Such questions involve the role of intercontinental commerce in maint...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2020-08, Vol.117 (33), p.19780-19791
Hauptverfasser: Fuks, Daniel, Bar-Oz, Guy, Tepper, Yotam, Erickson-Gini, Tali, Langgut, Dafna, Weissbrod, Lior, Weiss, Ehud
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container_end_page 19791
container_issue 33
container_start_page 19780
container_title Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS
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creator Fuks, Daniel
Bar-Oz, Guy
Tepper, Yotam
Erickson-Gini, Tali
Langgut, Dafna
Weissbrod, Lior
Weiss, Ehud
description The international scope of the Mediterranean wine trade in Late Antiquity raises important questions concerning sustainability in an ancient international economy and offers a valuable historical precedent to modern globalization. Such questions involve the role of intercontinental commerce in maintaining sustainable production within important supply regions and the vulnerability of peripheral regions believed to have been especially sensitive to environmental and political disturbances. We provide archaeobotanical evidence from trash mounds at three sites in the central Negev Desert, Israel, unraveling the rise and fall of viticulture over the second to eighth centuries of the common era (CE). Using quantitative ceramic data obtained in the same archaeological contexts, we further investigate connections between Negev viticulture and circum-Mediterranean trade. Our findings demonstrate interrelated growth in viticulture and involvement in Mediterranean trade reaching what appears to be a commercial scale in the fourth to mid-sixth centuries. Following a mid-sixth century peak, decline of this system is evident in the mid- to late sixth century, nearly a century before the Islamic conquest. These findings closely correspond with other archaeological evidence for social, economic, and urban growth in the fourth century and decline centered on the mid-sixth century. Contracting markets were a likely proximate cause for the decline; possible triggers include climate change, plague, and wider sociopolitical developments. In long-term historical perspective, the unprecedented commercial florescence of the Late Antique Negev appears to have been unsustainable, reverting to an age-old pattern of smaller-scale settlement and survival–subsistence strategies within a time frame of about two centuries.
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These findings closely correspond with other archaeological evidence for social, economic, and urban growth in the fourth century and decline centered on the mid-sixth century. Contracting markets were a likely proximate cause for the decline; possible triggers include climate change, plague, and wider sociopolitical developments. 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subjects 6th century
Archaeology
Centuries
Climate change
Globalization
Mounds
Plague
Questions
Social Sciences
Sustainability
Trade
Urban development
Urban sprawl
Viticulture
Wine
title The rise and fall of viticulture in the Late Antique Negev Highlands reconstructed from archaeobotanical and ceramic data
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