Caravan city explained

A caravan city is a city located on and deriving its prosperity from its location on a major trans-desert trade route.[1] The term is believed to have been coined by the scholar of antiquity, Michael Rostovtzeff, for his work O Blijnem Vostoke, published in English as Caravan Cities in 1932. The English translation of the work dealt principally with Petra, Jerash, Palmyra and Dura in the "near east", after Rhodes, Cyprus and Mycenaean Greece were removed from the translation as not being caravan cities.[2] [3] Dura, too, has been later considered to be more than a caravan city.[4]

Other caravan cities include Aroer[5] in Jordan, Hatra in Iraq,[6] Oualata in Mauritania, Damascus in Syria, and Samarkand in Uzbekistan.

The caravan cities of the Near East declined as the small trade states between the Roman and Persian empires were gradually absorbed by the two, and the "wall mentality" became dominant, that is, construction of defensive systems (Roman limes and Persian defense lines) and implementation of trade through a single point, the city of Nisibis.[7]

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. "Late Antiquity" by Richard Lim in The Edinburgh Companion to Ancient Greece and Rome. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2010, p. 115.
  2. Rostovtzeff, M. (1932) Caravan Cities. Translated by D. & T. Talbot Rice. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1932, p. v.
  3. http://depts.washington.edu/silkroad/cities/syria/palmyra/palmyra.html Palmyra as a Caravan City
  4. Pierre Leriche, D. N. MacKenzie, "Dura Europos", Encyclopaedia Iranica, December 15, 1996, last updated December 2, 2011.
  5. https://web.archive.org/web/20131011095724/http://www.antiquities.org.il/article_Item_eng.asp?sec_id=17&sub_subj_id=471&id=1216 Anatomy of a Caravan City: Aroer on the South Arabian Trade Route
  6. Web site: Schmitt . RĂ¼diger . HATRA . www.iranicaonline.org . . 16 March 2019.
  7. Book: Bowman. Alan. Garnsey. Peter. Cameron. Averil. The Cambridge Ancient History: Volume 12, The Crisis of Empire, AD 193-337. 2005. Cambridge University Press. 9780521301992. 473. en.