Unequal housing in Pompeii: using house size to measure inequality

IF 1.8 2区 历史学 0 ARCHAEOLOGY WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY Pub Date : 2022-08-08 DOI:10.1080/00438243.2023.2172069
Samuli Simelius
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

ABSTRACT House size is often used as a tool to calculate wealth in ancient societies, and thus it is also a potential source for the study of inequality. The site of Pompeii, on the Bay of Naples in southern Italy, was first inhabited about 800 years before the eruption of Mount Vesuvius buried it 79 CE. The city provides one of the largest data sets of private architecture in the Roman world, and it has been utilized to calculate the level of inequality in a Roman urban setting. Nonetheless, to understand the inequality of the entire society of the city, these calculations need to be developed. This article uses quantitative and statistical methods, such as Gini coefficients, Lorenz Curves, and also simpler graphs and their interpretation to advance establish methods for exploring inequality through house and building size. A method is proposed for identifying the top economic elite in this urban setting, and the article develops the calculation of inequality further, to encompass even individuals who did not own buildings. As a result, excavated Pompeii’s top economic elite is estimated to have comprised 50 to 100 households, with a high level of inequality evident in this ancient city during its final phase, the year 79 CE.
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庞贝不平等的住房:用房子的大小来衡量不平等
在古代社会,房屋大小经常被用作计算财富的工具,因此它也是研究不平等的潜在来源。庞贝古城位于意大利南部的那不勒斯湾,在公元79年维苏威火山爆发将其掩埋之前,大约800年前就有人居住了。这座城市提供了罗马世界最大的私人建筑数据集之一,它被用来计算罗马城市环境中的不平等程度。然而,为了理解整个城市社会的不平等,这些计算需要发展。本文使用定量和统计方法,如基尼系数,洛伦兹曲线,以及更简单的图表及其解释,以推进通过房屋和建筑大小探索不平等的建立方法。提出了一种方法来识别这个城市环境中的顶级经济精英,文章进一步发展了不平等的计算,甚至包括没有拥有建筑物的个人。因此,据估计,在庞贝古城的最后阶段,也就是公元79年,挖掘出来的顶级经济精英有50到100户人家,这个古城的不平等程度非常明显。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY
WORLD ARCHAEOLOGY ARCHAEOLOGY-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
期刊介绍: World Archaeology was established specifically to deal with archaeology on a world-wide multiperiod basis. Thirty years after it was founded it remains a leader in its field. The first three of the year"s quarterly issues are each dedicated to a particular theme of current interest. The fourth issue, Debates in World Archaeology, is a forum for debate, discussion and comment. All papers adopt a broad comparative approach, looking at important issues on a global scale. The members of the editorial board and the advisory board represent a wide range of interests and expertise and this ensures that the papers published in World Archaeology cover a wide variety of subject areas.
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