Demografía, esclavos y arrendatarios: una reseña de Luuk de Ligt, Peasants, citizens and soldiers. Studies in the demographic history of Roman Italy 225 BC – AD 100, Cambridge, 2012
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Reseña del libro Peasants, citizens and soldiers. Studies in the demographic history of Roman Italy 225 BC – AD 100 de Luuk de Ligt.
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García Mac Gaw, C. (2017). Demografía, esclavos y arrendatarios: una reseña de Luuk de Ligt, Peasants, citizens and soldiers. Studies in the demographic history of Roman Italy 225 BC – AD 100, Cambridge, 2012. Sociedades Precapitalistas, 7(1), e023. https://doi.org/10.24215/22505121e023
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References
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Boserup, E. (1965), The conditions of agricultural growth: the economics of agrarian change under population pressure, London.
Brunt, P. A. (2001 [1971]), Imperial Manpower. 225 B.C. - A.D. 14, Oxford.
Cornell T. (1996), “Hannibal’s legacy: the effects of the hannibalic war on Italy”, en Id. (ed.), The Second Punic War: a reappraisal, Londres, 97-117.
Frank, T. (1924), “Roman census statistics from 225 to 28 BC”, Classical Philology 19.4 (Oct.), 329-341.
Finley, M. (1982). Esclavitud antigua, ideología moderna, Barcelona.
Hopkins, K. (1978), Conquerors and Slaves, Cambridge (hay edición castellana: Conquistadores y esclavos, Barcelona, 1981).
Jongman, W. (2003), “Slavery and the growth of Rome. The transformation of Italy in the second and first centuries BCE”, in C. Edwards and G. Woolf, Rome the Cosmopolis, Cambridge, 100-122.
Kron, G. (2000), “Roman ley-farming”, Journal of Roman Archaeology 13, 277-287.
Kron, G. (2002), “Archaeozoological evidence: the productivity of Roman livestock farming”, Munsterische Beitrage zur antiken Handelsgeschichte 21.2, 53-73.
Lo Cascio, E. (1994), “The size of the Roman population: Beloch and the meaning of the Augustan census figures”, Journal of Roman Studies 84, 23-40.
Lo Cascio, E. (1999), “The population of Roman Italy in town and country”, in Bintliff. J. and K. Sbonias (eds.), Reconstructing past population trends in Mediterranean Europe (300 BC-AD 1800), Oxford, 161-171.
Lo Cascio, E. (2008), “Roman census figures in the second century BC and the property qualification of the fifth class”, in De Ligt, L. and S. J. Northwood (eds.), People, land and politics. Demographic developments and the transformation of Roman Italy, 300 BC-AD 14, Leiden, 239-256.
Lo Cascio E. y P. Malanima (2005), “Cycles and stability: Italian population before the demographic transition (225 BC – AD 1900)”, Rivista di Storia Economica 21, 5-40.
Malanima, P. (1998), “Italian cities 1300-1800: a quantitative approach”, Rivista di Storia Economica 14, 91-126.
Rosenstein, N. (2004), Rome at war. Farms, families and death in the middle republic, Chapel Hill-Londres.
Scheidel, W. (ed.) (2001), Debating Roman demography, Leiden.
Scheidel, W. (2008), “Roman population size: the logic of the debate”, in De Ligt and Northwood, op. cit., 17-70.
Wiseman, T. P. (1969), “The census in the first century B.C.”, Journal of Roman Studies 59, 59-75.
Boserup, E. (1965), The conditions of agricultural growth: the economics of agrarian change under population pressure, London.
Brunt, P. A. (2001 [1971]), Imperial Manpower. 225 B.C. - A.D. 14, Oxford.
Cornell T. (1996), “Hannibal’s legacy: the effects of the hannibalic war on Italy”, en Id. (ed.), The Second Punic War: a reappraisal, Londres, 97-117.
Frank, T. (1924), “Roman census statistics from 225 to 28 BC”, Classical Philology 19.4 (Oct.), 329-341.
Finley, M. (1982). Esclavitud antigua, ideología moderna, Barcelona.
Hopkins, K. (1978), Conquerors and Slaves, Cambridge (hay edición castellana: Conquistadores y esclavos, Barcelona, 1981).
Jongman, W. (2003), “Slavery and the growth of Rome. The transformation of Italy in the second and first centuries BCE”, in C. Edwards and G. Woolf, Rome the Cosmopolis, Cambridge, 100-122.
Kron, G. (2000), “Roman ley-farming”, Journal of Roman Archaeology 13, 277-287.
Kron, G. (2002), “Archaeozoological evidence: the productivity of Roman livestock farming”, Munsterische Beitrage zur antiken Handelsgeschichte 21.2, 53-73.
Lo Cascio, E. (1994), “The size of the Roman population: Beloch and the meaning of the Augustan census figures”, Journal of Roman Studies 84, 23-40.
Lo Cascio, E. (1999), “The population of Roman Italy in town and country”, in Bintliff. J. and K. Sbonias (eds.), Reconstructing past population trends in Mediterranean Europe (300 BC-AD 1800), Oxford, 161-171.
Lo Cascio, E. (2008), “Roman census figures in the second century BC and the property qualification of the fifth class”, in De Ligt, L. and S. J. Northwood (eds.), People, land and politics. Demographic developments and the transformation of Roman Italy, 300 BC-AD 14, Leiden, 239-256.
Lo Cascio E. y P. Malanima (2005), “Cycles and stability: Italian population before the demographic transition (225 BC – AD 1900)”, Rivista di Storia Economica 21, 5-40.
Malanima, P. (1998), “Italian cities 1300-1800: a quantitative approach”, Rivista di Storia Economica 14, 91-126.
Rosenstein, N. (2004), Rome at war. Farms, families and death in the middle republic, Chapel Hill-Londres.
Scheidel, W. (ed.) (2001), Debating Roman demography, Leiden.
Scheidel, W. (2008), “Roman population size: the logic of the debate”, in De Ligt and Northwood, op. cit., 17-70.
Wiseman, T. P. (1969), “The census in the first century B.C.”, Journal of Roman Studies 59, 59-75.