Introduction
Ah, Rome! Caesar!
Patricians! Plebeians! Centurions! Gladiators! The Coliseum! The
Forum! But what about the traders who went to the far reaches of the
empire bringing goods, gold and glory back to Rome? Who were they?
Where did they go? What goods did they trade? What did they bring
back?
Roman
entrepreneurs traded with other cultures along a system of Roman roads
and via ships on the Mediterranean Sea. Roads – a source of great
commercial importance -- led out of Rome in every direction linking the
capital with the distant provinces. At the same time, the Mediterranean
Sea – sometimes called the “Roman Lake” – also provided access to
distant ports and the goods that could be obtained from foreign lands.
As a result, Romans were able to satisfy their economic wants for scarce
resources by engaging in trade with other parts of the world. |