|
Introduction
"Being inordinately
fond of wine, they gulp down what the merchants bring them
quite undiluted. They have a furious passion for drink and
get altogether beyond themselves, becoming so drunk that they
fall asleep or lose their wits." (Diodorus Siculus, History
of the World V.2)
The story of wine in Gaul
while it was a Roman province is a fascinating one of sharply
fluctuating fortunes. It begins in 58 B.C., when Julius Caesar
brought to heel all the Gallic tribes and established
a frontier along the course of the Rhine that was to survive
for more than four centuries thereafter. Veterans of this
military campaign were rewarded with tracts of land near where
they had served, or provided with homes in newly created cities
(colonia), such as Lugdunum (Lyon), Noviodunum (Nyons), and Augusta
Rauricurum (Augst), that were placed strategically astride the Rhine
and Rhone rivers, to discourage any native rebellion.
|
REFERENCES
1) Goudineau, C., 1983: "Marseilles,
Rome, and Gaul From the Third to the First Century B.C.,"
in Trade in the Ancient Economy, 76-86 (edits., P.D.A.
Garnsey, K. Hopkins and C.R. Whittaker; Berkeley: University
of California).
2) Parker,
A.J., 1992: "Cargoes, Containers and Stowage: The Ancient
Mediterranean," The International Journal of Nautical
Archaeology 21.2: 89-100.
3) Peacock,
D.P.S. and Williams, D.F., 1986: Amphorae and the Roman
Economy, various entries (New York: Longman).
4) Tchernia,
A., 1983: "Italian Wine in Gaul at the End of the Republic,"
in Trade in the Ancient Economy, 87-104 (edits., P.D.A
Garnsey, K. Hopkins and C.R. Whittaker: Berkeley; University
of California).
|
|