Raiders to Traders? Economics of Integration among Nomadic Communities in North Africa

Wim Broekaert, Wouter Vanacker
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Abstract

Since the Augustan age, Rome progressively moved away from the North African coastline into the dusty inlands. To the various (semi)nomadic tribes pasturing their flocks within and beyond the Roman range of power, Rome’s arrival entailed various political, economic and social consequences. The presence of Roman hegemony in particular had important repercussions for the traditional power balance and the nature of exchange between sedentary and (semi-)nomadic groups. While the restrictions of a pastoral economy had previously been met by raiding, pillaging and the exaction of tribute, Roman occupation provided a political and socio-economic framework which allowed alternative solutions. It has been argued before that the economic interaction between nomadic and sedentary societies cannot be reduced to hostility and predation but is also characterized by close symbiosis and interdependency.1 In this contribution however, we show that previous research seriously underestimated the intermediary role of nomads in supplying both Roman civic and military settlements and the sub-Saharan kingdoms. Pastoralist nomadic tribes duly recognized the economic potential of emerging and ever-expanding civil and military markets and took advantage of these economic opportunities by playing an important role as very mobile commercial mediators connecting the Mediterranean and the sub-Saharan regions. To analyze these patterns of exchange during the Roman imperial period, we will first present an anthropological model of interaction between nomadic and settled communities and the economic opportunities for both parties. Next, we test the applicability of the model by discussing the particular role of the Garamantes in the economy of Roman Africa. To corroborate the analysis, data on economic interaction
从掠夺者到商人?北非游牧社区的整合经济学
自奥古斯都时代以来,罗马逐渐从北非海岸线转移到尘土飞扬的内陆。对于在罗马势力范围内外放牧的各种(半)游牧部落来说,罗马的到来带来了各种政治、经济和社会后果。特别是罗马霸权的存在,对传统的权力平衡以及定居和(半)游牧群体之间的交换性质产生了重要影响。虽然以前游牧经济的限制是通过袭击,掠夺和征收贡品来满足的,但罗马的占领提供了一个政治和社会经济框架,允许其他解决方案。以前有人认为,游牧社会和定居社会之间的经济互动不能简化为敌对和掠夺,而是以密切的共生和相互依赖为特征然而,在这一贡献中,我们表明,以前的研究严重低估了游牧民族在为罗马公民和军事定居点以及撒哈拉以南的王国提供物资方面的中介作用。游牧部落充分认识到新兴和不断扩大的民用和军事市场的经济潜力,并利用这些经济机会,作为连接地中海和撒哈拉以南地区的非常流动的商业调解人发挥了重要作用。为了分析罗马帝国时期的这些交换模式,我们将首先提出一个游牧和定居社区之间互动的人类学模型,以及双方的经济机会。接下来,我们通过讨论加拉曼特人在罗马非洲经济中的特殊作用来检验模型的适用性。为了证实这一分析,我们使用了经济互动的数据
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