Bibliography: Mining

Last updated: Saturday, March 9th 2024, 22:47

Holleran, C. (2016). ‘Labour Mobility in the Roman World: A Case Study of Mines in Iberia’, in L. De Ligt and L.E. Tacoma (eds), Migration and Mobility in the Early Roman Empire. Leiden: Brill, 95–137.
Wilson, A. (2012). ‘Raw Materials and Energy’, in W. Scheidel (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Economy. n/a Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 133–155.
Hirt, A. (2010). Imperial Mines and Quarries in the Roman World Organizational Aspects 27 BC-AD 235. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Craddock, P. (2008). ‘Mining and Metallurgy’, in J.P. Oleson (ed.), Oxford Handbook of Engineering and Technology in the Classical World. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 93–120.
Domergue, C. (2008). Les Mines Antiques. La production des métaux aux époques grecque et romaine. Paris: Picard.
Schneider, H. (2007). Geschichte der Antiken Technik. Munich: Beck.
Domergue, C. and J.-L. Bordes (2006). ‘Quelques nouveautés techniques dans les mines et la métallurgie à l'époque romaine: leur efficacité et leurs effects sur la production’, in E. Lo Cascio (ed.), innovazione tecnica e progresso economico nel mondo romano. Bari: Edipuglia, 197–224.
Lazzarini, S. (2001). Lex metallis dicta. Studi sulla seconda Tavola di Vipasca. Rome.
Greene, K. (2000). ‘Industry and Technology’, in A. Bowman, P. Garnsey and D. Rathbone (eds), The High Empire: A.D. 70-192. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 741–768.
Gorecki, J. (1999). ‘Metallurgy: From Mining to Finished Products’, in A. Ciarallo and E. De Carolis (eds), Homo Faber: Pompeii. Life in A Roman Town. Rome: Electa, 104–107.
Domergue, C., B. Cauuet, E. Lavielle, J.-M. Pailler, R. Sablayrolles, P. Sillières and F. Tollon (1993). Un Centre Sidérurgique Romain de la Montagne Noire. Le Domaine des Forges (Les Martys, Aude). .
Domergue, C. (1990). Les mines de la Péninsule Ibérique dans l'Antiquité romaine. Collection de l'école française de Rome 127. École française de Rome: Rome.
Healy, J. (1978). Mining and metallurgy in the Greek and Roman world. London: Thames and Hudson.