Machines, power and the ancient economy

This paper examines the relationship between the design and use of mechanical technology, patronage and investment, and economic return, using three main case studies: water-lifting devices, the water-powered grain mill, and the diverse uses of water-power in mining. Water-power was used on a wide s...

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Manylion Llyfryddiaeth
Prif Awdur: Wilson, A
Fformat: Journal article
Iaith:English
Cyhoeddwyd: 2002
Pynciau:
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author Wilson, A
author_facet Wilson, A
author_sort Wilson, A
collection OXFORD
description This paper examines the relationship between the design and use of mechanical technology, patronage and investment, and economic return, using three main case studies: water-lifting devices, the water-powered grain mill, and the diverse uses of water-power in mining. Water-power was used on a wide scale and in diversified forms at an early date (by the first century A. D.), and the use of mechanical technology to perform economically critical work had an important impact on economic performance and the potential for <em>per capita</em> growth, especially in the latter centuries B. C. and the first two centuries A. D. Conversely, in the third century A. D. the cessation of the employment of hydraulic mining techniques enabling large-scale extraction of gold and other metals may have had an adverse impact on the economy as a whole. Growth and progress do not necessarily follow a linear pattern of advance; technologies are lost as well as adopted.
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spelling oxford-uuid:d5d33486-1b9f-4983-8c8c-a93fd7bff9e32023-11-10T10:57:11ZMachines, power and the ancient economyJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:d5d33486-1b9f-4983-8c8c-a93fd7bff9e3ArchaeologyEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2002Wilson, AThis paper examines the relationship between the design and use of mechanical technology, patronage and investment, and economic return, using three main case studies: water-lifting devices, the water-powered grain mill, and the diverse uses of water-power in mining. Water-power was used on a wide scale and in diversified forms at an early date (by the first century A. D.), and the use of mechanical technology to perform economically critical work had an important impact on economic performance and the potential for <em>per capita</em> growth, especially in the latter centuries B. C. and the first two centuries A. D. Conversely, in the third century A. D. the cessation of the employment of hydraulic mining techniques enabling large-scale extraction of gold and other metals may have had an adverse impact on the economy as a whole. Growth and progress do not necessarily follow a linear pattern of advance; technologies are lost as well as adopted.
spellingShingle Archaeology
Wilson, A
Machines, power and the ancient economy
title Machines, power and the ancient economy
title_full Machines, power and the ancient economy
title_fullStr Machines, power and the ancient economy
title_full_unstemmed Machines, power and the ancient economy
title_short Machines, power and the ancient economy
title_sort machines power and the ancient economy
topic Archaeology
work_keys_str_mv AT wilsona machinespowerandtheancienteconomy