Simulating Littoral Trade: Modeling the Trade of Wine in the Bronze to Iron Age Transition in Southern France
Authored by Stefani A Crabtree
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.3390/land5010005
Sponsors:
Chateaubriand fellowship
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
The Languedoc-Roussillon region of southern France is well known today
for producing full-bodied red wines. Yet wine grapes are not native to
France. Additionally, wine was not developed indigenously first. In the
7th century B.C. Etruscan merchants bringing wine landed on the shores
of the Languedoc and established trade relationships with the native
Gauls, later creating local viticulture, and laying the foundation for a
strong cultural identity of French wine production and setting in motion
a multi-billion dollar industry. This paper examines the first five
centuries of wine consumption (from similar to 600 B.C. to similar to
100 B.C.), analyzing how preference of one type of luxury good over
another created distinctive artifact patterns in the archaeological
record. I create a simple agent-based model to examine how the trade of
comestibles for wine led to a growing economy and a distinctive
patterning of artifacts in the archaeological record of southern France.
This model helps shed light on the processes that led to centuries of
peaceable relationships with colonial merchants, and interacts with
scholarly debate on why Etruscan amphorae are replaced by Greek amphorae
so swiftly and completely.
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