Latifundium
E Vicipaedia
Latifundium(Latina: latus, "spatiosa" + fundum, "firmam, fundum") [1] est praedes vel fundus inmensus qualiter vetus Roma, et systema eiusdem saepe in agricultura exportanti, eiusmodi oleum olivarum, vinum, frumentum. Necnon in qualiter aliis coloniis erant eiusmodi Magna Graecia et Sicilia , et Aegyptus et Maghreb et Hispania Baetica meridiana in parte Hispania, quae usque hodierna tamen videri potest in colonis Hispaniae, et Italiae. Hispanice verba latifundio et hacienda, et Lusitanice fazendas, Italice verbus latifondo eiusdem referunt.
Notae [recensere]
- ↑ Singularis * latifundium occurrit semel (in Plinius Naturalis Historia 13,92, cum significatione "fundo", suggerente ad Anton JL van Hoofff indefinitam, cotidiani quadam obtrectandi terminum, magis quam descriptionem quaedam fundum. Ad linguae testimonium obtulit per K.D. Album, (Acta Instituti Studiorum Classicorum 14 [1967:62-79]), qui nisi septem exempla rara verbum latifundia in Romanum textus, Van Hooff addidit quinque plura in "Alii Latifundia" Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 31,1 (1st Quarter 1982:126-128), invenit duos "in neutram fere turpis modo" (p. 128).
Fontes (Anglice et Gallice) [recensere]
- Stephen L. Dyson, The Roman Countryside (Duckworth Debates in Archaeology)
- René Martin: Recherches sur les agronomes latins et leurs conceptions économiques et sociales, Paris, 1971.
- John Paul Russo, "The Sicilian Latifundia," Italian Americana, March 1999, Vol. 17 Issue 1, pp 40–57
Nexus [recensere]
- On Roman wealth: gentleman farmers
- Kautsky, Karl (1908) "The Technological Inferiority of the Slave Economy" from I. The Slave Economy, Book Two: Society In The Roman Empire, Foundations of Christianity. Published in English: Russell and Russell, 1953.
- Dr Frithjof Kuhnen, (University of Göttingen), "Latifundia (Hacienda)"
- Jonathan Conning (Hunter College), "Latifundia economics" Hunter College Department of Economics Working Papers with number 02/1.