innonimatu
the resident Cassandra
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2006
- Messages
- 15,374
If you look at Madisons estimate, you will see that Roman economy was pretty unequal, like very poor western regions, rich Italy and the eastern part being in the middle. By medieval period the western part seems to have been richer than the eastern part while Italy was still richest. Overall the gdp per capita seems to have grown from roman time to medieval even if that growth was mainly in western, northern and southern europe.
I'm aware of the estimates of wealth for regions of the Roman Empire ad of medieval Europe, but think those must be taken with a truckload of salt. During imperial times Italy literally fed on the rest of the Empire, true. But with the total collapse of taxation and transportation the the 5th century Italy ceased having that advantage, and the population of its cities, Rome especially, had fallen calamitously and remained small during the Middle Ages. Even Naples became bigger, which is not surprising: it was a seaport and had extensive fertile lands nearby, whereas Rome was boxed in by malaria-infested swamps to the north and the south! Italy, it is worth remembering, had some naturally wealthy regions in the middle ages (agriculturally very productive), but plenty of crappy regions. The same was true ot Greece and other areas of the eastern roman empire that are often described as "wealthy".
What really made the wealthy of Italy in the late middle ages. and imo had made the wealth of Greece before (and continuing into) imperial times, was its favorable position to run talassocracies from several of its cities. It was localized in a few cities. So it wasn't exactly "rich Italy" so much as "rich Rome", and Tarento, or Naples, or Venice or Milan or Genoa or Florence or... cities that by being seats of power over extremely fertile regions or hubs of trade became indeed wealthy. But the penninsula as a whole wasn't particularly wealthy, no more I dare say than Gaul or Hispania.
Another rather absurd thing with estimates of wealth for medieval Europe happens with the caliphate of Cordoba. It was wealthy, known doe minting gold coins when "poor christian Europe" lacked the gold to do it, but its fall and annexation into the christian kingdoms didn't lessen the wealth of the region: technology didn't change, population wasn't killed off, it was just a matter of the commercial connections to north Africa being disrupted. Temporarily, and anyway with replacements with trade with other regions. And the thing is, in medieval times the portion of wreath that was traded, versus what was produced locally for local consumption, was tiny.
Ancient economic history is tricky. Far too often, I think, an excessive emphasis is placed in the small portion of the economy that is measured through long-distance trade because that is more interesting and may have more remaining recrods (in the municilap archives of the city-states of that time) that the everyday and often unrecorded "feudal" life.