Sea of Treasures

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A01=Jeremy A. Simmons
ancient economy
Ancient history
ancient India
Antiquity
Archaeological
archaeology
Aromatic
Aromatic products
Artistic
Author_Jeremy A. Simmons
Buddhism
Buddhist
Buddhist sites
Cassia
Category=KCZ
Category=NHC
Category=NHF
Cinnamon
Classics
Coinage
Commodities
consumption
cultural history
economic history
Elder
Emperor
epigraphy
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
Funerary
Galen
gemstones
global history
Greco
Greco roman
Hellenistic
Hoard
imitation
Imperial
Indian Ocean
Indic
Indo
Indo-Roman
knowledge
Kushan
Malabathrum
maritime trade
material history
Mediterranean
miniaturization
Nard
numismatics
object history
Ocean commodities
Pearls
Pepper
Periplus
Plancus
Pliny
Plotius
Plotius plancus
Precious metal
Precious stones
Red sea
Roman
Roman coinage
Roman coins
Roman empire
Roman history
Roman script
semantic systems
south Asia
spices
Subcontinent
Tamil

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691280141
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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How goods and people in motion across the ancient world were entangled through consumption

The ancient world was a far more interconnected place than is often assumed. Maritime routes across the Indian Ocean, by no means peripheral, made these connections possible. In Sea of Treasures, Jeremy Simmons puts forth an entirely new perspective on Indian Ocean commerce, starting with commodities of trade and the patterns of consumption that resulted from their importation. Looking beyond the mechanics of long-distance travel or the economics of “Indo-Roman” exchange, Simmons considers the consequences of objects in motion: how Indian Ocean imports shaped the lives of humans throughout the wider ancient world. In his exploration of textual and archaeological sources from both the Mediterranean basin and the Indian subcontinent, he traces a series of sensuous and intellectual engagements that entangled people and things both tangible and intangible, from spices, coins, and gemstones to information and artistic style.

Each chapter addresses a different encounter and its experiential effects, including Roman outrage at Indian Ocean products; ingestion of consumables such as spices and alcohol; adornment and its sociocultural value; indirect exposure to luxury goods and the proliferation of imitations; and elite access to knowledge about treasured commodities. Drawing on theoretical discussions relating to objects, their material composition, and their roles in human activity, Simmons offers a cultural history of Indian Ocean trade through a holistic understanding of consumption. By interrogating long-held assumptions about Mediterranean dominance in Indian Ocean trade, Simmons expands our understanding of a global Afro-Eurasian world—one that afforded relationships with an ever-widening array of things.

Jeremy A. Simmons is assistant professor of history and the college at the University of Chicago.

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