Scheidel Walter
Stanford University.
J Hell Stud. 2003;123:120-40.
For much of the first millennium BC, the number of Greeks increased considerably, both in the Aegean core and in the expanding periphery the Mediterranean and Black Sea regions. This paper is the first attempt to establish a coherent quantitative framework for the study of this process. In the first section, I argue that despite the lack of statistical data, it is possible to identify a plausible range of estimates of average long-term demographic growth rates in mainland Greece from the Early Iron Age to the Classical period. Elaborating on this finding, the second section offers a comprehensive rebuttal of the notion of explosive population growth in parts of the eighth and seventh centuries BC. In the third section, I seek to determine the probable scale and demographic consequences of Greek settlement overseas. A brief preliminary look at the relationship between population growth and the quality of life concludes my survey. The resultant series of interlocking parametric models is meant to contextualize the demographic development of ancient Greece within the wider ambit of pre-modem demography, and to provide a conceptual template for future research in this area
在公元前第一个千年的大部分时间里,希腊人的数量大幅增加,无论是在爱琴海核心地区,还是在不断扩张的周边地区,即地中海和黑海地区。本文首次尝试建立一个连贯的定量框架来研究这一过程。在第一节中,我认为尽管缺乏统计数据,但仍有可能确定从早期铁器时代到古典时期希腊大陆平均长期人口增长率的合理估计范围。在阐述这一发现的基础上,第二节全面反驳了公元前8世纪和7世纪部分地区人口爆炸式增长的观点。在第三节中,我试图确定希腊海外定居点可能的规模及其人口统计学后果。对人口增长与生活质量之间关系的简要初步探讨结束了我的调查。由此产生的一系列相互关联的参数模型旨在将古希腊的人口发展置于更广泛的前现代人口统计学范围内,并为该领域未来的研究提供一个概念模板。