Vincent Gabrielsen - Selected publications#
Monographs
Financing the Athenian Fleet: Public Taxation and Social Relations. The Johns Hopkins University Press: Baltimore and London, 1994. Pp. 306
The Naval Aristocracy of Hellenistic Rhodes. Studies in Hellenistic Civilization 6. Aarhus University Press: Aarhus, 1997. Pp. 254
Papers/chapters
‘Piracy and the Slave-Trade’, in A Erskine (ed.), A Companion to the Hellenistic World, 389-404. Blackwell: Oxford, 2003
‘Banking and Credit Operations in Hellenistic Times’, in Z.H. Archibald, J. Davies & V. Gabrielsen (eds.), Making, Moving and Managing: The New World of Ancient Economies, 323-31 BC, 136-164. Oxbow Books: Oxford, 2005
‘Warfare and the State’, in P. Sabin, H. van Wees & M. Whitby (eds.), The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, vol. 1, 248-272. Cambridge Univ. Press: Cambridge, 2007.
’Brotherhoods of Faith and Provident Planning: The Non-public Associations of the Greek World’, Mediterranean Historical Review 22 (2007)183-210.
’The Public Banks of Hellenistic Cities”, in K. Verboven, K. Vandorpe and V. Chankowski (eds.), Pistoi dia tèn technèn: Bankers, Loans and Archives in the Ancient World. Studies in Honour of Raymond Bogaert, 115-130. Studia Hellenistica 44. Peeters: Brussels, 2008.
’Die Kosten der athenischen Flotte in klassischer Zeit’, in F. Burrer & H. Müller (Hrsg.), Krigskosten und Kriegsfinanzierung in der Antike, 46-73. Wissenschaftlicher Buchgesellschaft: Darmstadt, 2008.
‘The Chrysaoreis of Caria”, in P. Karlsson and S. Carlsson (eds.), Labraunda and Karia. Proceedings of an International Symposium Commemorating Sixty Years of Swedish Archaeological Work in Labraunda. The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences and Letters, History and Antiquity, Stockholm, November 20-21, 2008, 331-353. Boreas, Uppsala Studies in Ancient Mediterranean and Near Eastern Civilization 32: Uppsala 2011
’Profitable Partnerships: Monopolies, Traders, Kings and Cities’, in Z.H. Archibald, J.K. Davies and V. Gabrielsen (eds.), The Economies of Hellenistic Societies, Third to First Centuries BC, 216-250. Oxford University Press: Oxford, 2011