Thousands and thousands of vacationers go to the traditional website of Pompeii every year to discover enchanting frescoes, opulent villas, and a seemingly frozen snapshot of a affluent Roman city. However how did Pompeii come to achieve such ranges of success and affluence? A brand new research argues that this was largely as a result of labor of enslaved folks, who had been indispensable to town’s development till its demise in 79 CE. The research additionally supplies additional proof that the widespread financial abundance of the early Roman Empire as an entire was predicated much less on the singular genius of emperors, generals, or aristocrats, and was as an alternative extra closely reliant on the collective contributions of the thousands and thousands of enslaved individuals laboring throughout the Mediterranean.
Financial prosperity is commonly measured right this moment when it comes to metrics like Gross Home Product (GDP), family revenue, and revenue inequality inside a given inhabitants. And but, it’s only lately that students of historic financial historical past, like Walter Scheidel, have begun to make use of extra trendy financial instruments to mannequin the Roman economic system and converse in dialog with researchers.
The brand new article within the journal Past & Present by historic historian Seth Bernard on the College of Toronto applies many of those trendy financial metrics and instruments to the traditional world with the intention to mannequin after which calculate the influence of slavery on the native economic system of Roman Pompeii. Within the research, Bernard makes use of statistical and quantitative analyses to statistically argue that enslaved labor was not solely part of Pompeii’s economic system, but additionally the first supply of its prosperity.

From economists to popular media, the prosperity of the Roman Empire throughout the early imperial interval (31 BCE–180 CE) is most frequently attributed to the large-scale development in safe commerce, stability, and business trade throughout the interval of peace known as the Pax Romana. And but, as Bernard factors out, a give attention to market growth and fashions of long-distance commerce or surpluses doesn’t issue within the immense quantity of labor contributed by enslaved individuals throughout this era, which in flip allowed for such expansions and surpluses. Round 20% of the inhabitants of areas just like the Italic peninsula was enslaved, reaching as excessive as 30% in cities similar to Pompeii. In Pompeii and different city areas, enslaved Romans did all the pieces from spinning pottery and laundering garments to working within the metropolis’s many brothels.
A conservative estimate for the city inhabitants of Pompeii is 15,000 folks, though it might have been as excessive as 30,000 folks, together with close by rural areas. Low estimates would then put the variety of enslaved individuals at round 3,000 to 4,500 inside town partitions. As Bernard signifies in his financial modeling, there was excessive financial inequality throughout the metropolis that vastly benefited enslavers. In the end, this enslaved inhabitants was “answerable for half or much more than half of Pompeii’s economic system.” Quantifying the precise financial contributions of enslaved individuals as an entire then supplies a numerical means for indicating how they elevated the Roman economic system. It additionally underscores that, as Bernard states, “Slave proudly owning in all probability shaped the most important single revenue supply for the city economic system [within Pompeii].” Utilizing financial modeling, Bernard supplies stable proof that the revenue that flowed to enslavers by way of the exploitation of enslaved folks was what made Pompeii, and far of the Roman Empire, so economically highly effective.
Bernard’s research works in tandem with a number of different findings lately, which have renewed scholarly give attention to not solely the lives but additionally the contributions of enslaved folks at Pompeii. Excavations since 2020 have uncovered what seem like the sleeping quarters and bed of an enslaved particular person and a bakery prison the place enslaved employees and donkeys had been possible confined. Current museum exhibitions have centered on non-elites inside Pompeii, notably artisans, enslaved individuals, and previously enslaved people generally known as “freedpersons.” In 2024, archaeologist Silvia Martina Bertesago and Archaeological Park of Pompeii Director Basic Gabriel Zuchtriegel published a catalog to accompany the exhibition L’altra Pompei – Vite comuni all’ombra del Vesuvio (The Different Pompeii: Abnormal Lives within the Shadow of Vesuvius), which ran at Pompeii from December 2023 to January 2025. This present, particularly, acts as a reminder that altering public dialogue round slavery requires each accessible educational analysis and public outreach by way of areas like museums and archaeological websites.

The push to incorporate enslaved individuals within the bigger historic narrative of the Roman Empire is ongoing. In his article, Bernard notes the significance of understanding the contributions of enslaved labor to shifting this well-worn story of Roman historical past on the whole and modifying newer strikes to write down the macroeconomic historical past of the Mediterranean empire. “Recentering slave labour within the financial historical past of a paradigmatic Roman metropolis similar to Pompeii affords potential to handle current criticism that Roman historians fail to incorporate ‘lives of working folks as a significant part of financial historical past,’” he writes.
The names of the thousands and thousands of invisible employees in Pompeii and elsewhere all through the Mediterranean have been largely misplaced to historical past. Nevertheless, historic financial and labor historians like Bernard, Dan-El Padilla Peralta, Sarah Levin-Richardson, Miko Flohr, and plenty of others are working to exhibit that each the person lives and the financial contributions of enslaved persons are important to rewriting the narrative of the Roman Empire for the general public. Bookshelves internationally are populated by volumes that focus solely on the one p.c of Roman males who dominated the empire as Caesars and Emperors throughout the alleged tranquility of the Pax Romana. Nevertheless it was the violent profitability of slavery as an exploitative labor system that allowed for Rome to prosper when it comes to the way in which that almost all rich People nonetheless measure “success”: cash.