The malarial landscapes of Roman central Italy : an archaeological study of disease exposure

Placeholder Show Content

Abstract/Contents

Abstract
This dissertation presents a study of malaria's ancient epidemiology in Roman central Italy. While current evidence indicates that malaria was present in Italy during the Roman period, little work has been done regarding malaria's impact on and interaction with Romans and Roman society overall. This is largely due to the presumed inability of this evidence to specify where and to what degree the disease was present in antiquity. In this dissertation I address this evidentiary constraint by reconceptualizing the focus of research, considering both the context of the disease and the disease as context. To do this, I combine spatial epidemiological theories and methods with close analysis of paleo-environmental data, ancient texts, and material remains to learn how the environment, human practices, and artifacts bounded malaria's distribution, affected its prevalence, and ultimately exposed people in the past to this disease. In this way, I build a model of ancient malaria transmission risk, with major emphasis placed on the unfolding entanglement between malaria and Roman villa estates between 200 BCE and 500 CE. In Chapter One, all current evidence for malaria in the ancient Roman world is categorized according to the ability of each to support a malaria identification. Chapter Two outlines this dissertation's theoretical framework and method, central to which is the idea that landscapes of disease and disease exposures therein are the emergent outcome of the interdependent activity between the social world of humans and the material world of living and non-living things. In Chapter Three, GIS software is used to create suitability maps of relative malaria transmission risk in Roman central Italy. These maps reflect temperature's effect on the development and activity of mosquitoes and malaria parasites. In Chapter Four, the risk maps created in the previous chapter are juxtaposed with a geodatabase of 501 central Italian villa estates datable between 200 BCE and 500 CE. This juxtaposition discloses a tension that has not been satisfactorily considered in studies of Roman central Italy: growth and activity despite malaria's concurrent presence and naturally high risk of transmission. This tension is reconciled in the final two chapters. Chapter Five explores the potential for villa estate agricultural practices to effectively control malaria transmission. Chapter Six explores how the artifacts of those practices impacted their effectiveness in terms of malaria control, as well as the ways in which these artifacts themselves promoted malaria exposure as they fell into disrepair and dilapidated. This dissertation reveals that the Romans, although unaware of malaria's etiology, very likely incidentally reduced the risk of its transmission by embracing intensive farming practices, attentive local reclamation, and the employment of artifacts that curtailed substantive contact between susceptible human hosts and infected mosquito vectors. At the same time, this dissertation indicates that malaria's entrenchment within Italy, lasting until its elimination in the middle 20th century, was in part a consequence of the breakdown of those very same artifacts and practices that, for a time, curtailed its transmission.

Description

Type of resource text
Form electronic resource; remote; computer; online resource
Extent 1 online resource.
Place California
Place [Stanford, California]
Publisher [Stanford University]
Copyright date 2021; ©2021
Publication date 2021; 2021
Issuance monographic
Language English

Creators/Contributors

Author Pickel, David Gerald
Degree supervisor Leidwanger, Justin
Degree supervisor Scheidel, Walter, 1966-
Thesis advisor Leidwanger, Justin
Thesis advisor Scheidel, Walter, 1966-
Thesis advisor Saller, Richard P
Thesis advisor Seetah, Krish
Degree committee member Saller, Richard P
Degree committee member Seetah, Krish
Associated with Stanford University, Department of Classics

Subjects

Genre Theses
Genre Text

Bibliographic information

Statement of responsibility David Gerald Pickel.
Note Submitted to the Department of Classics.
Thesis Thesis Ph.D. Stanford University 2021.
Location https://purl.stanford.edu/yk689jc4076

Access conditions

Copyright
© 2021 by David Gerald Pickel
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 Unported license (CC BY-NC).

Also listed in

Loading usage metrics...