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Palaeamon's Success
The profits from clod-to-cuvee
transformations of the landscape could be enormous. For example,
around A.D. 50 the freedman, Remmius Palaemon of Vicetia,
spent 600,000 sestertii on a farm in the Nomentum region:
"To the latter he gave great
attention, keeping shops for the sale of ready-made clothing
and cultivating his fields with such care that it is common
talk that a vine which he grafted himself yielded three hundred
and sixty bunches of grapes." (Suetonius, The Lives of
Illustrious Men: On Grammarians, xxiii)
Eight years later he sold
his grape crop for 400,000 sestertii while it was still
hanging on the vine: a couple of years later again, he sold
the entire farm to emperor Nero's tutor, Lucius Seneca, for
an incredible 2.4 million sestertii.
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