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Harder Times
Like any business venture
dependent upon the vagaries of the weather, vineyards and
wine merchants could fall on hard times. A case in point is
described in an Egyptian papyrus document of A.D. 330 known
as the Meletian Schism. The text acknowledges the sufferings
of a certain wine-dealer, Pamonthius, who was so deeply in
debt that he was forced not only to sell all of his property
and his wardrobe but also to hand over his children to his
creditors. Though it was illegal to pledge one's children
as a security, in the eventuality of default, they were committed
to slavery; such a practice was quite widespread.
Vintners could shield themselves
against a bad crop or two, however, and even cope with a period of
glut (when wholesale process would tumble), by stock-piling some of
their wine every year.
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Meletian Schism ms. |