Questions

Did the Romans salt the fields of Carthage?

Did the Romans salt the fields of Carthage?

The Romans did not salt the lands around Carthage, that is a myth promulgated by a 20th century historian and there is nothing in the ancient literature to support it.

Did the Romans salt the earth?

As a final insult before they left, it is said that the Roman soldiers sprinkled salt upon the ground to ensure that nothing could ever grow there again. During the 17th and 18th centuries, Spain and Portugal punished traitors within their empires by executing them and then pouring salt on their land.

What did Romans do with salt?

In Roman times, and throughout the Middle Ages, salt was a valuable commodity, also referred to as “white gold.” This high demand for salt was due to its important use in preserving food, especially meat and fish. Being so valuable, soldiers in the Roman army were sometimes paid with salt instead of money.

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Was salt really worth more than gold?

The historian explains that, going by trade documents from Venice in 1590, you could purchase a ton of salt for 33 gold ducats (ton the unit of measure, not the hyperbolic large quantity). The fact is that it was actually salt trade that held more worth than the gold industry.

How long does salt ruin soil?

The salt stays in the soil until it’s leached out by water. Depending on how much salt you use as an herbicide, it could take years for rainwater to remove enough salt to make the soil viable for plant life again.

Who ploughed the ground of Carthage with salt?

History Notes. The Romans didn’t actually plough the ground of Carthage with salt. They did raze the city in the spring of 146 BC, under Scipio. Berthold Georg Niebuhr (1776-1831) started the idea in his book “History of Rome” that Scipio had Carthage not just razed, but ploughed.

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Where did the Romans build their saltworks?

At Middlewich a fort was built on a defensive site above the River Dane and this became a staging post on the main military road to the North. At Middlewich the Romans established their saltworks on land by the River Croco between the military fort and the site of the existing Celtic salt making settlement.

Why was salt so expensive in ancient Rome?

For one thing, salt was an expensive commodity and the pragmatic Romans would not have been so profligate with it. Secondly, Rome was becoming increasingly dependent on foreign sources of grain and were not likely to ruin good farmland which might be used to feed their hungry citizens.

What does the Bible say about salt?

The Bible compliments some men as being ‘the salt of the earth’. At the time of the Roman Conquest, British salt making had been long established at numerous coastal sites and at the inland brine springs of Cheshire and Worcestershire.