During the second century and into the early first century BC, the island of Delos was home to the largest port of transit in the eastern Mediterranean. As such, it welcomed many Italian traders who prospered among its cosmopolitan population for some fifty or so years. The many buildings, statues, paintings and inscriptions unearthed since 1873 by the French School at Athens have made it possible to trace out the life of this disparate yet influential community.
Introduction
The Italians of Delos: a powerful community with many faces
A colourful group open to other communities
An influential association: the Italici
Lucrative businesses: commerce and banking
The haunts of the Italians: from neighbourhood shrines to ostentatious monuments
The Agora of the Competaliasts and the official shrines of the Italici
The seafront warehouses and the oil and wine business
The houses of the Italians and the festival of the Compitalia
The ‘Agora of the Italians’, a place for gathering and ostentation