The Yellow Turban Rebellion and the beginning of Han collapse
The ancient world's port cities are windows into the most cosmopolitan and commercially dynamic aspect of ancient civilization. Alexandria, Ostia, Carthage, Piraeus, Delos — each represents a node in the ancient Mediterranean trade network where goods, people, and ideas converged.
Delos in the 2nd-1st centuries BC was the most cosmopolitan free port in the Mediterranean world. After Rome destroyed Corinth in 146 BC and made Delos a free port, its population swelled with merchants from across the Mediterranean. Inscriptions from the island record communities from Italy, the Greek world, the Near East, and North Africa — a microcosm of the Hellenistic trading world.
Ostia, Rome's port city at the Tiber mouth, is one of the best-preserved ancient cities — more complete than Pompeii for urban form, less spectacular for individual monuments. Its insulae (apartment buildings), warehouses, temples, and commercial spaces give us a vivid picture of a working ancient city rather than an elite residential enclave.
The Piraeus, Athens' port, had its own character distinct from Athens proper: more commercial, more cosmopolitan, more diverse in population. The distinction between the urban citizen community of Athens and the mercantile, mixed population of the Piraeus was a political and social reality that shaped Athenian political conflict.