Sostratus of Aegina

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Sostratus of Aegina

Flourished Sixth Century b.c.e.

Merchant

Source

Reputation . Sostratus is one of the few ancient Greek merchants that is known by name. Originally from the island of Aegina, he became famous as a transporter of other people’s goods in the latter part of the sixth century b.c.e. The historian Herodotus commended him on the profits he made on his cargoes: “with him, nobody can compare.” He is also one of the elite class of individuals of this period whose existence is attested both in literature and in archaeological remains: many pots and pot shards, mostly of Athenian workmanship, have been found in Italy bearing Sostratus’s mark, along with an offering of a stone ship’s anchor that he made to the god Apollo. Sostratus was the foremost of what must have been a large number of Aeginetan entrepreneurs who made the island wealthy and powerful in the latter part of the Archaic Period.

Source

John Boardman, The Greeks Overseas: Their Early Colonies and Trade (London: Thames & Hudson, 1980).