A comparative examination of two recent books on ancient trade (Trade in
the Ancient Near East, ed. J. D. Hawkins, 1977 and Ancient Civilizations
and Trade, eds. J. A. Sabloff and C.C. Lamberg-Karlovsky 1975) provides
the opportunity to juxtapose bodies of data and theory in the
interpretation of Mesopotamian economic systems. It is seen that the
study of trade necessarily entails an appreciation of the socio economic
consequences of movement of goods and must include an assessment not
only of the quality of traded materials but also of the volume of the
trade. Among the sections of the essay are reviews of Mesopotamian trade
in the third millennium and Old Assyrian period, an overview of
prehistoric tradeand a concluding evaluation on the prospects for
explaining trade in ancient Western Asia.