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latifundium

/ˌlætəˈfʌndiəm/
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Other forms: latifundia

In ancient Rome, a latifundium was a large agricultural property that was farmed by enslaved people. Most latifundia also had large villas where the landowner lived.

Several of the grand manor houses that once sat among each Roman latifundium's acres of farmed fields have been excavated by archaeologists. They reveal additional details of life on the huge landed estates: While wealthy owners decorated their homes with frescoes and lived in comfort, enslaved workers did the hard labor of farming olives, grain, and other lucrative crops. Latifundium, "spacious farm" in Latin, was later used for 16th-century Spanish and Portuguese land grants, which were also farmed by forced laborers.

Definitions of latifundium
  1. noun
    (historical) a vast estate worked by slaves in ancient Italy
  2. noun
    a large estate in Spanish-speaking countries
    synonyms: hacienda
    see moresee less
    type of:
    acres, demesne, estate, land, landed estate
    extensive landed property (especially in the country) retained by the owner for his own use
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