RT Article T1 TRAVELLING WITH A TYRIAN MERCHANT: Urban Encounters with Christ followers in Rome JF Jahrbuch für Antike und Christentum VO 67 SP 5 OP 54 A1 Rüggemeier, Jan 1981- LA English YR 2024 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1963378059 AB This article revisits the longstanding thesis that merchants were decisive vectors in bringing the early Christ movement from the eastern Mediterranean to Rome. After critically surveying earlier arguments regarding trade routes via Puteoli, it proposes a shift from institutional to individual perspectives through an »avatar model«. By constructing a historically plausible mercator vitri from Roman Tyre - a freedman specializing in glasswares - this study examines the merchant's professional designation, social and legal dependencies, diasporic associations (statio at Puteoli and Rome), and religious practices. Drawing on literary, epigraphic, and archaeological evidence, it demonstrates how glassblowing innovations and Syro-Phoenician trade networks placed such merchants at the heart of Mediterranean commerce. The article argues that, although merchants possessed the mobility and networks conducive to trans-regional communication, the economic and religious entanglements inherent to their profession - along with negative Christian tropes associating trade with greed - render them less likely as primary missionary agents in the mid-1st century CE. K1 Glass Product Manufacturing Made of Purchased Glass K1 Glass blowing & working K1 Independent visual artists and artisans K1 Mediterranean Sea K1 Merchants K1 Other Pressed and Blown Glass and Glassware Manufacturing K1 Primitive & early church, ca. 30-600 K1 RELIGIOUS behaviors K1 RITES & ceremonies K1 Rome