Over six hundred shops have been excavated in Pompeii, as well as the city-controlled markets around the forum. The various tradesmen had professional associations or ‘guilds’ who oversaw the practice of their particular profession.
Agriculture was one of the most respectable ways of earning a living, and local farming provided the raw materials – wine, olive oil, cereals, fruit, vegetables, meat and wool – for much of the retail and industry of Pompeii. There was also a lot of fishing in the Bay of Naples, and Pompeii was renowned for its fish sauce (garum), an ingredient made from putrefied fish guts.
Wine and oil were significant sources of income for people in this area, but the majority of the profit went to the wealthy landowners who owned the estates.
Wool formed the basis of one of the most important industries in Pompeii; it was washed, dyed and then used to make cloth. Associated with this was the washing, bleaching and re-colouring of clothing, done by fullers in one of the eighteen laundries in Pompeii.
Other industries we have evidence of in Pompeii include carpenters, plumbers, wheelwrights, tanners, metal-workers, stonemasons, gem-cutters and glassmakers.