The sea-port of Portus Scabris/Portiglioni (GR) near Puntone di Scarlino was used uninterruptedly from the Etruscan to modern times and represented the main commercial hub for maritime trade and inland redistribution of commodities in the Pecora Valley. Rescue archaeological work carried out in the early 2000s, simultaneously with the construction on the new tourist marina, collected several hundred thousand ceramics which help understand the role played by the site in the context of long-distance trade in the central Tyrrhenian Sea in the longue durée. By using the datasets provided by the pottery evidence (Fig.1-5), Emanuele Vaccaro’s research aims to contextualise the complex sub-regional economies analysed by the nEU-Med ERC Project in the broader framework of late antique and early medieval maritime trade and tackles issues such as connectivity, exchange and consumption. New work on the ceramics from Portus Scabris focuses particularly on the period AD 400-1100.