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Title:
The evolution of the ancient city : urban theory and the archaeology of the Fertile Crescent / Alexander R. Thomas.
Author:
Thomas, Alexander R., 1969-
Publication Information:
Lanham : Lexington Books/Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2012, ©2010.
Call Number:
DS56 .T446 2012
Abstract:
Urban theory and archaeology merge to create a readable discussion of how ancient cities came to be. Although many consider our modern social ills to be the consequence of Capitalism, many urban problems are traceable to pre-Capitalist times and thus are more related to urbanization. Ancient cities shared many characteristics with modern cities. For instance, the ancient cities of Rome and Carthage at the time of Christ had population densities approaching that of Manhattan Island today. The Canaanites, fifteen hundred years before, lived in cities oriented toward trade and dependent upon mass production of such items as wine, olive oil, and the pottery to contain such goods. Over three thousand years before the Common Era, the city of Uruk was part of a larger 'global system' that resembled in its own way the globalization that we know today. Cities first arose in Mesopotamia about 5,500 years ago, but for years before the rise of cities the small agricultural village was the most complex form of human social organization- clearly there was nothing inevitable about the city. This book explores what we can learn of modern cities by tracing the development of ancient cities. -- Back Cover.
Edition:
Pbk. ed.
ISBN:
9780739138700
Series:
Comparative urban studies

Comparative urban studies (Lanham, Md.)
Physical Description:
xii, 217 pages : maps ; 23 cm.
Contents:
Social science and the city -- Parameters of social evolution -- Evolution and the city -- The change -- Rural villages -- Rise of the city -- The dawn of history -- The city in the world -- Rethinking the city.
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