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2. Antecedent: the Origins of the City
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Defining the early city
Essential features: monumental building complexes, city walls, density of occupation, specialized craft production, urban functionality. IV millennium BCE: the world’s first cities originated in Mesopotamia. Urbanization cycles: the peak in the III millennium. The transformation of the rural areas. Division of labor became widespread.
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Mesopotamian cities Planned and unplanned urban spaces.
Temples and palaces. Residential neighbourhoods. Culture’s cosmology and value system. Urban logistics: water, rubbish, hinterland.
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The idea of City-State City-States began to appear in the middle of the fourth millenium BCE. The concept of civilization. Self-government. Invention of writing and political organization. Some methodological issues. «Western city» and «Eastern city».
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Babylon The first of the world’s giant cities: a population on order of 200,000 to 300,000 inhabitants. The urban structure. City walls, temples, royal palaces, small one-story houses. Popular assemblies of citizens and the emergence of public officials. The Gate of Ishtar.
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Iraq Babylon, the Istar [Ishtar] Gate 1932
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Ishtar Gate, Berlin State Museum
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Egyptian cities Egyptian cities differed from the ones that had emerged in Mesopotamia. Capitals of territorial states. Commercial and manufacturing activity was rudimentary. The leading role of bureaucrats and priests. A big city: Thebes. A population of around 50,000 to 80,000 inhabitants.
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Cities in the Middle East in ancient times
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Mediterranean urbanization
Formation and exploitation of several networks of cities: Phoenicians, Greeks and Romans. Sizes of cities and movements of populations. Different typologies of city: local exchange, industry, political administration, services, cultural activities. The construction of an ordered space.
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