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Civilization and Urbanization

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Title: Civilization and Urbanization


1
Chapter 17
  • Civilization and Urbanization

2
Introduction
  • Migration to cities - too fast to monitor.
  • Shenzhen, China -fastest-growing city during
    second half of the 20th century.
  • 21th Century, more urban residents than rural
  • Urban areas are centers of political power,
    industrial might, higher education and
    technological innovation, artistic achievement
    and medical advances.
  • Not until 8000 years ago, human began settling
    into larger places

3
For your information
  • BoyGirl Baby born 117 100 (China)
  • Threshold ratio 106100 (world)
  • 8 male without female partner (China)
  • Single male family/gay, crime rate high
  • 41 million more male than female in China
  • source Chinese official newspaper, 3-29-01

4
Ancient Cities and Early Civilization
Egalitarian Societies - Village form with no
government authority no public buildings and
workshops
Formative era-7000 B.P. and 5000 B.P.,
development of states and urbanization, end of
this ear, city groups formed (Mesopotamia), with
public building,army barracks, temples, called
stratified society
Early state, proposed by Henry Wright and Gregory
Johnson, 5000 yrs ago - Central City with least
three levels of administration
5
Function and location of ancient cities
  • Irrigation led the formation of organization.
  • Durability of certain towns depended on Water
    accessibility, proximity to productive farmlands,
    defensibility of the site
  • Writing - crucial element in the development of
    systematic administration in Mesopotamia and in
    the evolution of its religious-political ideology
  • Functions of ancient cities - 1) As centers of
    power 2) as religious centers, theocratic
    centers 3) as economic centers 4) as education
    centers, and 5) cultural centers
  • Size - 10,000 to 15,000 - maximum size sustained
    by existing systems of food gathering and
    distribution.

6
Figure 17-2 Maya and Aztec America
  • God-kings in Maya and Aztec Kingdom
  • Figure 17-3 The earliest civilizations

7
The Ancient Mesopotamian City
Over 100ft high Temples at the city center
Priest and authorities lived in palace
Poorest inhabitants live outside the city limits
Ordinary people live in mud-walled house packed
together
No sanitary system, garbage dumped into streets
which left the clues of the life
8
Greek Urbanization
  • During the 3000 B.P. Greece was one of the most
    highly urbanized areas on Earth. Mid- 3000B.P.
    Greece had more than 500 cities and towns. Athens
    and Sparta were Greeces leading cities and
    Athens may have been the largest city in the
    world at the time with 250,000 population.

Mesopotamian
Greece
Roman Empire
Process of Urbanization
Western Europe
All over the world
9
Acropolis (acrohigh point, poliscity)
  • No need for a an earthen mounds to build temples,
    religious building in Greece were built on hill,
    Parthenon in Athens, designed by Phidias.
  • Public places-open, spacious squares in a low
    part of town with steps leading down to theme. On
    these steps the Greeks debated, lectured, judged
    and socialized each other.
  • Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle
  • Great theaters transmitted from Greece to Romans

10
Socrates (470 -399 BC)
  • Although Socrates (470-399 BCE) is the central
    figure of these dialogues, little is actually
    known about him. He left no writings, and what is
    known is derived largely from Plato and Xenophon.
  • Socrates was a stone cutter by trade, even though
    there is little evidence that he did much to make
    a living.
  • It appears that Socrates spent much of his adult
    life in the agora (or the marketplace) conversing
    about ethical issues. He had a penchant for
    exposing ignorance, hypocrisy, and conceit among
    his fellow Athenians, particularly in regard to
    moral questions. In all probability, he was
    disliked by most of them. However, Socrates did
    have a loyal following. He was very influential
    in the lives of Plato, Euclid, Alcibiades, and
    many others. As such, he was associated with the
    undemocratic faction of Athens. Although Socrates
    went to great lengths to distinguish himself from
    the sophists, it is unlikely that his fellow
    Athenians made such a distinction in their minds.
  • Socrates is admired by many philosophers for his
    willingness to explore an argument wherever it
    would lead as well as having the moral courage to
    follow its conclusion.

11
Plato (427 BC - 347 BC)
  • Writer of The Republic
  • Founded Academy 387 BC, last 900 years,the
    longest surviving university known.
  • Let no one unversed in geometry enter here over
    the door of Academy - emphasized the importance
    of mathematics especially the idea of proof
  • Aristotle (384 BC to 322 BC)
  • Not primarily a mathmatician but made important
    contribution by systemizing deductive logic. He
    wrote on physical subjects some parts of his
    Analytica posteriora show an unusual grasp of the
    mathematical method.

12
Roman
  • Urban System formed during the Roman Empire.
    Places linked by transportation network, either
    by road, river or sea. Selection of urban
    locations and grid-connections shows the
    Efficiency was a Roman hallmark.
  • From Greek theater to Roman first great stadium
    -the Colosseum in Rome
  • Wild animals were killed in front of crowds in
    the Colosseum, later Christians were attacked and
    eaten by hungry lions.
  • Rich and poor in the same city like the city of
    today
  • Colosseum seated about 50,000

13
  • The Forum was Romes political center
  • Ercolano (Herculaneum)was a town of wealthy
    citizens, with streets of curbed sidewalks and
    two-storied houses with balconies and overhanging
    roofs for shade
  • Trajans Column in Rome and Hadrians Wall

14
Post-Roman Decline
  • Empire failure due to misrule, corruption, and
    environmental degradation. Invasion of Iberia
    made the urban tradition disappear from Roman
    Empire and brought new architectural and
    scientific ideas and Islam into the Roman
    regions.
  • Chinas Xian was known as the Rome of East Asia
  • Timbuktu-became a major city in West Africa
  • Meroe in Nile River-manufacture of weapons.
  • Maya and Aztec urban cities.

15
The Great Wall of ChinaCheck the link
  • A total length of 3,750 miles (6,000 km).
    Construction of the Great Wall started in the 7th
    century B.C. The vassal states under the Chou
    Dynasty in the northern parts of the country each
    built their own walls for defence purposes.
  • The Great Wall was renovated from time to time
    after the Chin Dynasty. A major renovation
    started with the founding of the Ming Dynasty in
    1368, and took 200 years to complete. The wall we
    see today is almost exactly the result of this
    effort
  • Xian - Tang Dynasty
  • 700 ad

16
Preindustrial Europe
  • Urban Environments - only a few peoples who
    controlled labor forces and oversea commerce
    enjoyed the four- or five-story homes, the rest
    of the general folks had to live in a
    slum-ridden, unsanitary and depressing
    environment and many of them, decided to leave
    for America, Australia and other parts of the
    world

17
Models of Urban Places
  • Sjoberg city should be viewed as products of
    their societies and could be divided into 4
    categories 1) folk-preliterate 2) feudal 3)
    preindustrial 4) urban-industrial
  • Prior to the industrial age, all cities shared
    certain basic characteristics, which can Primate
    City that expressed the culture and ideology of
    its society. Wealthy and Powerful had homes near
    the center of the city

18
The Modern Western City
  • Merchantile City- from colonial era. Center
    square as focus of the city, streets leading to
    the squares formed the downtown.
  • After the industrial revolution, a new type of
    cities- manufacturing city emerged. First in the
    British Midlands and soon in Western Europe.
    Paris and Amsterdam managed to retain the
    character of their historic centers, others were
    totally/partially destroyed

19
The Law of the Primate City
  • Mark Jefferson 1939, - dominant city as a place
    that reflects the culture of its region. The
    law states that a countrys leading city is
    always disproportionately large and exceptionally
    expressive of national capacity and feeling.
    Kyoto - represents
  • Old Japan and Tokyo-new
  • Paris - France
  • London, Athens, Lisbon, Prague and Amsterdam
  • Beijing in China, Lahore in Pakistan, Ibadan in
    Nigeria and Mexico City in Mexico

20
Primate Cities in other countries
Agricultural countries Bangladesh, India, Ethiopia
Recent colonized countries Kenya,
Zimbabwe,Senegal
Distant Colonized countries Sri Lanka, Liberia,
Nicaragua
But they dont necessarily express national
capacity and feeling because of past foreign
influence
21
Introduction
  • Migration to cities - too fast to monitor.
  • Shenzhen, China -fastest-growing city during
    second half of the 20th century.
  • 21th Century, more urban residents than rural
  • Urban areas are centers of political power,
    industrial might, higher education and
    technological innovation, artistic achievement
    and medical advances.
  • Not until 8000 years ago, human began settling
    into larger places
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