Project MUSE - Ancient Mesopotamia at the Dawn of Civilization: The Evolution of an Urban Landscape (review)Scholarship on early Mesopotamian civilization has not, for some time, been focused on the reasons for, or mechanisms through which, cities first emerged on the landscape. Explanations based mainly on irrigation, population density, and alternatively the availability or scarcity of natural resources have been employed effectively enough to allow researchers to move to other questions, such as regional interactions during the early urban period. Early Mesopotamia: Society and Economy at the dawn of history. DjVu & layered PDF format) A Dweller in Mesopotamia. ONLINE COURSE: The Dawn of History: Society and Culture in Ancient Mesopotamia. Author: Nicholas Postgate Publisher: Routledge Pagecount: 392 Category: Social Science Format Available: PDF, ePub, Mobi, iBooks, Kindle. Total Read: 2781 Total Download: 1745 The roots of our modern world. Guillermo Algaze's Ancient Mesopotamia at the Dawn of Civilization: The Evolution of an Urban Landscape revisits the question of the emergence of cities, armed with a wealth of ecological, geographical, and economic data. As the book title suggests, Algaze sees landscape as primary among factors allowing for the development of cities. His argument is laid out in evolutionary terms. Southern Mesopotamia is viewed as benefiting from . More specifically, Algaze considers the way the geography and ecology of the landscape of southern Iraq allowed for low- cost transport, economies of scale in production, and regional and long- distance trade. ![]() Online Ancient Mesopotamia At The Dawn Of Civilization The Evolution Of An Urban Landscape Read Download PDF id:ree25xi d5v7n. The History of Ancient Mesopotamia: An Overview'. The History of Ancient Mesopotamia (See. Ancient Mesopotamia at. My searches (0) Anthropology. Ancient Mesopotamia at the Dawn of Civilization. Ancient Mesopotamia at the dawn of civilization. Ancient Mesopotamia at the dawn of civilization: the evolution of an urban. Algaze is extremely clear in stating his goals and in framing his argument. He deploys an array of economic and geographical data, drawn from archaeological survey, cuneiform texts, and ethnographic examples. For example, he presents a compelling case for a particularly resource- rich environment in southern Mesopotamia in the fifth and fourth millennia b. In another impressive use of varied data sources, Algaze connects population growth and elite control of labor forces to the large- scale textile industry of Late Uruk cities. It is well known that textile production was an important industry in southern Mesopotamia, but Algaze uses ethnographic, textual, and visual evidence to reconstruct the scale and arrangement of the industry in some detail, and then draws conclusions about the economic and demographic effects of this extensive operation on the burgeoning cities. Such examples of well- researched, detailed microstudies are plentiful in this volume. Not all the information is new, but Algaze has gathered it together and thoughtfully analyzed it in such a way as to create a rich picture of the geographic and economic . ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() As an explanation for that urbanism, it does not quite fulfill its stated goals. Perhaps because of the amplifying feedback cycles of population growth and industrial growth, it is difficult to identify a prime mover. Does industrial growth feed population growth, or vice versa? Of course, it is both at the same time. And while Algaze recognizes the complexity of these forces, he nevertheless explains the process in linear terms: landscape allows low- cost production and trade, which feeds population growth, producing further innovations. Instead of urbanism being, ultimately, a result of innovations such as writing, could it not be that the scale and complexity of cities required the development of writing? Certainly the chronology of the development of writing suggests that cities came first, rather than vice versa. Such an idea is not absent from Algaze's book; to the contrary he considers such complexities and scenarios in some depth. Yet in the final analysis, he sticks to a causal chain of landscape, trade, population growth, and writing resulting in the urban entities of the Late Uruk. My critique, perhaps, reflects a difference in preferred methodological and theoretical frameworks, yet to seek change in socioevolutionary processes resulting from an advantageous landscape omits the choices and values of people living within the distinct communities of the Mesopotamian landscape. In Algaze's conclusion, he sums up his results as confirming that.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
November 2017
Categories |