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Week IV Lecturer: Faruk Berat AKCESME (MSc) HUM 101 Spring semester 2013-2014 Urbanization (or urbanisation) refers to the increasing number of people that live in urban areas. It predominantly results in the physical growth of urban areas, be it horizontal or vertical Louis Wirth: ‘For sociological purposes a city may be defined as a relatively large, dense, and permanent settlement of socially heterogeneous individuals’ Castells: 1. ‘The spatial concentration of a population on the basis of certain limits of dimension and density’ 2. ‘The diffusion of the system of values, attitudes and behaviour called “urban culture”’. (See Castells, 2002 p. 21) Large population and large settlements (cities) Full-time specialization and advanced division of labor Production of an agricultural surplus to fund government and a differentiated society Monumental public architecture A ruling class Writing Exact and predictive sciences (arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, calendars) Sophisticated art styles Long-distance trade The state Homo No Sapiens emerged cities for 99% of human history. First Cities cc 10,000 - 6000 years ago Now more than half of all human beings live in cities The earliest was Mesopotamia in modern Iraq. Egypt and the Indus valley civilisations followed soon after. Northern China (Huang-Ho) around 2,000BC. Meso-America and Peru first milllennium AD. Urban civilization marks a fundamental and irreversible turning point in the history of technology and human affairs generally. Process by which small, kin-based, non-literate agricultural villages were transformed into large, socially complex, urban societies. Techno economic revolution arising out of the need for intensified agricultural production to sustain increasingly large population. In its consequences unrivaled episode in human history and the history of technology and science until the Industrial Revolution. Written records available on dried and stored clay tablets, cataloged in great libraries and archives, Sumerian scribes in the third millennia BCE developed sophisticated system of 600-1000 signs (ideograms), Pictographic writing and hieroglyphs (ideographic) known in Egypt. Schøyen Collection MS 3029. Sumerian inscription on a creamy stone plaque, 9,2x9,2x1,2 cm, 6+6 columns, 120 compartments of archaic monumental cuneiform script by an expert scribe 26th century BC Institutionalized science Patronized by state and temple Civil servants as bureaucrats employed to deal with science and knowledge Court doctors Calendar keepers Magicians Learned priests Mathematicians on the palace Medicine, medical practitioners appeared, anatomy, surgery, herbal medicine developed Exact and predictive sciences (arithmetic, geometry, astronomy) developed Knowledge subordinated to the utilitarian ends Useful knowledge, practically oriented science, provided useful services in record keeping, political administration, economic transactions, architectural and engineering projects, agricultural management, medicine, religion, astrological predictions. Anonymous science, not a single individual who over hundreds of years contributed to science in the first civilizations (Mesopotamia, Egypt, India…) has been remembered, Lack of abstract science and generalization, no naturalistic theory, no natural philosophy or science, Pure science or abstract theoretical research only fostered by Greeks Sumerians and Babylonians developed sexagesimal or 60 base system versus our decimal or 10 base system, So, it was 60 seconds per minute, 60 minutes per hour, 24 hours per day, 360 degrees in a circle, and so on. The clocks that we use today are based on Sumerian mathematics. Babylonian astronomers mastered solstices and equinoxes, cycles of the sun and moon, could predict solar or lunar eclipses, Calendars originated in earliest civilizations, lunar and solar calendars adopted, 12 lunar months or 354 days and 12 solar months with 365 days…. Full-time specialization and advanced division of labor Economy supported by government, centralized economic authority, Large food surplus created, large food storage facilities available, Food redistributed, taxed. First money appeared in ancient Babylonia and Shang dynasty China First standardized weights and measure appeared in ancient Egypt, Indus river valley and early China. Political authority available, Bureaucratically Coercive First organized societies, institutions available, kingdoms, monarch or pharaohs appeared… Metalworking embodies a complicated set of technologies: mining ore, smelting, hammering. At the end of the Neolithic (the last Stone Age), about 6,300 years ago, people from Indus Valley (today northwestern India-Pakistan) to Central Asia started to process the copper. The bronze civilization spread rapidly through migration and trade even 5,000 years ago. Wind power as new energy and source for sailing (contributed to the unity of Egypt) Horse was domesticated and entered humanity‘s service, camel and elephant provided essential transport too Muscle power of the ox was applied to pull the plow in massive production Stone age No cities and kingdoms Tool making, Food producing economy Gardening Available some storage facilities Some surplus created No written record, No education facilities Some social ranking available economic competition created. Bronze age Villages became towns, towns became cities, cities became kingdoms, Tool designing, making and producing, Massive and state sponsored food production economy, Systematic agriculture, irrigation, hydraulically intensified agriculture, large scale water management, Systematic and large storage facilities, Larger, massive surplus created, government funded, Written sources available, Educational institutions, libraries created, Dominant, coercive bodies, individuals, institutions, centralized political authorities… The urban revolution resulted in a further decline in health and life expectancy. Factors included: Diet – further deficiencies. Airborne diseases – increased due to crowding. Water-borne diseases – increased due to contamination by sewerage. Food-borne infections – increased due food storage and handling. Vector-borne infections – increased due to increase in rodents, birds and arthropods. Irrigation also created new risks. Direct contact – more opportunity for sexual transmission. The earliest cities were politically independent (city states). Some city states conquered neighbouring cities and eventually developed into extensive empires, which came and went. The change in scale does not appear to have had any major implications for the history of disease. In Europe urban civilisation first made its appearance in Greece, initially in Crete and then on the mainland. Athens and Sparta emerged as the most influential city states between the 8th and 6th centuries BC, but Greece was never politically unified. Athens led the resistance against the Persians in the 5th century BC and might have formed the focus for a unified Greece. Athens lost the Peloponnesian War against Sparta in 431-404 BC, after being devasted by a plague in 430-429 BC. http://www.public.asu.edu/~mesmith9/1- CompleteSet/MES-09-Childe-TPR.pdf