Book contents
- Early Mesoamerican Cities
- Early Mesoamerican Cities
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter One Introduction
- Chapter Two Oaxaca’s Formative Period Cities and Their Implications for Early Urbanism in Mesoamerica
- Chapter Three Early Urbanization in the Formative Gulf Lowlands, Mexico
- Chapter Four Patterns of Early Urbanism in the Southern Maya Lowlands
- Chapter Five The Role of Middle Preclassic Placemaking in the Creation of Late Preclassic Yucatecan Cities
- Chapter Six The City over the City
- Chapter Seven The New Normal
- Chapter Eight The Nature of Early Urbanism at Teotihuacan
- Chapter Nine Art and Urbanity in Late Formative Mesoamerica
- Chapter Ten Landscape and Leadership in Mesoamerican Cities
- Chapter Eleven Experimental Cities?
- References
- Index
Chapter Four - Patterns of Early Urbanism in the Southern Maya Lowlands
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2021
- Early Mesoamerican Cities
- Early Mesoamerican Cities
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter One Introduction
- Chapter Two Oaxaca’s Formative Period Cities and Their Implications for Early Urbanism in Mesoamerica
- Chapter Three Early Urbanization in the Formative Gulf Lowlands, Mexico
- Chapter Four Patterns of Early Urbanism in the Southern Maya Lowlands
- Chapter Five The Role of Middle Preclassic Placemaking in the Creation of Late Preclassic Yucatecan Cities
- Chapter Six The City over the City
- Chapter Seven The New Normal
- Chapter Eight The Nature of Early Urbanism at Teotihuacan
- Chapter Nine Art and Urbanity in Late Formative Mesoamerica
- Chapter Ten Landscape and Leadership in Mesoamerican Cities
- Chapter Eleven Experimental Cities?
- References
- Index
Summary
In the past, the study of ancient urbanism called out the singularity of the Maya case in a manner that left Mayanists with an outstanding theoretical debt to the rest of the scholarly field. With seeming dismay, V. Gordon Childe (1950: 9) unabashedly claimed: “[T]he minimum definition of a city, the greatest factor common to the Old World and the New will be substantially reduced and impoverished by the inclusion of the Maya.” His techno-economic argument for early urbanism (and, by extension, ancient sociopolitical complexity) was not supported by the Maya data as he understood them. His subsequent ten characteristics of ancient urbanism and sociopolitical complexity, then, were inescapably impoverished – that is, made less precise and more abstract – by the inclusion of the ancient Maya into the fraternity of ancient urban civilizations.
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- Early Mesoamerican CitiesUrbanism and Urbanization in the Formative Period, pp. 73 - 98Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022
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