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The Ancient City: From Fustel de Coulanges to Max Weber and Beyond
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 June 2009
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The Graeco-Roman world, with which I am concerned to the exclusion of the pre-Greek Near East, was a world of cities. Even the agrarian population, always a majority, most often lived in communities of some kind, hamlets, villages, towns, not in isolated farm homesteads. It is a reasonable and defensible guess that, for the better part of a thousand years, more and more of the inhabitants of Europe, northern Africa and western Asia lived in towns, in a proportion that was not matched in the United States, for example, until the Civil War. (Admittedly only a guess is possible, since statistics are lacking for antiquity.) The ancients themselves were firm in their view that civilized life was thinkable only in and because of cities. Hence the growth of towns as the regular and relentless accompaniment of the spread of Graeco-Roman civilization; eastward after the conquests of Alexander as far as the Hindukush, to the west from Africa to Britain with the Roman conquests, until the number of towns rose into the thousands.
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References
This is a considerably revised and enlarged version of a paper I read to the annual conference of the Urban History Group in Churchill College, Cambridge, on 7 April 1976. For helpful criticism I am grateful to Peter Garnsey, Keith Hopkins and C. R. Whittaker, all of whom dislike the “intellectual history” framework of the analysis.
1 This subject has not been properly investigated; as a beginning, see Peč´irka, J., “Homestead Farms in Classical and Hellenistic Hellas,” in Probiemes de la terre en Grece ancienne, Finley, , ed. (Paris and The Hague: Mouton, 1973), pp. 113–47;Google ScholarWightman, E. M., “The Pattern of Rural Settlement in Roman Gaul,” in Aufstieg und Nieder-gang der römischen Welt, ed. Temporini, H. and Haase, W., vol. 11 4 (Berlin and New York: Walter De Gruyter, 1975), pp. 84–657.Google Scholar
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