Wednesday 31 August 2011

'The City in History', Lewis Mumford - the bible of Urbanism

Part 1 - Prehistory

The book begins with an exploration of the absolute depths of human history, a collection of pre-historic assumptions that he puts in an extremely plausible way with the little or no evidence available... he admits that there are such vast gaps in the historical record that it is impossible to judge correctly but he seems to 'reverse engineer' human society.  Using contemporary (and known ancient) examples, institutions and structures, he tracks back, creating suppositions as to how human society developed, in the very first instances of settlement and transition from ranging animal hunter packs.
He examines what kind of a situation must have occurred for the very first people to settle and develop a fixed abode, and what kind of society would develop from such early sites.  The development of kingship, which he supposes comes from a kind of hunter/shepherd figure who would protect the agrarian farmers from wild beasts and other dangers, springing from an original physical prowess, is examined and how it would become necessary to entrench power through the development of a religious mysticism.
One of his fundamental theories is that these early leaders, developed the first citadels which would necessarily predate the first cities.  Villagers would initially pay a powerful hunter to protect their crops/herds from dangerous beasts with food, and this exchange for services -  'protection' - gradually developed into a tribute, and finally into a tax.  The institution of kingship would also predate cities as this powerful elite established citadels.  A focal point for their power.

He also makes the point that cities predate war.  Organised, state warfare can only follow the development of urban centres he argues, as the 'original' village lifestyle (even under the 'protection' of an early king) would have been too dominated with the importance of generating enough food and shelter for the community to worry about others.  Such small communities would have enough commodities around them to satisfy their own needs, but not enough man power to spare for other activities, and their use of these commodities would be so low as to not impact on other communities, say, in the next valley.  It required the development of a city, with spare population capacity, wealth generation and religion to create war, he argues.

The link between kingship and religion is fundamental to the development of the ancient city, but also the relationship which most damaged its advancement, limiting it to thousands of years of internecine warfare.  To a certain extent this is still the case.

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