Examples of Preindustrial cities in the following topics:
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- Preindustrial cities had important political and economic functions and evolved to become well-defined political units.
- London is an example of a city that was well established in the preindustrial era as a political and economic center.
- While ancient cities may have arisen organically as trading centers, preindustrial cities evolved to become well defined political units, like today's states.
- Not all cities grew to become major urban centers.
- Examine the growth of preindustrial cities as political units, as well as how trade routes allowed certain cities to expand and grow
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- In some preindustrial urban traditions, basic municipal functions such as protection, social regulation of births and marriages, cleaning, and upkeep are handled informally by neighborhoods and not by urban governments; this pattern is well documented for historical Islamic cities.
- Neighborhoods in preindustrial cities often had some degree of social specialization or differentiation.
- Ethnic enclaves were important in many past cities and remain common in cities today.
- This was a continual process for preindustrial cities in which migrants tended to move in with relatives and acquaintances from their rural past.
- This image is of Chelsea neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City.
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- Mesopotamian cities included Eridu, Uruk, and Ur.
- Early cities also arose in the Indus Valley and ancient China.
- Some ancient cities grew to be powerful capital cities and centers of commerce and industry, situated at the centers of growing ancient empires.
- Why did cities form in the first place?
- Cities may have held other advantages, too.
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- Roughly 40 percent of Americans lived in cities, and the number was climbing.
- These large city populations caused crime rates to rise, and disease to spread rapidly.
- Skyscrapers were being built in the cities and the idea of mass transit had begun to take root.
- Suburbs were beginning to form as upper class families began to move out of the overcrowded cities.
- New large cities, such as Denver, Chicago, and Cleveland, developed inland along new transportation routes.
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- In developed countries, people are able to move out of cities while maintaining many of the advantages of city life because improved communications and means of transportation.
- White flight during the post-war period contributed to urban decay, a process whereby a city, or part of a city, falls into disrepair and decrepitude.
- Thus, suburbs were built—smaller cities located on the edges of a larger city, which often include residential neighborhoods for those working in the area.
- Around 1990, another trend emerged, called exurbanization: upper class city dwellers moved out of the city, beyond the suburbs, to live in high-end housing in the countryside.
- Baltimore, Maryland is an example of a shrinking American city.
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- These new large cities were not coastal port cities like New York, Boston, and Philadelphia, but laid inland along new transportation routes (like Denver, Chicago, and Cleveland).
- Soon people began to flock from rural, farm areas to large cities.
- Not only did urbanization cause cities to grow in population, it also caused cities to grow in building size.
- City living was for the lower class; the upper class had enough money to get away from all of the pollution and the city stench.
- For example, in the city of Chicago, you will find a lot of the nicer homes away from the city, and more towards the suburbs.
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- During the industrial era, cities grew rapidly and became centers of population growth and production.
- During the industrial era, cities grew rapidly and became centers of population and production.
- In 1800, only 3% of the world's population lived in cities.
- Rapid growth brought urban problems, and industrial-era cities were rife with dangers to health and safety.
- The greatest killer in the cities was tuberculosis (TB).
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- Hippodamus of Miletus is considered the "father" of rational city planning, and the city of Priene is a prime example of his grid planned cities.
- His plans of Greek cities were characterized by order and regularity in contrast to the intricacy and confusion common to cities of that period.
- In the middle of the city were many public buildings.
- The agora was the central component of the city.
- Instead, the rational plan of Priene allowed for access to multiple sites of the city and easy navigation through the city.
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- One of the most prominent theories in this field is that of global cities.
- A global city is a city that is central to the global economic system, such as New York or London.
- The most complex and central cities are known as global cities.
- Not only are global cities important economically, but they are also politically unique.
- In some ways, global cities are more intimately connected to the global economic system and to other global cities than they are to surrounding regions or national settings.