Ancient Town-Planning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 120 pages of information about Ancient Town-Planning.

Ancient Town-Planning eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 120 pages of information about Ancient Town-Planning.

GREEK TOWN-PLANNING.  THE ORIGINS, BABYLON

The beginnings of ideas and institutions are seldom well known or well recorded.  They are necessarily insignificant and they win scant notice from contemporaries.  Town-planning has fared like the rest.  Early forms of it appear in Greece during the fourth and fifth centuries B.C.; the origin of these forms is obscure.  The oldest settlement of man in town fashion which has yet been explored in any land near Greece is that of Kahun, in Egypt, dating from about 2500 B.C.  Here Professor Flinders Petrie unearthed many four-roomed cottages packed close in parallel oblong blocks and a few larger rectangular houses:  they are (it seems) the dwellings of the workmen and managers busy with the neighbouring Illahun pyramid.[6] But the settlement is very small, covering less than 20 acres; it is not in itself a real town and its plan has not the scheme or symmetry of a town-plan.  For that we must turn to western Asia, to Babylonia and Assyria.

[6] W.F.  Petrie, Illahun, Kahun, and Gurob (London, 1891), ch. ii, plate xiv.  The plan is reproduced in Breasted’s History of Egypt, p. 87, R. Unwin’s Town planning, fig. 11 (with wrong scale), &c.

Here we find clearer evidence.  The great cities of the Mesopotamian plains show faint traces of town-planning datable to the eighth and following centuries, of which the Greeks seem to have heard and which they may have copied.  Our knowledge of these cities is, of course, still very fragmentary, and though it has been much widened by the latest German excavations, it does not yet carry us to definite conclusions.  The evidence is twofold, in part literary, drawn from Greek writers and above all Herodotus, and in part archaeological, yielded by Assyrian and Babylonian ruins.

The description of Babylon given by Herodotus is, of course, famous.[7] Even in his own day, it was well enough known to be parodied by contemporary comedians in the Athenian theatre.  Probably it rests in part on first-hand knowledge.  Herodotus gives us to understand that he visited Babylon in the course of his many wanderings and we have no cause to distrust him; we may even date his visit to somewhere about 450 B.C.  He was not indeed the only Greek of his day, nor the first, to get so far afield.  But his account nevertheless neither is nor professes to be purely that of an eyewitness.  Like other writers in various ages,[8] he drew no sharp division between details which he saw and details which he learnt from others.  For the sake (it may be) of vividness, he sets them all on one plane, and they must be judged, not as first-hand evidence but on their own merits.

    [7] Hdt. i. 178 foil.  The accounts of Ctesias and other ancient
    writers seem to throw no light on the town-planning and streets
    of Babylon, however useful they may otherwise be.

    [8] The Elizabethan description of Britain by William Harrison is
    an example from a modern time.

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Ancient Town-Planning from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.