New book chronicle.
Witcher, Robert
(Ur)banisms
JOHN JULIUS NORWICH (ed.). Cities that shaped the ancient world.
2014. 240 pages, 151 colour and b&w illustrations. London: Thames
& Hudson; 978-0500-25204-8 hardback 24.95 [pounds sterling].
HARRIET CRAWFORD. Ur: the city of the moon god. 2015. vii+146
pages, 30 b&w illustrations. London: Bloomsbury Academic;
978-1-4725-2419-5 paperback 19.99 [pounds sterling].
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
With over half of the worlds population living in cities, urbanism
is one of the defining characteristics of the contemporary age. In the
past, by contrast, most people lived scattered in villages and rural
settlements. Yet pre-industrial cities still exerted a disproportionate
influence on society, economy and culture. In Cities that shaped the
ancient world, John Julius Norwich collects 40 of the most influential.
Taking inspiration from this urban super league, this installment of New
Book Chronicle tackles a selection of new volumes, each concerned with
one of the cities identified by Norwich, taking us 5000 years and 13 000
km from Ur to Tikal. Each book also presents a different publication
format, offering the opportunity to think not only about the individual
cities, but also how we write about them.
First, however, a few words about Cities that shaped the ancient
world. As we have come to expect from Thames & Hudson, this is a
smartly produced volume. A list of well-qualified archaeologists and
historians provide brief vignettes, sketching out the historical
significance of each city, name-checking their most famous residents and
whetting our appetites with sumptuous photography. There is a bias to
the Mediterranean--not entirely disguised by the grouping of these
cities into sections on the Near East, Africa and Europe, which is
supported by some cunning cartography; sections on Asia and the Americas
do, however, provide some balance.
List-making is in vogue (40 cities that shaped the ancient world,
10 celebrities you never knew were aliens ...), but this particular
exercise raises questions. How does one identify the most important
cities of the ancient world? And what do we learn as a result of the
exercise? Norwich suggests that these cities are where "the first
painful lessons of large communities living together" were learnt,
"an experience that we nowadays take for granted" (p. 6). Most
of these cities, he suggests, developed in places with a benign climate
and access to water--for crops, consumption and communication.
Otherwise, few generalisations emerge, and emphasis is on differences:
the book "spins the globe and watches as the earth's endlessly
varied peoples take their first tentative steps in that most challenging
art of living together" (p. 13).
With these brief pointers in mind, we can begin our tour. And where
more obvious to begin than Ur: the city of the moon god by Harriet
Crawford? This is the fourth in the Bloomsbury (formerly Duckworth)
Archaeological histories' series that chart the histories of
individual sites, but also views them in the broader context of
scholarly research and the popular imagination.
The volume starts with the rediscovery of Ur. This is a common
device, and one shared by some of the other works under review, but
those unfamiliar with Ur--its physical fabric and historical
significance--may be left adrift. Crawford recounts the work of Sir
Leonard Woolley et al., but the uninitiated might not fully grasp what
drove archaeologists to this particular site. The concise overview
provided in the penultimate paragraph of the book's final chapter
(p. 134) might have been better placed at the start of Chapter 1.
The history of archaeological investigations described, Crawford
turns to the results of that work, narrating the history of the site in
nine chapters, from the 'Earliest levels of Ur', through its
heyday in the third millennium BC, to 'Death and afterlife'.
The chapters offer concise overviews of the city's main phases.
Inevitably, however, the evidence for some periods is richer than
others, and Crawford draws on material from other cities such as Uruk to
fill some of the gaps (e.g. fifth/fourth millennia BC).
Woolley's discovery and restrained investigation of the Royal
Cemetery loom large in any account of Ur. His vivid reconstruction of
human (self-)sacrifice has dominated attention, but Crawford emphasises
that such rites were only observed for a short period by the earliest
rulers. Moreover, recent re-examination of the skeletal remains
undermines the image of courtiers willingly drinking poison in order to
accompany the deceased ruler to the afterlife, with evidence for blunt
force trauma and for corpses dressed following death (e.g. a soldier
with his helmet back-to-front). Were these, Crawford wonders, prisoners
of war, equivalent to animals, and hence appropriate for sacrifice?
Ur has, for obvious reasons, not been accessible for fieldwork in
recent decades, and there is relatively little in the way of new
projects and results to report here. But there are plenty of outstanding
questions: who, for example, were the occupants of the 'Royal'
Cemetery: monarchs or priests? One thing that Crawford is clear about,
however, is that while the finds from Ur are unparalleled, the city was
not exceptional; rather, it "was one of a number of small,
independent city states that from time to time were brought together
under the rule of a single exceptional ruler, only to fall apart into
their old rivalries on his death" (p. 60).
Crawford conveys a good sense of the complexity of investigating
long-lived sites such as Ur: the constant restructuring of houses as
families changed size and form; the limited urban planning and lack of
drainage; the losing battle between domestic thresholds and rapidly
rising road surfaces; and the cycles of monumental construction (e.g.
Ur-nammu's great ziggurat), destruction (such as by the Elamites c.
2000 BC) and rebuilding (e.g. the Neo-Babylonian ziggurat of Nabonidus).
No wonder archaeological phasing is so difficult at sites such as this.
The book focuses squarely on the city. Its destiny, however, was
often shaped by events elsewhere. Whether the rise of competitor cities,
the retreat of the Persian Gulf, shifts in trade routes and--perhaps
most decisively--the migration of the Euphrates away from the site. It
was the latter, beginning during the mid-first millennium BC, that led
to the city's depopulation and, eventual, abandonment. Here, the
chronological narrative skips briskly forward: "the empty city
stranded in a sandy waste, unvisited except by the Bedu for more than
1,500 years. It was only in the nineteenth century that foreigners began
to explore the area again" (p. 130). Some consideration of what is
known about Ur during this 'missing' millennium-and-a-half--or
some insight based on neighbouring sites--would have been welcome. What,
for example were the stories and memories that drew archaeologists to
this location?
Crawford provides detailed descriptions of the spatial layout of
buildings and urban quarters, and of the colours and textures of
artefacts. We are treated, however, to only a sparse collection of line
drawings, a number of which are poorly reproduced (e.g. fig. 7.11).
Notwithstanding the wonderful archival photograph of the towering
sections of Woolley's deep sounding pit X (fig. 2.i), the book as a
whole is under-illustrated.
Crawford brings the 'afterlife' of Ur up to the present
with the recent history of Iraq, a tragic tale of war and destruction,
but also of international collaboration and hope for the city's
recognition as a World Heritage Site. Yet, since those words were
penned, IS has wreaked destruction at sites in northern Iraq such as
Nineveh and Nimrud, re-emphasising both the iconic value and the
vulnerability of Mesopotamia's urban heritage.
Athens and Carthage
MARGARET M. MILES (ed.). Autopsy in Athens: recent archaeological
research on Athens and Attica. 2015. xii+186 pages, numerous colour and
b&w illustrations. Oxford & Philadelphia (PA): Oxbow;
978-1-782978-56-5 hardback 60 [pounds sterling].
ROALD DOCTER, RIDHA BOUSSOFFARA & PIETER TER KEUR (ed.).
Carthage: fact and myth. 2015. 144 pages, numerous colour and b&w
illustrations. Leiden: Sidestone; 978-90-8890-311-3 hardback 29.95
[euro].
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Standing on the Acropolis, Freud famously experienced a
'disturbance of memory', unable to reconcile the Athens of his
imagination with the physical city before him. Reading about a city is
one thing, experiencing it is another. The contributors to the next
volume under review--Autopsy in Athens: recent archaeological research
on Athens and Attica, edited by MARGARET MILES--all commence from
personal observation, or the ancient Greek tradition of
'autopsy'. The volume's 15 papers derive from a session
at the annual meeting of the Archaeological Institute of America in 2014
and represent another way of writing and publishing about a city that
shaped the ancient world.
The collection is introduced by Miles, who outlines why it is still
worth focusing attention on a well-known site such as Athens. One reason
offered is the results of rescue excavations relating to the development
of the modern city: the metro system, the Olympic Games and the ongoing
restoration of the Parthenon. In practice, however, these recent
discoveries are not as prominent in the papers as might have been hoped.
Miles also provides an overview of research on Athens through to the
present, including the observation that "Perhaps the most vigorous
area within Classical Archaeology is the study of ceramics" (p. x);
if so, it is perhaps strange that none of the papers in this volume
focuses specifically on this topic. In fact, they range widely in terms
of methods and materials, but a loose (if unflagged) crosscutting theme
groups together religious practice, architecture and landscape.
Several of the papers use ancient texts to read monuments and
sculptures in a new light; others integrate archival material and
unpublished finds to tweak existing interpretations. For example,
Tsakirgis re-examines finds and notebooks from earlier excavations in
the Agora and identifies the house/workshop of sculptors by the names of
Mikion and Menon.
One of the more fascinating papers concerns 'The experience of
Greek sacrifice: investigating fat-wrapped thighbones', in which
Morton presents experiments on the significance of sacrificial offerings
as described in ancient texts and depicted on ceramics. This involved
the burning of lamb thighbones to investigate the meaning of the phrase
'twice-wrapped fat'; was a specific piece of fat required? And
what was the aim? Twenty-two sacrifices-cum-barbecues later, he
concludes that what was important was not the specific type of fat
(amounts of which varied according to the age and size of the victim),
but the effect when burnt--especially the spectacle of jumping flames.
Divine protection of the city was not left to chance--sacrifice had to
be "reliable and predictable" (p. 73).
The paper by Best also considers religious experience, specifically
how different roadside religious spaces shaped the city's sacred
topography and citizens' day-to-day worship. Still on roads,
Fachard and Pirisino explore the 'Routes out of Attica'. They
offer a combination of GIS modelling to evaluate differences between
known and predicted routes across Attica and beyond, and a re-evaluation
of the motives for investment in the construction of engineered roads,
shifting discussion from military and political functions to economic
and religious ones. Other papers address the mutilation of herms, the
burial of statues and a reinterpretation of the localities at which--and
the practicalities of how--defeated Phoenician warships were dedicated
at sanctuaries around Attica following the Battle of Salamis.
A common issue with edited volumes is that however interesting and
valuable individual contributions may be, the overall collection lacks
cohesion. This is the case here; the device of 'autopsy' does
not provide the connective tissue to hold together the diversity of
themes and approaches. Indeed, the only real pitch for this unifying
theme is the statement that the papers derive from "first-hand
examination of the archaeological and epigraphical evidence" (p.
xi). Athenian philosophers may have perfected autopsy, but its practice
is hardly unique to Athens. In fact, what holds the volume together is
Athens.
Our next city comes via Carthage: fact and myth, edited by ROALD
DOCTER, RIDHA BOUSSOFFARA and PIETER TER Keur. This stems from an
exhibition at the Dutch National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden
(November 2014-May 2015), with the book's 17 concise chapters by
Dutch and Tunisian scholars presumably following the organisation of the
original displays. The volume shares the same basic remit as
Crawford's Ur--a long-term history of the city--but goes about it
in a rather different way. The overall structure is broadly
chronological, starting with the westward migration of the Phoenicians
and their late ninth-century BC colonial foundation of Qrt-hdst
('New city') on the North African coast. The growth of
Carthage into a city of perhaps 300 000 at the centre of an empire led
to inevitable conflict with, and destruction by, Rome. But so
well-chosen was the location that Carthage rose again, at the behest of
Caesar, and we follow Roman Carthage through to the (late antique)
Christian city. The book then jumps forwards in time--there is barely
mention of the Vandal and later periods--with chapters on the
rediscovery of Carthage and its depiction in art and literature.
Inevitably, the book must deal with the question of child sacrifice
at the Tophet, a debate that has played out in the pages of Antiquity
(Smith et al. 2011, 2013; Schwartz et al. 2012; Xella et al. 2013). In
this volume, the issue is carefully presented but attention is sensibly
redirected towards the broader context. Other chapters put Carthage into
its North African landscape, including its relations with the
Libyan-Numidian population and with the Egyptians.
A stand-out piece from the exhibition, featured in the chapter on
'Carthage as a maritime power', is a bronze battering ram from
a Carthaginian ship recovered off the coast of Sicily in 2010. This
object is huge (the book's photographs, although good, do not
convey its real scale; if you missed it in Leiden, it is now at the
Allard Pierson Museum in Amsterdam as part of the 'Sicily and the
sea' exhibition running until April 2016). Apart from its sheer
size, the ram is also notable for a Punic inscription invoking the wrath
of Baal against the enemy, and for a series of V-shaped notches marking
where the ram collided with a (Roman?) ship.
The authors integrate recent discoveries into the narrative. Text
boxes feature specific developments (mainly by Dutch projects). For
example, metallurgical analysis suggests that Carthaginian ironworkers
were--uniquely in the ancient Mediterranean--processing iron ore with
calcium, possibly in the form of crushed Murex shells, in order to
remove sulphur, and hence achieve a less brittle product.
Three chapters consider how the city of Carthage--especially
through the stories of Dido and Hannibal--has served as a source of
inspiration for artists, writers (e.g. Dante, Marlowe, Flaubert) and
filmmakers. There is also a fascinating chapter on the changing
representations of Carthage in comics and games, including the Alix
series, and a chapter on the rediscovery of Carthage (here located at
the end, rather than the beginning, of the volume). A brief final
chapter considers 'Ancient Carthage in the 21st century: a timeless
message', in which it is suggested that post-revolutionary Tunisia
may be able to find new meaning in the ancient city.
Carthage: fact and myth provides a valuable overview of the city of
Carthage. The chapters are short and intended to be widely accessible.
The text has been carefully translated and the book is beautifully
illustrated. Indeed, the photographs of monuments, artefacts and
landscapes offer a visual feast, although the maps are rather
impressionistic (perhaps designed for the exhibition, instead of the
book). The overall format might suggest that the book is intended for a
rather different audience to say Crawford's Ur, but Carthage: fact
and myth provides pretty much the same service and leaves the reader--or
at least this one--with a stronger sense of the city.
Alexandria and Pergamon
MOHAMED KENAWI. Alexandria's hinterland: archaeology of the
Western Nile Delta, Egypt. 2014. xii+241 pages, numerous colour and
b&w illustrations, 5 tables. Oxford: Archaeopress; 978-1-78491-014-3
paperback 48 [pounds sterling].
FELIX PIRSON & ANDREAS SCHOLL (ed.). Pergamon: a Hellenistic
capital in Anatolia (Anatolian Civilisations Series 4). 2014. 551 pages,
numerous colour and b&w illustrations. Istanbul: Yapi Kredi
Yayinlari; 978-97508-3098-3 hardback 95 TL.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Another city, another way of thinking about urbanism, another way
of writing about it. With Alexandria's hinterland: archaeology of
the Western Nile Delta, Egypt by MOHAMED KENAWI, we move from Carthage
to the other great metropolis of the North African
coast--Alexandria--viewing the city from the perspective of the
territory that sustained it. The volume presents the results of a survey
of the province of Beheira, undertaken between 2008 and 2010 as part of
the author's doctoral research. This low-lying land, criss-crossed
by canals, hosted three urban centres, including the Greek entrepot of
Naucratis, but Kenawi focuses on the villages and smaller settlements
that populated the landscape.
To set the scene, Kenawi collates the standard GraecoRoman written
sources; more fascinating, however, is his presentation of the Arabic
sources. The historian and geographer Al-Masudi (AD 896-956) captures
the Delta landscape thus:
Some wise people described Egypt, saying [for]
three months it is a white pearl, [for] three
months it is a black land, [for] three months
it is a green emerald, and [for] three months
it is a red goldish colour. The white pearl
is when Egypt, during the months of Epip,
Mesori and Thout, becomes covered with
water so that the world is white, and its
villages on Rawabu and Tells are like the
planets surrounded by water from all sides,
and there is no way from one village to another
except by boat (pp. 19-20).
Detailed analysis of these texts allows Kenawi both to reconstruct
the topography of the Delta and to see the Alexandrian agricultural
landscape from the Arab perspective. But regardless of whether this
territory was controlled by Egyptians, Greeks, Romans or Arabs,
"The rise and fall of civilization in the Western Delta was
primarily shaped by water" (p. 11). Canals drained land and
facilitated transport, flood waters deposited fertile silts and the
freshwater supply had to be carefully protected. Sometime between the
ninth and twelfth centuries AD, however, the Canopic branch of the Nile
was buried by flood deposits; the territory became swampy and the area
was abandoned until the reclamation initiative by Ali Pasha in the early
nineteenth century.
Kenawi's survey revisited known sites and identified new ones,
the latter by tracing the courses of ancient canals. Extant structures
were surveyed and sherd scatters were mapped and sampled. A total of 63
sites were visited, the details of which are presented in Chapter 3 and
comprise the bulk of the volume. This chapter, as with the volume as a
whole, is abundantly illustrated with line drawings and photographs
(many in colour) of artefacts, structures and landscapes. The maps are
informative, but not as user-friendly as they might have been. A
striking feature of the survey is the remains of wine-producing
facilities. Many of these take the form of 'mushrooms' of
brick, mortar and stone layers teetering on eroded mudbrick pedestals.
The vintage produced at these sites was probably marketed as the
esteemed 'Mareotic' wine (named after the nearby Lake
Mareotis).
Kenawi's main interest is economic production: wine, olive oil
and the amphorae in which these agricultural products were transported,
but he also briefly raises questions about the cultural character of the
landscape: was this an essentially Egyptian landscape, with a few
(urban) pockets of Graeco-Roman culture? Or was the latter more
widespread and deep-rooted (p. 27)? Or put another way, what was the
extent--and limit--of Alexandria's ability to shape the communities
of its hinterland?
Having raised these questions, and collated a wealth of evidence,
the discussion and conclusions are brief. Despite the claim that
"Alexandria is re-positioned in its regional context with the
villages and towns of the Beheira" (p. 226), Alexandria remains a
shadowy presence. Its influence is tangible via the production of wine
and the adoption of cultural practices such as bathing. But the
mechanics of the relationship are unexplored. Nonetheless, this volume
provides the data with which to develop such an understanding and we can
certainly agree with Kenawi's final comment, that "These small
villages and towns, inhabited by poor farmers working for rich
governors, once produced the sustenance of the capitals; but their
history is generally ignored. Today, it is important to focus on these
villages due to their fundamental contributions" (p. 226).
The area around Alexandria was also known for the production of
papyrus, a vital resource for the books that filled the city's
famous library. But other cities, in competition with Alexandria, also
wanted papyrus for their own libraries. One of these rivals was
Pergamon--the subject of our next book, which takes the form of a
bilingual (Turkish/English) volume entitled Pergamon: a Hellenistic
capital in Anatolia, edited by Felix Pirson and Andreas Scholl.
Pergamon--the monumental urban showpiece of the Attalid dynasty--is
probably the smallest of the cities considered here. This book, however,
is by far the biggest: large format pages, printed on heavy,
satin-finish paper. The result is unwieldly to handle but a pleasure to
behold, not least because of the sumptuous photographs, plans and
reconstructions. Yet this is no coffee table volume. Its origins lie in
the 2011/2012 Pergamon exhibition in Berlin; the German-language
companion volume to that exhibition has become a reference work, and the
idea emerged to prepare a Turkish-Ianguage volume, with some additional
papers. The decision to publish in the dual-language 'Anatolian
Civilisations' series--of which this is the fourth volume and the
first dedicated to a single city--means that this material is now also
available in English.
The book presents 30 chapters, predominantly by German scholars,
divided into five main sections: 'Exploration and
preservation', 'History and landscape', 'City
development, planning and architecture', 'The human
domain' and 'The sacred domain'. The first section
presents the history of investigations, conservation and a discussion of
the Berlin exhibition. Perhaps the defining feature of the latter was a
25m-high, 104m-long panorama of the reconstructed city; a huge foldout
reproduces that panorama--an arresting photo-realistic image. The
'History and landscape' section sets the city in context.
Horejs explores the prehistoric landscape out of which Pergamon emerged.
Gehrke then outlines the historical events surrounding the rise of the
Hellenistic city--and of the Attalid dynasty--and its absorption by the
Roman Empire. Pirson and Zimmermann then put the city into its regional
context with an examination of the surrounding rural hinterland,
including Pergamon's port or "maritime satellite" (p.
153) at Elaia; Otten considers Byzantine-period developments.
Papers in the section on 'City development, planning and
architecture' examine the organisation of urban space, construction
technology and--crucially for a city located on a 300m-high rock--water
supply. Papers on 'The human domain' are largely concerned
with individual structures and building types, including the cemeteries;
by and large, however, we do not get much direct sense of the
city's inhabitants. The final section, 'The sacred
domain', turns to the city's many religious structures,
including 'natural sanctuaries'--such as caves and niches cut
into the outcropping rock--for the worship of Meter, the Anatolian
manifestation of the Greek mother goddess, Kybele. Many of the
city's sacred structures were linked closely to ruler cults,
whether those of the Attalids or, later, the Roman emperors, including
the so-called Trajaneum in the heart of the old Hellenistic city and the
massive, brick-built 'Red Hall', linked with Hadrian, in the
lower, Roman town. Pergamon's most famous monument--the Great
Altar--inevitably features in this section (and throughout the volume),
with chapters dedicated to the Altar Terrace and to the discoveries made
during recent conservation work on the sculptural friezes. But this
monument is not allowed to dominate; this is very much a collection of
papers about Pergamon the city.
The contributors to the volume provide a valuable and up-to-date
overview of work at Pergamon. Recent results--in the archives,
geophysical survey, excavation and conservation--are worked into the
text throughout, and although Pirson notes that there is now limited
scope for further "sensational discoveries" (p. 51), this
perhaps makes it easier to focus attention on more important
archaeological questions about how the city functioned. Each chapter is
formatted with parallel Turkish (black) and English (green) text. I
cannot vouch for the Turkish translation, but the English is excellent.
There is inevitably some repetition between the standalone chapters but
they cohere into a comprehensive picture. Each chapter is fully
referenced and richly illustrated--the only improvement might have been
some standardisation of the various city plans. In sum, this volume
provides a new reference point, both for those already familiar with the
city and for those coming to it for the first time. Even in antiquity,
Pergamon was already famous for that Altar; this volume makes clear that
there are other reasons for looking at this city too.
Teotihucan and Tikal
GEORGE L. COWGILL. Ancient Teotihuacan: early urbanism in Central
Mexico. 2015. xvi+296 pages, 119 b&w illustrations, 3 tables. New
York; Cambridge University Press; 978-0-521-87033-7 hardback 60 [pounds
sterling].
DAVID L. LENTZ, NICHOLAS P. DUNNING & VERNON L. SCARBOROUGH
(ed.). Tikal: paleoecology of an ancient Maya city. 2015. xxiv+347
pages, numerous b&w illustrations, 24 tables. Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press; 978-1-107-02793-0 hardback $99.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Finally, we turn to two of the best-known ancient cities of the New
World, and two more approaches to writing about them. We start with the
latest addition to the Cambridge University Press 'Case studies in
early societies' series: Ancient Teotihuacan: early urbanism in
Central Mexico by GEORGE COWGILL. This series aims to provide
introductions that are 'clear, well organized, authoritative, and
succinct'; Cowgill succeeds on all counts.
The basic structure is chronological; in addition, two introductory
chapters--'Preliminaries' and 'Situating
Teotihuacan'--set the scene, one chapter is dedicated to
'Ideation and religion', and a concluding chapter puts
'Teotihuacan in wider perspective'. Cowgill is the only author
here who explicitly ponders how best to structure an urban narrative:
topical or chronological? Neither is ideal, but he opts for the latter,
as "The Teotihuacanos, whatever their memory of the past or
anticipation of the future, necessarily lived in what was for them the
present, and experienced all topics at once" (p. 25).
This candour is characteristic; Cowgill deploys clear and concise
prose to present the evidence, outline the problems and cut through to
the solutions. Indeed, it is striking that we get a stronger sense of
debate in this single-author book than in most of the multi-author
volumes under review. Nor is Cowgill afraid to expose the limits of our
understanding; he notes that he uses 'probably',
'perhaps', 'possibly' and 'conceivably' a
lot--but also with precision: "This is not timidity. It's
intended as a nuanced scale for the state of the evidence, and a
challenge to improve that state by further research" (p. 6).
As an introduction, the book makes no assumptions of prior
knowledge about Teotihuacan, or even Mesoamerica. Cowgill holds the
hands of the uninitiated and reassures them about such issues as
pronunciation (although it is debatable whether the US market really
requires an info box on the metric system). He defines his position on
issues such as cross-cultural comparison and dual-processual theory
clearly and briskly. He outlines the ceramic phases used for dating,
noting "I cannot emphasize too strongly that these are only my
current guesses, and are open to significant changes" (p. 11). We
are then advised to acquaint ourselves thoroughly with the layout of the
city, and thus we are off.
Much attention has focused on Teotihuacan during its final years,
before its destruction c. AD 600, but Cowgill devotes plenty of space to
earlier phases, emphasising, for example, that it was during the
neglected Patlachique phase (c. 100-1 BC) that "Teotihuacan grew
from almost nothing to become a large city" (p. 53). Its population
perhaps quadrupled in the following Tzacualli phase (c. AD 1-100). In
fact, each of the chapters starts with a population estimate. We do not,
however, get any insight into how these figures have been calculated
until Chapter 7, 'Teotihuacan at its height: 250-550 CE'.
Here, Cowgill explains his methodology (a simple equation of 'pots
to people'). With the Xolalpan phase, however, we have the first
solid evidence--residential architecture--from which to make a realistic
estimate. Cowgill crunches the numbers, reaching minimum and maximum
figures of 30 000 to 140 000--"For what it's worth, the
mid-point of this range is 85,000" (p. 143)--all of these figures
being rather lower than the estimates of other scholars.
The organisation of each chapter is tailored to the evidence, but
each considers the evolution of the urban landscape, including its
defining monuments (the Sun and Moon Pyramids, the Feathered Serpent
Pyramid and so on), infrastructure, neighbourhoods and domestic
architecture. Sections then deal with ceramic vessels and figurines, and
lithic and obsidian artefacts. Cowgill focuses relatively tightly on
Teotihuacan but is alert to the need to put the city into context:
"To even begin to understand what was happening [...] in the
Teotihuacan Valley, one has to look at developments [...] throughout
Mesoamerica" (p. 47). Consequently, each chapter concludes with
sections on developments in the Basin of Mexico and 'more distant
interactions'.
Art--or 'imagery' as Cowgill prefers--is afforded its own
chapter. We are encouraged to get beyond a Eurocentric perspective that
finds these images "squat, stiff, and expressionless" (p.
204). Nonetheless, such impressions are perhaps not entirely misplaced;
a striking observation is that most processional scenes come from the
vertically restricted lower registers of talud walls; where upper
registers survive, figures are taller.
Other themes include calendars, astronomy, ball courts (or lack
thereof), Teotihuacan concrete and, of course, human sacrifice. There
are plenty of well-illustrated artefacts and monuments. Some of the maps
are small, but, as Cowgill notes, the originals produced by the
Teotihuacan Mapping Project took up 147 large sheets at a scale of
1:2000. More importantly, the maps are consistent, facilitating easy
appreciation of the city's evolution.
Cowgill provides frequent (if passing) comparisons to other urban
cultures such as Mesopotamia, Egypt, China and Rome. In the final
chapter, he briefly elaborates, observing that the city is not easily
categorised as either a territorial state or a city-state. Nor are there
obvious specific comparators: it was unlike Old Kingdom Egypt, the Greek
city state or the Aztec Empire. For those eager to undertake such
comparisons, this volume provides a nuanced and up-to-date point of
entry.
Cowgill concludes by reflecting on the value of studying a city
such as Teotihuacan: "To neglect information about ancient cities
is to needlessly diminish the database for considering today's
cities" (p. 248). He recognises that archaeological evidence does
not "furnish us with any clear and simple guidelines for how to
cope with practical problems we face today [...] but it can [...] give
us some warnings about things to avoid, and hopefully induce an attitude
that is suspicious of 'quick fixes' and easy solutions to
complex problems" (pp. 248-49). His challenge is taken up by our
final city/book, Tikal: paleoecology of an ancient Maya city edited by
DAVID L. Lentz, Nicholas P. Dunning and Vernon L. SCARBOROUGH. This
volume reports on the results of a major research programme (University
of Cincinnati Archaeological Project at Tikal, UCAPT) on the ecological
sustainability of Tikal.
The city of Tikal started life during the Late Preclassic (400
BC-AD 200), came to regional dominance in the Late Classic (AD 550-800)
and took on much of its familiar monumental form during the eighth
century AD; despite longevity and success, it was largely abandoned by
c. 900. The volume explores how the city was able to live sustainably
within its regional environment for so long before apparently
over-reaching itself and collapsing. Research questions concern
agroforestry and water management, including the role of seasonal
wetlands and reservoirs in both production and ceremonial activity. All
but two of the chapters are by members of the project; the remaining
pair offer a perspective from the neighbouring site of El Zotz, and a
synthetic paper by Webster and Murtha who have worked on similar
material at Copdn but have come to slightly different conclusions.
The project undertook fieldwork in and around Tikal, and the
chapters present the different methodological components (mapping,
coring, excavation, GIS modelling, ethnobotany) and themes
(agroforestry, agriculture, use of fire, exploitation of the bajos
landscape). Key discoveries include a spring that may have been what
originally attracted people to this otherwise unpromising location, a
huge dam, canals and switching stations to manage seasonal flows of
water. Interpretive themes include resilience and niche construction.
The results permit new insight into the development of the city. For
example, the water supply for the early city came from natural springs.
With monumentalisation, paving prevented the recharging of these water
sources but simultaneously provided large run-off surfaces that
channelled rainwater into the quarries from which the building stone had
been cut; to prevent contamination, these reservoirs were fitted with
filtration systems. Given the significant seasonal variation in
rainfall, such water storage was critical. The editors estimate that the
massive reservoirs on the summit-ridge could provide water for 50 000
people during the four-month dry season; even allowing for
"deranging factors" (p. 21, e.g. leakage and the like), this
is still well in excess of Tikal's estimated population. Generally,
however, the question of population size and growth is sidestepped,
although the editors make clear that they believe that the maximum
population figure achieved, shortly before the collapse, was smaller
than usually argued.
The exploitation of agricultural land and forests involved
continual innovation, such as irrigation, to squeeze more out of the
landscape. But ultimately it was a growing population combined with
sustained drought that meant that "Their systems of water, land,
and forest management were unable to meet the needs of a large populace.
This was the root cause of collapse of the Late Classic occupation at
Tikal" (p. 294).
The chapter on 'Fractious farmers at Tikal' by Webster
and Murtha explores "how kings, lords, and common farmers asserted
rights to basic agrarian resources" (p. 212). Their approach
focuses on niche construction and inheritance. They conclude that
Preclassic and Early Classic farmers were relatively free to practise
coping strategies such as mobility, diversity, storage and exchange. By
the Late Classic, however, these mechanisms were constrained, partly by
external factors (the rise of neighbouring polities) and partly by
internal ones, such as degraded soils and landowning structures.
Consequently, Webster and Murtha question the idea that Tikal was a
resilient system. The city endured for over a millennium, but during
this time its population was low and its capacity to cope was
unconstrained by niche inheritance. When population spiralled upwards
after AD 550-600, Tikal was unable to respond. In other words, when it
counted, Tikal was not resilient.
Summing up, the editors observe: "One cannot think about the
collapse of the great city of Tikal without considering the fate of our
own culture and how this may represent a harbinger of our future
prospects" (p. 294). Webster and Murtha's conclusions are
therefore depressing indeed and when, in his Foreword, Payson Sheets
suggests that this book should be required reading for politicians
considering how to make decisions where sustainability and growth are in
confrontation, he is understandably pessimistic. Can we really
generalise the lessons from a single Mayan city to the world as a whole?
Certainly not in any detail. The overall message, however, seems to be
that resilience and sustainability are not enough. If we are to avoid
(eventually) going the same way as Tikal, we need to think much more
ambitiously; as Taleb (2012: 3) has argued, "The resilient resists
shocks and stays the same: the antifragile gets better."
Invisible cities
Kublai Khan does not necessarily believe everything Marco Polo says
when he describes the cities visited on his expeditions, but the emperor
of the Tartars does continue listening to the young Venetian with
greater attention and curiosity than he shows any other messenger.
So begins Italo Calvinos (1974: 5) Invisible cities, in which he
explores the limits of conventional models of urbanism and their
imaginative possibilities. What have we learnt from our own sample of
ancient cities and the different ways of describing them?
It is easy to find points of difference: some cities were
consciously founded, others evolved organically. Some achieved
impressively large populations, others were significantly smaller but
were more dominant in their regional contexts. Some were linked via a
shared cultural milieu, but each asserted--and sometimes fought for--its
own unique identity. Similarities can also be discerned. All of them
established the economic infrastructure for a basic level of supply. All
of them used monuments to express political, cultural and religious
power, and most of them experienced at least one--sometimes
several--phases of destruction and renewal. This suggests that for much
of their histories, these cities were building sites, but it also
emphasises the power of place and the accumulations of meaning that
influenced the actions of later peoples, whether those of Ur, enclosing
(within new structures) old buildings too sacred to demolish, or the
Romans, compelled to refound their great rival Carthage. In the past,
people were as conscious of the historicity of these cities as we are
today, whether the Persians at Ur or the Aztecs at Teotihuacan.
Writing was a technology for organising urban life-- but also for
shaping urban perceptions: who, for example, could have arrived in
Pergamon, past or present, without expectations about its architectural
magnificence? The existence of ancient writing is also central to the
way in which we write about these cities today. It not only provides
colourful details to flesh out broken architectural remains, but also
shapes the whole narrative, often towards the lives of rulers and their
relations with other cities. Indeed, the absence of "full-blown
writing" at Teotihuacan presents "a daunting challenge"
(Cowgill, p. 2). Ancient writing or not, most of these narratives
implicitly or explicitly treat their subjects as biological entities
with an inevitable life course: birth, growth, maturity and death.
Finally, several of these volumes look for contemporary relevance
in ancient cities, whether as a symbolic national focus (Ur/Iraq,
Carthage/Tunisia), or in relation to wider concerns about how we can
live together more peaceably and sustainably. Indeed, even though some
of the authors warn of the continued threat of destruction, each of
these cities is either on the World Heritage Site list (in whole or
part), or has been proposed as a candidate for such preservation. By
definition, therefore, these cities are of 'outstanding universal
value', part of our shared human heritage. The recent deliberate
and ideological destruction at Palmyra, Hatra and Nineveh--and the
global condemnation that followed--suggests that such places still
resonate today. In many ways, these cities shape the modern world as
much as they did the ancient.
doi: 10.15184/aqy.2015.194
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