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Ancient Middle Niger

Ancient Middle Niger

Ancient Middle Niger

Urbanism and the Self-organizing Landscape
Roderick J. McIntosh , Rice University, Houston
September 2005
Available
Paperback
9780521012430

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£27.00
GBP
Paperback
GBP
Hardback

    The cities of West Africa's Middle Niger, only recently brought to the world's attention, make us rethink the 'whys' and the 'wheres' of ancient urbanism. The cities of the Middle Niger present the archaeologist with something of a novelty; a non-nucleated, clustered city-plan with no centralized, state-focused power. Ancient Middle Niger explores the emergence of these cities in the first millennium B.C. and the evolution of their hinterlands from the perspective of the self-organized landscape. Cities appeared in a series of profound transforms to the human-land relations and this book illustrates how each transform was a leap in complexity. The book ends with an examination of certain critical moments in the emergence of other urban landscapes in Mesopotamia, along the Nile, and in northern China, through a Middle Niger lens. Highly-illustrated throughout, this work is a key text for all students of African archaeology and of comparative pre-industrial urbanism.

    • Offers an exciting examination of the cities of the Middle Niger, the most recently discovered ancient urban civilization
    • Explores the urban structure of ancient Middle Niger and its implication for traditional concepts of ancient urbanism
    • Highly-illustrated throughout with comparative analysis of other indigenous urban landscapes, it will appeal to all students of the ancient city

    Product details

    September 2005
    Hardback
    9780521813006
    278 pages
    235 × 160 × 21 mm
    0.574kg
    44 b/w illus. 17 maps 2 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Discovery
    • 2. Transformed landscapes
    • 3. Accommodation
    • 4. Excavation
    • 5. Surveying the hinterland
    • 6. Comparative urban landscapes.
      Author
    • Roderick J. McIntosh , Rice University, Houston

      Roderick J. McIntosh is Professor of Anthropology at Rice University and visiting Professor of Archaeology at the University of Pretoria, South Africa. His recent publications include The Peoples of Middle Niger: Island of Gold (1998), The Way the Wind Blows: Climate, History, and Human Action (2000) and Geomorphology and Human Palaeoecology of the Méma, Mali (2005).