The Transformation of the World (206 page)

Read The Transformation of the World Online

Authors: Jrgen Osterhammel Patrick Camiller

BOOK: The Transformation of the World
2.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

    3
. Bairoch,
Cities and Economic Development
, pp. 19 ff., 93ff. applies the concept of urbanization as far back as the Ancient East.

    4
. E. Jones,
Metropolis
, p. 76.

    5
. Coquery-Vidrovitch,
History of African Cities
, pp. 263–79; P. B. Henze,
Layers of Time
, p. 154.

    6
. Geertz,
Local Knowledge
, p. 137.

    7
. Kanwar,
Imperial Simla
; D. Kennedy,
Magic Mountains
.

    8
. Kent,
Soul of the North
, p. 320.

    9
. Morse,
Japanese Homes
, pp. 12f.

  10
. Seidensticker,
Low City
, p. 263.

  11
. A masterful analysis of this process in Europe, considering all its aspects, is Lenger,
European Cities
in the Modern Era; for a concise quantitative overview of the major European regions see P. Clark,
European Cities and Towns
, pp. 221–35.

  12
. Lepetit,
Les villes
, p. 94.

  13
. Martin Daunton, “Introduction,” in: P. Clark,
Cambridge Urban History
, vol. 3, pp. 1–56, at 6ff.

  14
. Girouard,
English Town
, p. 190.

  15
. See Pike,
Subterranean Cities
. On the obsession with the Paris catacombs since Victor Hugo's time, see the literary study: Prendergast,
Paris
, pp. 74–101.

  16
. This often neglected point is emphasized in Dodgshon,
Society
, p. 159; a key work on the theory and history of infrastructural development is Grübler,
Infrastructures
, whose main focus is on intercity transportation. Cf. Laak,
Infra-Strukturgeschichte
.

  17
. An interesting argument in de Soto,
Mystery of Capital
is that the chronic undervaluation of urban land has been one reason for the “poverty” of the “third world.”

  18
. Chudacoff,
American Urban Society
, p. 37.

  19
. Chartier et al.,
La ville des temps modernes
, p. 567.

  20
. These important issues have rarely been given serious attention in economic and social history. But see the exemplary work: Day,
Urban Castles
.

  21
. Important here are: P. Clark,
British Clubs
; and Hardtwig,
Genossenschaft
. For China see Rankin,
Elite Activism
and the debate it triggered about the beginnings of a “public sphere” in China.

  22
. Lees,
Cities Perceived
, p. 79. In Walter Benjamin, who made this expression famous, it was of course more than a mere cliché.

  23
. David Ward and Olivier Zunz, “Between Rationalism and Pluralism: Creating the Modern City,” in: idem,
Landscape of Modernity
, pp. 3–15; Harvey,
Postmodernity
; Berman,
All That is Solid
.

  24
. J. de Vries, “Problems in the Measurement, Description, and Analysis of Historical Urbanization,” in: Woude et al.,
Urbanization
, pp. 43–60, at 44. This article is an excellent introduction to the theory of urbanization.

  25
. Hohenberg and Lees,
Making of Urban Europe
, pp. 200–205.

  26
. Reulecke,
Urbanisierung in Deutschland
, pp. 11f.

  27
. Hohenberg and Lees,
Making of Urban Europe
, p. 244.

  28
. Bairoch,
Cities and Economic Development
, pp. 258ff.

  29
. E. A. Wrigley, “A Simple Model of London's Importance in Changing English Society and Economy, 1650–1759,” in: idem,
People
, pp. 133–56, quotation on p. 146 (first published in 1967).

  30
. Martin Daunton, “Introduction,” in: P. Clark,
Cambridge Urban History
, vol. 3, pp. 1–56, at 42.

  31
. Gerhard Melinz and Susan Zimmermann, “Großstadtgeschichte und Modernisierung in der Habsburgermonarchie,” in idem,
Wien–Prag–Budapes
t, pp. 15–33, at 23.

  32
. Daniel R. Brower, “Urban Revolution in the Late Russian Empire,” in: Hamm,
City in Late Imperial Russia
, pp. 319–53, at 325.

  33
. Adler,
Yankee Merchants
, pp. 1, 4 and passim.

  34
. Olsen,
City
, p. 4.

  35
. Still the classic text on the world history of the city is: Mumford,
The City in History
, even though—or because—many of its judgments invite contradiction. An equally ambitious work is: P. Hall,
Cities in Civilization
.

  36
. Inwood,
London
, pp. 270, 411; P. Clark,
Cambridge Urban History
, vol. 2, p. 650 (Tab. 19.1). Bairoch,
Cities and Economic Development
, p. 81, thinks that Rome may have reached a total of 1.3 million—as much as the largest European city in 1823.

  37
. A. F. Weber,
Growth of Cities
, p. 122.

  38
. T. Chandler and Fox,
3000 Years
, p. 313.

  39
. Ibid., p. 321.

  40
. Ibid., p. 323; P. Clark,
European Cities and Towns
, p. 131 (tab. 7.2).

  41
. On the 1790s as the decade of New York's great surge, see Burrows and Wallace,
Gotham
, pp. 333–38.

  42
. A. F. Weber,
Growth of Cities
, p. 139.

  43
. Kumar,
Java
, p. 180.

  44
. Maddison,
Chinese Economic Performance
, p. 35, which for China supports itself on Gilbert Rozman.

  45
. Gilbert Rozman, “East Asian Urbanization in the Nineteenth Century: Comparisons with Europe,” in: Woude et al.,
Urbanization
, p. 65, Tab. 4.2b.

  46
. Ibid., p. 64, tab. 4.1a/4.1b.

  47
. Bairoch in: Bardet and Dupâquier,
Histoire des populations de l'Europe
, pp. 212 (tab. 21).

  48
. J. de Vries,
European Urbanization
, pp. 28, 39, 258f.

  49
. Ibid., p. 84.

  50
. Jan de Vries, “Problems in the Measurement, Description, and Analysis of Historical Urbanization,” in: Woude et al.,
Urbanization
, pp. 43–60, at 58f.; H. S. Klein,
Population History
, pp. 142f.

  51
. Lappo and Hönsch,
Urbanisierung Russlands
, p. 38; Goehrke,
Russischer Alltag
, p. 290. See also Hildermeier,
Bürgertum
, pp. 603f.

  52
. Paul Bairoch, “Une nouvelle distribution des populations: Villes et campagnes,” in: Bardet and Dupâquier
Histoire des populations de l'Europe
, pp. 193–229, at 204f.

  53
. Palairet,
Balkan Economies
, pp. 28f.

  54
. Skinner,
Chinese Society
, pp. 68ff.

  55
. Anthony Reid, “South-East Asian Population History and the Colonial Impact,” in: Liu Ts'ui-jung et al.,
Asian Population History
, pp. 45–62, at 55.

  56
. In 1910 Bangkok was twelve times larger than Siam's second city: C. J. Baker and Phongpaichit,
History of Thailand
, p. 99.

  57
. Doeppers,
Philippine Cities
, pp. 783f., 791f.

  58
. Narayani Gupta, “Urbanism in South India: Eighteenth–Nineteenth Centuries,” in: Banga,
City in Indian History
, pp. 121–47, at 137f., 142; Mishra,
Economic History
, p. 23. Ramachandran,
Urbanization
, pp. 61f.

  59
. The following figures draw mostly on Chandler and Fox,
3000 Years
, passim.

  60
. M. Reinhard et al.,
Histoire générale
, p. 426.

  61
. Hofmeister,
Australia
, pp. 54, 64–67.

  62
. Monkkonen,
America Becomes Urban
, p. 70.

  63
. Ibid., p. 81.

  64
. A. F. Weber,
Growth of Cities
, p. 450.

  65
. Chudacoff,
American Urban Society
, p. 36.

  66
. Monkkonen,
America Becomes Urban
, p. 85.

  67
. Abu-Lughod,
New York
, p. 134.

  68
. Boyer and Davis,
Urbanization
, p. 7 (Tab. 2).

  69
. A. F. Weber,
Growth of Cities
, p. 450.

  70
. Bairoch,
Cities and Economic Development
, p. 217.

  71
. Bardet and Dupâquier
Histoire des populations de l'Europe
, pp. 193–229, at 227 (Tab. 24); Karpat,
Ottoman Population
, p. 103 (Tab. 5.3).

  72
. Ruble,
Second Metropolis
, pp. 15f., 25.

  73
. T. O. Wilkinson,
Urbanization of Japanese Labor
, pp. 63–65.

  74
. Hohenberg and Lees,
Making of Urban Europe
, p. 42; Meinig,
Shaping of America
, vol. 2, pp. 318–21.

  75
. Kassir,
Beirut
, pp. 110ff.

  76
. This point follows C. Tilly,
Coercion
, p. 51; it is more sharply expressed by Tilly in C. Tilly and Blockmans,
Cities
, p. 6; cf. Hohenberg and Lees,
Making of Urban Europe
, pp. 169ff.

  77
. Lemon,
Dreams
, p. 78; G. B. Nash,
First City
, pp. 45ff.

  78
. Hohenberg and Lees,
Making of Urban Europe
, p. 241.

  79
. Coquery-Vidrovitch,
History of African Cities
, pp. 226–27.

  80
. Kaffir,
Beirut
, pp. 28, 110f., 122f.; Hanssen,
Beirut
, pp. 84ff.

  81
. Cf. Lepetit,
Les villes
, p. 51.

  82
. George Modelski, “World Cities in History,” in: W. H. McNeill,
Berkshire Encyclopedia
, vol. 5, pp. 2066–73, at 2066.

  83
. Braudel,
Civilization and Capitalism
, vol. 3, pp. 21ff.

  84
. See Sassen,
Global City
.

  85
. Paul Knox, “World Cities in a World System,” in: Knox and Taylor,
World Cities
, pp. 3–20, at 12.

  86
. Snouck Hurgronje,
Mekka
, p. 7.

  87
. Coquery-Vidrovitch,
History of African Cities
, p. 236.

  88
. See the exemplary analysis: David D. Buck, “Railway City and National Capital: Two Faces of the Modern in Changchun,” in: Esherick,
Remaking the Chinese City
, pp. 65–89. “National capital” refers to the fact that from 1932 to 1945 Changchun was the capital of the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo. On Nairobi: Karl Vorlaufer, “Kolonialstädte in Ostafrika. Genese, Funktion, Struktur, Typologie,” in: Gründer and Johanek,
Kolonialstädte
, pp. 145–201, at 164f.

  89
. Mommsen,
Das Ringen um den nationalen Staat
, p. 230.

  90
. Shannon,
Gladstone
, vol. 2, p. 572.

  91
. Girouard,
English Town
, pp. 289–91.

  92
. Walton,
English Seaside Resort
, pp. 5ff. and passim.

  93
. Collier and Sater,
Chile
, pp. 76–80, 161.

  94
. See the exemplary history of the city: Rohrbough,
Aspen
, esp. pp. 13, 288 ff.

  95
. J. M. Price,
Economic Function
.

  96
. Mantran,
Istanbul
, p. 258.

  97
. Bled,
Wien
, pp. 183f.

  98
. Coquery-Vidrovitch,
History of African Cities
, pp. 291–300.

  99
. K. Schultz,
Tropical Versailles
, pp. 101ff.

100
. Raymond,
Cairo
, pp. 300f.

101
. Perkins,
Modern Tunisia
, p. 14.

102
. Letter from London, October 15, 1826, in: Pückler-Muskau,
Briefe eines Verstorbenen
, p.432.

103
. Kuban,
Istanbul
, p. 379.

104
. Naquin,
Peking
, p. 684. A good new history of the city is: L. M. Li et al.,
Beijing
.

105
. Dong,
Republican Beijing
, pp. 90–100 on “tourist Beijing.”

106
. Berelowitch and Medvedkova,
Saint-Pétersbourg
, pp. 317f.

107
. See Reps,
Making of Urban America
, pp. 240–62.

108
. Dickens,
American Notes
, p. 129.

109
. Gerhard Brunn, “Metropolis Berlin. Europäische Hauptstädte im Vergleich,” in: Brunn and Reulecke,
Metropolis
, pp. 1–39, at 13f.; P. Hall,
Cities in Civilization
, pp. 377, 386.

110
. Kenneth T. Jackson, “The Capital of Capitalism: The New York Metropolitan Region, 1890–1940,” in: Sutcliffe,
Metropolis
, pp. 319–53, at 347.

111
. Ball and Sunderland,
Economic History of London
, p. 313.

112
. A recent general account rejects the idea of London's decline as an industrial city in the nineteenth century: ibid., pp. 55–66, esp. 65; cf. Martin Daunton, “Introduction,” in: P. Clark,
Cambridge Urban History
, vol. 3, pp. 1–56, at 45.

113
. A first-rate piece is R. J. Morris, “The Industrial Town,” in: Waller,
English Urban Landscape
, pp. 175–208; for data across Europe see P. Clark,
European Cities and Towns
, pp. 246f.

Other books

Dear Sylvia by Alan Cumyn
Murder in Vail by Moore,Judy
Lila Blue by Annie Katz
No Mortal Reason by Kathy Lynn Emerson
Por qué fracasan los países by Acemoglu, Daron | Robinson, James A.
Child of Fortune by Norman Spinrad
Delicate Chaos by Jeff Buick
Twisted Vine by Toby Neal