The Babylonian World (Routledge Worlds)

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CHAPTER FIVE


URBAN FORM IN THE


FIRST MILLENNIUM BC





Heather D. Baker


INTRODUCTION

H


ere we present an overview of urban form in first millennium BCBabylonia.
Following a brief introduction to the sources and the state of the evidence, we
consider matters of urban layout and examine why the Babylonian cities took the
shape they did. In discussing the different elements of the city we will pay greater
attention to the less well studied features, such as the street network and the residential
areas, than to the monumental structures which have often been described in other
works. Many of the issues raised here will be dealt with in greater detail in a study
by the author (Baker forthcoming).

The sources
The evidence available for the study of urban form in first millennium BCBabylonia
encompasses both excavated remains and written sources. Archaeological excavation
has, of course, revealed the actual layout of a good many buildings, streets and other
features. The textual material, on the other hand, tends to offer a more indirect kind
of information, since the features referred to in the cuneiform documents very often
cannot be identified on the ground, usually because they have not yet been excavated;
alternatively, the details given in the tablets may not be sufficiently specific to secure
their identification. Nevertheless, the contemporary cuneiform documents constitute
an invaluable source on urban topography which, with careful study, can help to fill
in the gaps in the archaeological record and build up a more complete model of urban
form at this period. The tablets which are relevant for our purpose can be divided
into two groups: the literary/topographical tablets (edited with translations by George
1992 ) on the one hand, and the economic documents on the other (for an introduction
to these see Jursa 2005 ). The bulk of the latter group is made up of legal contracts
usually deriving from private family archives; administrative documents play a lesser
(though still significant) role. The economic documents are not evenly distributed
throughout the first millennium BC; rather, they peak in the sixth and early fifth
centuries, with another, smaller peak later on, in the Hellenistic period.
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