The evolution of agro-urbanism: A case study from Angkor, Cambodia
•Provides fine-grained diachronic development of the Angkor settlement complex.•The metropolitan area and center grew independently and at different rates.•Details top-down and bottom-up factors that influenced the growth of Angkor.•Provides comprehensive population estimates for growth of Angkor ov...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of anthropological archaeology 2021-09, Vol.63, p.101323, Article 101323 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Provides fine-grained diachronic development of the Angkor settlement complex.•The metropolitan area and center grew independently and at different rates.•Details top-down and bottom-up factors that influenced the growth of Angkor.•Provides comprehensive population estimates for growth of Angkor over time.
The vast agro-urban settlements that developed in the humid tropics of Mesoamerica and Asia contained both elite civic-ceremonial spaces and sprawling metropolitan areas. Recent studies have suggested that both local autonomy and elite policies facilitated the development of these settlements; however, studies have been limited by a lack of detail in considering how, when, and why these factors contributed to the evolution of these sites. In this paper, we use a fine-grained diachronic analysis of Angkor’s landscape to identify both the state-level policies and infrastructure and bottom-up organization that spurred the growth of Angkor as the world’s most extensive pre-industrial settlement complex. This degree of diachronic detail is unique for the ancient world. We observe that Angkor’s low-density metropolitan area and higher-density civic-ceremonial center grew at different rates and independently of one another. While local historical factors contributed to these developments, we argue that future comparative studies might identify similar patterns. |
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ISSN: | 0278-4165 1090-2686 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jaa.2021.101323 |