Litcius/Paper detail

Thinking spatially: new horizons for urban history

Richard Rodger, Susanne Rau

2020Urban History26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract A new opportunity, and a new challenge, presents itself to urban historians. In order to obtain a deeper understanding of historical urban space and spatial relationships, the contributors to this Special Issue deploy new techniques of spatial analysis using mapping tools to explore the density, frequency and proximity of various features of towns and cities. The contributors focus on case-studies at various urban scales – from major commercial centres (New York, Rome, Paris and London) – to smaller towns in the urban hierarchy. They also range across the tenth to the twentieth centuries and so challenge a common assumption that mapping the town is essentially an approach best suited to the modern period. Individually and collectively, the authors demonstrate how the urban morphology of the city developed and how durable that spatial patterning can be.

Topics & Concepts

Urban hierarchyHierarchyUrban historyFocus (optics)Regional scienceUrban spaceUrban morphologyGeographyEconomic geographySpace (punctuation)Period (music)Urban geographyOrder (exchange)Urban planningCartographyHistoryCivil engineeringComputer scienceSociologyPolitical scienceAestheticsEconomic historyEngineeringDemographyLawArtBusinessPhysicsOperating systemPopulationOpticsFinanceUrban Design and Spatial AnalysisUrbanization and City PlanningHistorical Architecture and Urbanism