
6.1
The Origin and Influence of
Urbanization
Essential Question: What are the processes that
in
itiate and drive
urbanization?
T
he
permanently inhabited portion
of
the earth's
surface-what
the classical
Greeks called
the
ecumene-is
a variety
of
community types with a range
of
population densities.
As
humans increasingly settled in
permanent
locations,
classifications
of
settlements emerged:
• Rural areas (farms
and
villages) with low concentrations
of
people
• Urban areas (cities) with high concentrations
of
people
• Suburbs
that
are primarily residential areas near cities
Factors Driving Urbanization
A settlement is a place with a permanent human population. The first agricultural
settlements appeared around 12,000 years ago. Before that, people survived by
hunting and gathering, so they lived in temporary or movable shelters. The first
permanent settlements were small enough that the inhabitants could all farm and
subsist on the surrounding
fields.
Over time, in several places around the world,
small agricultural settlements began to develop characteristics that made them the
first true urban settlements, or
cities:
• the presence
of
an
agricultural surplus
• the rise
of
social stratification
and
a leadership class
or
urban
elite
• the beginning
of
job specialization
A food surplus became available
as
irrigation, farming,
and
domestication
of
animals
and
plants developed. These changes enabled increasing numbers
of
people
to
live
in
the same location. A ruling class emerged
to
control the
products
that
were accumulated
and
the people living in the community.
Because
not
everyone was needed to produce food, some people specialized
in
making things, such as tools, weapons,
and
art. Others specialized as accountants
or religious
leaders-the
first members
of
a service sector.
As
a result, cities
developed as economic centers
of
services, manufacturing, and trade.
Urbanization
The process
of
developing towns
and
cities
is
known as urbanization,
an
ongoing process that does
not
end
once a city is formed. Urbanization also
6.1: THE ORIGIN
AND
INFLUENCE OF URBANIZATION
367