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The Babylonian World - Historia Antigua

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— Heather D. Baker —<br />

confronting the king in his role as builder – of temples, palaces and other monumental<br />

structures, such as city walls, streets and gates and (usually outside of the city) canals.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se activities are very well attested in the corpus of royal inscriptions for all periods<br />

of Mesopotamian history. <strong>The</strong> execution of large-scale building projects implies the<br />

mobilisation of large numbers of workers and the procuring of huge quantities of the<br />

necessary materials, not to mention the administration and supervision of both men<br />

and supplies by a host of trained officials.<br />

But the king himself was, of course, subject to social and religious convention. A<br />

major influence on the shape of the cities was the pervasive, long-term conservatism<br />

and the high degree of resistance to change, especially with respect to the layout<br />

of religious buildings. Kings actively sought to follow earlier plans when engaged<br />

in the rebuilding of temples. <strong>The</strong> lengths to which the Neo-<strong>Babylonian</strong> rulers were<br />

prepared to go – even to the extent of conducting programmes of ‘archaeological<br />

excavation’ – have been nicely documented by Winter (2000). This conservatism also<br />

applied with regard to the course of ceremonial streets: there is textual evidence which<br />

indicates that diverting such a street was considered to be a sin. <strong>The</strong> positioning of<br />

palaces was not affected by such considerations.<br />

Display and prestige are further factors to be taken into account as influences on<br />

the shape of the city. We should be mindful of the visual effect of the temples, palaces<br />

and other monumental structures, which would have towered over the areas of (generally<br />

single-storey) housing. As we have seen, monumental buildings were not necessarily<br />

confined to the city centre; temples at Babylon, for example, were distributed around<br />

the city, in the heart of residential quarters. Other features intended to impress may<br />

have included royal gardens (see above).<br />

Finally, we have to take into account the effects of existing property boundaries<br />

on city layout. This factor was especially critical in the residential districts. Streets,<br />

as we have seen, were often very long lived, and the boundaries of the built-up insulae<br />

which they separated would therefore tend to be stable over considerable periods.<br />

However, within the insulae it was a different matter. A private alley leading to the<br />

heart of a residential block could be remodelled or even moved as individual houses,<br />

or parts of houses, changed hands, according to the requirements of the inhabitants.<br />

Property boundaries were fluid and, facilitated by the use of mudbrick, which lent<br />

itself to relatively easy modifications, houses could change shape as the household<br />

expanded or contracted and parts were sold off or neighbouring rooms acquired. At<br />

the level of the residential neighbourhood there was probably little, if any, official<br />

involvement in planning, and private residents would determine for themselves, by<br />

mutual if not by written agreement, the shape of their own immediate environment.<br />

<strong>The</strong>se transformations are evident both in the archaeological record and in<br />

the legal contracts, which shed a great deal of light on the social background to them<br />

in terms of the contemporary patterns of property ownership, transmission and<br />

inheritance.<br />

CONTINUITY AND CHANGE IN URBAN<br />

LAYOUT<br />

When dealing with cities that were occupied over many hundreds of years, it can be<br />

difficult to distinguish truly innovative elements in urban planning from those which<br />

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