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Urban Continuity in the Andes: A pre-historical planning tradition
Lindsay Robert Hasluck
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This work investigates the evolution of urban design in the Andes of South America to ascertain if there existed in pre-Hispanic times a shared Andean tradition of urban planning. Since, in previous research, Andean urban planning has been treated as the product of individual sites or cultures, this study explores the repeated use of design elements within Andean urban planning, in order to isolate specific elements for individual functional analysis within the context of a cultural tradition. The primary focus is to demonstrate clearly the urban design connection that forms a coherent Andean urban planning tradition shared between the urban civilizations of the Andes from the inception of urbanism around the beginning of the third millennium BC until the cultural disruption of the Spanish conquest in the mid-sixteenth century AD. Through the investigation and understanding of the evolving sophistication of the cultures within the Andes cultural, political and geographical region, the study demonstrates that certain ideas of urban design, from very early times, began to form a coherent planning tradition that was shared by civilizations, cultures and settlements in close and distant contact. Moreover, these ideas for architectural designs and layouts for urban areas were not only shared geographically but also repeated through time.
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Cover
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Title Page
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Copyright
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Contents
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Acknowledgments
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Figures List
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Introduction
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Methodology
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PART ONE
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Chapter One. Geography and Economy
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Chapter Two. Urbanism, Civilization and Tradition
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Chapter Three. Pre-Urban Cultures
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Chapter Four. Urban Cultures
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PART TWO
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Chapter Five. Design Analysis
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Chapter Six. Economic Design
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Chapter Seven. Environmental Design
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Chapter Eight. Social Design
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Chapter Nine. Possible Non-Conforming Cases
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Chapter Ten. Conclusion
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Bibliography
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Index
Citable Link
Published: 2009
Publisher: BAR Publishing
- 9781407335278 (ebook)
- 9781407305387 (paperback)
BAR Number: S2002