Let op: om deze website goed te kunnen gebruiken is het noodzakelijk om Cookies aan te zetten. Meer informatie...

Water Management in the Premodern Middle East

Forces from 'Above' and 'Below'

Prijs: € 122,-
Voorraad#stock_type# onbekend
(Geen beoordelingen)
Delen:
Productspecificaties
EAN : 9789087284718
Taal : English
Onderwerp : Niet-westerse geschiedenis
Thema : Geschiedenis van het Midden-Oosten
Reeks : Middle East Environmental Histories (3)
Uitgever : Leiden University Press
Verwacht : Augustus 2026
Druk : 1
Uitvoering : Hardcover
Conditie : Nieuw
Pagina's : 290
Beschrijving

This volume analyses water management in pre-1500 Middle Eastern cities. Managing access to fresh water for large numbers of people has always been great challenge. Nevertheless, premodern societies of the Middle East and North Africa were rather successful in providing water to city dwellers, pilgrims and travellers in and around large and highly populated cities such as Cairo, Damascus, Baghdad, Samarra, Basra, and Medina. The contributions to this volume delve into the question of how this was accomplished by examining the intersection between social institutions and the physical reality of water use. These studies analyse the identity and interactions between many different players and stakeholders in water management in cities. Who was responsible for the building, management and maintenance of different elements in premodern waters systems? Who had access to that water? The volume focuses on the sometimes fraught relationships between forces from 'above'-central authorities, formal institutions and elites-and forces from 'below?- more informal practices within local communities.This volume maps a wide variety of physical infrastructures related to water management to be found in densely populated or travelled areas. At the same time, it explores the multitude of social institutions which mediated the distribution of water to medieval urban and rural populaces. Thus, water management provides a microcosm for the wider mechanisms and evolutions of premodern urban governance and its interactions with rural hinterlands. By bringing together a wide range of scholars working on different aspects of these issues, in different contexts and at different times, this volume makes an important new contribution to our understanding of how water was distributed, regulated, and used by urban populations in premodern societies.

Velden met een * zijn verplicht