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“Elephants for Want of Towns”: Archaeological Perspectives on West African Cities and Their Hinterlands

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Abstract

Sub-Saharan Africa has long been seen as lacking the potential for autochthonous urban development, and Near Eastern and European contact provided ready explanations for the emergence of precolonial cities across the continent. In the past few decades, the pace of archaeological work on African cities has accelerated, and archaeologists have increasingly deployed a functional model of the city, in which cities are defined in relation to broader hinterlands rather than particular traits. As a result, deeply rooted urban traditions have been identified in all corners of the continent. Despite the antiquity of urban traditions across Africa, however, long-distance forces clearly had wide-reaching impacts on urban developmental trajectories, and proponents of the functional model have yet to explain the specific role of long-distance forces in the process of urbanization. This review examines how multiscalar forces shaped urban trajectories in West Africa, specifically. I examine how local political entrepreneurs took advantage of the opportunities provided by local, interregional, and global forces, resulting in a heterogeneous set of urban traditions across West Africa, ranging from trading entrepôts to regional capitals. Throughout I emphasize how local agency articulated with multiscalar social and economic forces, transforming the nature of regional integration, economic specialization, and the materialization of social difference, defining qualities of urban life.

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Acknowledgments

I would like to thank Gerard Chouin, Kevin MacDonald, Susan McIntosh, Akin Ogundiran, the journal’s editors, and six anonymous reviewers for their very helpful comments and suggestions on previous drafts of this article. Any errors or omissions present are, of course, the sole fault of the author.

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Monroe, J.C. “Elephants for Want of Towns”: Archaeological Perspectives on West African Cities and Their Hinterlands. J Archaeol Res 26, 387–446 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10814-017-9114-2

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