<p>Urbanism shaped social, ideological, and environmental transformations on the tropical eastern African Swahili Coast from the end of the first millennium AD onward. However, it is unclear how settlement trajectories in this region compare with recently expanded understandings of urbanism within the contexts of tropical ecology globally. To address this question, I consider the biogeographical and sociopolitical conditions of urban growth in the region from AD 1000 to 1900, drawing from archaeological research around the city of Zanzibar Stone Town. Unlike other parts of the tropics, Swahili urbanization did not involve extensive landscape engineering, distributed urban networks, or low-density sprawl. Rather, mercantile, communal, and ritual activities drew people into dense, compact towns and cities that persisted through significant social and environmental transformations. I argue that the ethnographically derived model of the Swahili townland is a suitable framework for characterizing tropical Swahili urbanism. It featured compact, high-density settlement forms, managed tropical resource landscapes, and long-distance mobility and connectivity enabled by open, bilateral kinship systems. In the 19th century, however, globalizing forces drove deforestation and expansion into rural countrysides for cash cropping, setting certain Swahili cities like Zanzibar Stone Town on a trajectory toward their present-day sprawling, peri-urban form. Townland dynamics, featuring concentrated urban functions but widely distributed resource acquisition practices enabled by distributed social networks, may help explain urban growth in other parts of the tropics where dense, compact settlement systems emerged.</p>

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Townlands of the Swahili Coast: A Framework for Compact, High-Density Tropical Urbanism on Eastern Africa’s Indian Ocean Rim

  • Wolfgang Alders

摘要

Urbanism shaped social, ideological, and environmental transformations on the tropical eastern African Swahili Coast from the end of the first millennium AD onward. However, it is unclear how settlement trajectories in this region compare with recently expanded understandings of urbanism within the contexts of tropical ecology globally. To address this question, I consider the biogeographical and sociopolitical conditions of urban growth in the region from AD 1000 to 1900, drawing from archaeological research around the city of Zanzibar Stone Town. Unlike other parts of the tropics, Swahili urbanization did not involve extensive landscape engineering, distributed urban networks, or low-density sprawl. Rather, mercantile, communal, and ritual activities drew people into dense, compact towns and cities that persisted through significant social and environmental transformations. I argue that the ethnographically derived model of the Swahili townland is a suitable framework for characterizing tropical Swahili urbanism. It featured compact, high-density settlement forms, managed tropical resource landscapes, and long-distance mobility and connectivity enabled by open, bilateral kinship systems. In the 19th century, however, globalizing forces drove deforestation and expansion into rural countrysides for cash cropping, setting certain Swahili cities like Zanzibar Stone Town on a trajectory toward their present-day sprawling, peri-urban form. Townland dynamics, featuring concentrated urban functions but widely distributed resource acquisition practices enabled by distributed social networks, may help explain urban growth in other parts of the tropics where dense, compact settlement systems emerged.