Historic urbanization
Introduction
The city is an object of study in the social sciences, a problem that has occupied human beings forming stable groupings. Human settlements, even in their simplest forms, require social agreements to ensure the balance of the group, and the stability necessary for coexistence fundamentally depends on the fragility or solidity of these agreements. Therefore, the city must be understood as a living and permanent phenomenon, closely linked to the culture with which it shares the characteristic of complexity, which invites us to study it from multiple points of view. History, philosophy, geography, psychology, art, architecture, sociology, politics, literature, anthropology and law, among other disciplines, have dealt with it, among other disciplines.
There are numerous definitions that have been formulated about the city depending on the constituent element on which attention was focused. Some authors have highlighted the material element (paving, walled enclosure, equipment), while others have focused on social relations or utopian-philosophical visions of the urban phenomenon.
In general, scholars have been distinguishing cities according to two criteria: the periods in which they were consolidated (historical criterion) and the type of culture in which they have developed (anthropological criterion). From these perspectives, a distinction is usually made between the ancient city, the medieval city, the baroque city, the pre-Columbian city, the Islamic city, the Anglo-Saxon city, the Mediterranean city, etc.
In its vulgar meaning, the term city refers to human agglomerations that carry out activities other than agricultural activities. Here, the distinction between city and countryside, with a long tradition in urban planning thinking, is established depending on the type of activities. On the one hand, there are activities directly related to agriculture that take place in rural areas and, on the other, activities other than agricultural activities (industry, services, etc.) that take place in urban areas where human relations are more refined and complex, and the administrative apparatus of the State is closer to the citizen.
Human Geography, when studying the urban phenomenon, highlights aspects such as social organization, population rates, type of culture or functional specialization. For its part, Sociology, without neglecting these elements, focuses the study of the city on the causes that give rise to the transformations or social changes that occur in the urban world.