Top 5… history’s greatest cities

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
50,026
1,916
113
People have always thronged to centres of civilisation, commerce and culture. But which were the most important in their day?

Top 5… history’s greatest cities



This article was first published in the May 2015 issue of History Revealed

Wednesday 27th May 2015
Submitted by: Jonny Wilkes
BBC History Magazine


Westminster Bridge, London, c1892. (London Stereoscopic Company/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)



Athens

Heyday: Fourth century BC
Current population: 3 million




Art, literature and philosophy all flourished in Ancient Greece. But perhaps the greatest achievement of this influential culture evolved in Athens: democracy, from the Greek demos kratos – people power. After the city’s people revolted against the harsh aristocratic regime, reforms introduced by Cleisthenes around 508 BC enabled each adult male Athenian citizen to contribute to the rule of the city.

Baghdad

Heyday: Eighth century
Current population: 7.2 million




Founded in AD 762 by the Abbasid caliph al-Mansur as his capital, Baghdad soon became the intellectual focal point of the Islamic Golden Age – the centre of global thinking. This circular city included parks and gardens as well as a central mosque.

The House of Wisdom, built by caliph Harun al-Rashid in the late eighth century, attracted philosophers and scholars, writers and mathematicians to debate, create and share ideas, and within 50 years had become the largest repository of books in the world.

Uruk

Heyday: Fourth millennium BC




The greatest city you never heard of is probably the earliest large urban settlement on Earth. In the fertile region of Mesopotamia, between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers (in modern-day Iraq), the burgeoning Sumerian civilisation developed writing, the wheel and war. By 3000 BC, Uruk was the world’s biggest city, with a population of some 50,000. A change in the course of the Euphrates saw it abandoned by AD 700.

London

Heyday: 19th century
Current population: 8.6 million



How London's skyline will soon look once her plethora of new skyscrapers are built


‘Londinium’ first became an important settlement during Roman times. Over the centuries, its fortunes rose and fell, but between the Viking and Norman invasions, great expansion saw it become England’s capital. By the 1830s, it had become the planet’s largest city and would remain so until after World War I. The one-time centre of Britain’s vast empire has been devastated by fire, plague and bombing over the centuries but today it remains the world’s most-visited city.

Hangzhou

Heyday: 13th-15th centuries
Current population: 7 million




This lakeside city is known as ‘Paradise on Earth’ thanks to a glowing review by Venetian merchant Marco Polo, after he visited in 1290. He marvelled at the bustling, sophisticated hub. During the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279), the city had flourished and, by the time the European arrived, at least 1 million people were spilling out of its walls. It was ten times the size of Venice. Later, the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) saw Hangzhou become China’s silk capital, ensuring its wealth and prosperity for centuries.

Find out which other centres of civilisation made History Revealed’s Top 10 greatest cities in history in our May issue. And which historic city would you include?


Top 5… history’s greatest cities | History Extra
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
50,026
1,916
113
That one building in the London Picture looks like a giant dill dough. That's fairly appropriate.
That's the Gherkin, completed in 2003.




Also in that picture is the Cheesegrater, completed in 2013...




... and the Walkie-Talkie, completed in 2014.





That picture also shows the Can of Ham. Construction has not started on it yet but it looks like it will soon.



Also in that picture is the Pinnacle. It's currently under construction and, when it's completed, it will be the EU's second-tallest skyscraper after London's Shard, which was completed in 2012 (but isn't in that picture).




How the Pinnacle will look

Many of the other skyscrapers in that picture are under construction.



The Shard, the EU's tallest skyscraper, completed in 2012

How the London skyline will soon look



 
Last edited:

Sal

Hall of Fame Member
Sep 29, 2007
17,135
33
48
That's the Gherkin, completed in 2003. Also in that picture is the Cheesegrater, completed in 2013; and the Walkie-Talkie, completed in 2014.

That picture also shows the Can of Ham. Construction has not started on it yet but it looks like it will soon.



Also in that picture is the Pinnacle. It's currently under construction and, when it's completed, it will be the EU's second-tallest skyscraper after London's Shard, which was completed in 2012 (but isn't in that picture).




How the Pinnacle will look

Many of the other skyscrapers in that picture are under construction.



The Shard, the EU's tallest skyscraper, completed in 2012

How the London skyline will soon look



very cool...beautiful looking
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
50,026
1,916
113




How London may look in the 2060s, including the new Garden Bridge, the construction of which starts later this year




London's population, currently 8.6 million, is expected to hit 10 million by 2030









Construction is due to start on the Garden Bridge later this year










 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
50,026
1,916
113
Those photos of London in the future are missing what is already dominating the skyline.. as London is the Mecca of Europe.

Don't worry. Ukip will be in power within the next 20 years. They'll sort it out.