中世纪中东地区的城市化、原工业化和虚拟水资源

IF 1.3 2区 历史学 Q2 GEOGRAPHY
Majid Labbaf Khaneiki , Zohreh Emamzadeh , Abdullah Saif Al-Ghafri , Ali Torabi Haghighi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文试图了解有形和无形的社会经济因素之间的复杂关系,这些因素在公元十四世纪将一座沙漠城市变成了中东强大国家之一的总部。本文认为,原工业化导致了 "虚拟水 "的增长,帮助伊朗中部的亚兹德市在历史上首次摆脱了水资源的限制。在 12 世纪之前,亚兹德在历史上几乎不存在,它只是一个边缘绿洲,人口稀少,靠qanat 系统(开采地下水的地下渠道)灌溉自给自足的农业为生。13 世纪蒙古人入侵后,大量无地难民的涌入改变了生产关系,并为原始工业化铺平了道路,而原始工业化的发展取决于技术和资本,而不是水和土地。苏菲主义和宗教基金(捐赠传统)促进了贸易路线的扩展,促进了货物和人员的流动。坎儿井城市化,亚兹德成为工业中心,原材料被加工成具有相当高附加值的可交易产品。本文有助于更广泛地了解中东干旱地区的历史地理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Urbanization, proto-industrialization, and virtual water in the medieval Middle East

This article is an attempt to understand a mesh of complex relationships among tangible and intangible socio-economic factors that turned a desert city into the headquarters of one of the mighty polities in the Middle East in the fourteenth century CE. This paper argues that proto-industrialization led to the growth of ‘virtual water’ that helped the city of Yazd, in central Iran, to break free from its water limitation for the first time in its history. Yazd was almost absent in history until the twelfth century, as a peripheral oasis whose sparse population lived off subsistence agriculture irrigated by qanat systems (groundwater-mining subterranean channels). Following the Mongol invasion in the thirteenth century, the influx of landless refugees changed the relations of production and paved the way for proto-industrialization whose development hinged on skill and capital rather than water and land. Sufism and waqf (endowment tradition) contributed to the expansion of trading routes that facilitated the mobility of goods and people. The qanats were urbanized, and Yazd became an industrial hub where raw materials were processed into tradable products with considerable value added. This paper contributes to a broader understanding of the historical geography of the arid Middle East.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
10.00%
发文量
53
期刊介绍: A well-established international quarterly, the Journal of Historical Geography publishes articles on all aspects of historical geography and cognate fields, including environmental history. As well as publishing original research papers of interest to a wide international and interdisciplinary readership, the journal encourages lively discussion of methodological and conceptual issues and debates over new challenges facing researchers in the field. Each issue includes a substantial book review section.
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