Ancient Town-Planning by F. (Francis John) Haverfield
page 45 of 128 (35%)
page 45 of 128 (35%)
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highway ran straight through from north to south; two other streets
crossed at right angles, and its chief public buildings, the Temple of the Sun and three other temples, two theatres and two public baths, stood near these three streets (fig. 10). Again the evidence proves rectangular town-planning in broad outline; excavation alone can tell the rest.[37] [37] _Zeitschrift des deutschen Palãstina-Vereins_, xxv (1902), plate 6; Bãdeker, _Palestine and Syria_ (1906), p. 140. For the neighbouring Bostra, see p. 136. [Illustration: FIG. 10. GERASA] In the towns just described a distinctive feature is the 'chess-board' pattern of streets and rectangular house-blocks. That, of course, is the feature which most concerns us here. It may not have looked so predominant to their builders and inhabitants. The towns which the Macedonians founded were not seldom rich and large; several were the capitals of powerful and despotic rulers. In such towns we expect great public buildings, temples, palaces. It is not surprising if sometimes those who reared them cared solely for the spectacular grouping of magnificent structures and forgot the private houses and the general plan of the town. _Pergamum_. One such instance from the Macedonian age, perhaps the most instructive which we could ever hope to get,[38] is Pergamum, in the north-west of Asia Minor. This has been thoroughly explored by German |
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