Abstract

Masonry city walls were common defense facilities in the cities of the Eurasian before the industrial revolution. However, they were not widespread in China until the Ming Dynasty (1368–1644). Limited in research methods, previous studies failed to make convincing arguments on this phenomenon. We collected, organized and analyzed relevant historical documents to reconstruct the spatio-temporal process of the construction of masonry walls from 1st to 17th century in China. We conducted a time series analysis primarily based on factors such as wars, garrisons, economy, and natural disasters. Analysis of the correlation among the construction of masonry walls and these factors provides insights into this process. From the 1st to 14th century, only 125 masonry city walls were built in China and the annual average number was below 0.1. While in the Ming Dynasty, a total of 1,493 masonry walls were built, with an annual average of 5.41. The construction activities in 1368–1456 spread throughout the country, but mainly appeared in the high-grade administrative cities and garrisons, as a result of the planned implementation of the central government. The construction activities in 1457–1644 had corresponding cluster areas during different periods, mainly at county-level. We found that the wall construction was stimulated by external factors such as wars and disasters. We believe that the mass construction of masonry walls in the Ming Dynasty is a phenomenon of cultural diffusion. The central government plan, the complex interactions between local governments and community, and the stimulation of external factors worked together to contribute to the diffusion of masonry city walls in the Ming Dynasty.

Highlights

  • Defense facilities including entrenchments, barriers, forts, and especially city walls, have become essential components for many ancient cities on the Eurasian continent before the industrial revolutions [1]

  • There were totally 1,618 masonry city walls built in China from the Eastern Han to the late Ming Dynasty; 125 walls were before the Ming Dynasty and 1,493 were in the Ming Dynasty

  • The first masonry city wall in China appeared in the 1st century AD, which was far behind the civilizations of the Mesopotamia, the ancient India, and the ancient Greek-Roman civilization

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Barriers, forts, and especially city walls, have become essential components for many ancient cities on the Eurasian continent before the industrial revolutions [1]. City walls were most frequently built by soil, rammed earth, bricks, stones, and even woods. Among these building materials, the use of masonry has a long history. The masonry city walls construction in China such as Harappan and Moenjo-Daro, had used fired bricks to cover the city walls [2]. Such fired brick surface appeared in the UR city of the UR III Dynasty from 2,100 BC to 1,900 BC [3]. By the time of the Roman Empire (27 BC-330 AD), the masonry city walls had been widespread in Europe and the Middle East [5]

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call