Abstract

The tropical urbanism of coastal East Africa has a thousand-year-long history, making it a recognized example of sustainable urbanism. Although economically dependent on trade, the precolonial Islamic towns of the so-called Swahili coast did not feature markets or other public buildings dedicated to mercantile activities before the European colonial involvement. In this regard, Swahili urban tradition differed from other tropical Islamic cities, such as in Morocco, Mali, Egypt or the Middle East, where markets fulfilled the role of social and economic hubs and, in terms of movement, major transitory/meeting spaces in the trading towns. Yet, the Swahili urban tradition thrived for centuries as a well-connected cosmopolitan type of tropical urbanism. As research has suggested, the public role of spaces associated with trade might have been fulfilled by houses. Using approaches of space syntax and network analysis, this article studies the morphology of the houses considering whether it could have been the courtyards that simulated the role of markets thanks to their transitory spatial configuration. The results are discussed reflecting on other models of houses with courtyards, especially the modern Swahili house appearing later in the colonial era when markets began to be established, and Islamic houses known from elsewhere.

Highlights

  • The tropical urbanism of coastal East Africa has a thousand-year-long history, making it a recognized example of sustainable urbanism

  • The structure is shallow and the courtyard is located at the heart of the house; as such, it does not provide a buffer zone from the residential space but is part of it. As it has been discussed in this paper, past research suggested that in the absence of markets or other buildings dedicated to mercantile activities in the precolonial Swahili towns, trade might have been realised through houses

  • The analysis presented here focused on the courtyard in order to derive whether its position in the configuration of the house suggests that this particular space might have substituted the role of markets

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Summary

Introduction

The tropical urbanism of coastal East Africa has a thousand-year-long history, making it a recognized example of sustainable urbanism. Economically dependent on trade, the precolonial Islamic towns of the so-called Swahili coast did not feature markets or other public buildings dedicated to mercantile activities before the European colonial involvement. In this regard, Swahili urban tradition differed from other tropical Islamic cities, such as in Morocco, Mali, Egypt or the Middle East, where markets fulfilled the role of social and economic hubs and, in terms of movement, major transitory/meeting spaces in the trading towns. In the long-term perspective, one aspect of sustainable urbanism is a socio-spatial balance that withstands the test of time with the capacity to successfully deal with change

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