Abstract

The general view of urban segregation in pre-modern towns has been that the wealthy lived near the administrative and economic center(s), while the poor were pushed to the limits of the town. This approach has been questioned by studies proving that urban spaces were socially mixed. This dilemma has been studied here by examining in detail the urban segregation in one small town, Sortavala, at the eastern borderland of the Swedish realm. The analysis shows that the town space was bipolarly segregated. The “gentry,” officeholders and the like, lived near the market square and town hall; the wealthy burghers along the main street. However, even the poorest taxpayers lived among the wealthy and those of high social rank. The segregation was relative: the proportion of the wealthy grew in the grid plan in the town center; the settlements growing “freely” outside the original grid plan were for the poor only.

Highlights

  • The general view of urban segregation in pre-modern towns has been that the wealthy lived near the administrative and economic center(s), while the poor were pushed to the limits of the town

  • Email: kimmo.katajala@uef.fi Journal of Urban History 00(0). In his influential work analyzing and generalizing patterns in preindustrial cities (1960) from all over the world, Gideon Sjöberg postulates that the dwellings of the rich and powerful were concentrated in town centers, while the poorest and powerless were pushed to the limits near the town walls

  • This phenomenon can be called “relative” segregation.[5]. This is the view given by research on urban segregation in the early modern towns of Western Europe and Great Britain. How was it in the early modern North, where the towns were small and often very young? Were urban spaces socially segregated; were town centers socially mixed; and can we find any residential patterns to make generalizations about urban segregation? The results of studies undertaken in the Nordic countries vary

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Summary

Original Research Article

Urban Segregation in a Nordic Small Town in the LateSeventeenth Century: Residential Patterns in Sortavala at the Eastern Borderland of the Swedish Realm. Article reuse guidelines: sagepub.com/journals-permissions httpDs:O//dIo: i1.o0r.g1/107.711/0707/906019641442422121100337733113 journals.sagepub.com/home/juh

Segregated or Mixed Urban Space?
Tracing the Residential Patterns of the Sortavala Urban Space
Mayors and the Gentry by the Market Square?
Wealthy Burghers by the Main Street?
Number Percentage
Karelian Traders as an Ethnic Minority
Discussion
Author Biographies
Full Text
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