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CITIES

CITIES. BY: Marissa Scone Destacia Sexton Jastocia Sexton Aaliyah Dorsey. Delhi/Shahjahanabad.

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CITIES

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  1. CITIES BY: Marissa Scone Destacia Sexton Jastocia Sexton Aaliyah Dorsey

  2. Delhi/Shahjahanabad • Each Mughal emperor built his own capital. The sultans instantly before them had ruled from Delhi. Akbar ruled mainly from Agra 100 miles South of Delhi, in 1569 he built a new capital. By the end of the century a shortage of water at the eclectic capital • Forced Akbar to abandon the city and return to Agra. Akbar’s grandson Shah Jahan rebuilt Delhi as his own capital. By the mid-seventeenth century Shahjahanabad had a population reaching 2 million. Shahjahanabad was

  3. Delhi/Shahjahanabad • A newly rebuilt city so almost all of it’s people were immigrants. The merchant and artisan population was composed of foreign merchants such as Armenians, Persians, Central Asians, and Kashmiris. Delhi also served as a religious • Center , a place of pilgrimage respected throughout India for it’s tomb and graves of saints and holy men.

  4. Population Growth: Population growth impacted Shahjahanabad, because population was growing by the mid-seventeenth century with 2 million residents so if you can only imagine how life was when immigrants migrate from one place to Shahjahanabad and Merchant and Artisan populations were composed of foreign merchants . Turning Point: A turning point was when Shahjahanabad was deserted because hundreds of thousands of soliders and followers went to war like Aurangzeb( third son of Shah Jahan) did.

  5. Isfahan, Iran In 1598 Shah Abbas made Isfahan the capital of Iran (Contained about half a million people.) He welcomed merchants and craftsmen from all around the world Had bazaar for mosques, shops, factories, and warehouses. It made more jobs for people living there. Around 25,000 people worked in the textile industry alone Early 1600’s Shah Abbas allowed English and dutch to have trade offices in Isfahan.

  6. ISFAHAN, Iran Turning point • Turning Point- Was when a Jewish quarter was made in the northwestern part of the city, later Shah Abbas made Jews get persecuted, convert to Islam or they had to leave. • Shah Abbas kept command, he kept his supplies of weapons Iran's survival depended on it.

  7. Constantinople/ IstanbulPopulation growth Sultan Mehmed II renamed the city to Istanbul and began to recast it as the administrative center of the Ottoman empire, which was enlarging quickly. In 1478 Istanbul had about 80,000 inhabitants; between 1520 and 1535, there were 400,000: western observers estimated a population of 700,00 by 1600. Istanbul had become a city of Greeks, Jews, Armenians, Tziganes and 58 percent of the population consisted of Turks.

  8. Constantinople/ Istanbul Impact on Population growth Population Growth impacted this city because it had to expand trade, and the exchange of ideas and cultures. These trends would have encouraged East-West exchange without military expeditions or the taking of Jerusalem

  9. Constantinople Istanbul Turning Point The turning point in Constantinople/Istanbul is when Sultan Mehmed II a great military leader captured Constantinople and conquered the territories in Anatolia and the Balkans that comprised the Ottoman Empire's heartland for the next four centuries.Within the conquered city he established a millet or an autonomous religious community, and he appointed the former Patriarch as essentially governor of the city. However, his authority extended only unto the Orthodox Christians of the city, and this excluded the Genoese and Venetian settlements in the suburbs, and excluded the coming Muslim and Jewish settlers entirely.

  10. London • London had a big population growth between the years 1600 to 1800, the numbers grew from 200,000 to 900,000 • Became the largest city in western Europe( large cities everywhere were unsanitary) • They had more death rates than birth • The population growth caused London to be the largest and over populated • London carried most of England’s population(they were either visiting or they just lived there) • E.A. Wrigley was one of the founding members of the Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure

  11. LONDON (CONTINUED) • E.A. Wrigley was one of the founding members of the Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social StructureTurning point: He suggested the high population growth in the 17th century may have been a significant factor in helping the build up to the industrialization of the 18th century

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