Characterising and understanding the spatial organisation of early Islamic cities represents a major challenge for archaeologists and historians. Many of these cities are buried by later urban communities, leaving us to extrapolate from much later urban forms. Merv offers a rare opportunity to explore the nature of an early Islamic city, especially its floruit under the Seljuks (Williams forthcoming), and as such the emphasis of the Atlas project is to try to understand the broad structure and organisation of the urban space, rather than the specifics of individual property development (the latter perhaps best articulated through specific excavations). We hope to examine an 'archaeology of place' (Wheatley 2003), to explore theories of spatial organisation of the urban space as constituted through the action of knowledgeable agents: the intended and unintended consequences of human actions (Giddens 1984). Specific features that we might wish to identify, therefore, are:
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Last updated: Mon Sept 29 2008