The term "urban revolution" was introduced in the 1930s by V. Gordon Childe, an Australian archaeologist. Childe also coined the term Neolithic Revolution to describe the earlier process by which Hunter-Gatherer Societies domesticated crops and animals and began a farming lifestyle. Childe was the first to synthesize and organize the large volume of new archaeological data in the early 20th century in social terms. Whereas previous archaeologists had concentrated on chronology and technology, Childe applied concepts and theories from the social sciences to interpret archaeological finds. Childe first discussed the Urban Revolution in his 1936 book, Man Make Himself, and then his 1950 article in the journal Town Planning Review brought the concept to a much larger audience. In that paper he presented a 10-point model for the changes that characterized the Urban Revolution:
- Large population and large settlements (cities)
- Full-time specialization and advanced division of labor
- Production of an agricultural surplus to fund government and a differentiated society
- Monumental public architecture
- A ruling class
- Writing
- Exact and predictive sciences (arithmetic, geometry, astronomy, calendars)
- Sophisticated art styles
- Long-distance trade
- The state.
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