2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.jas.2019.02.007
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Modelling terrestrial route networks to understand inter-polity interactions (southern Etruria, 950-500 BC)

Abstract: Ancient regional routes were vital for interactions between settlements and deeply influenced the development of past societies and their "complexification". At the same time, since any transportation infrastructure needs some level of inter-settlement cooperation to be established, they can also be regarded as an epiphenomenon of social interactions at the regional scale. Here, we propose to analyze ancient pathway networks to understand the organization of cities and villages located in a certain territory, … Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(20 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
(32 reference statements)
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“…The more probable outcome, even in the absence of Rome, would have been a long-standing rivalry between equally ranked cities, where no individual city was able to overcome its equally large neighbour. This is a pattern imprinted on the political landscape, as we have seen earlier in the paper (compare also discussion in Fulminante and Stoddart, 2013;Fulminante et al, 2017;Prignano et al, 2019;Fulminante, in press).…”
Section: From Large Data To Urban Anthropologysupporting
confidence: 67%
“…The more probable outcome, even in the absence of Rome, would have been a long-standing rivalry between equally ranked cities, where no individual city was able to overcome its equally large neighbour. This is a pattern imprinted on the political landscape, as we have seen earlier in the paper (compare also discussion in Fulminante and Stoddart, 2013;Fulminante et al, 2017;Prignano et al, 2019;Fulminante, in press).…”
Section: From Large Data To Urban Anthropologysupporting
confidence: 67%
“…18 Optimal networks depend on the city they refer to. Calculation of the optimal networks for three cities: Barcelona, Seville and Valladolid using the procedure described in the text, based on the Dijkstra (1959) algorithm 9 Other approaches such as those based on route optimization on cost maps (Voigtlaender and Voth 2019) or network generation (Faber 2014;Prignano et al 2019) have the disadvantage of only taking into account local optimization, so they have difficulty in assessing whether intermediate nodes should be incorporated even if they increase the length of the route or consider weightings for the nodes. 10 Except in the case of the unweighted model that only transport costs were used.…”
Section: Criteria To Decide On Improvementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given a certain layout of the nodes in space, there are multiple connectivity patterns presenting approximately the same total length, L tot = i,j a ij d ij . Among the plethora of spatial network models available in the literature [4,19,[24][25][26][27], we selected the Minimum Spanning Tree (MST) [2], the Greedy Triangulation (GT) [28], the Equitable Efficiency Model (EEM) [29], and the Gastner-Newman model (GN) [19] as benchmarks, thus encompassing a wide spectrum of possibilities. Then, we built the MST, GT, EEM, and GN networks on random distributions of nodes in a unit square and compute their E glob and E loc .…”
Section: Global Local and Integrated Efficienciesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Latium Vetus/Southern Etruria: The networks of trails among settlements between 950 and 509 BC (Iron Age) in two regions of Italy, namely: Latium Vetus [33] and Southern Etruria [29]. Nodes represent settlements, while an edge denotes a direct route connecting them.…”
Section: Uk-air: Time-varying Network Of Domestic Flights In Thementioning
confidence: 99%
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