Urbanism, How We Live
The lost cities of the ancient tropics have a lot to teach us about how to live alongside nature.


The 12th-century Ta Prohm temple in Cambodia. Photography by Mark Croucher/Alamy Stock Photo

"Not only did societies such as the Classic Maya and the Khmer empire of Cambodia flourish, but pre-colonial tropical cities were actually some of the most extensive urban landscapes anywhere in the pre-industrial world – far outstripping ancient Rome, Constantinople/Istanbul and the ancient cities of China.

"Ancient tropical cities could be remarkably resilient, sometimes surviving many centuries longer than colonial- and industrial-period urban networks in similar environments. Although they could face immense obstacles, and often had to reinvent themselves to beat changing climates and their own exploitation of the surrounding landscape, they also developed completely new forms of what a city could be, and perhaps should be.

"Extensive, interspersed with nature and combining food production with social and political function, these ancient cities are now catching the eyes of 21st-century urban planners trying to come to grips with tropical forests as sites of some of the fastest-growing human populations around the world today." - Patrick Roberts

Article: The Real Urban Jungle: How Ancient Societies Reimagined What Cities Could Be