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・ Cities in Motion
・ Cities in Motion 2
・ Cities in the Great Depression
・ Cities in the Park
・ Cities of Bone
・ Cities of East Asia
・ Cities of Gold (album)
・ Cities of Japan
・ Cities of London and Westminster (UK Parliament constituency)
・ Cities of London and Westminster by-election, 1965
・ Cities of Mystery
・ Cities of Peace
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Cities of the ancient Near East
・ Cities of the Future
・ Cities of the Heart
・ Cities of the Interior
・ Cities of the Philippines
・ Cities of the Plain
・ Cities of the Plain (disambiguation)
・ Cities of the Red Night
・ Cities of the Sun
・ Cities of the Underworld
・ Cities Service Concerts
・ Cities XL
・ Cities XL 2011
・ Cities XL 2012
・ Cities XXL


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Cities of the ancient Near East : ウィキペディア英語版
Cities of the ancient Near East

The largest cities in the Bronze Age ancient Near East housed several tens of thousands. Memphis in the Early Bronze Age with some 30,000 inhabitants was the largest city of the time by far. Ur in the Middle Bronze Age is estimated to have had some 65,000 inhabitants; Babylon in the Late Bronze Age similarly had a population of some 50–60,000, while Niniveh had some 20–30,000, reaching 100,000 only in the Iron Age (ca. 700 BC).
The determinative was the Sumerian term for a city or city state.〔(Electronic Pennsylvania Sumerian Dictionary (EPSD) )〕 In Akkadian and Hittite orthography, URU became a determinative sign denoting a city, or combined with KUR "land" the kingdom or territory controlled by a city, e.g. "the king of the country of (the city of) Hatti".
==Mesopotamia==


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