A viewset for viewing and editing Utilitarian Public Buildings.

GET /api/sc/utilitarian-public-buildings/?format=api&page=2
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept

{
    "count": 161,
    "next": "https://seshat-db.com/api/sc/utilitarian-public-buildings/?format=api&page=3",
    "previous": "https://seshat-db.com/api/sc/utilitarian-public-buildings/?format=api",
    "results": [
        {
            "id": 55,
            "polity": {
                "id": 643,
                "name": "et_showa_sultanate",
                "long_name": "Shoa Sultanate",
                "start_year": 1108,
                "end_year": 1285
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " E.g. markets.  The Sultanate of Shoa was along import long-distance caravan routes which mostly likely linked to markets in town or cities. “It was on the long-distance caravan routes to these regions that the most viable Muslim communities were established.” §REF§ (Tamrat 2008, 134) Tamrat, Taddesse. 2008. ‘Ethiopia, the Red Sea and the Horn’ In the Cambridge History of Africa: c. 1050 – c.1600 vol. 3. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp 98-182. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/search/Tamrat/titleCreatorYear/items/A68FCWWI/item-list §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 56,
            "polity": {
                "id": 646,
                "name": "so_ifat_sultanate",
                "long_name": "Ifat Sultanate",
                "start_year": 1280,
                "end_year": 1375
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " E.g. markets. The capital city Ifat was located next to the Awadi River. Due to the existence of vital caravan routes and the importance of Zeila port which was a key city associated with the Ifat Sultanate, markets would have been likely established. “We have already seen that Christian Ethiopia had started to make use of the caravan routes to Zeila by the middle of the thirteenth century. The rise of the ‘Solomonic dynasty’, and the resultant shift of the centre of southern Amhara and Shoa, gave a particular significance to the Zeila routes in which the Christian kings began to show an ever increasing interest.” §REF§ (Tamrat 2008, 143) Tamrat, Taddesse. 2008. ‘Ethiopia, the Red Sea and the Horn’ In the Cambridge History of Africa: c. 1050 – c.1600 vol. 3. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Pp 98-182. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/search/Tamrat/titleCreatorYear/items/A68FCWWI/item-list §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 57,
            "polity": {
                "id": 648,
                "name": "so_majeerteen_sultanate",
                "long_name": "Majeerteen Sultanate",
                "start_year": 1750,
                "end_year": 1926
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " E.g. markets, well sites. The quote below suggests the existence of both. “However, there periodically emerged throughout Somali history regional sultanates whose leaders claimed authority over many clans and over large tracts of territory. Examples include the medieval Sultanates of Adal, Ifat and Harar on the eastern fringes of the Ethiopian highlands; the Ajuraan Sultanate in the sixteenth century; The Majeerteen Sultanate in the extreme northeast which arose in the eighteenth century; and the nineteenth-century Sultanates of Hobya and Geledi. While it is impossible to determine with any precision the boundaries  of these pastoral polities, it is apparent that they encompassed well sites, trade routes, and market towns shared by many different clans.” §REF§ (Cassanelli 1982, 70-71) Cassanelli, Lee. V. 1982. The Shaping of Somali Society: Reconstructing the History of a Pastoral People, 1600-1900. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/TKPH7Z89/library §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 58,
            "polity": {
                "id": 651,
                "name": "et_gumma_k",
                "long_name": "Kingdom of Gumma",
                "start_year": 1800,
                "end_year": 1897
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The following quote suggests that markets were likely present in the Kingdom of Gumma. “Trade between the north and the southwest passed through Jimma, much of it carried on by Jimma merchants. Through Hirmata (where the modern town of Jimma is situated) passed caravans to the southwest (to Kafa, Maji, Gimira); the south (Kullo, Konta, Uba, and elsewhere); to the west (Gomma, Guma, Gera Ilubabor); and north to Limmu, Nonno, Shoa, Wollo, and Gondar.” §REF§ (Lewis 2001, 49) Lewis, Herbert S. 2001. Jimma Abba Jifar, an Oromo Monarchy: Ethiopia, 1830-1932. Lawrenceville, New Jersey: The Red Sea Press. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/NRZVWSCD/collection §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 59,
            "polity": {
                "id": 653,
                "name": "et_aussa_sultanate",
                "long_name": "Early Sultanate of Aussa",
                "start_year": 1734,
                "end_year": 1895
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " E.g. Markets. The below quote suggests the presence of markets as there was a vast caravan trade into the interior of Ethiopia. “The caravan trade followed two main routes: from Massawa through Adowa, Gondar and Gojjam and from Tajura and Zeila through Awsa or Harar and then Shoa.” §REF§ (Rubenson 2008, 83) Rubenson, Sven. 2008. ‘Ethiopia and the Horn’ In The Cambridge History of Africa c.1790 – c.1870. Edited by John E. Flint. Vol. 5. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/search/Sven/titleCreatorYear/items/VRU64Q8P/item-list §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 60,
            "polity": {
                "id": 658,
                "name": "ni_kwararafa",
                "long_name": "Kwararafa",
                "start_year": 596,
                "end_year": 1820
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Granaries. It’s unclear what time period this refers to, but it’s in a section headed ‘Pre-Colonial Social Organization’ so should apply: “Each section of the compound had its own kitchen and each married man his own farm and granaries. At the time of the visit (in November), the household foodstocks had been entirely consumed, and, pending the harvest, the members were living solely on maize, stacked on the maize farms close to the river. The household depended wholly on agriculture. But two of the members engaged, to a small extent in fishing. There was no property at all in the form of livestock.” §REF§Zhema, S. (2017). A History of the Social and Political Organization of the Jukun of Wukari Division, c.1596–1960 [Benue State University]: 102. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/U667CC36/collection§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 61,
            "polity": {
                "id": 665,
                "name": "ni_aro",
                "long_name": "Aro",
                "start_year": 1690,
                "end_year": 1902
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Markets. “The development of the Atlantic commerce stimulated the southward migration and relocation of peoples, and initiated population push on settlements along the major arteries of trade. Arochukwu was one of these settlements along the major trade routes which experienced an unprecedented population pressure from neighbouring communities.” §REF§Nwauwa, A. O. (1995). The Evolution of the Aro Confederacy in Southeastern Nigeria, 1690–1720. A Theoretical Synthesis of State Formation Process in Africa. Anthropos, 90(4/6), 353–364: 358. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/G4DWA3GQ/collection §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 62,
            "polity": {
                "id": 676,
                "name": "se_baol_k",
                "long_name": "Kingdom of Baol",
                "start_year": 1550,
                "end_year": 1890
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The following quotes suggests that markets were likely present. “All three capitals: Kahone, Diakhao, and Lambaye, were established in the mid-sixteenth century when the fertile coastal provinces of the Empire of Jolof- an inland empire established in the thirteenth century-gained independence […] They prospered as independent kingdoms during the mercantilist era and, together, constituted the ‘Peanut Basin’ that developed during the colonial era. They maintained trade relations with the European and Eura-african merchants who frequented their port cities, and diplomatic relations with the Dutch, French and English/British chartered companies that claimed to monopolize trade along their coasts.” §REF§ (Bigon and Ross 2020, 42) Bigon, Liora and Ross, Eric. 2020. Grid Planning in the Urban Design Practices of Senegal. London: Springer. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/MM67I638/collection §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 63,
            "polity": {
                "id": 679,
                "name": "se_jolof_emp",
                "long_name": "Jolof Empire",
                "start_year": 1360,
                "end_year": 1549
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Markets. The following quote suggests that markets were likely present. “The Senegambia’s link to the expansive interior trade incorporated several commercial complexes that were connected to the major empires in West Africa besides Mali to the north and Jolof to the east, allowing the flow of a variety of foreign commodities into the region. Part of this conglomerate of networks made use of the Gambia River to gain salt, rice, grasses, and dried fish that would be bartered for iron, cloth, kola, and in all likelihood luxury items (a notable portion of which were of European origin) that until that time could only be obtained from interior markets.” §REF§ (Gijanto 2016, 31-32) Gijanto, Liza. 2016. The Life of Trade: Events and Happenings in the Niumi’s Atlantic Center. London: Routledge. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/7XNBIF95/collection §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 64,
            "polity": {
                "id": 686,
                "name": "tz_karagwe_k",
                "long_name": "Karagwe",
                "start_year": 1500,
                "end_year": 1916
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Markets inferred from existence of important trade centres. \"As one of the leading trading centres in Karagwe, Kafuro reportedly grew into a large depot as important as Kazeh and Ujiji (Katoke 1975).\"§REF§(Mapunda 2009: 102) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/items/9GV5C5NF/collection. §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 65,
            "polity": {
                "id": 703,
                "name": "in_kalabhra_dyn",
                "long_name": "Kalabhra Dynasty",
                "start_year": 200,
                "end_year": 600
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The following quote discusses early Tamil inscriptions from Madurai and Sivaganga dated between the Second Century BC and the Sixth Century AD. The inscriptions mention various professions particularly merchants and traders suggesting that markets were likely present. “Although the earliest are mainly found in the Madurai and Sivaganga districts, these epigraphs are scattered all over Tamil Nadu. They sometimes simply record a name (tiyancantan in Alakarmalai cave in Madurai district), sometimes the name of a person along with his profession (goldsmith, salt merchant, accountant, nun, sugar merchant, trader in ploughshares, cloth merchant, for example, all in the cave of Alakarmalai).” §REF§ (Gillet 2014, 284-285) Gillet, Valérie. 2014. ‘The Dark Period: Myth or Reality?’ Indian Economic and Social History Review. Vol. 51:3. Pp 283-302. Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/7F5SEVNA/items/NMH86RIS/collection §REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 66,
            "polity": {
                "id": 612,
                "name": "ni_nok_1",
                "long_name": "Middle and Late Nok",
                "start_year": -1500,
                "end_year": -901
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"There are [...] no signs of communal construction activities, and no preserved facilities to store agricultural surplus. [...] It has to be considered that the preservation of features in Nok sites is generally poor and that the amount of data is not too large and regionally restricted to a rather small key study area.\"§REF§(Breunig and Ruppe 2016: 253) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/ES4TRU7R.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 67,
            "polity": {
                "id": 613,
                "name": "bf_west_burkina_faso_yellow_5",
                "long_name": "West Burkina Faso Yellow I",
                "start_year": 100,
                "end_year": 500
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The following suggests that the only identified buildings were houses, and that houses fulfilled multiple purposes (\"economically generalized”). ”The community [of Kirikongo] was founded by a single house (Mound 4) c. ad 100 (Yellow I), as part of a regional expansion of farming peoples in small homesteads in western Burkina Faso. A true village emerged with the establishment of a second house (Mound 1) c. ad 450, and by the end of the first millennium ad the community had expanded to six houses. At first, these were economically generalized houses (potting, iron metallurgy, farming and herding) settled distantly apart with direct access to farming land that appear to have exercised some autonomy.\"§REF§(Dueppen 2015: 21-22)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 68,
            "polity": {
                "id": 615,
                "name": "ni_nok_2",
                "long_name": "Middle and Late Nok",
                "start_year": -900,
                "end_year": 0
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"There are [...] no signs of communal construction activities, and no preserved facilities to store agricultural surplus. [...] It has to be considered that the preservation of features in Nok sites is generally poor and that the amount of data is not too large and regionally restricted to a rather small key study area.\"§REF§(Breunig and Ruppe 2016: 253) Seshat URL: https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/collections/GWWIKDDM/ES4TRU7R.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 69,
            "polity": {
                "id": 617,
                "name": "bf_west_burkina_faso_red_2",
                "long_name": "West Burkina Faso Red II and III",
                "start_year": 1100,
                "end_year": 1400
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"The first nondomestic structures identified at Kirikongo are found from Red II and Red III on the peak of Mound 4. This multistory complex has formal similarities to a Bwa ancestor house, which today when associated with the founding house is a sacrificial shrine to the village ancestors, the meeting place for the village council, and maintained by the village headman. Given the presence of these ritual structures, cross-cutting communal activities, and a communally focused built environment, it is possible that an institution similar to the village Do was in existence.\"§REF§(Dueppen 2012: 31)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 70,
            "polity": {
                "id": 618,
                "name": "bf_west_burkina_faso_red_4",
                "long_name": "West Burkina Faso Red IV",
                "start_year": 1401,
                "end_year": 1500
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Inferred from the following, which pertains to the immediately preceding period. \"The first nondomestic structures identified at Kirikongo are found from Red II and Red III on the peak of Mound 4. This multistory complex has formal similarities to a Bwa ancestor house, which today when associated with the founding house is a sacrificial shrine to the village ancestors, the meeting place for the village council, and maintained by the village headman. Given the presence of these ritual structures, cross-cutting communal activities, and a communally focused built environment, it is possible that an institution similar to the village Do was in existence.\"§REF§(Dueppen 2012: 31)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 71,
            "polity": {
                "id": 619,
                "name": "bf_west_burkina_faso_red_1",
                "long_name": "West Burkina Faso Red I",
                "start_year": 701,
                "end_year": 1100
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "absent",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"The first nondomestic structures identified at Kirikongo are found from Red II and Red III on the peak of Mound 4. This multistory complex has formal similarities to a Bwa ancestor house, which today when associated with the founding house is a sacrificial shrine to the village ancestors, the meeting place for the village council, and maintained by the village headman. Given the presence of these ritual structures, cross-cutting communal activities, and a communally focused built environment, it is possible that an institution similar to the village Do was in existence.\"§REF§(Dueppen 2012: 31)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 72,
            "polity": {
                "id": 614,
                "name": "cd_kanem",
                "long_name": "Kanem",
                "start_year": 800,
                "end_year": 1379
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " The near-absence of archaeologically identified settlements makes it particularly challenging to infer most building types. \"While the historical sources provide a vague picture of the events of the first 500 years of the Kanem-Borno empire, archaeologically almost nothing is known. [...] Summing up, very little is known about the capitals or towns of the early Kanem- Borno empire. The locations of the earliest sites have been obscured under the southwardly protruding sands of the Sahara, and none of the later locations can be identified with certainty.\"§REF§(Gronenborn 2002: 104-110)§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 73,
            "polity": {
                "id": 663,
                "name": "ni_oyo_emp_1",
                "long_name": "Oyo",
                "start_year": 1300,
                "end_year": 1535
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "SSP",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "unknown",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " \"Contexts that could shed light on the dynamics of social structure and hierarchies in the metropolis, such as the royal burial site of Oyo monarchs and the residences of the elite population, have not been investigated. The mapping of the palace structures has not been followed by systematic excavations (Soper, 1992); and questions of the economy, military system, and ideology of the empire have not been addressed archaeologically, although their general patterns are known from historical studies (e.g, Johnson, 1921; Law, 1977).\"§REF§(Ogundiran 2005: 151-152)§REF§ Regarding this period, however, one of the historical studies mentioned in this quote also notes:  \"Of the earliestperiod of Oyo history, before the sixteenth century, very little is known.\"§REF§(Law 1977: 33)§REF§ Law does not then go on to provide specific information directly relevant to this variable."
        },
        {
            "id": 82,
            "polity": {
                "id": 569,
                "name": "mx_mexico_1",
                "long_name": "Early United Mexican States",
                "start_year": 1810,
                "end_year": 1920
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " “Examples proliferate, particularly during the late seventeenth- and late eighteenth-century silver bonanzas that produced the wealth of communities such as Santiago de Querétaro, Zacatecas and Guanajuato, or individuals such as Juan Antonio de Urrutia y Arana, marqués de la Villa del Villar del Águila; Pedro Romero de Terreros, conde de Santa María de Regla; Antonio de Obregón y Alcocer, conde de la Valenciana; and José de Borda (Couturier 2003; Torales Pacheco 1985; Yuste López 1987). Their munificence built aqueducts, churches, palaces, industrial establishments, charitable institutions, and even ships for the Spanish navy.”§REF§(Bunker and Macias-Gonzalez 2011: 60) Bunker, Steven B. and Macías-González, Víctor M. 2011. “Consumption and Material Culture from Pre-Contact through the Porfiriato,” in A Companion to Mexican History and Culture, ed. William H. Beezley. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. pp54–82. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/SDIQ5VE7§REF§ “Maximilian’s greatest material legacy was his plan to redesign Mexico City (Chapman 1975, pp. 105–10). Developed in 1866, the 4-phase, 22-item plan traced new avenues, squares, utilities, and many improvements around the city. Of these, Maximilian only laid out the new Paseo de la Emperatriz (today Paseo de la Reforma) evoking Vienna’s Ringstraße. Subsequent regimes have implemented much of this plan, opening avenues west and south of the main plaza (5 de Mayo, Juárez, and 20 de Noviembre avenues), re-paving streets, adding gas lights, meatpacking plants, a ring-road (today’s circuito interior), fire stations, hospitals, cemeteries, and government ministries.”§REF§(Bunker and Macias-Gonzalez 2011: 56) Bunker, Steven B. and Macías-González, Víctor M. 2011. “Consumption and Material Culture from Pre-Contact through the Porfiriato,” in A Companion to Mexican History and Culture, ed. William H. Beezley. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. pp54–82. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/SDIQ5VE7§REF§ “The “modernity” of the capital, while exemplary in its scale and expense, paled with the cost of public works in the regions; railroads crisscrossed the country by the 1880s, electrical and telephone utilities by the 1890s, and vast bonds were issued to finance new state and municipal buildings, schools, and trams.”§REF§(Bunker and Macias-Gonzalez 2011: 68) Bunker, Steven B. and Macías-González, Víctor M. 2011. “Consumption and Material Culture from Pre-Contact through the Porfiriato,” in A Companion to Mexican History and Culture, ed. William H. Beezley. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. pp54–82. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/SDIQ5VE7§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 83,
            "polity": {
                "id": 579,
                "name": "gb_england_plantagenet",
                "long_name": "Plantagenet England",
                "start_year": 1154,
                "end_year": 1485
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 84,
            "polity": {
                "id": 568,
                "name": "cz_bohemian_k_2",
                "long_name": "Kingdom of Bohemia - Luxembourgian and Jagiellonian Dynasty",
                "start_year": 1310,
                "end_year": 1526
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 85,
            "polity": {
                "id": 305,
                "name": "it_lombard_k",
                "long_name": "Lombard Kingdom",
                "start_year": 568,
                "end_year": 774
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Roman public buildings such as forums, amphitheatres and bath houses, existed in the territories that the Lombards conquered. Cities in particular had well made and preserved public buildings. §REF§Christie 1998: 146, 150. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/975BEGKF§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 86,
            "polity": {
                "id": 575,
                "name": "us_united_states_of_america_reconstruction",
                "long_name": "Us Reconstruction-Progressive",
                "start_year": 1866,
                "end_year": 1933
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 87,
            "polity": {
                "id": 563,
                "name": "us_antebellum",
                "long_name": "Antebellum US",
                "start_year": 1776,
                "end_year": 1865
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 88,
            "polity": {
                "id": 302,
                "name": "gb_tudor_stuart",
                "long_name": "England Tudor-Stuart",
                "start_year": 1486,
                "end_year": 1689
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " “Although some counties had multiple institutions (there were four each in Devon and Norfolk by 1598, seven in Hertfordshire by the early 1620s, three in Warwickshire by 1635, and seven in Sussex by 1642; and in 1598, Essex had a scheme for 23), others (including Denbighshire until 1687) failed to provide one at all. It was only in the 1630s, almost 60 years after the statute, that they became virtually universal. 96 Even then, they were badly managed and underfunded. Envisaged as an ‘uneasy mixture of prison, workhouse and reformatory’, bridewells degenerated into ‘lock-ups’.”§REF§(Hindle 2002: 164) Hindle, Steve. 2002. The State and Social Change in Early Modern England, 1550–1640 (London: Palgrave https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/GVIZDIC9§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 89,
            "polity": {
                "id": 295,
                "name": "tm_khwarezmid_emp",
                "long_name": "Khwarezmid Empire",
                "start_year": 1157,
                "end_year": 1231
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 90,
            "polity": {
                "id": 578,
                "name": "mo_alawi_dyn_1",
                "long_name": "Alaouite Dynasty I",
                "start_year": 1631,
                "end_year": 1727
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Stables; warehouses; infirmaries. “When he heard about all this unrest, Mawläy Ismail decided to deal first of all with his nephew. He marched against him and forced him to flee a second time, into the Sahara. Then he advanced on Fez and laid siege to it until it surrendered, but later decided to make Meknes his capital. On his return to that town he gave orders for the building of palaces, houses, walls, stables, warehouses and other large buildings. He had gardens and ponds laid out, to such good effect that this town came to rival Versailles (which King Louis XIV, abandoning Paris, had taken as his capital). At Meknes, the building work went on for several years.”§REF§(Ogot 1992: 222) Ogot, B. A. 1992. ed., General History of Africa: Africa from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century., vol. V, VII vols. Oxford: Heinemann Educational Books Ltd. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/24QPFDVP§REF§ “All the Christians in Morocco were collected there and were at first housed in siloes near the building-yards, then they were moved to the Dar al-Makhzen, then to near the stables, under the arches of a bridge, where their lot was particularly miserable, finally to lodgings built from mud brick along the north wall of the Dar al-Makhzen. They were able to organise themselves a little there, to build themselves a church, to have chapels, a convent and infirmaries.”§REF§(Bosworth 2007: 400) Bosworth, Clifford Edmund. 2007. ed., Historic Cities of the Islamic World. Leiden; Boston: Brill. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/HGHDXVAC§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 91,
            "polity": {
                "id": 351,
                "name": "am_artaxiad_dyn",
                "long_name": "Armenian Kingdom",
                "start_year": -188,
                "end_year": 6
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 92,
            "polity": {
                "id": 573,
                "name": "ru_golden_horde",
                "long_name": "Golden Horde",
                "start_year": 1240,
                "end_year": 1440
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 93,
            "polity": {
                "id": 360,
                "name": "ir_saffarid_emp",
                "long_name": "Saffarid Caliphate",
                "start_year": 861,
                "end_year": 1003
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 94,
            "polity": {
                "id": 587,
                "name": "gb_british_emp_1",
                "long_name": "British Empire I",
                "start_year": 1690,
                "end_year": 1849
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 95,
            "polity": {
                "id": 21,
                "name": "us_hawaii_k",
                "long_name": "Kingdom of Hawaii - Post-Kamehameha Period",
                "start_year": 1820,
                "end_year": 1898
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": " Barracks; prisons; post office; customhouses; warehouses; schoolhouses; insane asylum; quarantine building “During the reigns of the last two Kamehamehas and Lunalilo, approximately a million dollars were spent by the government on public works. The Hawaiian Hotel and Aliiolani Hale accounted for about a quarter of that sum. One hundred and eighty thousand dollars went into the construction of buildings of lesser magnitude—lIolani Barracks, a new prison, Royal Mausoleum, post office, customhouses, warehouses, schoolhouses, insane asylum, quarantine building.”§REF§(Kuykendall 1938: 174) Kuykendall, Ralph Simpson. 1938. The Hawaiian Kingdom. Honolulu: University Press of Hawaii. http://archive.org/details/hawaiiankingdom0002kuyk. https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/QJ4Z7AAB§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 96,
            "polity": {
                "id": 566,
                "name": "fr_france_napoleonic",
                "long_name": "Napoleonic France",
                "start_year": 1816,
                "end_year": 1870
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 97,
            "polity": {
                "id": 572,
                "name": "at_austro_hungarian_emp",
                "long_name": "Austro-Hungarian Monarchy",
                "start_year": 1867,
                "end_year": 1918
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 98,
            "polity": {
                "id": 786,
                "name": "gb_british_emp_2",
                "long_name": "British Empire II",
                "start_year": 1850,
                "end_year": 1968
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 100,
            "polity": {
                "id": 797,
                "name": "de_empire_1",
                "long_name": "Holy Roman Empire - Ottonian-Salian Dynasty",
                "start_year": 919,
                "end_year": 1125
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": ""
        },
        {
            "id": 101,
            "polity": {
                "id": 409,
                "name": "bd_bengal_sultanate",
                "long_name": "Bengal Sultanate",
                "start_year": 1338,
                "end_year": 1538
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "\"But locally Khan Jahan [...] also built roads, mosques and tanks in Barobazar, a site northwest of Bagerhat in the Jhenaidah district, which some now identify with Mahmudabad of Sultanate times.\"  <a class=\"fw-bold\" href=\"https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/RBQ75QDX\">[Hasan 2007, p. 16]</a>",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 102,
            "polity": {
                "id": 780,
                "name": "bd_chandra_dyn",
                "long_name": "Chandra Dynasty",
                "start_year": 900,
                "end_year": 1050
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "Warehouse: “a tenth-century inscription suggests that the town of Savar, now in central Bangladesh, derives its name from its role as a port with warehousing facilities.”  <a class=\"fw-bold\" href=\"https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/JJDGEDFZ\">[van_Schendel 2009]</a>",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 103,
            "polity": {
                "id": 250,
                "name": "cn_qin_emp",
                "long_name": "Qin Empire",
                "start_year": -338,
                "end_year": -207
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "Dujiangyan system. Irrigation, flood reduction, commercial waterway.   <a class=\"fw-bold\" href=\"https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/Z4ACHZRD\">[Keay 2010, p. 84]</a>",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 104,
            "polity": {
                "id": 426,
                "name": "cn_southern_song_dyn",
                "long_name": "Southern Song",
                "start_year": 1127,
                "end_year": 1279
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "EMPTY_COMMENT",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 105,
            "polity": {
                "id": 423,
                "name": "cn_eastern_zhou_warring_states",
                "long_name": "Eastern Zhou",
                "start_year": -475,
                "end_year": -256
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "EMPTY_COMMENT",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 106,
            "polity": {
                "id": 506,
                "name": "gr_macedonian_emp",
                "long_name": "Macedonian Empire",
                "start_year": -330,
                "end_year": -312
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "Public baths?   <a class=\"fw-bold\" href=\"https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/CJEMEKZ8\">[Girtzi-Bafas_Özkan_Aygün 2009, pp. 136-144]</a>  Something referred to as a \"fountain building\".  <a class=\"fw-bold\" href=\"https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/CJEMEKZ8\">[Girtzi-Bafas_Özkan_Aygün 2009, pp. 136-144]</a>  Under Phillip II swamps drained and dykes built to prevent flooding and increase agricultural area.   <a class=\"fw-bold\" href=\"https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/A5VCK5NQ\">[Gabriel 2010, p. 51]</a>",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 107,
            "polity": {
                "id": 708,
                "name": "pt_portuguese_emp_1",
                "long_name": "Portuguese Empire - Renaissance Period",
                "start_year": 1495,
                "end_year": 1579
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "Markets.",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 108,
            "polity": {
                "id": 709,
                "name": "pt_portuguese_emp_2",
                "long_name": "Portuguese Empire - Early Modern",
                "start_year": 1640,
                "end_year": 1806
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "Irrigation systems, food storage sites, and, after 1707 at least, drinking water supply systems.",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 109,
            "polity": {
                "id": 337,
                "name": "ru_moskva_rurik_dyn",
                "long_name": "Grand Principality of Moscow, Rurikid Dynasty",
                "start_year": 1480,
                "end_year": 1613
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "EMPTY_COMMENT",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 110,
            "polity": {
                "id": 710,
                "name": "tz_tana",
                "long_name": "Classic Tana",
                "start_year": 1000,
                "end_year": 1498
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "IFR",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "Markets. Inferred from the centrality of trade along the Swahili Coast at the time: \"[T]hroughout the early centuries of the second millennium Zanzibar remained the gateway of the eastern African coast for an array of overlapping trade networks.\"  <a class=\"fw-bold\" href=\"https://www.zotero.org/groups/1051264/seshat_databank/items/VRKMQD48\">[Fitton_Wynne-Jones_LaViolette 2017]</a>",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 111,
            "polity": {
                "id": 314,
                "name": "ua_kievan_rus",
                "long_name": "Kievan Rus",
                "start_year": 880,
                "end_year": 1242
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": null,
            "description": "Hospitals, hostels, refuges for wayfarers associated with churches.§REF§(Feldbrugge 2017, 438) Ferdinand J M Feldbrugge. 2017. A History of Russian Law: From Ancient Times to the Council Code (Ulozhenie) of Tsar Aleksei Mikhailovich of 1649. BRILL. Leiden.§REF§"
        },
        {
            "id": 112,
            "polity": {
                "id": 774,
                "name": "mw_early_maravi",
                "long_name": "Early Maravi",
                "start_year": 1400,
                "end_year": 1499
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "EMPTY_COMMENT",
            "description": null
        },
        {
            "id": 113,
            "polity": {
                "id": 775,
                "name": "mw_northern_maravi_k",
                "long_name": "Northern Maravi Kingdom",
                "start_year": 1500,
                "end_year": 1621
            },
            "year_from": null,
            "year_to": null,
            "tag": "TRS",
            "is_disputed": false,
            "is_uncertain": false,
            "name": "Utilitarian_public_building",
            "utilitarian_public_building": "present",
            "comment": "EMPTY_COMMENT",
            "description": null
        }
    ]
}