Search results
Filter
Format
Type
Language
More Languages
Time Range
155848 results
Sort by:
Towns and communication, 2, Communication between towns: proceedings of the meetings of the International Commission for the History of Towns (ICHT) London 2007 - Lecce 2008
In: Saggi e testi / Università del Salento, Dipartimento dei Beni delle Arti e della Storia 45
Urban liberties and citizenship from the Middle Ages up to now: actes du colloque 2009 de la Commission internationale pour l'Histoire des villes
In: Beiträge zur Landes- und Kulturgeschichte Bd. 9
In: Publications du Centre Luxembourgeois de Ducumentation et d'Études Médiévales (CLUDEM) t. 41
Bild und Wahrnehmung der Stadt: [Referate einer Tagung, die im September 2004 vom Institut für Vergleichende Städtegeschichte in Zusammenarbeit mit der "Commission Internationale pour l'Histoire des Villes" in Münster veranstaltet wurde]
In: Städteforschung
In: Reihe A, Darstellungen 63
Villes et métropoles en France et en Allemagne
Cities and minorities in Africa
In: Nova Collectanea Africana, 1
World Affairs Online
Les cités atlantiques: villes périphériques ou métropoles de demain? ; Diagnostics et politiques : peripherical towns or metropolitan cities for tomorrow? : Problems and policies
In: Collection Dynamiques territoriales et développement
Town and town mythology: introductory paper presented at the International Congress of IFHP, held at Belgrade, Yugoslavia in June, 1971
In: Housing and planning conference papers no. 5
Swedish towns during industrialization
In: Annales de démographie historique: ADH, Volume 1999, Issue 2, p. 63-96
ISSN: 1776-2774
This article discusses différent aspects of migration and health in Swedish 19th century urban environments. The décliné in urban mortality set in during the last decades of the century, at the same time as Sweden rapidly became more urbani-zed. The relation between population increase and mortality was however not that clear. The article analyses mortality among migrants in comparison with the more permanently resident population in two Swedish towns-Sundsvall and Linköping. People with another origin than the town of Sundsvall had much better survival than the others. A possible explanation for this is that the migrants were brought up in a much healthier environment than those that spent their childhood in the urban environment, and that the better health in adulthood partly was a resuit of these long-term effects. For illegitimate children, however, their mother's back-ground as migrants had a negative effect. The unmarried migrant mother's lack of social network and support made the survival of their children low.
Inside density: International Colloquium on Architecture and Cities 1
In: The NeTHCA colloquia series 1