Posted by Carolyn on September 8, 2011 at 3:23 pm
As I mentioned in my previous post, I was fascinated to discover that the sitopian origins of Sydney and Melbourne bear a striking resemblance to ancient city-founding rituals, such as the Etruscan one you can see me discussing here, during my keynote address at the Melbourne State of Design Festival. If you like, you can watch my whole lecture here:
Melbourne State of Design Lecture
Posted by Carolyn on September 8, 2011 at 3:06 pm
Last month I was delighted to make my first trip to Australia as the guest of the Melbourne State of Design Festival. Australia faces unique problems when it comes to feeing itself; not just because so much of it is desert. Having missed out on the last Ice Age, it is an ‘old’ landscape, which means that, even in its most fertile region (the South Eastern corner where Sydney, Melbourne and Adelaide are located) its soils are thin compared to those at similar latitudes in Europe.
This posed terrible problems for British settlers, who were at pains to discover which parts of the coast, if any, would be capable of sustaining their colonies. As I discovered during my research of the sitopian development of Sydney and Melbourne, both cities were second attemps to find fertile ground, the colonists having rejected their initial attempts to find suitable sites.
As the map above shows, Sydney Cove was favoured since it led to good grazing ground inland, essential to the colonists’ abilty to supplement their stocks of food imported from home. Early prints of Sydney also show the market gardens established around Government House, and windmills on the hill behind.
I found it fasinating to trace the settlers’ thoughts and actions as they founded their colonies; identical, one imagines, to those of ancient Greeks and Romans as they sought to expand their empires and find new means of survival.