i. Rural Settlements
About |
Rural settlements are most closely and directly related to land. They are dominated by primary activities such as agriculture, animal husbandry, fishing etc. |
Factors affecting the location of rural settlements are |
1. Water Supply 2. Land 3. Upland 4. Building Material 5. Defence 6. Planned Settlements |
Classification of Rural settlement |
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1. On the basis of setting:Â |
The main types are plain villages, plateau villages, coastal villages, forest villages and desert villages. |
2. On the basis of functions: |
There may be farming villages, fishermen villages, lumberjack villages, pastoral villages etc. |
3. On the basis of forms or shapes of the settlements:Â |
These may be a number of geometrical forms and shapes such as Linear, rectangular, circular star like, T-shaped village, double village, cross-shaped village etc. (a) Linear pattern: In such settlements houses are located along a road, railway line, and river, canal edge of a valley or along a levee. (b) Rectangular pattern: Such patterns of rural settlements are found in plain areas or wide inter montane valleys. The roads are rectangular and cut each other at right angles. (c) Circular pattern: Circular villages develop around lakes, tanks and sometimes the village is planned in such a way that the central part remains open and is used for keeping the animals to protect them from wild animals. (d) Star like pattern: Where several roads converge, star shaped settlements develop by the houses built along the roads. (e) T-shaped, Y-shaped, Cross-shaped or cruciform m settlements: T –shaped settlements develop at tri-junctions of the roads ( ) while –shaped settlements emerge as the places where two roads converge on the third one and houses are built along these roads. Cruciform settlements develop on the cross-roads and houses extend in all the four direction. (f) Double village: These settlements extend on both sides of a river where there is a bridge or a ferry. |