During the Renaissance, more people who could read and write lived in cities rather than villages. Cities were centers of trade, culture, and education, providing more opportunities for people to acquire literacy skills. These urban dwellers had better access to universities, libraries, and intellectual exchanges that promoted literacy.
In villages job opportunities are lesser than in cities. People get good salary in cities, so that they can lead a peaceful life. Since there is no rain , dry ponds , dry lakes and no vegetation, farmers find very difficult to lead their life. People in villages do not get good medical care in villages. There is no proper road facilities. Even if they produce some goods it could not be sold in village itself, so people shift to cities from villages.
Cities and towns were not normally in manors. Villages could be.
Plows increased how much grain could be farmed. This led to cities instead of small farms and villages.
The agricultural villages have small shelters. The people who work there could have shelters for them.
One reason could be that the migrating people desire the "hustle and bustle" of city life. Another could be that because everything is so busy in the city that most people stay anonymous to their neighbors, and that could be preferrable over villages where everyone knows everyone else.
The Renaissance began in Florence, Italy. However you could possibly also add Venice in as another northern Italian renaissance city.
People may live in villages because they may have been born there and decided not to move. They may have an emotional attachment to the people they have grew up with also.
On a lesser scale perhaps. But the concentration of wealth within the cities was what financed the Renaissance, as it did with empires throughout history. An agrarian society would not have enough money to waste on sculpting, or art for art's sake.
Early villages evolved into cities due to several factors, including population growth, agricultural surplus, and the need for more complex social organization. As farming techniques improved, communities could support larger populations, leading to increased trade and economic specialization. This growth necessitated more structured governance and infrastructure, fostering the development of urban centers. Additionally, cities became cultural and religious hubs, attracting people and further driving urbanization.
kill people or destroy things like homes ,villages
they could sell art, or other goods, or they could die.
Cities were developed so people could have more local control of things. People come to cities where they like what happens there.?æ