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Ancient society; or, Researches in the lines of human progress from savagery, through barbarism to civilization PDF

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Preview Ancient society; or, Researches in the lines of human progress from savagery, through barbarism to civilization

mi mi ^{oLi' 5 ! -< 'J:?130NVS01^' %a3AINrt3WV ^<!/0JllV3JO^ . .uFTMimPx/. 5 I ^. ,.....aV v©;jiyiivMni^'^ ' ^<9AHvaan# % .^lOSANCElf/^ o Ui ^ 1 / -n «-J %a3AiNaav\v> ^^ ^lOSANGElfj^ o ^ " %a3AiNnBv .v^lilBRARYQr. ^^<!/0jnV3JO^ ,^;0FCAIIF0% 5 ..in<:.nurFiff«. Yi j8in^>^ '^OAav.aaiH^ %i3dnvso# "%a3AiNfi-3Wv' ^mmms^ <^HW \vm//j ^tllBRARYC/ M. i.CJA %}13AIN vvlOSANCFifr.; ,A.^H\mon^^, °^ (j £2 ( '^^mhm]^'^ LIFO/?^, aaiH^ IVER% ^lOSANCEl£x> o %a3AiN .^lOSANCElfT^, 1^ Mi* \w '^^omm^ RARYQ/-. <e^UIBRARYGr. AWtUNIVERS//, .V ANCIENT SOCIETY RESEARCHES IN THE LINES OF HUMAN PROGRESS FROM SAVAGERY, THROUGH BARBARISM TO CIVILIZATION BY LEWIS H. MORGAN, LL.D MemberoftheNationalAcademyofSciences, Authorof"TheLeagueofthe Iroquois^'' "'TheAmericanBeaverandhis Works,'''' ^''SystemsofConsanguinityand AffinityoftheHumanFamily,''''Etc. Nescitvoxmissareverti, HORACE. NEW YORK HENRY HOLT AND COMPANY 1877 91022 Copyright, 1877, By HENRY HOLT. TO THE REVEREND McILVAINE, H. D. D., J. LATE PROFESSOR OF BELLES-LETTRES IN PRINCETON COLLEGE, THIS VOLUME IS DEDICATED, IN RECOGNITION OF HIS GENIUS AND LEARNING, AND IN APPRECIATION OF HIS FRIENDSHIP. Cumprorepseruntprimisanimaliaterris, Mutumetturpepecus,glandematquecubiliapropter Unguibusetpugnis,deinfustibus,atqueitaporro Pugnabantarmis,quaepostfabncaveratusus: Doneeverba,quibusvocessensusquenotarent, Nominaqueinvenere: dehincabsisterebelle, Oppidacoeperuntmunire,etponereleges, Nequisfuresset,neulatro,neuquisadulter. — Horace,Sat.,I,iii,99. "Modernscienceclaimstobeproving,by the most careful and exhaustive study ofman andhisworks,thatourracebeganitsexistenceonearthatthebottomofthescale,insteadofat thetop,andhasbeengraduallyworkingupwar—d; that human powers have had a history of development; t—hatalltheelements ofculture asthearts oflife,art,science,language,relig- ion,philosophy havebeenwroughtoutbyslowandpainfulefforts,intheconflictbetweenthe soulandthe mind ofman on the one hand,and external nature on the other."—Whitney's OrientalandLing^uisticStudies,p.341. "These communities reflect the spiritual conduct of our ancestors thousands oftimes removed. Wehavepassedthroughthesamestages ofdevelopment, physical and moral,and arewhatweareto-daybecausetheylived,toiled,andendeavored. Ourwondrouscivilization istheresultofthesilenteffortsofmillionsofunknown—men,as thechalk cliffs ofEnglandare formed by contributions ofmyriads offoraminifera." Dr. J. Kaines, Anihropologia,vol.i. No.2,p.233. PREFACE. ' The great antiquity ofmankind upon the earth has been conclusively established. It seems singular that the proofs should have been discovered as recently as within the last thirty years, and that the present generation should be the first called upon to recognize so important a fact. I Mankind are now known to have existed in E^urope in the glacial period, and even back of its commencement, with every probability of their origination in a prior geological age. They have survived many races ofanimals with whom they were contemporaneous, and passed through a process ofdevelopment, in the several branches ofthe human fam- ily, as remarkable in its courses as in its progress. Since the probable length of their career is connected with geological periods, a limited measure of time is excluded. One hundred or two hundred thousand years would be an unextravagant estimate of the period from the disappear- ance ofthe glaciers in the northern hemisphere to the pres- ent time. Whatever doubts may attend any estimate ofa period, the actual duration of which is unknown/the exist- 1 ence ofmankind extends backward immeasurably, and loses itself in a vast and profound antiquity. This knowledge changes materialfy the views which have prevailed respecting the relations ofsavages to barbarians, and ofbarbarians to civilized men. It can now be asserted U£on convincing evidence that savagery preceded barbar- ism in all the tribes of mankind, as barbarism is known to — PREFACE. vi . have preceded civilization. The history of the human race is one in source, one in experience, and one in progress^/ It is both a natural and a proper desire to learn, if possi- ble, how all these ages upon ages of past time have been expended by mankind how savages, advancing by slow, ; almost imperceptible steps, attained the higher condition of barbarians how barbarians, by similarprogressive advance- ; ment, finally attained to civilization and why other tribes ; and nations have been left behind in the race ofprogress some in civilization, some in barbarism, and others in sav- agery. It is not too much to expect that ultimately these several questions will be answered. Inveiitigns and discoveries stand -in serial relations along the lines of human progress, and register its successive stages while social and civil institutions, in virtue of their ; connection with perpetual human wants, have been devel- oped from a few primary germs of thought. They exhibit a similar register of progress. These institutions, inven- tions and discoveries have embodied and preserved the principal facts now remaining illustrative of this experi- ence. When collated and compared they tend to show the unity of origin of mankind, the similarity of human wants in the same stage of advancement, and the uniformity of the operations of the human mind in similar conditions of society. Throughout the latter part ofthe period ofsavagery, and the entire period of barbarism, mankind in general were organized in gentes, phratries and tribes. These organiza- tions prevailed throughout the entire ancient world upon all the continents, and were the instrumentalities by means of which ancient society was organized and held together. Their structure, and relations as members of an organic series, and the rights, privileges and obligations of the mem- bers of the gens, and of the members of the phratry and tribe, illustrate thegrowth ofthe idea ofgovernment in the human mind. The principal institutions of mankind origi- nated in savagery, were developed in barbarism, and are maturing in civilization.

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