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The Cambridge World History, Volume 2: A World with Agriculture, 12,000 BCE–500 CE PDF

669 Pages·2015·26.2 MB·English
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the cambridge world history * VOLUME II The development of agriculture has often been described as the mostimportantchangeinallofhumanhistory.VolumeIIofThe Cambridge World History explores the origins and impact of agri- culture and agricultural communities, and also discusses issues associated with pastoralism and hunter-fisher-gatherer econo- mies. To capture the patterns of this key change across the globe, the volume uses an expanded timeframe from 12,000 BCE to500CE,beginningwiththeNeolithicandcontinuingintolater periods. Scholars from a range of disciplines, including archaeol- ogy, historical linguistics, biology, anthropology, and history, trace common developments in the more complex social struc- tures and cultural forms that agriculture enabled, such as seden- tary villages and more elaborate foodways, and then present a seriesofregionaloverviewsaccompaniedbydetailedcasestudies frommanydifferentpartsoftheworld,includingSouthwestAsia, South Asia, China, Japan, Southeast Asia and the Pacific, sub- SaharanAfrica,theAmericas,andEurope. GRAEME BARKERisEmeritusDisneyProfessorofarchaeology,Senior Fellow of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, and ProfessorialFellow,StJohn’sCollegeattheUniversityofCambridge. HeistheauthorofTheAgriculturalRevolutioninPrehistoryandPrehistoric FarminginEurope(CambridgeUniversityPress,1985). CANDICE GOUCHER is a professor of history at Washington State University.WithLinda Walton, shepublishedseveralworldhistory textbooks,includingthesecondeditionofWorldHistory:Journeysfrom Past to Present, and was co-lead scholar on the multimedia project BridgingWorldHistory. the cambridge world history The Cambridge World History is an authoritative new fi overview of the dynamic eld of world history. It covers the whole of human history, not simply history since the developmentofwrittenrecords,inanexpandedtimeframe that represents the latest thinking in world and global history. With over two hundred essays, it is the most comprehensive account yet of the human past, and it draws on a broad international pool of leading academics fl from a wide range of scholarly disciplines. Re ecting the increasing awareness that world history can be examined through many different approaches and at varying geographic and chronological scales, each volume offers regional, topical, and comparative essays alongside case studies that provide depth of coverage to go with the breadth of vision that is the distinguishing characteristic of world history. Editor-in-chief MERRY E. WIESNER-HANKS,DepartmentofHistory, UniversityofWisconsin-Milwaukee EditorialBoard GRAEME BARKER,DepartmentofArchaeology, CambridgeUniversity CRAIG BENJAMIN,DepartmentofHistory, GrandValleyStateUniversity JERRY BENTLEY,DepartmentofHistory,UniversityofHawaii DAVID CHRISTIAN,DepartmentofModernHistory, MacquarieUniversity ROSS DUNN,DepartmentofHistory, SanDiegoStateUniversity CANDICE GOUCHER,DepartmentofHistory, WashingtonStateUniversity MARNIE HUGHES-WARRINGTON,DepartmentofModernHistory, MonashUniversity ALAN KARRAS,InternationalandAreaStudiesProgram, UniversityofCalifornia,Berkeley BENJAMIN Z. KEDAR,DepartmentofHistory, HebrewUniversity JOHN R. MCNEILL,SchoolofForeignServiceand DepartmentofHistory,GeorgetownUniversity KENNETH POMERANZ,DepartmentofHistory,UniversityofChicago VERENE SHEPHERD,DepartmentofHistory, UniversityoftheWestIndies SANJAY SUBRAHMANYAM,DepartmentofHistory, UCLAandCollègedeFrance KAORU SUGIHARA,DepartmentofEconomics,KyotoUniversity MARCEL VAN DER LINDEN,InternationalInstituteofSocialHistory, Amsterdam Q. EDWARD WANG,DepartmentofHistory,RowanUniversity NORMAN YOFFEE,DepartmentofNearEasternStudiesand Anthropology,UniversityofMichigan; InstitutefortheStudyoftheAncientWorld,NewYorkUniversity THE CAMBRIDGE WORLD HISTORY * VOLUME II A World with Agriculture, 12,000 – 500 BCE CE * Edited by GRAEME BARKER University of Cambridge and CANDICE GOUCHER Washington State University UniversityPrintingHouse,CambridgeCB28BS,UnitedKingdom CambridgeUniversityPressispartoftheUniversityofCambridge. ItfurtherstheUniversity’smissionbydisseminatingknowledgeinthepursuitof education,learning,andresearchatthehighestinternationallevelsofexcellence. www.cambridge.org Informationonthistitle:www.cambridge.org/9780521192187 ©CambridgeUniversityPress2015 Thispublicationisincopyright.Subjecttostatutoryexception andtotheprovisionsofrelevantcollectivelicensingagreements, noreproductionofanypartmaytakeplacewithoutthewritten permissionofCambridgeUniversityPress. Firstpublished2015 PrintedintheUnitedKingdombyTJInternationalLtd.PadstowCornwall AcataloguerecordforthispublicationisavailablefromtheBritishLibrary ISBN 978-0-521-19218-7Hardback CambridgeUniversityPresshasnoresponsibilityforthepersistenceoraccuracyof URLsforexternalorthird-partyinternetwebsitesreferredtointhispublication, anddoesnotguaranteethatanycontentonsuchwebsitesis,orwillremain, accurateorappropriate. Contents fi List of gures xi List of maps xxi List of tables xxiii List of contributors xxv Preface xxvii 1 · Introduction: a world with agriculture 1 graeme barker and candice goucher 2 · Archaeogenetics 26 maria pala, pedro soares, gyaneshwer chaubey, and martin b. richards 3 · Agricultural origins: what linguistic evidence reveals 55 christopher ehret 4 · Whatdidagriculturedoforus?Thebioarchaeologyofhealthanddiet 93 charlotte roberts 5 · Communities 124 amy bogaard 6 · Pastoralism 161 alan k. outram 7 · Agriculture and urbanism 186 daphne e. gallagher and roderick j. mcintosh vii Contents 8 · Early agriculture in Southwest Asia 210 alan h. simmons 9 · ’Ain Ghazal, Jordan 243 gary o. rollefson 10 · Early agriculture in South Asia 261 eleanor kingwell-banham, cameron a. petrie, and dorian q. fuller 11 · Mehrgarh, Pakistan 289 cameron a. petrie 12 · Early agriculture in China 310 xinyi liu, dorian q. fuller, and martin jones 13 · Xinglonggou, China 335 xinyi liu, zhijun zhao, and guoxiang liu 14 · Early agriculture in Japan 353 simon kaner and ken’ichi yano 15 · The Nara basin paddies, Japan 387 ken’ichi okada (translated by simon kaner) fi 16 · Early agriculture in Southeast Asia and the Paci c 411 huw barton 17 · Swamp cultivators at Kuk, New Guinea 445 tim denham 18 · Early agriculture in sub-Saharan Africa to c. 500 CE 472 paul j. lane 19 · The Tichitt tradition in the West African Sahel 499 kevin c. macdonald 20 · Early agriculture in the Americas 514 deborah m. pearsall viii Contents 21 · Nanchoc valley, Peru 539 tom d. dillehay 22 · Early agricultural society in Europe 555 alasdair whittle 23 · Pioneer farmers at Brzes´c´ Kujawski, Poland 589 peter bogucki and ryszard grygiel Index 612 ix

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The development of agriculture has often been described as the most important change in all of human history. Volume 2 of the Cambridge World History series explores the origins and impact of agriculture and agricultural communities, and also discusses issues associated with pastoralism and hunter-f
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