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161 Pages·1994·18.828 MB·English
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Studies in Latin American Ethnohistory &. Archaeology Joyce Marcus, General Editor Volume I A Fuego y Sangre: Early Zapotec Imperialism in the Cuicatlan Canada, Oaxaca, by Elsa M. Redmond. Memoirs of the Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, No. 16 (1983). $15. Volume II Irrigation & the Cuicatec Ecosystem: A Study of Agriculture & Civilization in North Central Oaxaca, by Joseph W. Hopkins III. Memoirs of the Museum of Anthropol ogy, University of Michigan, No. 17 (1984). $15. Volume III Aztec City States, by Mary G. Hodge. Memoirs of the Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, No. 18 (1984). $15. Volume IV Conflicts over Coca Fields in XVIth-Century Peru, by Maria Rostworowski de Diez Canseco. Memoirs of the Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, No. 21 (1988). $19.50 Volume V Tribal and Chiefly Warfare in South America, by Elsa M. Redmond. Memoirs of the Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, No. 28 (1994). MEMOIRS OF THE MUSEUM OF ANTHROPOLOGY UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN NUMBER 28 Studies in Latin American Ethnohistory &.. Archaeology Joyce Marcus, General Editor Volume V Tribal and Chiefly Warfare in South America by Elsa M. Redmond ANN ARBOR 1994 Coveirl lustrSaixttieoenn.t hw-ocoednictluultryu sotfra T auptiinoanaq tuti aangc akithne sTatm oisoe ttle ofm eUnbtatuba, ont he c Boraasztti hlofwa,at ws i tnebsyHsa enSdst addeunr hiincsga pttihveiirtn1ey 5 5 S5t.adreencn otuehdo wtw enty-five cnaoeofs w arraittoarcsUk beatdu bwai btohw asn adr rotwoths e s ouon fhdo rnThse.m aldefeen dresto oukp a rmpeods itions behinthdes ettlepmaelnitws'hasidth leeew omeannc dh ilrdreemna ihneeldp lients hcseel ny t uenra,bt lfloee eH.u mahne ad tropchaibnees se e na top talplo sattos n een ofd t hevl ilage's Rpeadlra friwosnmaS dtea.d1 e94n4 :64. Thisse riipsare tislla y suppobryatg erndat --aii dNno4.45 3fr om theW enner -FoGurnednafotrAi notnh ropological Research, whos eDireocfRt eosre a Lric Othsa,mundosffeenrbo,et deh n couraagnehdem ledpnu tr tihn pegr epaor fatethg irnoatn porposal. © 199by4t hRee geofnt thUsen i verosfMi itcyh igan ThMeu seoufAm n thropology All right rseserved Prnitietndh UeniStteadto feA mseri ca ISBN 978-0-915703-35-7 (paper) ISBN 978-1-951519-98-8 (ebook) ThUen iveofrM siicthyiM guasne o ufAm nthrocpuorrleopngutybl lyti hrsehmeeo sn ogsrearpAihne tsh:r opological Papers, Memoirasnd,T echnRiecpao lWr et hsa.voev esre vetnittiyln pe rsi Fnotar.c omp claettaewlroigtt ,oMe u seoufm AnthropPoulb­loigcya tions, 400 A9r bMoMurls, e 4u8m1s0o 9crB- al1ld0lg7 .97(,,63 41A-3n0)n485. LibrofaC royn gCraetsasl oging-Diant-aP ublication RedmoEnldMs,.a Triabnacdlh iwearffalryie nS outh /Ab myEe lrMsi.acR aedmond. p.c m-. (Memooiftr hMseu seoufAm n thropUonliovgeyr,s ity ofM ichi;ng oa2.n8 ( )S tuidnLia etAsim ne riectahnn oh&i story archaevo.5l )o gy; Inclbuidbelsi ogrreafeprheinccaels . ISB0N- 91570(3a-lp3ka5.p- elr ) 1.I ndioafSn osuA tmhe rica-W2arf.Ca hriee.fd oms-South Amer3i.cSa o.uA tmhe rica-An4t.Si hquIuanirdt iiaenss.- Warfare. Yanomlnamdoi ans--WarfIaT.ri et.Il ISe.e. r IiIeSIse..r ies: StudiinLe astA imne rican e&t ahrncohha;iev so.5tl .oo rgyy GN2.Mn5o22.8 [F2230.l.W37] 30s6-<l c20 [3.063' 6'08998] 941-8061 Thpea puesrei dnt hpiusb limceaetttihrsoee n q uiroeftm hAeeNn StSIst anZd3a9r.d4 8-1984o fP( aPpeerrm)a nence Introduction to Volume V by Joyce Marcus This volume, the fifth in our series entitled Studies in Latin American Ethnohistory & Archaeol ogy, is the product of more than a decade of research by Elsa Redmond. Redmond has been amassing ethnohistoric, ethnographic, and archaeological data on warfare in Latin America, particularly north ern South America. Taken together, those data have increasingly convinced her that warfare played a major role in the cultures of many tribes and chiefdoms throughout the region. When Redmond compared and evaluated those data, she began to see important differences between tribal and chiefly warfare, as well as striking similarities shared by groups at the same sociopolitical level. Specifying these differences and similarities is one of Redmond's most valuable contributions (see Chapter 4). In this volume we learn of tribal warfare among the Jfvaro and Yanomamo, chiefly warfare among groups in Colombia and Panama, and the archaeological evidence for similar warfare patterns from a wide range of sites in the New World. We also see Redmond tackle the role of warfare in the evolution of chiefdoms. She suggests that warfare spurred the development of chiefdoms by turning some renowned warriors into powerful chiefs (see Chapter 7). To maximize the data of northern South America and lower Central America, Redmond had to wear three different hats-that of ethnologist, ethnohistorian, and archaeologist. Wearing her eth nologist's hat, she surveyed the extensive ethnographic literature for northern South America, focus ing on several themes: the motivations for warfare; the preparations for battle; the weapons used; the timing and seasonality of battles; the location of battles; the range of associated rites (such as headshrinking, ritual bathing, making of poison to tip arrows, cannibalism); the injuries and losses in human life on both sides; and the gains (booty, captives, land, wives). Wearing the hat of an ethnohistorian, Redmond searched sixteenth- and seventeenth-century documents with the idea of collecting detailed, eyewitness reports of groups who had only recently come into contact with the Spaniards. Those ethnohistoric data are extremely important, since a few scholars (e.g., Ferguson 1990, 1992) have attributed the region's endemic warfare to contact with Europeans. Redmond's data and those of others (Carneiro 1981, 1991; Spencer 1991) strongly suggest such conflict is prehispanic. Redmond's ethnographic and ethnohistoric studies reveal dimensions of warfare that the archae ological record does not preserve-the range of motives, the size of the military forces, the number of losses, the location of various pre-battle and post-battle rites, the number of women taken, the seasonality of warfare, and so forth. Redmond shows that South American tribesmen plan their raids for the dry season, since intervillage travel is more difficult during the rainy season. They even go so far as to conduct raids on enemy villages at the end of the dry season in order to postpone the enemy's counterraid until the following dry season. Although archaeologists often find it difficult to document the seasonality of warfare, a preference for dry season warfare can also be shown for the ancient Maya, because sufficient hieroglyphic texts exist for certain centuries (Marcus 1992:430- 433). Without such texts, the task is much tougher. v Finally, wearing the hat of an archaeologist, Redmond began to consider how archaeologists could improve their research designs to increase the likelihood of recovering more information about warfare. She proposes a comprehensive research design that focuses on increasingly larger units of study-from the feature to the household, to the community, to the region, and to the interregional level. The current strategy of excavating mounds or making test pits only in the very center of a site would rarely reveal the kinds of evidence she has documented with ethnohistoric and ethnographic data. Archaeologists often fail to look for features on the periphery of sites, such as palisades of wooden logs, cane, vines, and lianas which form a ring circumscribing the settlement. Furthermore, archaeologists have virtually no methods for documenting battles that took place in between settle ments. Sadly, survey is unlikely to recover such data. Ethnologists and ethnohistorians have much to learn from this book because of its strong compara tive approach and its integration of different lines of evidence. For their part, archaeologists will profit from the following kinds of evidence that Redmond presents: (1) Boundary markers, buffer zones, or no-man's-lands. When extensive regions have been surveyed and mapped, it has sometimes been possible to locate boundaries between social and political units (e.g., DeBoer 1981; Redmond 1983). Such boundaries may be completely human made, or they may be minimal modifications of the natural landscape. (2) Fortifications. These include moats, deep hidden trenches filled with sharpened stakes set in their floors, timber palisades lashed together by vines, or earthen walls (Spencer and Redmond 1992; Spencer 1991). There may be inner and outer palisades, or concentric rings of defensive features, increasing the chances of recovering such constructions. (3) Burial and skeletal data. Having a large skeletal population for study is an advantage. Evidence of pre-mortem and postmortem trauma are both important. Healed wounds and fractures might indicate participation in battles. Unhealed fractures such as parry fractures and skull fractures might indicate death was caused in battle. Postmortem treatment, such as cut marks on the cervical vertebrae, might indicate decapitation. Keeping skulls and mandibles as trophies is also known. If many victims of war were carried off by the enemy, left on the battlefield, or buried outside the site being excavated, victims of warfare may be underestimated. (4) Weapons. Chipped-stone projectiles used as arrow, spear, or dart points, stone axes, and broadswords studded with obsidian blades are potentially recoverable. If made of wood, cane, or vegetal fiber, weapons such as lances, spears, arrows with feathers, clubs, and slings would be difficult to recover. (5) Settlement pattern changes. Abrupt changes in the location of sites, such as a shift of all sites from the valley floor to defensible hilltop locations, may suggest concern for defense and the threat of warfare. The abrupt abandonment of many houses in a village with no evidence of reoccupation is another example (e.g., Redmond 1983). (6) Burned buildings or sites. Widespread burning of several scattered and noncontiguous build ings; evidence of whole artifacts, whole vessels, and food discarded and abandoned on the floors of burned houses might be recoverable. Unburied skeletons, lying abandoned on house floors, could be further evidence. (7) Abrupt or drastic changes in the cultural sequence. The complete interruption of local ceramic or architectural styles, especially if they are replaced by those of another polity, has been used to infer warfare in various parts of the world (e.g., Spencer 1982; Redmond 1983; Webster 1993). (8) Iconography. Artistic scenes that show weapons, warriors fighting, men with warpaint, nude or bound prisoners, and so on, have been used as evidence of warfare. At the chiefly level, we might expect more of these depictions because of the endemic rivalry and competition between chiefs. Stone monument galleries displaying hundreds of nude and mutilated prisoners, such as those constructed at Cerro Sechfn in Peru and Monte Alban in Mexico, come to mind. This volume should serve as a catalyst for scholars interested in the diversity of prestate warfare patterns, and as a challenge to archaeologists concerned with the role of warfare in the evolution of complex societies. vi Bibliography Carneiro, Robert L. 1981 The chiefdom: precursor of the state. In: The Transition to Statehood in the New World, edited by Grant D. Jones and Robert R. Kautz, pp. 37-79. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 1991 The nature of the chiefdom as revealed by evidence from the Cauca Valley of Colombia. In: Profiles in Cultural Evolution: Papers from a Conference in Honor of Elman R. Service, edited by A. Terry Rambo and Kathleen Gillogly, pp. 167-190. Anthropological Papers of the Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, No. 85. Ann Arbor. DeBoer, Warren R. 1981 Buffer zones in the cultural ecology of aboriginal Amazonia: an ethnohistorical approach. American Antiquity 46:364-377. Ferguson, R. Brian 1990 Blood of the Leviathan: western contact and warfare in Amazonia. American Ethnologist 17(2):237-257. 1992 A savage encounter: western contact and the Yanomarni war complex. In: War in the Tribal Zone, edited by R. Brian Ferguson and Neil L. Whitehead, pp. 199-227. Santa Fe, N.M.: School of American Research. Marcus, Joyce 1992 Mesoamerican Writing Systems: Propaganda, Myth, and History in Four Ancient Civilizations. Princeton: Princeton University Press. Redmond, Elsa M. 1983 A Fuego y Sangre: Early Zapotec Imperialism in the Cuicatlan Caiiada, Oaxaca. Studies in Latin American Ethnohis tory & Archaeology, Volume I. Memoirs of the Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, No. 16. Ann Arbor. Spencer, Charles S. 1982 The Cuicatlan Caiiada and Monte Alban: A Study of Primary State Formation. New York: Academic Press. 1991 Coevolution and the development of Venezuelan chiefdoms. In: Profiles in Cultural Evolution: Papers from a Conference in Honor of Elman R. Service, edited by A. Terry Rambo and Kathleen Gillogly, pp. 137-165. Anthropological Papers of the Museum of Anthropology, University of Michigan, No. 85. Ann Arbor. Spencer, Charles S. and Elsa M. Redmond 1992 Prehispanic chiefdoms of the western Venezuelan llanos. World Archaeology 24(1):134-157. Webster, David 1993 The study of Maya warfare: what it tells us about the Maya and what it tells us about Maya Archaeology. In: Lowland Maya Civilization in the Eighth Century A.D., edited by Jeremy A. Sabloff and John S. Henderson, pp. 415-444. Washington, D.C.: Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection. vii Contents Introduction to Volume V ......................................................... v Figures ... .......................... '" ......................................... x Tables .... .... , ................................................................ xi Acknowledgments ............................................................... xii Chapter 1 Introduction .......................................................... 1 Uncentralized tribes and centralized chiefdoms ........................................ 1 Chapter 2 Tribal Warfare Patterns ................................................ 3 Jivaro Warfare ................................................................. 3 The nature and objectives of warfare ............................................. 3 Preparations for war .......................................................... 3 Organization of war parties ..................................................... 5 Warfare strategies, weapons, and tactics .......................................... 5 Defensive strategies ........................................................... 8 Post-war rituals and practices .................................................. 10 Mortuary treatment .......................................................... 12 Y anomam6 Warfare ............................................................ 15 The nature and objectives of warfare ............................................ 15 Preparations for war ......................................................... 15 Organization of war parties .................................................... 16 Warfare strategies, weapons, and tactics ......................................... 17 Defensive strategies .......................................................... 19 Post-war rituals and practices .................................................. 21 Mortuary treatment .......................................................... 22 Chapter 3 Chiefly Warfare Patterns .............................................. 25 Warfare in the Cauca Valley ..................................................... 25 The nature and objectives of warfare ............................................ 25 Preparations for war ......................................................... 27 Organization of war parties .................................................... 27 Warfare strategies, weapons, and tactics ......................................... 28 Defensive strategies .......................................................... 29 Post-war rituals and practices .................................................. 30 Mortuary treatment .......................................................... 31 Tairona Warfare ............................................................... 32 The nature and objectives of warfare ............................................ 32 Preparations for war ......................................................... 32 Organization of war parties .................................................... 34 Warfare strategies, weapons, and tactics ......................................... 34 Defensive strategies .......................................................... 36 Post-war rituals and practices .................................................. 37 Mortuary treatment .......................................................... 37 viii Warfare among the Panamanian Chiefdoms ......................................... 37 The nature and objectives of warfare ............................................ 39 Preparations for war . . ....................................................... 40 Organization of war parties .................................................... 41 Warfare strategies, weapons, and tactics ......................................... 42 Defensive strategies .......................................................... 45 Post-war rituals and practices .................................................. 46 Mortuary treatment .......................................................... 48 Chapter 4 Tribal Versus Chiefly Warfare .......................................... 51 Objectives .................................................................... 51 Organization .................................................................. 51 Pre-War Rituals ............................................................... 52 Offensive Tactics .............................................................. 53 Defensive Tactics .............................................................. 54 Post-War Rituals .............................................................. 55 Funerary Treatment of Warriors .................................................. 56 Chapter 5 The Archaeology of Tribal Warfare ..................................... 57 Investigating Warfare Archaeologically ............................................ 57 Archaeology of Tribal Warfare ................................................... 59 Preparations for war ......................................................... 59 Pre-war rituals .............................................................. 62 Warfare tactics .............................................................. 62 Defensive tactics ............................................................ 69 Post-war rituals ............................................................. 74 Mortuary treatment .......................................................... 79 Chapter 6 The Archaeology of Chiefly Warfare ..................................... 83 Preparations for War ........................................................... 83 Arrow Poisons ................................................................ 84 Pre-War Rituals ............................................................... 87 Organization of War Parties ...................................................... 89 Warfare Tactics ............................................................... 93 Defensive Tactics .............................................................. 96 Post-war Rituals .............................................................. 102 Ritual Cannibalism. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103 Display of Human War Trophies ................................................. 108 Mortuary Treatment ........................................................... 109 Chapter 7 Conclusion ......................................................... 117 The Authority of Tribal War Leaders and Warring Chiefs ............................. 117 The Ideological Motives of Warfare .............................................. 118 The Alternating Roles of Warfare and Exchange .................................... 120 Warfare and the Development of Centralized Societies ............................... 123 Sources of power ........................................................... 124 Legitimation of power ....................................................... 127 Favorable conditions ........................................................ 128 Conclusion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 130 Bibliography .................................................................. 133 Notes ......................................................................... 143 Appendix: Author's Translations of Spanish Text ................................... 145 ix

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