CY118-FM 0521822459 CY118/Trigger December16,2006 14:0 CharCount=0 Understanding Early Civilizations This book offers the first detailed comparative study of the seven best- documented early civilizations: ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia, Shang China,theAztecsandadjacentpeoplesintheValleyofMexico,theClassic Maya,theInka,andtheYoruba.Unlikepreviousstudies,equalattentionis paid to similarities and differences in their sociopolitical organization, eco- nomic systems, religion, and culture. Many of this study’s findings are sur- prising and provocative. Agricultural systems, technologies, and economic behaviourturnouttohavebeenfarmorediversethanwasexpected.Yetonly two basic types of political organization are found – city-states and territo- rialstates–andtheyinfluencedeconomicbehaviouratleastasmuchasdid environmentaldifferences.Underlyingvariousreligiousbeliefswasasingle, distinctivepatternthatisuniquetoearlycivilizationandmusthavedeveloped independentlyindifferentregionsoftheworld.Manyothersharedreligious beliefsappeartohavebeentransformationsofasharedheritagefromearlier times.Esteemedlifestylesthatdifferedidiosyncraticallyfromoneearlycivi- lizationtoanotherinfluencedhumanbehaviourinwaysthatoftenpersisted despite changing material and political circumstances. These findings and manyotherschallengenotonlycurrentunderstandingsofearlycivilizations butalsothetheoreticalfoundationsofmodernarchaeologyandanthropology. Thekeytounderstandingearlycivilizationsliesnotintheirhistoricalconnec- tionsbutinwhattheycantellusaboutsimilaritiesanddifferencesinhuman behaviour. Bruce G. Trigger was James McGill Professor in the Department of An- thropologyatMcGillUniversity.HereceivedhisPhDfromYaleUniversity andhascarriedoutarchaeologicalresearchinEgyptandtheSudan.Hisin- terests included the comparative study of early civilizations, the history of archaeology,andarchaeologicalandanthropologicaltheory.Hereceivedvar- ious scholarly awards, including the presitigious Prix Le´on-Ge´rin from the Quebec government, for his sustained contributions to the social sciences. He was an honorary Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland and anhonorarymemberofthePrehistoricSociety(U.K.).Hisnumerousbooks includeTheChildrenofAataentsic:AHistoryoftheHuronPeopleto1660 (1976),AHistoryofArchaeologicalThought(Cambridge1989),EarlyCiv- ilizations:AncientEgyptinContext(1993),SocioculturalEvolution(1998), andTheCambridgeHistoryoftheNativePeoplesoftheAmericas,Volume1 (Cambridge1996),co-editedwithWilcombE.Washburn. i CY118-FM 0521822459 CY118/Trigger February4,2003 11:14 CharCount=0 ii CY118-FM 0521822459 CY118/Trigger February4,2003 11:14 CharCount=0 Understanding Early Civilizations A Comparative Study BRUCE G. TRIGGER McGillUniversity iii CY118-FM 0521822459 CY118/Trigger November28,2006 4:33 CharCount=0 cambridgeuniversitypress Cambridge,NewYork,Melbourne,Madrid,CapeTown,Singapore,Sa˜oPaulo CambridgeUniversityPress 32AvenueoftheAmericas,NewYork,ny10013-2473,usa www.cambridge.org Informationonthistitle:www.cambridge.org/9780521822459 (cid:2)C BruceG.Trigger2003 Thispublicationisincopyright.Subjecttostatutoryexception andtotheprovisionsofrelevantcollectivelicensingagreements, noreproductionofanypartmaytakeplacewithout thewrittenpermissionofCambridgeUniversityPress. Firstpublished2003 Firstpaperbackedition2007 PrintedintheUnitedStatesofAmerica AcatalogrecordforthispublicationisavailablefromtheBritishLibrary. LibraryofCongressCataloginginPublicationData Trigger,BruceG. Understandingearlycivilizations:acomparativestudy/BruceG.Trigger. p. cm. Includesbibliographicalreferencesandindex. isbn0-521-82245-9 1.Civilization,Ancient. 2.Socialarchaeology. 3.Prehistoricpeoples. I.Title. cb311.t77 2003 930–dc21 2002074052 isbn978-0-521-822459hardback isbn978-0-521-70545-5paperback CambridgeUniversityPresshasnoresponsibilityfor thepersistenceoraccuracyofurlsforexternalor third-partyInternetWebsitesreferredtointhispublication anddoesnotguaranteethatanycontentonsuch Websitesis,orwillremain,accurateorappropriate. iv CY118-FM 0521822459 CY118/Trigger February4,2003 11:14 CharCount=0 Contents ListofIllustrations pagevii Preface ix Introduction 1 RationalismandRelativism 3 2 ComparativeStudies 15 3 Defining‘EarlyCivilization’ 40 4 EvidenceandInterpretation 53 Sociopolitical Organization 5 Kingship 71 6 States:CityandTerritorial 92 7 Urbanism 120 8 ClassSystemsandSocialMobility 142 9 FamilyOrganizationandGenderRoles 167 10 Administration 195 11 Law 221 12 MilitaryOrganization 240 13 SociopoliticalConstantsandVariables 264 Economy 14 FoodProduction 279 15 LandOwnership 315 16 TradeandCraftSpecialization 338 v CY118-FM 0521822459 CY118/Trigger February4,2003 11:14 CharCount=0 vi Contents 17 AppropriationofWealth 375 18 EconomicConstantsandVariables 395 Cognitive and Symbolic Aspects 19 ConceptionsoftheSupernatural 409 20 CosmologyandCosmogony 444 21 Cult 472 22 Priests,Festivals,andthePoliticsoftheSupernatural 495 23 TheIndividualandtheUniverse 522 24 EliteArtandArchitecture 541 25 LiteracyandSpecializedKnowledge 584 26 ValuesandPersonalAspirations 626 27 CulturalConstantsandVariables 638 Discussion 28 CultureandReason 653 29 Conclusion 684 References 689 Index 733 CY118-FM 0521822459 CY118/Trigger February4,2003 11:14 CharCount=0 Illustrations 2.1 Mapshowinglocationsofsevenearlycivilizations page30 2.2 Comparativechronologyofearlycivilizations 32 6.1 Mapsofcity-statecivilizations,atcommonscale 95 6.2 Mapsofterritorialstates,atcommonscale 105 7.1 UrbancentresinMesopotamiaandamongtheYoruba 128 7.2 UrbancentresinMesoamerica 130 7.3 UrbancentresinEgyptandtheInkakingdom 135 7.4 UrbancentresinChina 138 9.1 Housesinearlycivilizations 170 12.1 Inkabattlescene 246 12.2 Mesopotamianbattlescenes 258 14.1 Mesopotamianirrigationsystem 291 14.2 Egyptianagriculturalbasinsystem 296 14.3 AgricultureintheValleyofMexico 305 16.1 Femaleweaversinearlycivilizations 361 19.1 Deitiesasdepictedinearlycivilizations 427 24.1 ClassicMayaandValleyofMexicopaintingstyles 546 24.2 EarlyShangritualvesselscastinbronzefromZhengzhou 547 24.3 Statuesinearlycivilizations 548 24.4 Inkaartstyles 552 24.5 Kingssubduingenemies 560 24.6 Templesonraisedplatformsincity-states 569 24.7 Royalpalacesincity-states 574 25.1 EarlyrecordinginMesopotamiaandEgypt 589 25.2 DevelopmentofMesopotamiansigns 590 25.3 Formalcharacteristicsofwritingsystemsinearly civilizations 592 vii CY118-FM 0521822459 CY118/Trigger February4,2003 11:14 CharCount=0 viii CY118-FM 0521822459 CY118/Trigger February4,2003 11:14 CharCount=0 Preface In1959,myfinalyearasanundergraduateattheUniversityofToronto,Ipro- ducedapaperentitled‘ADefinitionofUrbanism’foracourseinwhichRonald Cohen, then a young assistant professor, sought to introduce his students to themostrecenttrendsinecologicalandneoevolutionaryanalysis.Icompared the ecological, demographic, economic, social, political, and cultural charac- teristicsoffiveurbancentres:Tenochtitlan,Akhetaton,Rome,andanancient Mesopotamian and a medieval Western European city. I concluded that the eclectic range of features exhibited by these urban centres did not support GideonSjoberg’s(1955,1960)generalconstructofthe‘preindustrialcity’and that the early development of cities must have been multilinear rather than unilinear. My recent rediscovery of this early work in a dusty filing cabinet reminded me of how long I have been interested in comparative studies of earlycivilizations. Intheautumnof1959,asagraduatestudentatYaleUniversity,Ihadtheop- portunitytostudythetheoryandmethodsofcross-culturalcomparisonunder theexpertguidanceofGeorgePeterMurdockandClellanFord.In1963–64, I learned still more about this subject from Raoul Naroll, a senior colleague at Northwestern University. To these anthropologists, none still living, the presentworkowesagreatdebt. After that time, my interest in comparative studies was in abeyance while Iworkedonsettlementarchaeology,historicalarchaeology,andthehistoryof archaeology. Since 1970, however, I have taught approximately every second year a course at McGill University entitled ‘The Social Institutions of Early Civilizations’ and more recently ‘Comparative Studies of Early Civilizations’. Thiscourseencouragedmyinterestinhowearlycivilizationsfunctionedand resultedinthepublicationofafewpapersbasedonthecomparativestudyof suchsocieties(Trigger1972,1976b,1979,1985a,1985b,1990a,1990b). ix
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