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Chiefdom

A chiefdom is a form of hierarchical political organization in non-industrial societies usually based on kinship, and in which formal leadership is monopolized by the legitimate senior members of select families or 'houses'. These elites form a political-ideological aristocracy relative to the general group.[1]

Concept edit

In anthropological theory, one model of human social development rooted in ideas of cultural evolution describes a chiefdom as a form of social organization more complex than a tribe or a band society, and less complex than a state or a civilization.

Within general theories of cultural evolution, chiefdoms are characterized by permanent and institutionalized forms of political leadership (the chief), centralized decision-making, economic interdependence, and social hierarchy.

Chiefdoms are described as intermediate between tribes and states in the progressive scheme of sociopolitical development formulated by Elman Service: band - tribe - chiefdom - state.[2] A chief's status is based on kinship, so it is inherited or ascribed, in contrast to the achieved status of Big Man leaders of tribes.[3] Another feature of chiefdoms is therefore pervasive social inequality. They are ranked societies, according to the scheme of progressive sociopolitical development formulated by Morton Fried: egalitarian - ranked - stratified - state.[4]

The most succinct definition of a chiefdom in anthropology is by Robert L. Carneiro: "An autonomous political unit comprising a number of villages or communities under the permanent control of a paramount chief" (Carneiro 1981: 45).

Chiefdoms in archaeological theory edit

In archaeological theory, Service's definition of chiefdoms as “redistribution societies with a permanent central agency of coordination” (Service 1962: 144) has been most influential. Many archaeologists, however, dispute Service's reliance upon redistribution as central to chiefdom societies, and point to differences in the basis of finance (staple finance v. wealth finance).[5] Service argued that chief rose to assume a managerial status to redistribute agricultural surplus to ecologically specialized communities within this territory (staple finance). Yet in re-studying the Hawaiian chiefdoms used as his case study, Timothy Earle observed that communities were rather self-sufficient. What the chief redistributed was not staple goods, but prestige goods to his followers that helped him to maintain his authority (wealth finance).[6]

Some scholars contest the utility of the chiefdom model for archaeological inquiry. The most forceful critique comes from Timothy Pauketat, whose Chiefdom and Other Archaeological Delusions[7] outlines how chiefdoms fail to account for the high variability of the archaeological evidence for middle-range societies. Pauketat argues that the evolutionary underpinnings of the chiefdom model are weighed down by racist and outdated theoretical baggage that can be traced back to Lewis Morgan's 19th-century cultural evolution. From this perspective, pre-state societies are treated as underdeveloped, the savage and barbaric phases that preceded civilization. Pauketat argues that the chiefdom type is a limiting category that should be abandoned, and takes as his main case study Cahokia, a central place for the Mississippian culture of North America.

Pauketat's provocation, however, fails to offer a sound alternative to the chiefdom type. For while he claims that chiefdoms are a delusion, he describes Cahokia as a civilization. This upholds rather than challenges the evolutionary scheme he contests.[8][further explanation needed]

Simple category edit

Chiefdoms are characterized by the centralization of authority and pervasive inequality. At least two inherited social classes (elite and commoner) are present. (The ancient Hawaiian chiefdoms had as many as four social classes.) An individual might change social class during a lifetime by extraordinary behavior. A single lineage/family of the elite class becomes the ruling elite of the chiefdom, with the greatest influence, power, and prestige. Kinship is typically an organizing principle, while marriage, age, and sex can affect one's social status and role.

A single simple chiefdom is generally composed of a central community surrounded by or near a number of smaller subsidiary communities. All of the communities recognize the authority of a single kin group or individual with hereditary centralized power, dwelling in the primary community. Each community will have its own leaders, which are usually in a tributary and/or subservient relationship to the ruling elite of the primary community.

Complex category edit

A complex chiefdom is a group of simple chiefdoms controlled by a single paramount center and ruled by a paramount chief. Complex chiefdoms have two or even three tiers of political hierarchy. Nobles are clearly distinct from commoners and do not usually engage in any form of agricultural production. The higher members of society consume most of the goods that are passed up the hierarchy as a tribute.

Reciprocal obligations are fulfilled by the nobles carrying out rituals that only they can perform. They may also make token, symbolic redistributions of food and other goods. In two- or three-tiered chiefdoms, higher-ranking chiefs have control over a number of lesser ranking individuals, each of whom controls specific territory or social units. Political control rests on the chief's ability to maintain access to a sufficiently large body of tribute, passed up the line by lesser chiefs. These lesser chiefs in turn collect from those below them, from communities close to their own center. At the apex of the status hierarchy sits the paramount.

Anthropologists and archaeologists have demonstrated through research that chiefdoms are a relatively unstable form of social organization. They are prone to cycles of collapse and renewal, in which tribal units band together, expand in power, fragment through some form of social stress, and band together again. An example of this kind of social organization were the Germanic Peoples who conquered the western Roman Empire in the 5th century CE. Although commonly referred to as tribes, anthropologists classified their society as chiefdoms. They had a complex social hierarchy consisting of kings, a warrior aristocracy, common freemen, serfs, and slaves.

The Native American tribes sometimes had ruling kings or satraps (governors) in some areas and regions. The Cherokee, for example, had an imperial-family ruling system over a long period of history. The early Spanish explorers in the Americas reported on the Indian kings and kept extensive notes during what is now called the conquest. Some of the native tribes in the Americas had princes, nobles, and various classes and castes. The "Great Sun" was somewhat like the Great Khans of Asia and eastern Europe. Much like an emperor, the Great Sun of North America is the best example of chiefdoms and imperial kings in North American Indian history. The Aztecs of Mexico had a similar culture.

Chiefdoms on the Indian subcontinent edit

The Indus Valley Civilisation (3300 BCE - 1700 BCE) was a hegemony of chiefdoms with supreme chiefs in each and a system of subsidiary chiefs. The ranks of the chiefs included ordinary chiefs, elders, priests or cattle-owners and head chiefs.[9]

The Arthashastra, a work on politics written some time between the 4th century BC and 2nd century AD by Indian author Chanakya, similarly describes the Rajamandala (or "Raja-mandala,") as circles of friendly and enemy states surrounding the state of a king (raja).[10][11] Also see Suhas Chatterjee, Mizo Chiefs and the Chiefdom (1995).[12]

Chiefdoms in Hispaniola edit

Native chieftain system in China edit

Tusi (Chinese: 土司), also known as Headmen or Chieftains, were tribal leaders recognized as imperial officials by the Yuan, Ming, and Qing-era Chinese governments, principally in Yunnan. The arrangement is generally known as the Native Chieftain System (Chinese: 土司制度; pinyin: Tǔsī Zhìdù).

Alternatives to chiefdoms edit

In prehistoric South-West Asia, alternatives to chiefdoms were the non-hierarchical systems of complex acephalous communities, with a pronounced autonomy of single-family households. These communities have been analyzed recently by Berezkin, who suggests the Apa Tanis as their ethnographic parallel (Berezkin 1995). Frantsouzoff (2000) finds a more developed example of such type of polities in ancient South Arabia in the Wadi Hadhramawt of the 1st millennium BCE.

In Southeast Asian history up to the early 19th century, the metaphysical view of the cosmos called the mandala (i.e., circle) is used to describe a Southeast Asian political model, which in turn describes the diffuse patterns of political power distributed among Mueang (principalities) where circles of influence were more important than central power. The concept counteracts modern tendencies to look for unified political power like that of the large European kingdoms and nation states, which one scholar posited were an inadvertent byproduct of 15th-century advances in map-making technologies.[13][14]

Nikolay Kradin has demonstrated that an alternative to the state seems to be represented by the supercomplex chiefdoms created by some nomads of Eurasia. The number of structural levels within such chiefdoms appears to be equal, or even to exceed those within the average state, but they have a different type of political organization and political leadership. Such types of political entities do not appear to have been created by the agriculturists (e.g., Kradin 2000, 2002, 2003, 2004).

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Berezkin, Yu. E. 1995. "Alternative Models of Middle Range Society" and " 'Individualistic' Asia vs. 'Collectivistic' America?", in Alternative Pathways to Early State, Ed. N. N. Kradin & V. A. Lynsha. Vladivostok: Dal'nauka: 75–83.
  • Carneiro, R. L. 1981. "The Chiefdom: Precursor of the State", The Transition to Statehood in the New World / Ed. by G. D. Jones and R. R. Kautz, pp. 37–79. Cambridge, UK – New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
  • Carneiro, R. L. 1991. "The Nature of the Chiefdom as Revealed by Evidence from the Cauca Valley of Colombia", Profiles in Cultural Evolution / Ed. by A.T. Rambo and K. Gillogly, pp. 167–90. Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press.
  • Earle, T. K. 1997. How Chiefs Came to Power: The Political Economy of Prehistory. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.
  • Frantsouzoff S. A. 2000. "The Society of Raybūn", in Alternatives of Social Evolution. Ed. by N.N. Kradin, A.V. Korotayev, Dmitri Bondarenko, V. de Munck, and P.K. Wason (p. 258-265). Vladivostok: Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences.
  • Korotayev, Andrey V. 2000. Chiefdom: Precursor of the Tribe?, in Alternatives of Social Evolution. Ed. by N.N. Kradin, A.V. Korotayev, Dmitri Bondarenko, V. de Munck, and P.K. Wason (p. 242-257). Vladivostok: Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences; reprinted in: The Early State, its Alternatives and Analogues. Ed. by Leonid Grinin et al. (р. 300–324). Volgograd: Uchitel', 2004.
  • Kradin, Nikolay N. 2000. "Nomadic Empires in Evolutionary Perspective", in Alternatives of Social Evolution. Ed. by N.N. Kradin, A.V. Korotayev, Dmitri Bondarenko, V. de Munck, and P.K. Wason (p. 274-288). Vladivostok: Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences; reprinted in: The Early State, its Alternatives and Analogues. Ed. by Leonid Grinin et al. (р. 501–524). Volgograd: Uchitel', 2004.
  • Kradin, Nikolay N. 2002. "Nomadism, Evolution, and World-Systems: Pastoral Societies in Theories of Historical Development", Journal of World-System Research 8: 368–388.
  • Kradin, Nikolay N. 2003. "Nomadic Empires: Origins, Rise, Decline", Nomadic Pathways in Social Evolution. Ed. by N.N. Kradin, Dmitri Bondarenko, and T. Barfield (p. 73-87). Moscow: Center for Civilizational Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences.

References edit

  1. ^ Helm, Mary (2010). Access to Origins: Affines, Ancestors, and Aristocrats. Austin, TX: Univ Of Texas Press. p. 4. ISBN 9780292723740. OCLC 640095710.
  2. ^ Service, Elman R (1976). Primitive Social Organization: An Evolutionary Perspective. Chicago, IL: Random House. ISBN 0394316355. OCLC 974107713.
  3. ^ Sahlins, Marshall D. (1963). "Poor Man, Rich Man, Big-man, Chief: Political Types in Melanesia and Polynesia". Comparative Studies in Society and History. 5 (3): 285–303. doi:10.1017/S0010417500001729. ISSN 1475-2999. S2CID 145254059.
  4. ^ Fried, Morton Herbert (1976). The Evolution of Political Society: An Essay in Political Anthropology. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0075535793. OCLC 748982203.
  5. ^ Earle, Timothy, ed. (2004). Chiefdoms: Power, Economy, and Ideology. Cambridge Univ. Press. ISBN 0521448018. OCLC 611267761.
  6. ^ . Northwestern University. 2017-03-30. Archived from the original on 2017-03-30.
  7. ^ Pauketat, Timothy R (2011). Chiefdoms and Other Archaeological Delusions. AltaMira Press. ISBN 9780759108295. OCLC 768479880.
  8. ^ Beck, Robin (2009). "On Delusions". Native South. 2: 111–120. doi:10.1353/nso.0.0011. S2CID 201784072.
  9. ^ Fairservis, W.A. (1992). The Harappan Civilization and Its Writing: A Model for the Decipherment of the Indus Script. E.J. Brill. p. 133. ISBN 978-81-204-0491-5.
  10. ^ Avari, Burjor (2007). India, the Ancient Past: A History of the Indian Sub-continent from C. 7000 BC to AD 1200. Taylor & Francis. pp. 188–189. ISBN 978-0415356152. from the original on 2022-10-12. Retrieved 2015-11-20.
  11. ^ Singh, Prof. Mahendra Prasad (2011). Indian Political Thought: Themes and Thinkers. Pearson Education India. pp. 11–13. ISBN 978-8131758519. from the original on 2022-10-12. Retrieved 2015-11-20.
  12. ^ Chatterjee, Suhas (1995). Mizo Chiefs and the Chiefdom. Publications Pvt. Ltd. ISBN 8185880727. from the original on 2022-10-12. Retrieved 2015-11-20.
  13. ^ . Wilson Quarterly. Summer 2011. Archived from the original on 11 August 2011. Retrieved 28 July 2011. Source: 'Mapping the Sovereign State: Technology, Authority, and Systemic Change' by Jordan Branch, in International Organization, Volume 65, Issue 1, Winter 2011
  14. ^ Branch, Jordan Nathaniel (2011). Mapping the Sovereign State: Cartographic Technology, Political Authority, and Systemic Change (Ph.D. thesis). University of California, Berkeley. pp. 1–36. doi:10.1017/S0020818310000299. 3469226. from the original on June 29, 2017. Retrieved March 5, 2012. Abstract: How did modern territorial states come to replace earlier forms of organization, defined by a wide variety of territorial and non-territorial forms of authority? Answering this question can help to explain both where our international political system came from and where it might be going....

External links edit

  • Characteristics of Chiefdoms
  • Was the Chiefdom a Congelation of Ideas? by Robert L. Carneiro. In Grinin L. E. et al. Early State, Its Alternatives and Analogues. Volgograd, Uchitel, 2004.

chiefdom, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, april, 2013, lear. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Chiefdom news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message A chiefdom is a form of hierarchical political organization in non industrial societies usually based on kinship and in which formal leadership is monopolized by the legitimate senior members of select families or houses These elites form a political ideological aristocracy relative to the general group 1 Contents 1 Concept 1 1 Chiefdoms in archaeological theory 1 2 Simple category 1 3 Complex category 2 Chiefdoms on the Indian subcontinent 3 Chiefdoms in Hispaniola 4 Native chieftain system in China 5 Alternatives to chiefdoms 6 See also 7 Bibliography 8 References 9 External linksConcept editIn anthropological theory one model of human social development rooted in ideas of cultural evolution describes a chiefdom as a form of social organization more complex than a tribe or a band society and less complex than a state or a civilization Within general theories of cultural evolution chiefdoms are characterized by permanent and institutionalized forms of political leadership the chief centralized decision making economic interdependence and social hierarchy Chiefdoms are described as intermediate between tribes and states in the progressive scheme of sociopolitical development formulated by Elman Service band tribe chiefdom state 2 A chief s status is based on kinship so it is inherited or ascribed in contrast to the achieved status of Big Man leaders of tribes 3 Another feature of chiefdoms is therefore pervasive social inequality They are ranked societies according to the scheme of progressive sociopolitical development formulated by Morton Fried egalitarian ranked stratified state 4 The most succinct definition of a chiefdom in anthropology is by Robert L Carneiro An autonomous political unit comprising a number of villages or communities under the permanent control of a paramount chief Carneiro 1981 45 Chiefdoms in archaeological theory edit In archaeological theory Service s definition of chiefdoms as redistribution societies with a permanent central agency of coordination Service 1962 144 has been most influential Many archaeologists however dispute Service s reliance upon redistribution as central to chiefdom societies and point to differences in the basis of finance staple finance v wealth finance 5 Service argued that chief rose to assume a managerial status to redistribute agricultural surplus to ecologically specialized communities within this territory staple finance Yet in re studying the Hawaiian chiefdoms used as his case study Timothy Earle observed that communities were rather self sufficient What the chief redistributed was not staple goods but prestige goods to his followers that helped him to maintain his authority wealth finance 6 Some scholars contest the utility of the chiefdom model for archaeological inquiry The most forceful critique comes from Timothy Pauketat whose Chiefdom and Other Archaeological Delusions 7 outlines how chiefdoms fail to account for the high variability of the archaeological evidence for middle range societies Pauketat argues that the evolutionary underpinnings of the chiefdom model are weighed down by racist and outdated theoretical baggage that can be traced back to Lewis Morgan s 19th century cultural evolution From this perspective pre state societies are treated as underdeveloped the savage and barbaric phases that preceded civilization Pauketat argues that the chiefdom type is a limiting category that should be abandoned and takes as his main case study Cahokia a central place for the Mississippian culture of North America Pauketat s provocation however fails to offer a sound alternative to the chiefdom type For while he claims that chiefdoms are a delusion he describes Cahokia as a civilization This upholds rather than challenges the evolutionary scheme he contests 8 further explanation needed Simple category edit Chiefdoms are characterized by the centralization of authority and pervasive inequality At least two inherited social classes elite and commoner are present The ancient Hawaiian chiefdoms had as many as four social classes An individual might change social class during a lifetime by extraordinary behavior A single lineage family of the elite class becomes the ruling elite of the chiefdom with the greatest influence power and prestige Kinship is typically an organizing principle while marriage age and sex can affect one s social status and role A single simple chiefdom is generally composed of a central community surrounded by or near a number of smaller subsidiary communities All of the communities recognize the authority of a single kin group or individual with hereditary centralized power dwelling in the primary community Each community will have its own leaders which are usually in a tributary and or subservient relationship to the ruling elite of the primary community Complex category edit A complex chiefdom is a group of simple chiefdoms controlled by a single paramount center and ruled by a paramount chief Complex chiefdoms have two or even three tiers of political hierarchy Nobles are clearly distinct from commoners and do not usually engage in any form of agricultural production The higher members of society consume most of the goods that are passed up the hierarchy as a tribute Reciprocal obligations are fulfilled by the nobles carrying out rituals that only they can perform They may also make token symbolic redistributions of food and other goods In two or three tiered chiefdoms higher ranking chiefs have control over a number of lesser ranking individuals each of whom controls specific territory or social units Political control rests on the chief s ability to maintain access to a sufficiently large body of tribute passed up the line by lesser chiefs These lesser chiefs in turn collect from those below them from communities close to their own center At the apex of the status hierarchy sits the paramount Anthropologists and archaeologists have demonstrated through research that chiefdoms are a relatively unstable form of social organization They are prone to cycles of collapse and renewal in which tribal units band together expand in power fragment through some form of social stress and band together again An example of this kind of social organization were the Germanic Peoples who conquered the western Roman Empire in the 5th century CE Although commonly referred to as tribes anthropologists classified their society as chiefdoms They had a complex social hierarchy consisting of kings a warrior aristocracy common freemen serfs and slaves The Native American tribes sometimes had ruling kings or satraps governors in some areas and regions The Cherokee for example had an imperial family ruling system over a long period of history The early Spanish explorers in the Americas reported on the Indian kings and kept extensive notes during what is now called the conquest Some of the native tribes in the Americas had princes nobles and various classes and castes The Great Sun was somewhat like the Great Khans of Asia and eastern Europe Much like an emperor the Great Sun of North America is the best example of chiefdoms and imperial kings in North American Indian history The Aztecs of Mexico had a similar culture Chiefdoms on the Indian subcontinent editThe Indus Valley Civilisation 3300 BCE 1700 BCE was a hegemony of chiefdoms with supreme chiefs in each and a system of subsidiary chiefs The ranks of the chiefs included ordinary chiefs elders priests or cattle owners and head chiefs 9 The Arthashastra a work on politics written some time between the 4th century BC and 2nd century AD by Indian author Chanakya similarly describes the Rajamandala or Raja mandala as circles of friendly and enemy states surrounding the state of a king raja 10 11 Also see Suhas Chatterjee Mizo Chiefs and the Chiefdom 1995 12 Chiefdoms in Hispaniola editMain article Chiefdoms of HispaniolaNative chieftain system in China editMain article Tusi Tusi Chinese 土司 also known as Headmen or Chieftains were tribal leaders recognized as imperial officials by the Yuan Ming and Qing era Chinese governments principally in Yunnan The arrangement is generally known as the Native Chieftain System Chinese 土司制度 pinyin Tǔsi Zhidu Alternatives to chiefdoms editIn prehistoric South West Asia alternatives to chiefdoms were the non hierarchical systems of complex acephalous communities with a pronounced autonomy of single family households These communities have been analyzed recently by Berezkin who suggests the Apa Tanis as their ethnographic parallel Berezkin 1995 Frantsouzoff 2000 finds a more developed example of such type of polities in ancient South Arabia in the Wadi Hadhramawt of the 1st millennium BCE In Southeast Asian history up to the early 19th century the metaphysical view of the cosmos called the mandala i e circle is used to describe a Southeast Asian political model which in turn describes the diffuse patterns of political power distributed among Mueang principalities where circles of influence were more important than central power The concept counteracts modern tendencies to look for unified political power like that of the large European kingdoms and nation states which one scholar posited were an inadvertent byproduct of 15th century advances in map making technologies 13 14 Nikolay Kradin has demonstrated that an alternative to the state seems to be represented by the supercomplex chiefdoms created by some nomads of Eurasia The number of structural levels within such chiefdoms appears to be equal or even to exceed those within the average state but they have a different type of political organization and political leadership Such types of political entities do not appear to have been created by the agriculturists e g Kradin 2000 2002 2003 2004 See also edit nbsp politics portalChief of the Name Band society Mandala Southeast Asian political model Tanistry TribeBibliography editBerezkin Yu E 1995 Alternative Models of Middle Range Society and Individualistic Asia vs Collectivistic America in Alternative Pathways to Early State Ed N N Kradin amp V A Lynsha Vladivostok Dal nauka 75 83 Carneiro R L 1981 The Chiefdom Precursor of the State The Transition to Statehood in the New World Ed by G D Jones and R R Kautz pp 37 79 Cambridge UK New York NY Cambridge University Press Carneiro R L 1991 The Nature of the Chiefdom as Revealed by Evidence from the Cauca Valley of Colombia Profiles in Cultural Evolution Ed by A T Rambo and K Gillogly pp 167 90 Ann Arbor MI University of Michigan Press Earle T K 1997 How Chiefs Came to Power The Political Economy of Prehistory Stanford CA Stanford University Press Frantsouzoff S A 2000 The Society of Raybun in Alternatives of Social Evolution Ed by N N Kradin A V Korotayev Dmitri Bondarenko V de Munck and P K Wason p 258 265 Vladivostok Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences Korotayev Andrey V 2000 Chiefdom Precursor of the Tribe in Alternatives of Social Evolution Ed by N N Kradin A V Korotayev Dmitri Bondarenko V de Munck and P K Wason p 242 257 Vladivostok Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences reprinted in The Early State its Alternatives and Analogues Ed by Leonid Grinin et al r 300 324 Volgograd Uchitel 2004 Kradin Nikolay N 2000 Nomadic Empires in Evolutionary Perspective in Alternatives of Social Evolution Ed by N N Kradin A V Korotayev Dmitri Bondarenko V de Munck and P K Wason p 274 288 Vladivostok Far Eastern Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences reprinted in The Early State its Alternatives and Analogues Ed by Leonid Grinin et al r 501 524 Volgograd Uchitel 2004 Kradin Nikolay N 2002 Nomadism Evolution and World Systems Pastoral Societies in Theories of Historical Development Journal of World System Research 8 368 388 Kradin Nikolay N 2003 Nomadic Empires Origins Rise Decline Nomadic Pathways in Social Evolution Ed by N N Kradin Dmitri Bondarenko and T Barfield p 73 87 Moscow Center for Civilizational Studies Russian Academy of Sciences References edit Helm Mary 2010 Access to Origins Affines Ancestors and Aristocrats Austin TX Univ Of Texas Press p 4 ISBN 9780292723740 OCLC 640095710 Service Elman R 1976 Primitive Social Organization An Evolutionary Perspective Chicago IL Random House ISBN 0394316355 OCLC 974107713 Sahlins Marshall D 1963 Poor Man Rich Man Big man Chief Political Types in Melanesia and Polynesia Comparative Studies in Society and History 5 3 285 303 doi 10 1017 S0010417500001729 ISSN 1475 2999 S2CID 145254059 Fried Morton Herbert 1976 The Evolution of Political Society An Essay in Political Anthropology McGraw Hill ISBN 0075535793 OCLC 748982203 Earle Timothy ed 2004 Chiefdoms Power Economy and Ideology Cambridge Univ Press ISBN 0521448018 OCLC 611267761 Timothy Earle Department of Anthropology Northwestern University 2017 03 30 Archived from the original on 2017 03 30 Pauketat Timothy R 2011 Chiefdoms and Other Archaeological Delusions AltaMira Press ISBN 9780759108295 OCLC 768479880 Beck Robin 2009 On Delusions Native South 2 111 120 doi 10 1353 nso 0 0011 S2CID 201784072 Fairservis W A 1992 The Harappan Civilization and Its Writing A Model for the Decipherment of the Indus Script E J Brill p 133 ISBN 978 81 204 0491 5 Avari Burjor 2007 India the Ancient Past A History of the Indian Sub continent from C 7000 BC to AD 1200 Taylor amp Francis pp 188 189 ISBN 978 0415356152 Archived from the original on 2022 10 12 Retrieved 2015 11 20 Singh Prof Mahendra Prasad 2011 Indian Political Thought Themes and Thinkers Pearson Education India pp 11 13 ISBN 978 8131758519 Archived from the original on 2022 10 12 Retrieved 2015 11 20 Chatterjee Suhas 1995 Mizo Chiefs and the Chiefdom Publications Pvt Ltd ISBN 8185880727 Archived from the original on 2022 10 12 Retrieved 2015 11 20 How Maps Made the World Wilson Quarterly Summer 2011 Archived from the original on 11 August 2011 Retrieved 28 July 2011 Source Mapping the Sovereign State Technology Authority and Systemic Change by Jordan Branch in International Organization Volume 65 Issue 1 Winter 2011 Branch Jordan Nathaniel 2011 Mapping the Sovereign State Cartographic Technology Political Authority and Systemic Change Ph D thesis University of California Berkeley pp 1 36 doi 10 1017 S0020818310000299 3469226 Archived from the original on June 29 2017 Retrieved March 5 2012 Abstract How did modern territorial states come to replace earlier forms of organization defined by a wide variety of territorial and non territorial forms of authority Answering this question can help to explain both where our international political system came from and where it might be going External links editCharacteristics of Chiefdoms Was the Chiefdom a Congelation of Ideas by Robert L Carneiro In Grinin L E et al Early State Its Alternatives and Analogues Volgograd Uchitel 2004 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chiefdom amp oldid 1196922979, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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