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Sedentism

In cultural anthropology, sedentism (sometimes called sedentariness; compare sedentarism[1]) is the practice of living in one place for a long time. As of 2024, the large majority of people belong to sedentary cultures. In evolutionary anthropology and archaeology, sedentism takes on a slightly different sub-meaning, often applying to the transition from nomadic society to a lifestyle that involves remaining in one place permanently. Essentially, sedentism means living in groups permanently in one place.[2] The invention of agriculture led to sedentism in many cases, but the earliest sedentary settlements were pre-agricultural.

Initial requirements for permanent, non-agricultural settlements edit

For small-scale nomadic societies it can be difficult to adopt a sedentary lifestyle in a landscape without on-site agricultural or livestock breeding resources, since sedentism often requires sufficient year-round, easily accessible local natural resources.

Non-agricultural sedentism requires good preservation and storage technologies, such as smoking, drying, and fermentation, as well as good containers such as pottery, baskets, or special pits in which to securely store food whilst making it available. It was only in locations where the resources of several major ecosystems overlapped that the earliest non-agricultural sedentism occurred. For example, people settled where a river met the sea, at lagoon environments along the coast, at river confluences, or where flat savanna met hills, and mountains with rivers.

Criteria for the recognition of sedentism in archaeological studies edit

In archaeology a number of criteria must hold for the recognition of either semi or full sedentism.

According to Israeli archaeologist Ofer Bar-Yosef, they are as follows:[3][4]

1. Increasing presence of organisms that benefit from human sedentary activities, e.g.

  • House mice
  • Rats
  • Sparrows

2. Cementum increments on mammal teeth

  • Indications that hunting took place in both winter and summer

3. Energy expenditure

  • Leveling slopes
  • Building houses
  • Production of plaster
  • Transport of undressed stones
  • Digging of graves
  • Shaping of large mortars

In many mammals dark cementum is deposited during winter when food is scarce and light cementum is deposited in the summer when food is abundant, so the outermost cementum layer shows at which season the animal was killed. Thus if animals were killed the year around in some area it suggests that people were sedentary there.[5]

Historical regions of sedentary settlements edit

 
Herd of horses on summer mountain pasture in the Pyrenees
 
Regions of origin of sedentary life: north central Europe, northeast Asia, and the fertile crescent

The first sedentary sites were pre-agricultural, and they appeared during the Upper Paleolithic in Moravia and on the East European Plain between c. 25000–17000 BC.[6] In the Levant, the Natufian culture was the first to become sedentary at around 12000 BC. The Natufians were sedentary for more than 2000 years before they, at some sites, started to cultivate plants around 10000 BC.[7] A year-round sedentary site, with its larger population, generates a substantial demand on locally provided natural resources, a demand that may have triggered the development of deliberate agriculture.

The Jōmon culture in Japan, which was primarily a coastal culture, was sedentary from c. 12000 to 10000 BC, before the cultivation of rice at some sites in northern Kyushu.[8][9] In northernmost Scandinavia, there are several early sedentary sites without evidence of agriculture or cattle breeding. They appeared from c. 5300–4500 BC and are all located optimally in the landscape for extraction of major ecosystem resources;[10] for example, the Lillberget Stone Age village site (c. 3900 BC), the Nyelv site (c. 5300 BC), and the Lake Inari site (c. 4500 BC).[11] In northern Sweden the earliest indication of agriculture occurs at previously sedentary sites, and one example is the Bjurselet site used during the period c. 2700–1700 BC, famous for its large caches of long distance traded flint axes from Denmark and Scania (some 1300 km). The evidence of small-scale agriculture at that site can be seen from c. 2300 BC (burnt cereals of barley).

Historical effects of increased sedentism edit

 
Beja nomads from Northeast Africa

Sedentism increased contacts and trade, and the first Middle East cereals and cattle in Europe, could have spread through a stepping stone process, where the productive gift (cereals, cattle, sheep and goats) were exchanged through a network of large pre-agricultural sedentary sites, rather than a wave of advance spread of people with agricultural economy, and where the smaller sites found in between the bigger sedentary ones did not get any of the new products. Not all contemporary sites during a certain period (after the first sedentism occurred at one site) were sedentary. Evaluation of habitational sites in northern Sweden indicates that less than 10 percent of all the sites around 4000 BC were sedentary. At the same time, only 0.5–1 percent of these represented villages with more than 3–4 houses. This means that the old nomadic or migratory life style continued in a parallel fashion for several thousand years, until somewhat more sites turned to sedentism, and gradually switched over to agricultural sedentism.

The shift to sedentism is coupled with the adoption of new subsistence strategies, specifically from foraging (hunter-gatherer) to agricultural and animal domestication. The development of sedentism led to the rise of population aggregation and formation of villages, cities, and other community types.

In North America, evidence for sedentism emerges around 4500 BC.[citation needed]

Forced sedentism edit

Forced sedentism or sedentarization occurs when a dominant group restricts the movements of a nomadic group. Nomadic populations have undergone such a process since the first cultivation of land; the organization of modern society has imposed demands that have pushed aboriginal populations to adopt a fixed habitat.

At the end of the 19th and throughout the 20th century many previously nomadic tribes turned to permanent settlement. It was a process initiated by local governments, and it was mainly a global trend forced by the changes in the attitude to the land and real property and also due to state policies that complicated border crossing. Among these nations are Negev Bedouin in Jordan, Israel and Egypt,[12] Bashkirs, Kyrgyz, Kazakhs, Evenks, Evens, Sakha in the Soviet Union, Tibetan nomads in China,[13] Babongo in Gabon, Baka in Cameroon,[14] Innu in Canada, Romani in Romania and Czechoslovakia, etc.

As a result of forced sedentarization, many rich herdsmen in Siberia have been eliminated by deliberate overtaxation or imprisonment, year-round mobility has been discouraged, many smaller sites and family herd camps have been shut down, children have been separated from their parents and taken to boarding schools. This caused severe social, cultural and psychological issues to Indigenous peoples of Siberia.[15][16]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gabaccia, Donna R. (2012). "17: Food, mobility, and world history". In Pilcher, Jeffrey M. (ed.). The Oxford Handbook of Food History. Oxford Handbooks in History. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 308. ISBN 978-0199729937. Retrieved 9 January 2017. This assumption that civilized peoples were largely immobile has sometimes been labeled as sendentarying or sedentarism.
  2. ^ Kris Hirst, Sedentism
  3. ^ Bar-Yosef, Ofer (1998). The Natufian Culture in the Levant, Threshold to the Origins of Agriculture.
  4. ^ . neareast-prehistory.com. Archived from the original on 22 October 2009.
  5. ^ Lieberman, Daniel E. (1994). "The Biological Basis for Seasonal Increments in Dental Cementum and Their Application to Archaeological Research". Journal of Archaeological Science. Elsevier BV. 21 (4): 525–539. doi:10.1006/jasc.1994.1052. ISSN 0305-4403.
  6. ^ Stuart, Gene S. (1979). "Ice Age Hunters: Artists in Hidden Cages". Mysteries of the Ancient World. National Geographic Society. p. 19.
  7. ^ Lieberman D.E., Seasonality and gazelle hunting at Hayonim Cave : new evidence for "sedentism" during the Natufian, Paléorient, 1991, volume 17, issue 17/1, pp. 47–57
  8. ^ Jomon Fantasy: Resketching Japan's Prehistory. June 22, 1999.
  9. ^ "Ancient Jomon of Japan", Habu Junko, Cambridge Press, 2004
  10. ^ New Evidence on the Ertebølle Culture on Rugen 2004-11-12 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Lillbergets Stone Age Village 2014-04-04 at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ The Sedentarization of the Bedouin People 2012-04-12 at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Sedentarization of Tibetan Nomads
  14. ^ Matsuura, Naoki (September 2009). "Visiting Patterns of Two Sedentarized Central African Hunter-Gatherers : Comparison of the Babongo in Gabon and the Baka in Cameroon" (PDF). African Study Monographs. 30 (3): 137–159.
  15. ^ Hele, K. (1994). "Native people and the socialist state: the native populations of Siberia and their experience as part of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics" (PDF). Canadian Journal of Native Studies. 14 (2): 251–272.
  16. ^ Krupnik, I. (2000). "Reindeer pastoralism in modern Siberia: research and survival during the time of crash". Polar Record. 19 (1): 49–56. Bibcode:2000PolRe..19...49K. doi:10.1111/j.1751-8369.2000.tb00327.x.[dead link]

External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of sedentism at Wiktionary
  • Emily A. Schultz, Robert H. Lavenda. The Consequences of Domestication and Sedentism. From a college textbook – Anthropology: A Perspective on the Human Condition Second Edition. pp 196–200
  • Keith Weber, Shannon Horst. 2011. Desertification and livestock grazing: The roles of sedentarization, mobility and rest
  • David Western, Rosemary Grooma, Jeffrey Worden. 2009.
  • Shuji Sueyoshi, Ryutaro Ohtsuka. 2007. LONG-LASTING EFFECTS OF SEDENTARIZATION-INDUCED INCREASE OF FERTILITY ON LABOR FORCE PROPORTION AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN AN ARAB SOCIEITY [sic]: A CASE STUDY IN SOUTH JORDAN
  • Fagan, Brian. 2005. Ancient North America. Thames & Hudson, Ltd.: London.
  • Halén, Ove. 1994. Sedentariness During the Stone Age of Northern Sweden Almkvist & Wiksell, Stockholm.
  • Sofer, Olga. 1981 Sedentism During the Paleolithic
  • Habu, Junku. 2004 Ancient Jomon of Japan Cambridge University Press
  • Lands of the Negev on YouTube, a short film presented by Israel Land Administration describing the challenges Bedouins face in their sedentarization in Israel's southern Negev region
  • , Drylands Coordination Group

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For the lifestyle associated with poor health outcomes see Sedentary lifestyle Look up sedentism in Wiktionary the free dictionary In cultural anthropology sedentism sometimes called sedentariness compare sedentarism 1 is the practice of living in one place for a long time As of 2024 the large majority of people belong to sedentary cultures In evolutionary anthropology and archaeology sedentism takes on a slightly different sub meaning often applying to the transition from nomadic society to a lifestyle that involves remaining in one place permanently Essentially sedentism means living in groups permanently in one place 2 The invention of agriculture led to sedentism in many cases but the earliest sedentary settlements were pre agricultural Contents 1 Initial requirements for permanent non agricultural settlements 2 Criteria for the recognition of sedentism in archaeological studies 3 Historical regions of sedentary settlements 4 Historical effects of increased sedentism 5 Forced sedentism 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksInitial requirements for permanent non agricultural settlements editFor small scale nomadic societies it can be difficult to adopt a sedentary lifestyle in a landscape without on site agricultural or livestock breeding resources since sedentism often requires sufficient year round easily accessible local natural resources Non agricultural sedentism requires good preservation and storage technologies such as smoking drying and fermentation as well as good containers such as pottery baskets or special pits in which to securely store food whilst making it available It was only in locations where the resources of several major ecosystems overlapped that the earliest non agricultural sedentism occurred For example people settled where a river met the sea at lagoon environments along the coast at river confluences or where flat savanna met hills and mountains with rivers Criteria for the recognition of sedentism in archaeological studies editIn archaeology a number of criteria must hold for the recognition of either semi or full sedentism According to Israeli archaeologist Ofer Bar Yosef they are as follows 3 4 1 Increasing presence of organisms that benefit from human sedentary activities e g House mice Rats Sparrows2 Cementum increments on mammal teeth Indications that hunting took place in both winter and summer3 Energy expenditure Leveling slopes Building houses Production of plaster Transport of undressed stones Digging of graves Shaping of large mortarsIn many mammals dark cementum is deposited during winter when food is scarce and light cementum is deposited in the summer when food is abundant so the outermost cementum layer shows at which season the animal was killed Thus if animals were killed the year around in some area it suggests that people were sedentary there 5 Historical regions of sedentary settlements edit nbsp Herd of horses on summer mountain pasture in the Pyrenees nbsp Regions of origin of sedentary life north central Europe northeast Asia and the fertile crescentThe first sedentary sites were pre agricultural and they appeared during the Upper Paleolithic in Moravia and on the East European Plain between c 25000 17000 BC 6 In the Levant the Natufian culture was the first to become sedentary at around 12000 BC The Natufians were sedentary for more than 2000 years before they at some sites started to cultivate plants around 10000 BC 7 A year round sedentary site with its larger population generates a substantial demand on locally provided natural resources a demand that may have triggered the development of deliberate agriculture The Jōmon culture in Japan which was primarily a coastal culture was sedentary from c 12000 to 10000 BC before the cultivation of rice at some sites in northern Kyushu 8 9 In northernmost Scandinavia there are several early sedentary sites without evidence of agriculture or cattle breeding They appeared from c 5300 4500 BC and are all located optimally in the landscape for extraction of major ecosystem resources 10 for example the Lillberget Stone Age village site c 3900 BC the Nyelv site c 5300 BC and the Lake Inari site c 4500 BC 11 In northern Sweden the earliest indication of agriculture occurs at previously sedentary sites and one example is the Bjurselet site used during the period c 2700 1700 BC famous for its large caches of long distance traded flint axes from Denmark and Scania some 1300 km The evidence of small scale agriculture at that site can be seen from c 2300 BC burnt cereals of barley Historical effects of increased sedentism editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Beja nomads from Northeast AfricaSedentism increased contacts and trade and the first Middle East cereals and cattle in Europe could have spread through a stepping stone process where the productive gift cereals cattle sheep and goats were exchanged through a network of large pre agricultural sedentary sites rather than a wave of advance spread of people with agricultural economy and where the smaller sites found in between the bigger sedentary ones did not get any of the new products Not all contemporary sites during a certain period after the first sedentism occurred at one site were sedentary Evaluation of habitational sites in northern Sweden indicates that less than 10 percent of all the sites around 4000 BC were sedentary At the same time only 0 5 1 percent of these represented villages with more than 3 4 houses This means that the old nomadic or migratory life style continued in a parallel fashion for several thousand years until somewhat more sites turned to sedentism and gradually switched over to agricultural sedentism The shift to sedentism is coupled with the adoption of new subsistence strategies specifically from foraging hunter gatherer to agricultural and animal domestication The development of sedentism led to the rise of population aggregation and formation of villages cities and other community types In North America evidence for sedentism emerges around 4500 BC citation needed Forced sedentism editForced sedentism or sedentarization occurs when a dominant group restricts the movements of a nomadic group Nomadic populations have undergone such a process since the first cultivation of land the organization of modern society has imposed demands that have pushed aboriginal populations to adopt a fixed habitat At the end of the 19th and throughout the 20th century many previously nomadic tribes turned to permanent settlement It was a process initiated by local governments and it was mainly a global trend forced by the changes in the attitude to the land and real property and also due to state policies that complicated border crossing Among these nations are Negev Bedouin in Jordan Israel and Egypt 12 Bashkirs Kyrgyz Kazakhs Evenks Evens Sakha in the Soviet Union Tibetan nomads in China 13 Babongo in Gabon Baka in Cameroon 14 Innu in Canada Romani in Romania and Czechoslovakia etc As a result of forced sedentarization many rich herdsmen in Siberia have been eliminated by deliberate overtaxation or imprisonment year round mobility has been discouraged many smaller sites and family herd camps have been shut down children have been separated from their parents and taken to boarding schools This caused severe social cultural and psychological issues to Indigenous peoples of Siberia 15 16 See also editNacirema people Western culture Indian reservation Negev Bedouin Nomad Seasonal human migration Timeline of agriculture and food technology TranshumanceReferences edit Gabaccia Donna R 2012 17 Food mobility and world history In Pilcher Jeffrey M ed The Oxford Handbook of Food History Oxford Handbooks in History New York Oxford University Press p 308 ISBN 978 0199729937 Retrieved 9 January 2017 This assumption that civilized peoples were largely immobile has sometimes been labeled as sendentarying or sedentarism Kris Hirst Sedentism Bar Yosef Ofer 1998 The Natufian Culture in the Levant Threshold to the Origins of Agriculture Sedentism and Pristine Agriculture neareast prehistory com Archived from the original on 22 October 2009 Lieberman Daniel E 1994 The Biological Basis for Seasonal Increments in Dental Cementum and Their Application to Archaeological Research Journal of Archaeological Science Elsevier BV 21 4 525 539 doi 10 1006 jasc 1994 1052 ISSN 0305 4403 Stuart Gene S 1979 Ice Age Hunters Artists in Hidden Cages Mysteries of the Ancient World National Geographic Society p 19 Lieberman D E Seasonality and gazelle hunting at Hayonim Cave new evidence for sedentism during the Natufian Paleorient 1991 volume 17 issue 17 1 pp 47 57 Jomon Fantasy Resketching Japan s Prehistory June 22 1999 Ancient Jomon of Japan Habu Junko Cambridge Press 2004 New Evidence on the Ertebolle Culture on Rugen Archived 2004 11 12 at the Wayback Machine Lillbergets Stone Age Village Archived 2014 04 04 at the Wayback Machine The Sedentarization of the Bedouin People Archived 2012 04 12 at the Wayback Machine Sedentarization of Tibetan Nomads Matsuura Naoki September 2009 Visiting Patterns of Two Sedentarized Central African Hunter Gatherers Comparison of the Babongo in Gabon and the Baka in Cameroon PDF African Study Monographs 30 3 137 159 Hele K 1994 Native people and the socialist state the native populations of Siberia and their experience as part of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics PDF Canadian Journal of Native Studies 14 2 251 272 Krupnik I 2000 Reindeer pastoralism in modern Siberia research and survival during the time of crash Polar Record 19 1 49 56 Bibcode 2000PolRe 19 49K doi 10 1111 j 1751 8369 2000 tb00327 x dead link External links edit nbsp The dictionary definition of sedentism at Wiktionary Emily A Schultz Robert H Lavenda The Consequences of Domestication and Sedentism From a college textbook Anthropology A Perspective on the Human Condition Second Edition pp 196 200 Keith Weber Shannon Horst 2011 Desertification and livestock grazing The roles of sedentarization mobility and rest David Western Rosemary Grooma Jeffrey Worden 2009 The impact of subdivision and sedentarization of pastoral lands on wildlife in an African savanna ecosystem Shuji Sueyoshi Ryutaro Ohtsuka 2007 LONG LASTING EFFECTS OF SEDENTARIZATION INDUCED INCREASE OF FERTILITY ON LABOR FORCE PROPORTION AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT IN AN ARAB SOCIEITY sic A CASE STUDY IN SOUTH JORDAN Fagan Brian 2005 Ancient North America Thames amp Hudson Ltd London Halen Ove 1994 Sedentariness During the Stone Age of Northern Sweden Almkvist amp Wiksell Stockholm Sofer Olga 1981 Sedentism During the Paleolithic Habu Junku 2004 Ancient Jomon of Japan Cambridge University Press Lands of the Negev on YouTube a short film presented by Israel Land Administration describing the challenges Bedouins face in their sedentarization in Israel s southern Negev region Should Pastoralists be sedentarized Drylands Coordination Group Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sedentism amp oldid 1200997374, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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