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BY THE SAME AUTHOR Spanish-Guarani Relations in Early Colonial Paraguay Tobati: Paraguayan Town (By Elman R. Service and Helen 8. Service) Evolution and Culture (Edited by Marshall D. Sahlins and Elman Ru Service: with contributions by the editors ‘and by Thomas G. Harding and David Kaplan) The Hunters Cultural Evolutionism: Theory in Practice Primitive Social Organization, Second Edition Profiles in Ethnology, Revised Edition Origins of the State and Civilization The Process of Cultural Evolution Elman R. Service UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SANTA BARBARA W: W: NORTON & COMPANY INC: NEW YORK4 ‘The Origins of Government to each other. Eventually some of them became hierarchical, con- trolled and directed by a central authoritative power—a power instituted as a government, Clearly, these societies were tremend- ously changed by the advent of this new stage in cultural evolu- Gon. Interpretations of this achievement have been the keynotes of some of the most significant historical, philosophical, and scientific writings in Western civilization from the time of clas- sical Greek thinkers like Plato and Aristotle to today. The evolution of civilized society has been contemplated by the important thinkers of all civilizations, but particularly in recent centuries by Western Europeans. Evolutionary ideas per- vaded the philosophy of the Enlightenment and, later, nineteenth- century sociology and anthropology, and itis from these schools of thought that we have inherited much of our interest in the origi ‘of government. But the philosophers were too remote from the real world of primitive peoples. Even the nineteenth-century authors ‘knew little of primitive peoples at first hand, and the sources of data were still poor. New data available to us today demand a reas- sessment of their theories and some of their concepts—but not at the cost of losing their valuable evolutionary perspective. Frequently these theorists unfairly and misleadingly called the primitive peoples savages and barbarians—implying wildness and animality. On the other hand, the words “urban” and “cfvil,” applied to the nonprimitive side of the divide, came also to suggest “urbane” and “civilized” in the sense of high personal refinement, again to the disparagement of the primitives. Let us define a few necessary terms less pejoratively and apply them consistently. Urban and civil can be accurately used to mean that the society was characterized by the presence of cities or large towns and that the inhabitants were citizens of some kind of legal com- monwealth, It is these meanings of urban and civil that were prior and that evoked the other meanings only metaphorically —at least at first. Conversely, the earlier, simpler stage of society was characterized by the absence of urban agglomerations and formal structures and their associated institutionalized governments. is what we shall take primitive to mean: simple, early, original, primary; lacking developed governmental institutions, However informal may seem this way of defining the subject of this book, it has the virtue of holding to the central core of mean- Introduction 5 ing in most modern statements of the problem of the differences between primitive and civilized society. These will be discussed in the next chapter. Modern anthropologists know something that neither Plato nor Aristotle, Hobbes nor Rousseau understood. All of these and countless other commentators on human nature and the civiliza- tional problem Cbut not Marx and Engels) equated government ‘or civilization with society itself, and precivilization was not understood as anything but anarchy, with people constrained only by nature rather than by cultural institutions. But we know now that over gg percent of past human history Cand, for a part of the world’s population, even history today) was spent in societies that did not govern themselves by legalistic, institutionalized sy tems of control. But primitive society was nevertheless not anar- chical, for social behavior was strikingly constrained, How this ‘was done will be discussed in chapters g and 4 ‘The archaic civilizations ancestral to modern civil societies evolved in different times and places: about 3500-gooo .c. in Mesopotamia and Egypt, and about 2500 3.0. in the Indus River Valley, 1500 .c. at the Great Bend of the Yellow River in China, and w.c./a.p. in the Valley of Mexico and in coastal Peru (see table 1). Tt is of course possible that some of these avere related episodes, especially those in Mesopotamia and Egypt, and in the ‘New World, in Mexico and Peru.? But some of these-civilizations must have developed independently; most obviously, those of. the New World were unrelated to those of the Old World. This is ‘a most significant fact, for it affects our perspective. Were it one single development that spread to the other areas by conquest, diffusion, emulation, or whatever, then the problem would be “historical” —that is, our concern would be simply, what hap- pened? When? But since it happened several times independently ‘we itumediately wonder, even if it only happened twice Cin the New World and in the Old World), what causes or repetitive 1: V. Gordon Childe's very influential books, Man Makes Himself asq6) and What Happened in History Cao42), concentrated on Mesopo femmia, Egypt, and the Indus River civilizations, His last, most definitive, Formulation of the “urban revolution” Cxggo) added to these # brict dlscus- Sion of the Maya, Since then, however, most anthropologists have cited the above six, Glyn Daniel (1968) makes seven by subdividing Mesoamerica. ‘Toble 1 above omits the Indus River Valley.AawLE 1 / Avsotute Chronology of Major Areas* ‘The Origins of Government q ysae flog tl ay Pasa Wale un ga} ge) BEE | 28 eile au zeice. a] act a Hise fl) agile q ait ee # Hue Hen z 3 ay : giesey al | gh iBlet leled) = Fslase P| ae ale WHE wiky eres ' dlls seecae ‘| i uid jase | Be) aU EgEeTae & i sete] 2 Bic ish Beene glial : ‘ : Piler: a qi Hip | 2032238 hoolak all Be i al i] pe) Hees [sida des s i | elnins HAA a8 ay fie ee esi ae ie Introduction 7 processes were at work. We want fo know, by careful comparison, what Were the shared factassi- the antecedent conditions; the ‘geographical, technological, economic, social, and ideological set- tings; the role of warfare and the nature of the surrounding political environment. If civilization had originated only once, it would not even pay to speculate as to whether or not it was an historical accident, with this causal network unanalyzable. But not only did some of the archaic civilizations probably develop independently; they also developed surprisingly similar kinds of new cultural features, some of which have been seen as indica- tive of civilization as an evolutionary stage. Lewis H. Morgan and others in the last century felt that writ- ing was the hallmark achievement of the archaic civilizations. Peru seems Itke an exception, but the Peruvians did have the quip, a mnemonic device of strings with knots for decimal places 1nd colors for categories of things. If a main function of all early writing systems was record-Keeping, then the Peruvians were only barely off the track.) In recent times, archaeological interest in socioeconomic factors has been greatér, resulting in wide- spread acceptance of V. Gordon Chile's conception of the origin of the first civilizations as an “urban revolution.” This rubric stands for the following set of functionally linked features Chere only briefly summarized, following Childe 1950): urban centers (Childe provisionally suggested they were between 7,000 and 20,000 in population); a class of full-time specialists Ccraftsmen, merchants, officials, priests) residing in the cities; a “social sur- plus” in the food production of the peasants, which could be extracted by the government; monumental public buildings, sym- bolizing the concentration of the surplus; a “ruling class” of upper- level priests, civil and military leaders, and officials; numerical notation and writing; the beginnings of arithmetic, geometry, and astronomy; sophisticated art styles; long-distance trade; and, finally, an institutionalized form of political organization based on force—termed the state. The foundation of the state, as Childe expressed it, was the "glaring conflict in economic interests be- tween the tiny ruling class, who annexed the bulk of the social surplus, and the vast majority who were left with a bare sub- sistance and effectively excluded from the spiritual benefits of ation” (P. 4). procs.8 ‘The Origins of Government We should note at this point that the researches to be reported in this book do not support the core of this concept of an “urban revolution.” We shall see that although a number of urban cen- ters were found among some of the archaic civilizations, they seem to have been not only inessential to the development of the archaic civilizations, but also clearly dependent, most usually, ‘on the prior development of the civilizations. In fact, Childe’s ten cxiteria are only very generally and imperfectly coincident. There has been, consequently, a tendency to pick out one, or a very Few, of the elements in Childe's scheme as the basic diagnostic fea- ture(s) of the origin of civilization—or in some salient instances, as the causative prime mover. The most provocative feature thus selected has been the last on Child's list, the Marxian notion of the state, based on repressive Force, working to protect the eco- nomic interests of the ruling class. ‘The notion of the state as based on repressive physical force ccan be usefully applied, as we will see, to some modern primitive states, But our findings do.not support the economic-class element in the definition of “state” set forth by Childe et al, And further- more, Our researches do not bear out the notion that the rise of civilization was founded on the origin of the state. The alternative thesis to be presented here locates the origins of government in the institutionalization of centralized leadership. That leadership, in developing its administrative functions for the maintenance of the society, grew into a hereditary aristocracy. ‘The nascent burcaucracy's economic and religious functions devel oped as the extent of its services, its autonomy, and its size increased. Thus the earliest government worked to protect, not another class or stratum of the society, but itself.'It legitimized itself in its role of maintaining the whole society. Political power organized the economy, not vice versa. The system was redistributive, allocative, not acquisitive: Personal wealth was not required to gain personal political power. And these first governments seem clearly to have reinforced their struc- ture by doing their economic and religious jobs well—by providing benefits—rather than by using physical force. In the course of this book, we will see how these hierarchical, institutionalized political structures developed out of the matrix of egalitarian primitive socicty. Introduction 9 Modern governmental creations such as legislatures, formal Jaw codes and courts, police and militias, and so on, are all alike in that they ere formal institutions, purposely established and specialized for carrying out major political functions, especially the maintenance of social order. But we should be reminded at this point that many behavioral restraints occur at an informal level also, within face-to-face communities like the household, especially, and in schools, neighborhoods, clubs, and so on. The ‘most powerful socializing forces at this level are personal-social punishments and rewards that have strong psychological conse-
Mediation In the egalitarian society the right to use physical force is not monopolized by a public power or any other authority that sup- presses internal conflict by legal means. Is this again a case of not needing force because the cake of custom is a sufficient deterrent? Or is it that there are enough informal means of preserving order {in a small society that formal government is unnecessary? Perhaps its some of both, = Man in a State of Nature 37 Usually, because the societies are so small, conflicts are be- tween kinsmen, In such cases, it is often possible for an aged and respected relative whom the contenders have in common to inter- vene and arrange a satisfactory conclusion. Ideally, the arbitration should be by a relative who is equidistant from both so that there ‘would be no expectation of favoritism. In many disputes one person may be clearly in the right and the other in the wrong, so much so that public opinion is nearly tunanimous. In such cases it may be said that, in a sense, the public is itself the mediator. When the issue is not clear, however, di ficulties arise, since one of the salient characteristics of egalitarian society is that unanimity of opinion seems to be sought in political decisions, unlike our familiar majority-rule, One of the most usual recourses is for the disputants to engage in a public duel or contest of some sort. ‘Among the Eskimo, for example, wrestling and head-butting contests are typical forms of public dueling. More common, and certainly more interesting, are the famous Eskimo song ducls (CHoebel 1954, P. 93): Song duels are used to work off grudges and disputes ofall orders, save murder, An Fast Greenlander, however, may seek his satisfaction for the murder of a relative through a song contest If he is physically too ‘weak to gain his end, or if he is so skilled in singing as to feel certa of victory, Inasmuch as East Greenlanders get so engrossed in the me artistry of singing as to forget the cause of the grudge, this is under- standable. Singing skill among these Eskimos equals or out-ranks gross Physical proveess. ‘The singing style is highly conventionalized. The successful singer uses the traditional patterns of composition which he attempts to de- liver with such finesse a$ to delight the audience to enthusiastic ap- plause, He who is most heartily applauded fs “winner.” To win a song Contest brings no restitution in its train, ‘The sole advantage is in prestige, ‘The song duel is usually cerried on at some length, giving the public time to form a consensus. Most people probably have an initial idea of which side they are on, but they want to reserve expression of this opinion until they find whether it accords with that of the majority. Gradually more people are more overtly laughing at one duelist’s song than at the other’, hinting at their own preference but not overtly committing them to it. But this can then turn very quickly into unanimity.58 ‘The Origins of Government Among the Australian aborigines disputes are typically settled by means of a spear-throwing duel. From a prescribed distance the accuser is allowed to hurl a number of spears, while the de- fendant is allowed only to dodge them. The public can applaud the throwing ability of the accuser and the adroitness and agility of the defendant. As in the case of the Eskimo song duel, the public gradually realizes a majority opinion, which then quickly turns to unanimity. When this is in favor of the defendant, the accuser simply stops throwing, But if the defendant loses, he is ‘supposed to allow one of the spears to wound him. ‘These are some of the ways disputes are settled between mem- bers of the same community. But these means will not sufice when the dispute is between members of different communities. The more distant the two groups, or the less known they are to each other, the more difficult it is to mediate a quarrel. A primitive Kinship. group such. as.a.lineage or clan reacts as a.whole to-an {injury to one of its members. Conversely, it assumes that a counter- injury fo any members of the culprit band will serve the law of retribution, Obviously there is great danger that the above injury/reteibu- tion cycle could develop into a full-scale feud. Retribution or retaliation in the “eye for an eye, a tooth for a tooth’ vein does not ordinarily result in a return to the original state of equilibrium, simply because the contenders are not likely to view the original injury in the same light, which makes it unlikely that they would agree on what constituted an equivalent retaliation. People in these primitive societies seem to realize this as a danger and some- times even to anticipate ways to prevent it. The most common attempt to prevent feuds between communities are what have been called “expiatory encounters.” For example, sometimes in cases of homicide in aboriginal Australia the guilty person is required by his own kinsmen to submit to a shower of spears thrown at him by close relatives of the slain person. Once he is wounded an end to the conflict is possible, even though payment has not been made in full. Sometimes, to0, the Kinsmen of the culprit may punish him before the other side has a chance to retaliate—again in recognition of the danger of feud. But sometimes, of course, feuds do occur, and they can fester and erupt into larger-scale true warfare between tribes, Warfare Man in a State of Nature 59 among egalitarian societies, however, is seldom a pitched and bloody affair. This kind of society cannot sustain very many men in the field, and hence the battles are neither large nor protracted. But more important in limiting the scale of war is the egalitarian nature of the society. Leadership is ephemeral, for one thing, and the leader has no strong organization or authority to conscript or otherwise force people to serve his bidding. And he cannot force people to be brave by threats of legal punishment for dereliction of duty. Warriors left on their own usually will not run grave risks to their lives, and hence pitched battles are rare—ambush and surprise raids are the normal form of warfare, When a real battle does take place it is more noisy than bloody, as in the following example from northern Australia (Hart and Pilling 1960, pp. 86-87): ‘Thus Tiwi battles had to be the confused, disorderly, inconclusive things they always were, They usually lasted all day, during which about two-thirds of the elapsed time was consumed in violent talk and mutual abuse between constantly changing central characters and satellites. The remaining third of the time was divided between duels {involving a pair of men who threw spears at each other until one was wounded, and brief Mucries of more general weapon throwing involr~ ing pethaps a dozen men at a time, which ended whenever somebody, leven a spectator, was hit. As a result of this full day of violence, per: haps a few of the cases would be settled that night—by a father hand- ing over his delayed daughter, or 2 man with a disputed wife relin- quishing her to her rightful husband—but when the war party lef the next day to return home, the number of cases settled was likely to be less than the number of new feuds, grievances and injuries that hhad criginated during the day of battle. For not only did the partici- pants carry away from the battle feld a vivid memory of all the physical wounds, intended or accidental, inflicted by whom on whom, but they also brooded Jong and suspiciously upon. who had supported whom and why, either verbally or with spese in hand. Finally, chrough all these disputes and hostile actions between teins men ran thee united susilon of bachelors. The only. bate in two years between large groups drawn from distinct bands that hat ‘ cleat.cut and Gente hal act was are fat t Hong in te 038 (On that occasion, after disputing and fighting among themselves from ‘early morning until late afternoon, all the old men present from both war parties gradually channeled all theie anger tovard one unFort nate young Mandiimbula bachelor whom they finally accused of going acound from band to band creating misunderstandings between various elders. Several elders on both sides testified publicly that their mistrust60 The Origins of Government of each other had started shortly after the bachelor in question had begun hanging around their households; whereupon the senior war- iors of the two opposing armies had no difficulty in deciding that ‘most of their suspicions of each other “were all his fault,” and. with {great unanimity ganged up on the bachelor and quickly clubbed hi {nto unconsciousness for being a troublemaker and a suspicion spre ex. In the midst of battle the gerontocracy had reasserted its solidarity by finding a bachelor scapegoat upon whom to unload all their mutual suspicions and aggressions. External Relations In the examples so far we have dealt largely with intrasocietal political problems. But when we turned above to questions of feuds and battles we touched on the essence of foreign political govern- ‘mental problems, the ability to make war or peace. If government is mainly an organization formed to wield legal force, then it has not only the internal contexts for its use of or threat of force, but also the foreign. The two contexts should be sepazated, of course, for they are very different: Domestic constraints and sanctions Gand Taw as well in civil society) are an omnipresent aspect of the problems of keeping the internal social order, but external affairs are essentially lawless, and unordered by mutual customs or public sanctions. Egalitarian society cannot wage war or make peace effectively via alliances and treaties because a responsible body, a governmental authority, is lacking. The external political problems are theré, however, although the means of dealing with them are, as in the case of intrasocietal political problems, simply an extension of certain personal and domestic capabilities into the wider field It seems apparent, as in the previously mentioned case of feud, thet primitive people recognize the danger of warfare and | take measures to reduce its likelihood. These measures are various, ‘of course, but they are all reducible to one generic mode of alli- Lance-making, the reciprocal exchange. Reciprocal exchanges ways _in. which ganizations extend or intensify the normal inter nds of \ kinship statises. Any two relationships of Kinship imply standard- ized obligations and rights that are symbolized by exchanges of Man in a State of Nature 61 goods and favors Cas well as by prescribed forms of etiquette). Such exchanges are normally both utilitarian and symbolic. This means that a valuable present given freely to a person obligates that person to respond appropriately—as though personal ties actually existed as symbolized by the exchange. Something like this is actually pan-human and can be observed even in the obligations of alliance that young children lay on each other in the play- srounds of the modern world. But in primitive society reciprocal exchanges are taken with great seriousness simply because the society is egalitarian and anarchical. The rules and expectations) that govern reciprocal exchanges are thé very essence of damestic life, of course, bur they are also the sole means available to primi- tive people in their struggles to cope with the political problems of war and peace, Failure and sticcess in alliance-making is failure: and success at peacemaking, This sounds Hobbesian—to suggest that strife tends to occur, more or less normally so to speak, unless positive actions are taken to avoid it, that the deterioration of peace-making actions tends to result in warfare. I believe this is true: It is usually idle to talk of the “causes of war"; it is the evolution of various causes of peace that can be studied in the Jhumman record; and a large and essential part of the evolution of} political organization is simply an extension and intensification of | peace-making means. More: It can be claimed that not only the” evolution of government, but the very evolution of society and culture itself, depends on the evolution of the means of “waging” peace in ever-widening social spheres—by continually adding new political ingredients to the social organization. Reciprocal exchanges in primitive society are of many kinds and have multifarious implications. Here we want to discuss only the important ones used in alliance-making among sovereign groups. These are mainly of two kinds although each can have many Variations and permutations): marriages and exchanges of goods. The latter is not exactly “trade” as we Kiiow Tt in modern tims; for although modern trade for profit may in some senses help keep international peace, alliance-making exchanges of goods primitive society are giftlike personal exchanges showing gen- ‘erosity and friendliness, rather than impersonal extractions of what the traffic will bear, “buying cheap and selling dear.” The other62 ‘The Origins of Government form of reciprocity, marriage, also needs to be distinguished from its modern counterpart. Modern marriages are so often freely con- tracted 38 a product of romantic love that we often think that the purpose, or function, of marriage is to legitimize love, sexual relations, and offspring. Marriage does these things in_ pri society. also, but solely as a by-product of the. basic,” obvious, planned-for, politically schemed creation of alliances by reciprocal ‘exchanges ‘of martiage’ partners: Marriage, of course, is the way in which affinal relatives, and by the next generation, new con- sanguineal relatives, are created. ‘This obviously is the earliest, most basic, and also the surest form of alliance-making, for it extends the domestic realm out- ward. A marriage rule Ci.e., a rule stating what sort of group must be married into, or conversely, which groups cannot be married into) regulates the reciprocal relations in the society at large. Because itis a “rule,” and thus made up by the people them- selves, its consequences can be anticipated; and it can be changed, as well, in order to accomplish political expedients.® ‘The rules of marriage can be remarkably complicated—com- plicated, that is, from our point of view. The Northern Arunta of central Australia, for example, have a marriage rule that ethnol- ogists have called “second cross-cousin marriage.” Another way of stating it, probably more indicative of the actual scheme, is that first-cousin marriage is tabu. Essentially, it means that a boy can- not marry into either his father’s or mother’s oven local kin group Cin many primitive societies, on the contrary, the mother's brother's daughter would be a favored marriage), but must marry farther out—among the mother’s first-cousin group. OF this kind of marriage, it has been stated by the participants themselv “Why marry into my mother's band? They are our allies already.’ This rule, then, has the effect of widening the bonds of kinship 2. E. B. Tylor (1888, p. 267) made this point long ago. “Among tribes of low culture there is but one means known of keeping up permanent lance, and that means is intermarriage. ... Again and agein in the world’s history, savage tribes must have had plainly before their minds the simple practical alternative between marzyingout and being killed-out. Even far fon in culture, the political value of intermarriage remains. - ‘Then we will give our daughters unto you, and we will take vour daughters (0 us, land ive will dwell with you, and, we will become one people," is a well” known passage of Israelite history.” Man in a State of Nature 63 far beyond those of the more usual first cross-cousin marriage.* At least twice as many relatives are harvested by this expedient. In the above example, the reciprocity of the marriage can be delayed and made very general, when reciprocity refers to the actual exchange of women between two groups in successive mar- rages. But sometimes in egalitarian society, alliance-marsiages may be so delayed in reciprocity, or so uncertain because of long distances, that immediate gifts of goods substitute for the delayed reciprocal marriage. This is, so to speak, reciprocity-on-the-spot. Its best-known manifestation is the miscalled “bride-price” or “brideppurchase,” wherein the exchanges are symbolically can- celled out at the actual marriage ceremony. At some later time a return marriage is in fact likely, and a similar return of goods for the new bride The very common levirate and sororate matriages of primitive society demonstrate fully the fact that primitive marriage is a form of alliance, a politicallike agreement, between groups rather than simply between the two persons who marry. The levirate marriage (after Latin levir, “husband's brother") follows the cus- tom, or rule, that if a husband dies his brother —usually a younger brother—takes custody of the wife and children. The sororate marriage (Latin soror, “sister") maintains the alliance if it is the wife who dies, for then her sister must take her place. In both cases it is revealed how seriously the groups take the agreement. ‘The “bargain” struck must be maintained and “not even death will us (the groups) do part.” The Limits of the Politi I Organization If in egalitarian society the political extension of peace is by such personal, nongovernmental means_as reciprocal exchanges ‘of goods and marriages, then it must be that the scope of. the 3 A person's cross cousin is a child of « parent's sibling of opposite sex; ‘thus, one’s maternal uncle's or paternal aunt's child. Paraliel cousins are children of siblings of the same sex. This distinction occurs because of the very common primitive practice of local exogamy: one cannot marry Into fone’ own local group, hence one’s father and one’s mother arc from dif- ferent local groups. Cross cousins, as a consequence ate residents of difer- cnt local groups Cand thus are normally mareiageable), while parallel cous ins grow Up in the same local group and cannot marsy each other.64 The Origins of Government ical organization is not particularly plain, nor its boundaries tently visible. Most primitive societies have overlapping and interlocking sets of social Chence potentially political) relations swith other apparently autonomous societies This rather indeterminant character of primitive political bodies is largely created by the ephemeral nature of leadership and by the fact that different political problems are solved directly and expediently, if they are solved at all, after which the system relapses into anarchy. And added to this is the fact that different kinds of problems and activities will muster different numbers of people, Assemblages called together for feasts or dances will nor- mally attract more people than, say, a funeral. But any such assembly, because it forms a social group, however temporary, can undertake some political functions. Radcliffe Brown put it this way, speaking of Australian aborigines (2940, p. xix): ‘The point to be noted is that such assemblies for religious or cere: monial purposes consist on different occasions of different collections of hordes focal kin groups]. Each assembly constitutes for the time being a political society. If there is a feud between two of the con- stituent hordes, it must either be settled and peace made or it must be ing the meeting, to break out again later on. Thus sions a horde belongs temporarily to different larger ry political groups. But there is no definite permanent group of this kind of which a horde can be said to be a part. Conditions similar to this are found in some parts of Afriea—for example among the Tallens ‘The Tallensi mentioned above are sedentary agriculturalists, ‘a much larger society than the simple, nomadic, hunting-gathering hordes of the Australian desert. Yet they and many others, as distinct in various ways as Iroquois and North American Plains Indians, are all stateless egalitarian societies, making it difficult for an outsider to discern the limits of the society. Political events emerge from social events, the size of any gathering depends on its function, and attenuated kinship ties radiate in all directions so that the kindred—the true and constant society of relatives from the point of view of an individual—is not the same group ‘of persons from family to family. And of course no kindred cor- responds to any territorial demarkation, nor to any other dis Man in a State of Nature 65 tion such as linguistic or cultural traits. The larger tribel societies, ; still within the category of egalitarian societies, have kinship groupings that are named and sometimes territorially demarked so that they are objectified and made corporate, so to speak, tran- scending the personal kindred and outlasting changes in member- ship from generation to generation, These are normally local lineages of patrilineally or matrilineally related persons, and clans associations of related lineages), But even here, one cannot de- mark te society. Several clans may unite for some common pur- pose—ritual, festival, or war—and fall the next day into their constituent separate parts, This quality of structural subdivision and reconstitution depending on evens isso formally equilibrated | in some societies that they have been labeled a structural-fune- tional type: segmentary societies. Evans-Pritchard epitomized this in concluding his essay on the Nuer (Fortes and Evans-Pritchard 1940, p. 296) “The consistency we perceive in Nuer political structure js one of process rather than of morphology. The process consists of comple- Inentary tendencies towards fission and fusion which, operating abke {n all political groups by a series of inclusions and exclusions that are controlled by the changing social situation, enable us to. speak of @ system and to say that this system is characteistically defined by the relativity and opposition ofits segments. Emphasizing that egalitarian society is essentially without fixed political boundaries implies that the societies with formal political organization are bounded, and that this is an important function of, and aspect of, true political organization. Sir Henry Maine knew this and made it part of his famous distinction be- tween primitive, stateless society and civilization, Political states become based on the principle of local contiguity as they grow beyond the feasibility of uniting new members by means of exten- 14» The classic examples may be found in M. Fortes, “The Political System of the Tallensi of the Norther Territories of the Gold Coast” and ELE. EvansPrltchard, “Tae Nuer of the Southern Sudan," both in their ‘African Political Systems (1940). i "A more recent Yolume is devoted entirely to segmentary societies in Afi This is John Middleton and David Tait’s Tribes without Rulers: Studies im African Segmentary Systems (1958).66 ‘The Origins of Government sions of kinship (Maine, 1861, p. 109). Many anthropologists have disageced with Maine on the grounds that many primitive societies are made up of families, bands, and Hneages that are firmly based on bounded territories. But this is beside the point: Maine clearly did not mean that primitive peoples had no con- ‘ceptions of territorial boundaries at all, but that these constituent units, territorial or not, were not consistently united to each other within a boundary that enclosed the permanent political entity, whereas one of the important aspects of a state or government is, the strong sense of the area within which its laws are enforced and which it defends. The pliability of egalitarian society, the ireat variations in its scope depending on the nature of the political problem, is dramatically illustrated in the variety of the responses of these societies to the shocking arrival of European colonists in the Americas, Africa, and Oceania, Primitive states and chiefdoms are bounded, governed, and permanently established to 2 much greater degree than the egal- itarian societies, and thus they offer possibilities for invaders to reserve such populations for exploitation. They may do this by replacing the governing body with their own, or more usually and more successfully, leaving the ruling group in power, as litte modified as possible. This form of “indirect rule” was practiced by the Spaniards in Mexico and Peru, by the English most notably in West Africa, Kenva, and Rhodesia, and by missionaries in Hawaii, Tonga, and Tahiti, But egalitarian socicties offered no such possibilities and-theit adaptations to the invaders are striking illustrations of theit alter- native capacities for “Assion and fusion.” Two polar responses actually happened repeatedly: In some situations, large confedera- tions were made of a size that were never achieved under purely §. Inasmuch as the Spanizeds were able to explait the native Mexicans and Peruvians, whereas the English were not able to exploit the native North Americans, the English promulgated the famous "black legend,” that the Spaniards were cruel and exploitative and the English correspondingly benevolent. Ihave argued elsewhere that this exploitation in Latin America and its relative absence in Anglo Ameriea were due ta the nature of the native societies: The Mexican and Peruvian Indians had. well developed states, but the North American Indians had egalitarian societies except for some weakly. developed chiefdoms in the southeastern United States and the northwest coast (Service 4973, ch. 6) Man in a State of Nature 67 aboriginal conditions; in other situations, when confederations could not withstand the kind of pressure being applied, the tribes separated instead into small units, the better to escape defeat. One thinks immediately of the Abnali, Mohigan, Creek, and especially the Iroquoian confederacies in eastern North America and of the more ephemeral confederations of the Great Plains (such as the great multitribal army that massacred General Custer's army) as examples of the former response, The Ojibwa of the Upper Great Lakes, however, unable to cope with cither the whites or the confederated Indians, fell apart so early in the colonial epoch that they have since become well-known ethnological cases of an “individualized” and “fragmented” culture.® ‘There are excellent examples of the two procesées in the American West, especially in the Great Basin of Nevada and adjacent parts of Utah and Idaho. The historical disturbance came later than in the lands further to the east and therefore descrip- tions have come down to us describing a more purely aboriginal situation. (It was detailed by Lewis and Clark in 1805 in the northern part of the basin, by Alexander Ross in 1824~25, and later by others.) The Indians of the basin spoke the same Shosho- nnean language, and their aboriginal culture and social organiza- tion was generically similar. But we have known them ethnologic- ally as very different kinds of societies, because of the very dif- ferent responses to the coming of the white man to the area, ‘Some of the Basin Shoshone acquired horses from New Mexico Gand later firearms by trade from the north) and expanded thei hunting ranges so greatly and their subsistence base so markedly that they came to resemble the mobile, warlike buffalo hunters of the Great Plains. These were the tribes known to us later as Utes. With their new way of subsistence, as well as the larger societies thus made possible, they were able to defend themselves and their ranges effectively for a long time against the whites and other Indians as well. So strong did they become, finally, that they became near-professional predators, raiding whites for guns, horses, knives, and so on, but also raiding other Indians. One of the most striking of their enterprises was to go into the central yO Se Hato Hickersons (2960, 1982) documentary accounts ofthis carly process.68 ‘The Origins of Government basin of Nevada, a near-desert where refugee, unmounted Sho- shone had retreated, and to round up these Indians to transport them to Santa Fe for sale as slaves.* ‘These latter, the unmounted Indians, are known today as Paiutes and Western Shoshone. Because of an advantageous loca- tion, the Shoshone now known as Utes acquired horses and fire- arms earlier than the others. This put the horseless Indians to flight. They could not get enough men and horses together into a viable organization that could compete with the Utes because the Utes were able to prevent it. (When the Shoshone did find a horse, they ate it.) The organization that resulted was the frag- mented, isolated-family form described in the famous monograph by Julian H. Steward. An interesting instance of the fission-fusion responses occurred in the northern part of the Basin-Plateau area, interesting because an Indian volunteered the same functional explanation of the changes that we here are proposing. A “Ban-at-tee” (Northen Paiute), quoted by Alexander Ross in 1824, said: “We can never venture into the open plains for fear of the Blackfoot and Piegans, and for that reason never keep horses.” In 1825, a Ban plained to Ross that his people lived in hiding becaus to live in large bands, we should easily be discovered” (Ross 1956, PP. 176, 277-78). In South America, egalitarian tribes of horticulturalists in- habited the lowland jungles, and nomadic hunting-gathering bands the savannahs and southern pampas. As in North America, re- sponses tended to become polarized at the extremes of a Fusion- fissfon continuum. Araucanians in Chile and westera Argentina and the Puelche and Tehuelche of central Argentina are well- known examples of durable large-scale federations that made strong, hence aggressive Cand therefore later epitomized in eth- nology as “warlike”), predatory tribes. ‘On the other hand, some of the more remote areas became refuges for fragmented tribes. These are most notably the upper Xingu region, the Matto Grosso, the Montafia, and the Gran 7. Farnum as quoted by Steward (1998, p. 0). 8. Basin-Platean Socio-Political Groups (4998). The above explans- Lion differs from Steward's; he believed the socal fragmentation was cased by the scarcity of food. Man in a State of Nature 69 ‘Chaco. More clearly even than in the Great Basin instances, the fragmentation of these peoples was not a consequence of the nature of the food supply, as Steward would have it, but defensive fis- sioning.® In Africa the situation was quite different because of the ‘greater numbers of kingdoms and chiefdoms (which often con- federated to become kingdoms, most notably in coastal West Africa and in Southeast Africa). Refuge areas for the weaker societies were in Southwest Africa, the Congo jungles, and mountainous parts of East Africa. Again it seems clear that fragmentation was a form of adaptation to a political-military dominance of others, not ue to the nature of the food supply.” In order that the fissionfusion principle not be taken too simply as the only characteristic response of primitive peoples to invading Europeans, we should insist, rather parenthetically, that one of the most ordinary causes of fragmentation was simple decimation due to Furopean diseases, But when this happened we stil find, frequently, that the alternative adaptive responses of confederation versus fragmentation were still possible. Confedera- tions of unrelated people, the remnants of former kinship societies, sometimes took place, although more usually the tol of lseases resulted in a society so demographically weakened that the offense- defense polity was weighted toward defensive retreat, and hence toward continued or further fragmentation. But in any case, our emphasis here is on the more purely political practices, particularly so as to widen the ethnological relevance of the very useful Fusion- fission political principle whose application heretofore has been confined to the societies termed "segmmentary.” But beware of this difference: Evans-Pritchard and Fortes were talking about societies that characteristically altered their composition frequently as part of an ongoing equilibrium system with respect to different political events—their label “segmentary” thus characterizes a type of society. But in this chapter we are, talking about the political process as such, and it matters not that jn many of the societies mentioned fuston or fission happened im- portantly only once in their histories, so that they cannot in the 9. Carneiro (3961). 30, Evidences aze spelled out in greater detail in Service (1971, ch. 10).70 ‘The Origins of Government previous sense be regarded as segmentary types of societies. We vwill therefore reserve the term segmental, in the Durkheimian Cagq3) sense, for the kinds of societies composed of equal and similar component groups Cnormally kin groups like clans or lineages). Because they are segmental in type they may exhibit the segmentary process mote frequently than other kinds of societies. Note that I have mot tried to be exhaustive about the varieties of political processes in egalitarian segmental society. ‘The present chapter is intended only to describe very generally the salient char- acteristics of these societies as they are relevant to the major point to be pursued in subsequent chapters-—the origin of, and nature of, formal political inventions as related to the origin of, and nature of, civilization. This chapter therefore has endeavored to present some features of ot-civilization, hoping they will be use- ful in thinking about pre-civilization, which in turn would be useful in thinking about what political habits the eatly states had to work with 4 The Institutionalization of Power ReLarionsntes based on differential power exist actually or potentially in all human geoups. All families, of course, have internal dominant-subordinate relationships, based primarily con age and sex differences. In interfamily rclationships on the band and tribal (segmental) level, the prevailing ideology and etiquette presses toward equality in social interactions, so there is no formal hierarchy of authority or other power above the level of individual families, Leaders, es discussed in the previous chapter, are ephemeral, in action only sporadically and then usually in the context only of thei special spheres of competence. The power inherent in their persons renders Max Weber's original concept of charisma an appropriate designation. The society's assumption that their leaders’ abilities are in fact. superior them power. But this kind of power iss limited and so personal in, most prim! tive societies that itis best termed influences How does ait taffuential person’ come to occupy an office, so that as his charisma wanes the office can be filled by someone else? In other words, how does personal power become depersonalized2 ‘The Origins of Government power, corporate and institutionalize? How does a high achieved status’ become an ascribed status? In more societal terms, the question is: How does an egalitarian, segm hierarchical society with permanienily_ascrib anks cof high and low statinses? Still in social terms: How can we count for the “origin of the inequality of the social classes,” as Gunner Landtman entitles his work on this problem (1998). All ‘of these questions refer to aspects of the same bureaucratic char- acteristic: As a form of personal power is finally established and eases ae ule a ae aca ‘offices, forming an hierarchy. This hierarchy of offices, in all chief- doms, was hereditary in terms of succession, and thus permanent social strata came into being ‘This is a conception of bureaucracy that is rather more loose than Weber had it; especially in not citing such modern criteria as full regularization, salary, appointments, and so on (Weber 1946, pp. 196-204). The emphasis here is on a graded hierarchy and the related jurisdictions that are “offices’; that is, posts itsti- tuted to insure theit continuity beyond the period of the competen- cies of the individual incumbents. This is only a part, though an important one, of Weber's conception. Hierarchy and Authority We find tendencies in some segmental societies that in certain circumstances might logically become aggrandized to create at least the beginnings of an hferarchical society. Above all, it seems likely that an individual who had acquired a personal following would like to have his own descendants bask in the same glory. ‘A New Guinea tribe, as described by Kenneth Read, exemplifies this point particularly well Among the Gahuku-Gama of the Fastern Highlands, the nor- ‘mal authority system is that of standard egalitarian society, se- niority among males—a familistic conception based on age-sex statuses, Read says (1959, p. 427): ut beyond this level of segmentation authority is achieved. The most attract followers and wield influence because, in the first instance, The Institutionalization of Power 73 ir fellows admire. There is some ex- ppectation that a son will succeed his father. People believe that the character of the parent is transmitted to his offspring, and a man of ‘eminence may be likely to seek and to encourage in his son the qual lies which Inspire confidence and dependence. Indeed, the son of & “big man” may have a slight advantage over others—access to greater wealth, for example—and various pressures may induce him to emur late his father. Read's point, however, is that charisma still wins, normally, because in a society that is “tradition-directed,” in’ Riesman’s familiar terminology, it is the “autonomous” individuals, superior as leaders, who usually win out. The “strength” of a man may be manifested or proved in various contexts, of which at one time warfare was probably the most important, Dancing ability and gift giving have continued to be important institutionalized occa- sions for demonstrating superiority. Gift-giving “places the recip- ient under an obligation to the donor, who, for the time being, has a measure of advantage over the other person. This applies equally—perhaps more clearly—to gift-giving between groups” Gbid., p. 428). Read elaborates interestingly about the strains and tensions that occur in a type of society that is essentially still egalitarian C'equivalence” governs the relations of age-mates and intergroup contacts) but that grants more prestige to leadership than more egalitarian societies. In some New Guinea tribes the “big-man’ is called a “center- man,” focusing more attention on the circumstance, gift-giving, that is so closely associated with the nearly achieved institution- alization of this form of personal power. He is a center-man in the sense that he attracts a cluster of followers. His bigness is ‘manifested in various ways, but the most notable are the giveaway feasts that demonstrate his ability to attract goods, especially pigs, from his followers in order to give a lavish feast to some other group. In this, the competitive aspect, and the fact that he or his, group will reccive goods in turn at some other time for him to redistribute, the feasts resemble the well-known potlatch of the American Indians of the North Pacifie Coast. 1. The exaggerated status rivalry manifested in the North American ‘Northwest Coast potlatches seems to have been caused by a breakdown in the social structure Cinvolving primogeniture, ranking by birth orden, and4 ‘The Origins of Government At any given time, a bigeman and his followers may resemble an embryonic chiefdom, as defined in chapter 2: leadership is cen- tealized, statuses ate arranged hierarchically, and there is to some degree a hereditary aristocratic ethos. The big-man's group is much smaller, usually hundreds rather than a thousand or s0, but a more important distinction is that since it rests on a purely personal form of power it is short-lived and unstable as a struc ture. Above all, since the power of the big-man is his charismatic ‘magnetism, he has no formal means to enforce his authority and his command elicits only a voluntary response from his followers.® How could a big-man turn an apparent embryonic chiefdom into a real one? The answer, as suggested by Read above, seems to lie in the tendency for-people to believe that the character of ‘a man is transmitted to his sons, particularly to his first-born. A Teview of the well-known chiefdoms of Polynesia and Micro- nesia, the southeastern United States, the islands and coasts of the Caribbean, many African societies, and Central Asian pastoralists reveals that inheritance of status by primogeniture must be a nearly universal feature of chiefdoms.® It is entirely reasonable to suppose that as this natural tendency toward primogeniture becomes stabilized as a custom or rule, just by that much hes the group increased the stability and power of its leadership over time—and probably its size as well-—as it has institutionalized the power ofits leadership. ‘he chiefdom form of organization), which left many hereditary statuses ‘open for occupancy, Population loss'due to European diseases was a large factor in this breakdown. the amount of European trade goods coming into the society in exchange for sea otter pelts created opportunities for ambitious potlatchers to achieve prestige. It Js endrely possible that the areas in New ‘Guinea where big-man status rivalry was strong were also areas of a certain amount of structural breakdown, ‘A good discussion of the big-man system of the Tiv of Nigeria is found in Bohannan (1958). 2. A classic report on bigman activites in the Solomon Islands is recommended reading: 300 “A Leader in Action” by Douglas Oliver (1955, pp. 422-499). For accounts of the functions of potlatches on the Northwest Coast see Suttles C1980, 1968), Piddocke (1985), and Vayda C1987) 3. There are a few matrilineal chicfdoms with inheritance and sue- cession moving to sister's son, but it seems to be normally the sister’ eldest san. The line doesn't matter greatly, since the ranking by relative age is ‘hat gives the Lineage its basic distinctiveness ‘The Institutionalization of Power 75 Redistribution also seems to be closely allied to the rise of and perpetuation of leadership. And to the extent that redistribution is exteiided and formalized, so may be the power of the leader, as his position as redistributor becomes more useful or necessary. Conversely, the better the leadership, and the more stable, the more it may be instrumental in extending and formalizing the exchange system. And of course once the society comes to depend heavily on the system, it depends on the continuity of the leadership. Sedentary chiefdoms normally inhabit areas of variegated natural resources, with numerous ecological niches requiring local and regional symbiosis. Some are located in mountain valleys with variations in altitude, in northerly or southerly exposure, in access to streams or Takes, and so on. Others are found in coastal regions with highly variegated land and sea resources, requiring overall coordination and redistribution in order to effectively hunt whales, net schools of halibut, or trap, smoke, and box salmon (the latter, for instance, during the tremendous spawning runs on the north- swest coast of North America). ‘The strong suggestion where this kind of distribution occurs is that certain geographic ciccumstances will favor the development of redistribution, and when combined with embryonic leadership like the big-man system, will tend to promote leadership toward a status hierarchy with an institution- alized system of central power. It may have typically happened, details aside, just so Figure 1 shows a mountain valley with a rapid stream grad- ually slowing and meandering over a rich alluvial bottom and finally forming a swamp at the lower end of the valley. At the 44, The lowland Maya may seem exceptional, but their ease will be “explained away” in chapter 10. “Sedentary" was specified because some chiefdoms are nomadic herders. It would seem that such herder predator froups require not only, good permanent leadership for thelr military ad Yentures, but also for the important and frequent redisteibution of booty and berds ‘5, There are so many ethnologicel examples of chiefdoms in this kind ‘of ecological setting, 2 setting which so stimulates a regional symbiors, ‘that I chose this model for the illustrative discussion to follow (cf. Sahlins 198; ef. also Patterson's discussion of the Peruvian valleys [1973, DP, 95-100]}. But it should be noted that diversifcation and specialization of local skilis in a gcographically homogeneous environment. could provide the same redistributional impetus. This would be so especially when com bined with the necessity for highly orgenized long-distance trade In neces: sities Gee Rathje 1972).76 The Origins of Government upper end of the valley is a Bint outcrop, and four miles away at the lower end of the valley the swamp hosts an array of fine reeds for arrowshafts, as well as food and cover for migratory waterfowl. ‘A horticultural hamlet has Tong occupied the bottomlands, growing an assortment of maize, beans, squash, peanuts, tobacco, and a few spices and herbs. This hamlet, A, eventually grew to the point that a daughter hamlet, B, was founded farther down- stream where the land was not quite so good for maize, being Doggier, but with the compensation of better tobacco, good fishing, more waterfowl, and good reeds. Next, a related’ group comes over the mountains and are peacefully allowed to settle in the northern end. This group, C, finds that maize, beans, and squash do only fairly well in the rocky soil, and tobacco not at all. The Proximity to good forest hunting, especially for deer, is a com pensation, as is the presence of the flint outcrop for stone tools and projectile points. ‘This simple sketch will do. Assuming that peaceful relations prevail, presents will be exchanged reciprocally among families of the three hamlets. A is not so dependent on the exchanges as the others, however, having a better all-around agricultural produc- tion, and being equidistant between the localized hunting and flint areas of the upper valley and the ducks, reeds, and tobacco of the lower. These desirable items would be exchanged in bal- anced reciprocity among the villages, but village A is in a particu- larly advantageous position. Not only is its status highest, because it is the original site, and its production higher, because it is in the best all-around location, but for these reasons it may also be larger. In addition, being centrally located it can more easily receive B's specialties than can C, and receive C’s specialities better than can B. Other things equal, the reciprocities are likely to go from A to B and back, and A to C and back. A, then, by simply storing the goods acquired from B and later giving a part of them to C Calong with some of its own production), gradually becomes in part at least the “magazine” of the valley, and A’s reciprocities at that time turn into true redistribution. If A village hhas an adequate big-man, the situation tums very much to his advantage, raising his status and helping perpetuate his position Meanwhile, the local specialization is so advantageous that it Froune 1 / Sketch of Villages in Area of Diversified Resources78 The Origins of Government naturally inereases, so that C village may give up maize-growing altogether, depending on A for its supply, while B may give up tobacco-growing, Production thus increases, population grows, new hamlets are probably formed Cby fission, as well as possibly by accretion), and the power of A—and above all, the society's need for A's power— increases proportionately. A village is the chiefly village, A’s chief has founded the highestanked descent line, for what would be ‘more natural than that A's oldest son be gradually trained into the succession? Calculated intermarriages with other villages es- tablish high-ranked cadet lines with B's chiefly line higher than Cs, Cs higher than D's, and so on. It seems to be a universal aristocratic principle that the oldest are the highest. This situation is abetted by a circumstance found normally among chiefdoms, that sons of high avistocratic lines but lowest in inheritance pros- pects Ca last-born, for example) are those who form the new daughter villages or marry into them. As charismatic power is perpetuated in a line, becoming instituted as an inherited hierarchy of offices, it not only can in- crease the effectiveness of the local specialization and redistributive network, but increasingly take on other tasks as well. Chiefs can subsidize craft specialties so that a family line of good flint work- cers, for example, can increase its skill by giving more time to it A chiefly line is likely to become a priestly line, as well, interced- ing with its ancestral gods in favor of the society. Chiefdoms known ethnologically seem to be typically, pethaps universally, theocracies. Ancestor worship is the typical formn the priestly cult takes, adding it as a sort of cultural overlay to the original sha- manism and mythology. The chiefly line is usually considered the direct descendants of the founder of the line and of the society as @ whole, now exalted in status as the major deity. Such concep- tions greatly strengthen the capacity of the governing hierarchy to do better some additional necessary and useful jobs. A central- ized government can make war more effectively, can preserve peace more effectively, and can solve internal problems of govern ance in ways not possible in egalitarian society. Most visibly, many of them have commanded public labor in the building of massive monuments The Institutionalization of Power 79 ‘A chiefdom in good working order seems to be held together Decause it can one the above functions well, especially redistribution—here, in fact, is the organismic model of society so beloved of the classical sociologists. The chiefdom was a very widespread form of organization, possibly because, being so suc- cessful in comparison to egalitarian tribes, it transformed its neigh- bors, oF neighbors transformed themselves in emulation. It is also possible that a successful new chiefdom might go on expanding by accretion as well as internal growth to the point where it could not rule successfully. If such growth and dissolution were in fact usual, it would help account for the spread of chiefdoms: An ‘expanding chiefdom transforms its new parts, if they were egal- itarian societies, into small-scale replicas of the original central chiefdom simply by adopting their leaders into the prevailing hierarchy. If the whole splits into parts, for whatever reasons, the parts will all be chiefdoms, however small, It is probably the cycle of expansion and contraction that caused chiefdoms to appear rather suddenly and to diffuse so rapidly in the archaeological record. : Redistributional leadership and status, stabilized through time by primogeniture, transforms the kinship structure of the society ‘Thus the lineages or clans of egalitarian society become, in Paul ichhoff’s words, (259), “conical clans,” wherein all collateral lines of descent as well a§ individuals in the families are ranked in terms of the birth order of the founders and of the order of each successive generation of perpetuators of the line and its proliferating cadet lines. This genealogical ranking is familiar in history among the ancient Celtic peoples of Great Britain, in the European aristocratic class, and apparently among the Semitic “ribes” of the Old Testament. The use of the term “clan” by Kirchhoff presents semantic difficulties because it is normally used for the egalitarian kinship order of “common” Cequal or generalized) descent from a founder. Raymond Firth (1936) called the conical group a ranage, from an Old French word meaning "branch." His term seems preferable because its etymal- ‘ogy calls attention to the “branching and rebranching” of the genealogy, ranked according to distance from the “parent stem’ (See figure 2), But Kirchhoff was quite correct in his argument80 ‘The Origins of Government that the “conical clan” Cramage) can evolve to a higher order, the state and archaic civilization. (He was wrong, however, in his assumption that the egalitarian clan was a “dead end." The solu- tion must be, simply, that a chiefdom stage of development was interposed between egalitarian society and the state.) Fioune: 2 / Scheme of Ranking of Chiefly Ramage, Reflect in Genealogy the Rank and Precedence of the ‘tee . aythieal ancestor A (Founcer-entef) 8 Cfomnder-chiet) © ttouaer-ehter) 2 (founders "Sier) Evidently the chiefdom and its ramage kinship structures are governments in some senses, differing from peoples in a “state of nature.” Obviously some new political inventions were created. We have already mentioned hereditary inequality, primogeniture, permanent leadership, and hierarchical authority. In these respects, and in some others, chiefdoms would seem to resemble societies of the historical feudal epoch in Europe. Inasmuch as Marx, notably, and others as well, had invested this Feudal epoch with the characteristics of an evolutionary stage preceding the capi- talist nation-state, it may be well to discuss briefly the differences and similarities between chiefloms and feudal societies. There are, in fact, some interesting paraltels, although the discontinuity remains significant—mainly because European feudalism was 4 particular historical variety of a political type, but not a stage itself. The Institutionalization of Power 81 Primitive Chiefdoms and Feudalism European feudalism, of which eleventh-century France is often taken as the classical form, combined three distinct char- acteristics, any one of which, and sometimes two in combination, can be found in abundance in the world of primitive and peasant communities. These are: (1) the building of an hierarchy of personal relationships of a peculiarly voluntary type, usually called vassalage; (2) a landholding regime of fiefs, featuring the relationship of agricultural workers to it as serfs; and (3) an economic system of lecal, near-sufficiency—usually called the ‘manorial system—which (like the political system) remained decentralized after the breakup of the Roman Empire. “The first feature of feudalism, vassalage, was the one empha- sized by the great French authority, Mare Bloch, who said (1932, P. 204) Tin the absence then of a strong state, of blood ties capable of dominat- ing the whole life and of an economic system founded upon money payments, there grew up in Carolingian and post-Carolingian society {elations of man to man of a peculiar type. The superior individual {ranted his protection and divers material advantages that assured @ Subsistence tothe dependent directly or indirectly; the inferior pledged various prestations or various services and was under @ gen: tral obligation to render aid. These relations were not always feeely fssumed nor did they imply a universally satisfactory equiltbrium between the two partes. Built upon authority, the feudal regime never ceased to contain a great number of constraints, violences and abuses. However, this idea of the personal bond, hierarchic and synallagmatic [bilateral] in character, dominated European feudalism. ‘The second, the tenure system of fiefs, was, os implied in Bloch’s definition above, closely related to the purely personal bond of vassalage. To some writers Cespecially Marxists), however, the land tenure system is more the essence of feudalism, however importantly related to vassalage, because it refers to relations of production. Such an authority as Maurice Dobb (1945), for instance, uses serfdom, the involuntary form of dependence in land tenure, as fully synonymous with feudalism. But the relationship of vassalage to the fief and serfdom in82 The Origins of Government European feudalism is not a necessary one in the rest of the world. The big-man system of New Guinea and the patron-lient re- lationship in many areas of Africa, for example, are very remi- niscent of the voluntary “followership” of feudalistic vassalage. But they have nothing, or very little, to do with any kind of dependent land tenure system. On the other hand, we are familiar with many modern cases of fieflike land tenure systems featuring vwealthy privileged owners and debt-bound serflike peasants (lati fundia and hacienda systems in colonial Latin America come to mind), but which may have no vassalage whatsoever in the system, The third characteristic of feudalism is the relative self sufficiency of the great manors, left high and dry after the breakup of the political and economic structure of the empire, This kind of local reconstitution after the dissolution of some greater polity hhas happened again and again in history, with subsequent partial reconstitution always a likelihood. If that were all that defined feudalism, then we must conclude that itis always a very probable historical phase of any empire, but certainly not a stage in the development of a polity—it may be best construed, in fact, as @ Cpossibly temporary) devolution rather than evolution. ‘The historical peculiarity of Europe's feudal devolution, as compared with other more plain devolutions, such as that of ‘ovelfth-century Japan, was that it involved a former imperial tunion of societies of two disparate kinds, the Northern European especially the Germanic) chiefdoms and the more southerly parts of the classical Greco-Roman civilization. European feudalism, then, was historically of a very complex, and perhaps unique, sort, For this reason it cannot be considered a stage in evolution, or even a usual case of devolution. Only one of its elements, voluntaristic vassalage, has widespread counterparts in the rest of the world. 'Vassalage seems typically—perhaps uni- versally—a feature of those societies variously denominated as bigaman or patron-client systems. And when these systems be- come institutionalized as the power bureaucracies of hereditary chiefdoms, they resemble in certain important respects the hered- itary aristocracies of late or postfeudal times in Europe. But none of these chiefdoms combine those features with the complicated land tenure systems and the devotion in political unity of Euro- ‘The Institutionalization of Power 83 pean feudalism closely enough to be classed with it, This is not to say that the parallels are without interest. law ‘As we sav in the previous chapter, “man in a state of nature” is not an unfettered, natural man. Very powerful forces of social control inhere in small face-to-face societies; this is especially so in primitive societies where the individual normally spends his whole life among his kinsmen. Since escape is impossible he can- not recover by moving to some new group the esteem he might have lost by a social mistake in his own group. Cooperation, alli- ance, love, reciprocities of all kinds are totally important to the survival of any individual in primitive society. This must be why such people seem so extraordinarily sensitive to the reactions of the group to any social action. Praise and blame, affection and withdrawal, and other such socie-psychological sanctions are ex- tremely poswerful reinforcers in small societies of stable member- ship, and it has been noted over and over by many observers of egalitarian societies how carefully social customs, especially in etiquette, are observed —“custom_is_king.” Sidney Hartland’s Primitive Law (ag24) is pethaps the strong- est exponent of the idea that uncoercive custom is the primitives law. In a typical statement Cp. 138), he says that the primitive "is hemmed in on every side by the customs of his people, he is bound in the chains of immemorial tradition. . these fetters are accepted by him as a matter of course; he never seeks to break forth.” : ‘Another ethnologist, W. H. R. Rivers, in his Social Organiza tion, says (1924, p. 169): “Among such peoples as the Melanesians there is a group sentiment which makes unnecessary any definite social machinery for the exertion of authority, in just the same manner as it makes possible the harmonious working of a com- munel ownership and insures the peaceful character of a com- ‘munistic system of sexual relations.” : Statements like these were a great annoyance to Bronislaw Malinowski (1934), who argued against the idea that primitive peoples were so enthralled by custom. He also argued tellingly that84 ‘The Origins of Government powerful negative, though not physical, sanctions do exist in “savage society.”* I think he is correct that there are powerful negative sanctions, such as, importantly, the withdrawal of normal reclprocities.* But since these are not instituted and administered by official authority with privileged force, there ate many critics of Malinowski who would deny that law in found in primitive, pre- state societies A modern specialist, E. A. Hocbel, sees law as composed of three necessary elements: privileged force; official authority; and regularity (a954, p. 28). Robert Redfield, like Hoebel trained in law but practicing ethnology, states that “law is... recognizable in form: in formal statement of the rules, and in forms for secur- ing compliance with the rules or:satisfaction or punishment for their breach” (1967, p. 5). These definitions do not argue explicitly, however, that the coercion of “privileged force” and “punishment” come about necessarily with the advent of the state. They are not conceived in such evolutionary terms. It may be that only evolutionists are convinced of the con- nection between legal punitive force and the state, Walter Gold- schmidt says (a959, p. 99): “A true state involves the legitimate monopoly of power in the hands of its rulers.” Stanley Diamond would definitely separate custom from law, with this distinction defining rigorously the difference betweeti primitive and civilized societies: “Custom—spontancous, traditional, personal, commonly known, corporate, relatively unchanging—is the modality of prim- itive society; law is the instrument of civilization, of political 4 He shuld have sad, im the sage scety be sued Che Teo band eed) Manoa te Seaueny pence sees Seg se worl using evkdenee fom ii ge Sade ack nae ee ‘acto nate mle! cite 7, Tt may be useful to quote one of Malinowski's statements on this Point (ag34, 9. xe) “This ositive aspect of compliance to primitive custom, the fact that hedience 9 rules is bated with premiums, that fis fewarded by counter, Serres, i as important, im my opinion, as the study of puntve yancnny, nd these later consist notin a punishment inflicted deliberately a hoe, but rather inthe natural retaliation of non-compliance in eountesservisey of extcsm and dissatisfaction within the relationshtp and within the i station Any mala fide fale 19 discharge the dutey fly and adegeately mec with whole series of rebuley renal and diverts whch mat needs end in a complete daorgansation of the cooperave group, whedber this be the family, the guild or the tribe.” . The Institutionalization of Power 85 society sanctioned by organized force, presumably above society at large, and buttressing a new sct of social interests. Law and cus- tom both involve the regulation of behavior but their characters are entirely distinct; no evolutionary balance has been struck between developing law and custom, whether traditional or emer- gent” (2972, p. 47). Many others have argued in this vein at length. And it would seem that the pre-Malinowski view of the significance of custom may be making a comeback. Simpson and Stone, historians of law, state (1948, p. 3): “Despite the recent challenge of Mali nowski, the orthodox explanation of the effectiveness of social control in a kin-organized society still seems the most satisfac- tory. The pressure of a body of custom sanctified by a belief in its supernatural origin points to social opinion and the fear of the gods as the two major weapons in the armory of rudimentary social control.” Certain problems related to the custom versus Jaw argument are semantic, so it may be well to get them out of the way before confronting the ethnological evidence, which will require some new kind of adjudication of the argument. First of all, what does custom mean? We do not want to bother now with an indi vidual’s habits ("Tt is my custom to take a walk before breakfast”); we are concerned with the conventions of the collectivity. But these may be of two distinct kinds. Morris Ginsberg was conscious of this problem when he decided that the term usage would refer to “those actions habitual to members of a community, which do not possess normative character or lack the sanction of moral con- straint,” and that custom would mean “not merely a prevailing habit of action or behavior, but... judgment upon action or behavior. ... Custom, in other words, is sanctioned usage” (aga, pp. 2068 This dichotomy is suggestive of some real differences but seems unnecessarily strict, for it could be argued that any devia tion from conventional usage may be sanctioned to some extent in some society by some kind of disapproval from somebody. It would be hard to predict, cross-culturally, just which deviations from normal behavior would elicit strong public negative sanctions singing a traditional song incorrectly; not wearing the “proper hie style; a mistake in greeting style; belching; killing your clan's86 The Origins of Government totem. A breach of any of these, and any of a thousand more, could be severely punished by the collectivity in some society of other, But then some of those thousand customs might also be ignored in the breach. I shall try to avoid this problem by always using the modifier sanctioned when indeed sanctions sre attached toacustom. Sanctioned customs are forms of social control that are rein- forced positively or negatively. The positive sanction® are normally some kind of approval by the public, or some part of it. Negative sanctions are disapprovel of a breach of custom, normally with- drawals of friendship and the expected reciprocities that Mal nowski emphasized above. Again, as in the case of positive sanc- tions, the disapproval is a social punishment—by the public, or some part of it, That is, the sanctions are not applied by an official authority who stands as a “third party"; the only third party in segmental society is a person or group who has a familistic sort of authority, such as a wise, aged relative who might work as conciliator oF arbitrator, Law, on the other hand, implies a centralized, permanent authority standing above the familistic statuses." It iin ‘making the clear distinction between. the rule of custom in segmental so- cieties and the addition of law to custom in hierarchical. societies that the emphasis on forceful coercion applied by the. state was created. As the famous historian of law Paul Vinogradoff put it (ageo-22, vol. 4, p. 95): "The state monopolizes the making and enforcing of laws by coercion, and did not exist in ancient times.” Force and a political structure, the state, that monopolizes its use are usually, therefore, important elements in definitions of law alle the distinction between sanctioned custom and law. jut none of those who make this distinction have recognized the problem posed by the chiefdoms that apparently precede the state, A chiefdom lies between the segmental, egalitarian society and the coercive state. In a chiefdom we find one essential of trne law, the authority structure that can act as @ third party above the familistic level. But chiefdoms lack the coercive physical sanctions related to the monopoly of force practiced by states. 8. Apparcolly this fs what the historian of Jee, William Seag! C1946), had in mind when he insisted on the significance of a court a5 {he eenizal element in lw. ted on the sgnicance of a court as The Institutionalization of Power 87 Note that this assumption about chiefdoms and states, and the question of the universality of the chiefdom stage in evolution, is a “given” at this point in our discussion. Its factual basis will be ‘more fully explored in succeeding chapters. It seems useful to divide law into its two kinds, public law and private law, Public lew will refer here to the legal problems that persons (individuals or groups) have with the authority structure. Its context of greatest significance for our present purposes is that of reinforcement, as in cases of treason or Iése majesté. Private lavw will refer to legal contentions between persons individuals or ‘groups) themselves, which are mediated by the authority struc- ture, (The functions of public and private law in chiefdoms, with examples, will be discussed more fully in the sections of this chap- ter titled "Reinforcement" and “Mediation.” Inasmuch as we are at present interested in chiefdoms, it seems evident that we need a definition of law that will apply to them, but which will still enable us to talk about the differences between chiefdoms and states. Leopold Pospisil’s experiences in the ethnology of law (1972) are useful here, particularly since his major work on the Kepauku Papuans C1958) faces the prob- Jem of the present chapter, since it is devoted to a chiefdomlike society Cbut rather a low-level one). He describes cases of con- flict resolution as legat when the decisions possess four attributes authority, intention of universal application, obligatio, and sane- tion (2972 and elsewhere). Legal authority requires an individual Cor group, like a coun- cil) powerful enough to enforce the verdict by persuasion or threat of force. CIn a chiefdom, it should be added, « legal author~ ity is likely to combine with this function still others of a political, military, economic, or priestly nature, and these are likely to give him various enforcive powers.) Disputes are frequently mediated by an authority who uses his powers of persuasion to induce com- pliance with his attempted arbitration. Such interference seems ‘more informal and “primitive,” or familistic, than if he were to render a decision that the litigants are forced to accept. This latter seems more legal to us, involving as it does the familiar uses of an authority working as a judge. But Pospisil points out (972, p. 26) that in either case the producer of the solution was not the disputants but the “third party,” a legal authority. It would seem,88 The Origins of Government hhowever, that the ability of the legal authority to enforce decisions rather than to function by suasion, as @ kind of wise man, is a ‘measure of the power of the hierarchy, of its abilify to command, But there is an important qualification to be made. A decision made by an authority is not for that reason necessarily legal; it \may be political and thus expediently variable from one context to another. The decision partakes of greater legality if it incor- Porates the “intention of universal application.” Whenever a pre- vious case can be found that is similar to the case being considered, and which was satisfactorily solved, there is a normal tendency to use the earlier case as @ precedent. Frequently, trouble cases may be quickly composed by an authority who simply calls atten- tion to the earlier case, In other words, the thitd party in the cease seems to find the solution informally, rather than by making an arbitrary decision. Even if the case “goes to court” and an authority has to render a decision more formally, it is still easier for him to get compliance, to strain his power less, when he has even a partial precedent. But the first case, the precedent-setting fone, had to be a true decision, and if legal, always incorporates the intention of further application in like cases. COF course it may have been a bad decision, not followed subsequently at all, but the intention of precedentsetting must have been there if it were to be a legal decision.) A difficulty with this criterion is that of discovering its presence (Lundsgaarde 1970). Obligatio, the third attribute of law Cibid., pp. 22-23), “refers to that part of the legal decision that defines the rights of the entitled and the duties of the obligated parties.” This is not yet sanction, but rather a statement as to the nature of the unbal- anced relationship of the litigents. Sanction, while closely related, refers to the resolution of the conflict by restoring an equitable relationship. (In familiar modern courtroom terms, when a court comes to a factual verdict of “guilty” it is a statement of the dis- turbed obligatio relationship between the litigants; the actual sentencing is the imposition of the sanction.) ‘The attribute obligatio is particularly useful in discussing law in a theocracy. Much of such a society's reinforcement of its rules and social arrangements is religious, having to do with morals, conscience, and especially tabus. Violations of these are, 50 to speak, “crimes without victims”; the punishment of these The Institutionalization of Power 89 crimes, if any, is imaginary and supernatural; and the litigious relationship is not between living persons. This is not to say that such things as religious tabus are not important: They may be so successful as a society's punishment-reward system that force- ful sanctions may be only very rarely imposed. Obligatio, in other ‘words, stands well apart from sanction in theocracies, in contrast to modern society, which often confounds the two. Punitive sanction involving force is regarded by some anthro- pologists as the exclusive criterion of law, as we have seen, but it seems clear that while such sanction may be one of the usual ingredients of modern law, not all uses of sanction are im a Tegel context. Most prominently, a great many ad hoc political decisions carry sanctions, yet they are not law. As discussed above, political decisions are expediently variable and thus do not carry the in- tention of universal application, although they may impose sanc- ioris. oGanetons need not be always, or even often, of a physical nature. They may be economic (like fines and damages), and especially in a theocratic society, they may be psychological pun ishments Ca public reprimand by a high priest, for example), or socially negative Cas in excommunication, withdrawal of rewards, services, and normal reciprocities). Nor are the legal cases them- selves in primitive society, in chiefdom theocracies especially, necessarily or even mostly concerned with physical violence. Pri- vate crimes are frequently "breaches of faith” concerning reciproc- ities, and public crimes, instances of iése majesté. These latter crimes may be viewed in two separate ways in a theocracy: (1) a crime Cas in a violation of a tabu) against the person of the para- mount chief, or toa lesser extent, against someone in authority but lower in the hierarchy; and (2) an attack against any traditional ‘custom or belief that somehow injures the authority of the ruler. Such a thing as the breaking of a tabu is a legal offense only when there is obligatio—an offender and a person, like the chief, who is somehow “injured” by the act.) Such breaches of the law are usually something like expressions of contempt, or a curse, and if unpunished somehow weaken the authority system, which is largely based on ideological, supernatural, cultural grounds. ‘As we have seen in some of our quoted examples, emphasizing such coercive sanctions as violence in states has led these writers90 The Origins of Government to identify law with force and both with states. We shall con- sider this in later chapters by analyzing some actual cases, but at this point we need to consider an argument of Pospisil’s that has theoretical relevance. If a law is desirable to most members of a group and if they consider it binding, it may in time seem to an observer to be like a custom, in contrast to laws that may have to be enforced by the state, at least sometimes, against the will of many of the people. A customary law, according to Pospisil Cag72, p. 30), is “internalized” so that not only do the people feel it desirable, but when it is broken the malefactor feels guilt or shame. If a law is too nev, or for some other reason not suffi- ciently accepted and internalized, a forceful repression may be called for; but later, ot in some other society, the same law may be upkeld by conscience or public opinion alone. In times of social or demographic breakdown, for example, crimes without victims such as public drunkenness) that had been prevented in stable times by psychological states of shame might have to be repressed by physical punishment or fines. ‘Thus the difference between the two kinds of laws is not guali- {ative and cannot be taken as exact or specific characterizations of the difference between state and primitive non-state, But we do want to bear in mind for later reference that the origin of the state may be accompanied by a sudden increase in the number of repressive laws, by more severe repression, and perhaps by new Kinds of laws. And it is very likely that the new state will ave a more visible, more formal, and more explicit judicial and puni- tive machinery. To the extent that the laws are new, they will nnot yet be internalized or even widely accepted, which might create further need for repression. We may at this point continue to accept. this monopoly of force and the presence of @ judicial apparatus as indicative of. “stateness,” but not Tecessarily of law. | Both states and chiefdoms have the most necessary ingredient of Jaw, a central authority that can ereate rules of behavior, enforce them, and judge the breaches of them.? 1, Morton Fried C1967, pp. 9o-a4) states his basie approval of Pos: Diss definition of law, but disagrees with some of his applications of it to simple egalitarian socictis. 1 agree with Fried, but think the problem i easily remedied if we make explicit now what was stated in the previous chapter: That familistic authority mediating domestic quarrels are found 4m all societies and are not law. Let us therefore add the simple: proviso ‘The Institutionalization of Power 0 Nonlegai Reinforcement ‘The same personalsocial familistic sanctions that character- ized egalitarian society remain within the component face-to-face residential groups of a chiefdom. But in addition, there are new political norms, rules, and sanctions that will reflect Cin these groups) the new features of the social system, particularly those relating to the maintenance of the new hierarchy of status and authority. Also, since chiefdoms are larger and more complex than egalitatian tribes, there are new problems regarding the inter- relation of groups. ‘One important form of punishment/reward that remains as a carry-over from the previous stage is the familistic admonish- ment/praise form by which an elder person guides and educates, the younger toward conformity. But at one point the status of elders over youths is confused by the higher status of one person over another if he comes from an elder descent line but is in fact a younger person than another. It would seem that a youth simply avoids the confusion of confronting an older person higher than he in age-status) when the elder is lower in descent-line status It is difficult to confirm this judgment from enough examples in the ethnographic literature, but the very absence of examples may bespeak such avoidance, On the other hand, in some chiefdoms —those of Polynesia come to mind—young aristocrats could be deliberately cruel to elderly commoners, which suggests that per- haps the latter do the avoiding. But above all, the tabu system of extreme social distance between ranks is the best example (to be discussed in chapter 9). The development of a permanent. redistributional_system not only seems to have bech closely. associs ith the origin of chiéFlome, but also contributes powerfully to the ongoing mainte- nance and reinforcement of the sociopolitical authority hierarchy, that legal authority is supra-familistic. Another possible amendment is im- plied in our present chapter: that the authority and sanetions need not be Secular alone (as Pospisil and others believe); In chiefdoms, and undoubs- edly in the archaic civilizations, the authority is typically sacerdotal and the Sanctions supernatural. Our more evolutionary perspective thus excludes from formal-legal types of sccietics certain segmental examples and admits rote hierarchical societies than Pospisil’.92 The Origins of Government 1s was emphasized earlier. It reiiforces the structure mainly in two important ways: (1) the authority structure is also the struc- ture of main and lesser redistributors—it is the basic supply sys- tem—and hence it is obviously necessary to the whole society; (2) allied to this aspect of the supply system is the fact that a redistributor could punish by withholding goods from any dis- sident subchief or group. All this is obvious enough. Along with redistribution, one of the most powerful of the new politically integrative ingredients is ideological: the hierarchy of the authority system has become supernaturally sanctioned in mythology. The original founder becomes an ancestor god, other ancestors are lesser gods, the living chief is nearly divine, lesser chiefs less divine, and the supernatural world and the living world are reflections of each other (“on earth as it is in heaven”), The Polynesians are the most striking examples of this arrangement. They even posited a kind of supernatural force, mana, which owed from the ancestors in varying amounts of power, greater in first-borns and diminishing with each successive birth. ‘Thus the paramount chief is the “holiest” (fullest of mana), and each ower step in the authority hierarchy is manned by a person having the appropriately lesser amount of mana.%? Such beliefs, it may be imagined, give enormous stability to the social structure, making every status absolutely hereditary in theory, as well as mostly in fact. Inasmuch as supernatural beings support the extant struc- ture, additional stability is undoubtedly created by fear, by super- natural terrorism, ‘The ancestors must be placated with sacrifices Sometimes human) and great ceremonies in their name must be held. These are evidences of the belief that the gods can punish by withholding rain or migrations of game, or by sending pests and diseases. Alternatively, the gods can also send benefits: They can bestow good luck in war, assure fertility, cure diseases, send rain, and so on. All of these and still other supernatural rewards and 10, Manalike conceptions are widespread among theocracies. A pa ticularly close analogy in Africa is found among the Tiv see Bohennan 1958), who belieye in tsav, an innate spiritual power held in varying amounts by individuals, The Institutionalization of Power 93 punishments are mediated by the priest-chiefs, and thus they are themselves greatly enhanced in importance.” Ceremonialism in and of itself has a great socially integrating effect, especially when rituals and ceremonies involve the attend- ance of large numbers of people and are for the purposes of the whole society. This later aspect is in a sense a technological Func- tion of the authority system; the priest-chief is “getting some- thing done” toward 2 good harvest, for example, by assuring a rainfall after the ceremony. That is good. But he needs the pres- ‘ence of his people and perhaps the actual participation of large numbers of them, dancing, chanting, clapping, or praying. All this is a common effort for the common good, but led by authority. ‘This kind of ceremony is thus organismfe in Wis mature, like the redistributional system, But it also has an important social-psycho- logical dimension as the people collaborate in large groups with Little likelihood of friction under such circumstances. And appar- ently the Targer the group the greater the social intoxication of the melting of the individual into the collectivity. ‘The paramount chiefs and the highest priests were frequently, though not always, the same person. But always the priesthood sanctified the chief, celebrated his life crisis rites, and in general supported the hierarchy by ritual and ceremonial means. Some- times, as in Polynesia, priests were of special orders who resided in, and were custodians of, certain temples and images of gods on a full-time basis, but always these. temples. and goss were in the service. of the authoritative bureaucracy, supporting it at every turn, This is not to say that there was no other religion in chief- doms. The curing shaman of egalitarian society probably con- tinued this “oldest profession,” as did magicians, soothsayers, witches, and other practitioners of primitive supernaturalism. But these remained largely unorganized, whereas the hierarchy of priests was an important facet of the organized hierarchical society of chiefdoms, In the classic chiefdoms the negative sanctions reinforcing the integrity of the society—the public laws—were typically 11, Netting (1972) has written a particularly good analysis of the imag of religion in the instiationaliration of power in stateless socites94 ‘The Origins of Government supernatural punishments such as curses or denunciations by @ sacerdotal authority. The crime, something like treason in our society, was interpreted as Tse majesté, an offense against the person—hence the rule—of the high chief or of members of the hierarchy. In most chiefdoms, any failure to obey orders could be interpreted a5 an offense against the chief, and therefore against the gods. Sacrilege or sin may be an accurate conception of this Kind of breach. It may well be that the hierarchy of the first chiefdoms, having the perpetuation of their regime much before their minds, soon promoted the Iése majesté sort of law. Hence the origin of an inchoate code of laws probably coincided with the maintenance problems of the new chiefdoms. What could be more natural, as the chiefdom expanded and secured itself, than for the leadership to expand the range of actions to be con- sidered as “offenses against the hierarchy and the gods"? (The tabu systems of the ancient Polynesians, again, are the most com- plex example of this process.)!? Leadership Leadership~in~ action, normally with respect to concerted ‘group projects, may be only sporadic in chiefdoms. But as already indicated in another context, the most significant group_activity in chiefdoms is redistribution, which not only enables.a Teadet.t0. become a permanent fixture but also requires that he do his job well.“This means that he must be able to command labor in agricultural and craft production, and then he must equitably and wisely decide how the goods are to be allocated. Among the im- portant uses of the goods is to store certain of them, not only to later subsidize public labor and craftsmen, but as capital for uses in contingencies like war or @ great feast for important visitors. Such powers are economically and socially useful, having, as mentioned, a politically integrative effect. But the storehouse of a chief hss still another political effect. David Malo, a native Hawaiian historian, describes it this way C1gog, pp. 257-58): 12, A. M. Hocart said (1996, p. 199), “The Fijian chief has only to ‘extend his procinets and interpret widely the traditional rules of ceremonial ‘order to acquire @ criminal jurisdiction, and increase his inter- ference with the life of his subjects The Institutionalization of Power 95 It was the practice for kings [ic., paramount chiefs of individual fslands} to build store-houses in which to collect food, fish, tapas [bark cloth}, malos [men's loin cloths], pa-us [women’s loin skirts], and all sorts of goods. These storeshouses were designed by the Kalak. moku [the chief's principal executive] as a means of keeping the peo- ple contented, so they would not desert the king. They were like the baskets that were used to entrap the hkinalea fish. The hinalea thought there was something good within the basket, and he hung round the outside of it. In the same way the people thought there was food jn the store-houses, and they kept their eyes on the king, As the rat will not desert the pantry . .. where he thinks food is, so the people will not desert the king while they think there is food in his store-house. It is evident that a well-managed redistributional system, by its very nature, contributes to solidarity. Most obvious, and most often remarked upon, is its organismie quality: The specialized parts depend on the functioning of the whole. But Malo's point is important, too. A head of a houschold growing an abundant sur- plus of yams, for example, probably does not mind too much giving up some of the surplus to the chief, since he knows he will Tater acquire things that he needs but does not produce. ‘The exchange seems necessary and beneficial to the yam-grower, and his perception of the benefit to him is not in terms of his own dependence on a system or organism, but to the chief himself. Hence, “organismic solidarity” in truly political terms also re- sults in personal loyalties to the administration, OF course the most dramatic administrative uses of leader- —and for which the redistributional surplus is very useful —is in warfare, But we leave matters of foreign war-making and peace-making for another section of this chapter, “External Rela- at this point we need only to refer to the role of leader- ship in preventing rebellions—i.e., internal, or “civil,” war. It has been mentioned that chiefdoms seem to have a propen- sity for growing to the point of imbalance or too much organiza- +s tional stress. Perhaps they simply get too large to be governed by the ‘till relatively primitive means of governance and communication, But this seems too vague; one wonders how, more’ specifically, a chiefdom breaks up. In any society, there are always some dis- satisfied, dissident elements—centrifugal forces are always at work. Thi a large chiefdom, constituent elements are made up of litde chiefdoms, replicas of the paramount chiefdom, and hence96 The Origins of Government capable of their own hierarchical self government. Some may be led by arrogant, ambitious, and able chiefs who want indepen- dence merely to fulfil themselves in successful competition; some may be genuinely oppressed or exploited, and resentful of this circumstance. Sahlins (1968, pp. 92-93) emphasizes this Factor, thinking of Polynesia at about the contact period. He visions a sort of primitive class-struggle: ‘Advanced Polynesian political systems were overtaxed. In Hawaii and ther islands cycles of centralization-decentralization appear in the traditional histories: periodic violent dissolution of larger into smaller chiefdoms and, by the same means, periodie reconstitution of the great society. Sydney Parkinson accompanied Captain Cook to Polynesia and left an important account, but Northcote Parkinson would also have understood it. The expansion of a chiefdom seems to have tailed a more-than-proportionate expansion of the administrative apps- ratus and its conspicuous consumption, The ensuing drain on the people's wealth and expectations was eventually expressed in an unrest that destroyed both chief and chiefdom. There is no way to tell how much the above kind of unrest characterized chiefdoms outside the large Polynesian Islands, nor ‘whether even in those islands it was always the primary cause of administrative breakdown. But certainly sometimes large chief- doms break up simply because of the desire of secondary chiefs to become paramount chiefs in an independent arca of this own, for whatever reasons. As we shall sce in later chapters, chiefdoms that preceded the native states in parts of Africa were given to that Kind of movement, If, however, all potentially dissident groups were involved in society-wide efforts, solidarity of the whole is benefited ‘One of the most visible results of the capacity of the theocratic chiefdoms to administrate is the use of labor in building public works. The most imposing and usual of these are the monuments of the theocratic order, pyramids or burial mounds and temples. The leadership apparently can as easily require a certain amount of man-days per community for a public project as it can a certain proportion of a crop—perhaps more easily, since the primitive work schedule allows for long seasons of inactivity between plant- ings and harvests.”¥ tle SEe Erasmus (1965) for Interesting experiments on the balling of monuments. The Institutionalization of Power 97 The levy on the public for labor must be very like the raising of an army—it is a conscription of men in either case, With respect to military affairs, it is probably unnecessary to argue that the centralized administration of chiefdoms makes for much more powerful atmies—in size and in tactical coordination—than are possible in egalitarian societies, which depend on a kind of volun- tarism. Chiefdoms, of at least some of them, are able ¢o conscript « rather large proportion of able-bodies men, sometimes as age grades, and among herding chiefdoms it would seem that neatly all grown men could be made available at certain seasons for military forays, since the herds could be watched over by women and children when in a safe place. Mediation It may, be taken. as-oxiomatic that because chiefdoms have a larger population. and more. centralization than egalitarian tribes and bands they will not only have more occasions for mediation but alsovagreater ability to do so. This does not mean that they create bodies of formal laws Cor codes), nor that a formal court meeting and procedure is worked out, but only that we do find authority at work in the context of ending quarrels that threaten the integrity of the society. It makes a significant difference be- tween hierarchical society and egalitarian society that the authority of the former is capable of intervention, rather than simply gen- cxalized public opinion aroused by an occasion such as a song duel or athletic contest. “As stated earlier, this discussion is essentially descriptive rather than an attempt to settle the semantic debates among anthropal- ogists as to whether lew is everywhere or is found only in states. Let us merely agree now that when a true state administers a codified set of laws with formal procedures and backed by force, an institutional structure has appeared that is visibly very distinct from a group of old men in Australian society giving some advice cr help in settling an argument. Our problem is that chiefdoms lie somewhere between institutionalized modern Jaw courts and primitive familistic customs with their informal public sanctions. All have the same mediating functions, but the means are distinct. Chiefdoms seem to have the beginnings of lawlike institutions,98 The Origins of Government s0 that even the strictest definition of law would allow such char- acterizations as “inchoate law” or “law-stuff.” However, we do want to talk about the system of mediation as it really is. As an- thropologists repeatedly point out, there is danger of ethnocentrism Jf we stick too closely to modern legalistic terms when talking about primitive societies. First of all, we should not expect to find in chiefdoms such extreme formality and explicitness in the law and legal procedures that enable us in modern society to so easily distinguish between “going to court” and “Till tell your father on you.” We must be watchful not to let sheer formalism be our only criterion of an adjudicative legal process. As an example of a relatively informal procedure that still conforms to Pospisil’s criteria of adjudicative law-making, let us take an example from a New Guinea Papuan society investigated by Pospisl himself (1968, pp. 49-30) ‘The Kapauku “process of law” starts usually as a quarrel. The “plain- Lif” accuses the “defendant” of having performed an act which causes harm to the plaintiff's interests. The defendant denies this or brings forward justification for his action. The arguments are usually accom panied by loud shouting which attracts other people, who gather ‘around. The close relatives and friends of the parties fo the dispute take sides and present their opinions and testimony by emotional speeches or by shouting. If this sort of arguing, called by natives mana Koto, goes on unchecked, it usually results in’a stick fight . . . ot in However, in most instances, the important mem from the village, and from allied communities, appear on the scene. First, they 1mong the onlookers and listen to the arguments. As soon as the ‘exchange of opinions reaches a point too close to an outbreak of violence, the rich headman steps {n and starts his argumentation. He admonishes both parties to have patience and begins questioning the defendant and the witnesses. He looks for evidence that would in- criminate the defendant, at the scene of the crime or in the defen- dant’s house. . . . This activity of the authority is called boko petai, Which can be loosely teanslated as “finding the evidence.” Having secured the evidence and made up his mind about the factual back- ground of the dispnte, the authority starts the activity called by the natives boko duvvai, the process of making a decision and inducing the parties to the dispute to follow it. The native authority makes a long speech in which he sums up the evidence, appeals to a rule, and then tells the parties what should be done to terminate the dispute. If the principals are not willing to comply, the authority becomes emotional and starts to shout reproaches; he makes long speeches in which evi- dence, rules, decisions, and threats form inducements. Indeed, the The Institutionalization of Power 99 authority may go as far as to start wainal (the mad dance), or ch: iis tastes sedlenly'and weep bitery about the mecnduct of tee defendant sa th Tae hat he refies i oy, Some nate autor ties ae o shld in the at of pecsuastn that they can produce genuine tears which almost always break the resistance ofthe Unwilling part. A superll Westen observer confronted with such s'shuaton may very ley segard the weeping headman asa culprit om tral, Thus, froin the formelstie polnt of view, there isle resemblance betwen the Western cours sentence and ihe boko dual activity ofthe head man. However, the effect of the headman's persutsion fe the same a5 hat of a verdict passed in our courts. There were only five cases in my material wherein the parties openly resisted and. disobeyed. the Authority's decison. A noticeable feature of this instance is that the authority did_not himself truly adjudicate the matter so much as use his good influence to-compose the differences of the two, parties, and even “involve ‘public opinion to scnie e¥ient. Having no police to back him, he exercised his power, which was that of authority alone, with considerable caution—not at all as an “authoritarian” leader. Like a good arbitrator, he tried t6°1avalvé both sides in an acceptable solution by his powers of persuasion. This may be taken as a sign that the power inherent in_his particular office ‘was not really very great. For other reasons, as well, the Kapauku society seems to mé to qualify as a chiefdom, but at a rather low level. But it is for this reason an interesting case, revealing the ‘embryonic essence of chieftainship. More-developed chiefdoms, like those of some of the Indians of the southeastern United States, the circum-Caribbean Indians, and the Africans and Polynesians, were much more thoroughgoing theocracies than the Kapauku; the authority positions were seen much more as buttressed by supernatural power. The evidence seems to show that the chiefs had more confidence, even arrogance, in rendering decisions as to guilt, restitution, or punishments, External Rel All of the foregoing instances of reinforcement, leadership, and mediation have as a main function the preservation of the society. To the extent that they are successful—especially in pre- venting feuds and other tendencies toward fission—the society can grow, by natural increase and by accretion. And of course, the =—_—— OOO OO100 The Origins of Government larger and better governed, the better the society can wage war and peace in its external relations. Such a society can wage war more effectively, obviously, be- cause miktary achievements depend so heavily on Jeadership and discipline; but less obvious is the significance of the authority in making and preserving peace in the society's foreign affairs. Tf, for example, an alliance is made between two neighboring chief- doms, it would normally mean that peaceful relations obtain be- ‘tween individuals of the two groups, and that they come to aid each other in case of an attack by a third group. But these relations hhave to be guaranteed; the authority might make the treaty, but itis no good if he cannot command the obedience of his people maintaining it as individuals. Also, prominently, intersocietal relations are typically maintained by reciprocal exchanges of pres- ents, people (in marriage), and hospitality. And if the two groups can exchange local specialities that the other lacks, amiable rela~ tions are better assured. All of the above depend upon the chief's ability to command labor and goods from his ciety. IF a society with a central authority can wage beth war and peace better than“aii egalitarian society, which will predominate in its history? Is there more war or more peace in the chiefdom ‘Stage? Logically, when there is war it will be on a larger scale than among egalitarian groups, and more conclusive because more or- ganized. This itself might tend to limit the number of wars. In addition, chiefdoms have a better capacity than egalitarian societies to subjugate (Otterbein 1964), rather than merely intimidate. In other words, war might be infrequent because considerably more total; but the question of the number of wars in chiefdoms simply cannot be resolved conclusively. ‘An important way of waging peace is by means of trade, and sometimes rather unusual institutions arise out of the necessary coincidence of peace and trade. Among the Kalinga of the Philip- pine Islands, for example, an exchange of specialized goods be- tween independent regions was a powerful deterrent to war. ‘Traders Cor better, carriers) of the goods elaborated a widespread network of trade partners, that they might enjoy hospitality and safety in their visits, They made themselves ceremonial brothers, with ritual obligations and even the incest prohibitions of true Drothers (ie. their children could not marry). This institution ‘The Institutionalization of Power 101 became the basis for peace pacts between the regions, by the trade partners, ho thus become ambesadors of 2 sor spokesmen for their own regions in relation to others. These Pangats, as they were called, became prominent internally 2s well, ‘as mediators of disputes. ‘ : Since important trade relations hetween two societies are a deterrent to war between them, we may also reasonably suppose that chiefs are much inclined to foster such relations, since the subsequent chapters, the rise of civilizations out of ‘chiefdoms be an important buttress to their authority. As we shall see in subsequent chapters, the rise of civilizations out of chiefdoms depended heavily on ‘the organismic solidarity achieved by regional symbiosis and more distant trade as manipulated by the political authority. ‘The Limits of the Political Organization It should be remembered that a segmental primitive society tends to muster differentsized groups from one time to another, particularly when the occasion or functions of the gatherings are Aifferent, The boundaries of the society are indistinct for this reason, There are of course numerous exceptions to this generaliza- tion, particalarly when the society is a relatively sedentary hor cultural village of the self-contained Cendogamous) type. These are found frequently in the South American tropical forest and elsewhere and are probably caused by the tremendous depopula- tion and deculturation to which these societies have been subjected for many generations (Wagley 1940). ‘One of the most important reasons for the indeterminacy of political boundaries in the usual segmental society is the ephemeral nature of the leadership. It follows that to the extent a chiefdom ‘comes to have a permanent office of paramount chief, then to that extent his following will be known and discernible “on the ground.” This does not mean that territorial boundaries will be always fixed, for this would vary by type of economy—herders differing from intensive agriculturalists, as an obvious example. But the society itself is named, its membership known, and it occupies a specific space at any given time. Sometimes a sedentary chiefdom’s name fs also the name of its territory.102 The Origins of Government One of the main functions of an authority system is to inte- grate the society. To the extent that it does so the people are integrated on @ relatively permanent basis, and thus the society is more distinct. Territoriality need not be the sole criterion of mem- bership in the society, but it is a frequent one, and if not, mem- bership is still known by some means. One of the consequences of this factor is that fissionable tendencies arc overcome, as is the considerable voluntariness that characterizes egalitarian societies with respect to what associations or sodalitics individuals belong to. It must be remembered that although a well-organized chief dom has its known membership, this is only at a given time, for they do have increasingly fissionable tendencies as they grow in size. The waxing and waning of chiefdoms over a long period of population growth should cause a wide dispersal of a common pattern of culture, although finally manifested by mumerous polit: ically distinct societies. Here we are addressing one of the most serious problems in the cross-cultural, statistical method in anthro- ology: What is the unit to be counted? It is hard enough to de- cide what a sociopolitical unit is, especially in egalitarian seg: ‘mental society. Such units grow in distinctness and permanence, as well as in size and complexity, during their evolution, but are they also unit cultures? It seems clearly evident that a distinct society will manifest a culture, but that the culture will not neces- sarily be a distinctive one in most respects, peculiar to that society alone among its neighbors. But there are ways in which certain new cultural traits might atise as characteristics of a particular chiefdom. In matters of religious ideology and ritual, items can be added and subtracted almost at will by theocratic leadership. A now chiefdom, for exam- ple, might want to distinguish itself, and especially its chiefly Jineage, from the parent society and lineage by clevating new gods and diminishing or abolishing old ones, along with the rituals associated with them. A society can change elements of its culture {in some respects, and even its social structure, for political reasons Leach 1954). Changes in the tabu system in Hawail may be taken as a prime example of this power, which is so much more inherent in chiefdoms and states than in egalitarian societies. But of course such changes are limited mostly to theocratic aspects of the culture,10 The Origins of Civilization in Mesoamerica MrsoaMmenica is the term used by modern anthro- pologists to refer to the complex geographic region in which there have been found several examples of American Indian societies that participated in the development of a native civilization. The region includes the highlands and lowlands of central and south- ern Mexico and Guatemala and the lowlands of Salvador, British Honduras, and part of western Honduras. The geographical dif- ferences are enormous and the consequent variations in cultural adaptation correspondingly great. On the one hand, in the arid highlands, dense populations were agglomerated by virtue of inten sive agriculture (irrigation, drainage, and terracing); on the other hand were lowlands of greater rainfall and more extensive agri- culture, with more-scattered populations. The best-known exam ples of these two-types are the highland city-states of the Valley of Mexico (where Mexico City is found today) and the lowland Maya-speakers of Yucatén and the neighboring region of the Petén, in Guatemala. ‘The archaeological record reveals that in Mexico there existed for a very long period a hunting-gathering economy, with social Mesoamerica 167 ‘oups consisting of small nomadic bands scattered widely over the landscape. The beginnings of cultivation in Mexico were small in scale, and the shift from primary dependence on hunting- gathering to agriculture very slow. According to MacNeish’s work (ag64) in the Tehuacén Valley, agriculture began in about 7200 ».¢., and took until about 2500 2.c. the “Purrén” phase) before agricultural products constituted about 70 percent of the people's diet. Pottery appeared in the valley about this time, implying somewhat sedentary villages, which in turn suggests an important dependence on agriculture, By this time many of the important Mexican crops were in cultivation: maize, beans, squash and pumpkin, avocado, chile, cotton, tobacco, tomato, and cactus (principally nopal and maguey). Sanders and Price (2968, pp. 24-25) use this Purrén phase (2500 w.c.) to mark the beginning of the Formative period, an epoch during which most of the important cultural inventions occurred that were related to the continued development and spread of settled agricultural villages. They see the Formative stage as ending with the emergence of the various climactic local developments called Classic: Teotihuacén (in the central Plateau), Monte Albin (Classic Zapotec in Oaxaca), and the lowland areas, typified by Tajin in Veracruz and Tikal and others in the Petén of Guatemala, The probable dates range from 8.c./a.p. for Teoti- hhuaciin to G00 A.p. for Tajin. The most important developments of the Formative period were the gradual intensification of agricul- ture, continuous population growth (manifested by greater num bers of archacological sites and their larger size), and the trans- formation of small simple villages into stratified societies and states, Gbid., p. 29). Other experts differ in certain respects of nomen- lature and dating Cespecially Coe 1962), but the basic notion of evolutionary growth in complexity is common to all, and the order ‘of precedence by which the Formative became the Classic period in these regions seems to be agreed upon (table 1). They will be discussed below in that order. Teotihuacin (ca. B.C/A.D.-800 A.D.) ‘The Valley of Teotihuacén is a side-valley of the huge Valley of Mexico, lying on the northeast side about twenty-five miles from Mexico City. The archaeotogical site of Teotihuacén in its ClassieTapte 1 / Stages and Periods in Mesomerica Sri Senge com rm, orca MgC tnd are compoate | sonseute Adapted by permission of Random House, Inc. from Mesoamerica The Evolution of @ Civilisation, by William T. Sanders and Barbara J. Price, Copyright © 2968 by Random House, Inc. Mesoamerica 169 phase was undoubtedly the largest and most important urban center in Mesoamerice, Sanders believes that the Teotihuacén Valley population reached 150,000. The urban center itself grew to cover about two thousand acres. The most striking evidence of large populations and of some kind of political control are the enormous Pyramids of the Sun and Moon, the Temple of the Feathered Serpent, and many other large civil and religious buikd- ings. There is little doubt that Teotihuacén grew faster than its neighbors during the Formative period and was able to dominate them. in short, Teotihuacén was undoubtedly the first true urban civilization in Mesoamerica, unless Monte Albén in Oaxaca also qualifies (Sanders and Price 1968, p. 140). At any rate, the devel- opment of Teotihuacén was clearly primary, uninfluenced by the example of neighbors. . ‘On the basis of the relationship of urban density and political development that we have seen in previous chapters, we might expect that the dominating power of TTeotihuacdn approached that of a true empire, In a summary of the evidence, Bernal (1967, p. 98) points out that all of the localities occupied in the classic period in the Valley of Mexico other than Teotihuacén are small towns and villages. This suggests a complete domination by the urban center. But how far outside the Valley of Mexico this power extended is of course difficult to know for certain. Some evidences and professional opinions, to be cited later, bear on the question of empire. ‘The huge basin that is the Valley of Mexico probably was the dominant cultural power in Mesoamerica since the origin of the first urban center there. The dominance of this area in Mexico was retained throughout the colonial and modern eras. It is natural, therefore, that a great deal of archacological effort has bbeen expended there. From early in this century until midcentury archaeologists were mainly interested in pottery analysis, chronol- ‘ogy, and site description. In the 1950s and intensifying in the 1960s, broader analytical interests have become predominant, in- volving regional surveys and test excavations that are problem- oriented within an evolutionary-ecelogical theoretical framework? a. Personal communication, 1973. 2. Interpretive syntheses by Armillas (1951) and Sanders (1956) were probably the frst catalysts for these Broader studies. Since 1960 &170 The Archaic Civilizations Since the region is decidedly arid, the growth in population was related to the development of water-controlled agriculture Le,, icrigation of dry lands and drainage of swampy lands, and eventually, reclamation of lake beds), and of extensive transporta tion of products by water. ‘This latter feature assumes considerable importance because the Mesoamericans lacked animal transport. In terms of population density, therefore, the geographical Features of the basin—especially the lakes and rivers—meant that a large amount of coordinated labor had to be used to expand the agricul- tural base, But once that labor was expended, the fertility of the soil and the control over the water were tremendous compared to the earlier period of dependence on rainfall and flood alone. Prior to the rise of the city, the Teotihuacén Valley was occu- pied for about one thousand years by sedentary agriculturalists practicing a form of agriculture dependent on rainfall and involv- ing the cultivation of swiddens® The settlement pattern of that period suggests a tribal form of organization. By goo ».c. the Population had grown considerably and a series of tiny chiefdoms were formed. According to Sanders and Price,* Between 309 1.0. and n.c./a.n. several sttiking changes in the eco- system occurred: ‘The population probably doubled every generation, settlements shifted to the alluvial plain, and toward the end of this period, at least half of the population was concentrated into a single, hhuge, sprawling, mucleated center at the site of the Classic city. Milion (ag64) feels that at this time Teotihuacdn was already a city and that there was extensive architectural activity. By the time of Christ, there was at least valley wide political integration, comprising an atca of approximately 500 km®, The subsequent history of Teotihuacén fs one of expansion of the size of this mucieated center, increase in density large number of coordinated researches have been made: Sanders’ region- all surveys and excavations 19 the Teothuaedn Vslley, Millon's intensive sue ‘eps at the Teotihuscin urban center (Drewitt 1986; Millon 1964, 1986, 1967; Spence 1988), Persons’ surveys In the Texcoco and Chatee regions GBS ore, agri) and Lorena terdlinary work C968) are same af the more important. ‘3. Swiddens are nonpermanent sgrcultural plots produced by cuttin back and burning off the plant cover. : ws (A965, BPs 340nf1). Sanders seas for several years the head of the Teothuackn Valley Project, and ha amased plentfal data on setDerent patterns, Price (3972) has provided am excelleat overview of irtigation Stems. Mesoamerica 171 and socioeconomic differention of the population of the center, and expansion of the orbit of its political influence. By the Miceaotli phase ‘Teotihuacdn had certainly reached the status of a city and the Teoti- hhuacin culture the status of a civilization. The subsequent history of Central Mexico was one of cyclical rise and decline of urban civiliza- tions with changing centers of political and economic power. It is probable that the subsistence and demographic base for the founding of the huge city was the installation of an irrigation system, Sanders’ Teotihuacdn Valley Project found indirect evi- dence that in the Early Classic period the Lower Valley Can allu- vial plain) was irrigated by springs; floodwater apparently was controlled in the Middle Valley. The slopes were probably also terraced and ircigated with Hoodwater (Sanders and Price 1968, p.149.) ‘Water control is, of course, of tremendous significance for agriculture, so obviously so that there is no need to go into the Particulars here. The result of such control, an increased and con- sistent food supply, must be regarded as “permissive,” as an enabler, s0 to speak, without which a dense population, above all a city, could not be sustained. But does it cause a city? And does it create a controlling bureaucracy? Because so much controversy and speculation have surrounded this possible relationship, it seems preferable to defer discussion of its role in Mesoamerica’s rise to civilization to near the end of this chapter, after other Meso- american regions have been discussed. At this point itis sufficient to note that the rise to urban status of Teotihuacan seems to have been accompanied by the development of systematic water control. It has often been said that in the development of civilization turbanism is a necessary component—that city and civilization imply each other, We need not try to settle this point now, but since Childe (1950), Adams (1966), and many others do believe this, its well to discuss the factors involved in the rise to urbanism as well as the origins of the civilization itsclf.> Sanders (1956) has emphasized that the highlands of Central Mexico have numerous environmental areas and smaller niches ‘5, The population of the urbanized Valley of ‘Teotihuacin ore to 85,000 by about 400-go0. A.D. (Parsons 29686, p. 875) of 10 100,000, a0. cording to Sanders and Price (1968, P. 149).172 ‘The Archaic Cit that vary greatly in type of soil, amount of rainfall, kinds of irriga- tion possibilities Cspringwater, terracing for flood control, bottom land canals, drainage, and so on), altitude, forests (for wood and game), lekes (for salt and fish), and scattered mineral deposi for obsidian, basalt, and lime). Such “symbiotic regions” nor- mally are involved in exchanges of the varying kinds of produce; and as the exchanges become customary, regional specialization is increased, One important result of the specialization is greater efficiency in production, which in turn helps provide for an ceularged and denser population. Specialization is also likely to have a significant social or political result, As Flannery and Coe (1966) have pointed out, in such complicated environments reciprocal exchanges between vil- Jages are not nearly so effective as a coordinated system of redis- tribution. Redistribution is necessarily by plan and acquiescence of the producers since the reciprocity is delayed. That is, a village producing maize and needing obsidian does not have to find an obsidian-producing group that needs maize in order to effect an immediate balanced reciprocity. Instead, it can at harvest send the regular surplus of maize to the redistribution center and acquire other things as it needs them. But for redistribution to work, it needs a coordinating center, a redistributor—an “author- ity” who can plan and who can make equitable-seeming allocations. ‘The redistributive system, as we have seen in the preceding ma- terials on the ethnology of chicfdoms, is the economic exchange aspect of this kind of power structure. And the positive feedback is apparent: The more centralized and organized the authority center, the better the redistribution and related specialization works; the better the redistribution works, the more necessary and beneficial will be the authority center. They ascend together the path toward civilization, in a pattern of mutual reinforcement. As the system improves, the role of the authority is strength- ened, which in turn makes it able to widen its scope. This seems evident particularly in the increased ability of the center to sub- sidize specialized craftsmen and public labor, as evidenced so strikingly in the art work and massive monuments so characteristic of the rise of early civilizations. Redistribution, we see ethnologically, is closely associated with ‘8 ramage form of residential organization, and according to evi- izations Mesoamerica 173 dence analyzed by Sanders and Price (1968, pp. 155-157) this pattern must have been characteristic of the whole Mexican basin Once this form of centralized authority exists in local organiza tion, the possibilities of expansion and inclusion while retaining the centralization are increased Redistribution and its associated power center can also have ‘8 pacifying effect over a wide area. When a population concen- trated through the redistributive system finally occupied all of the adjacent agricultural niches, there were two normal alternative results: competition and cooperation. Competition frequently re- sulted in warfare, which may have resulted in a special form of cooperation, wherein the defeated submitted to collaboration with others under the direction of the erstwhile alien authority. Such a consequence seems actually rare in the primitive world, and pos- sibly is feasible only in the context of chiefdoms evolving into a state, Jeffrey Parsons's (1971) regional surveys in the Valley of Mexico have suggested that the rise of the Teotihuacin center involved such local hostilities. In his words: «We have the impression of a highly competitive situation in Ter- ininal Formative times throughout the Valley of Mexico. This era sav two primary centers of roughly equivalent size and power (Tezo- yuca-Patlichique Teotihuecén and Cuicuilo (ca. 209 3.0.=8.€./4.D-1), {ogether with numerous secondary centers, struggling amongst then” selves, on various levels, for access to strategic productive resources and trade routes [pp. 197-98]. There should be mentioned now another rather different and special kind of competition, the disturbance caused by migrations of predator peoples. In highland Mexico such invaders were known in myth as Chichimec, nomadic warriors from the arid northern frontier called the Great Chichimeca, Teotihuacén was in fact destroyed in the eighth century A.p., and perhaps this was a con- sequence of invasion, Tula, a city-state at the center of the Toltec empire, had developed on the northern outskirts of the Teotihuacdn civilization, and may have been itself dominated by the warrior invaders. Following a period of military and political dominance over much of Mexico (as far south as Yucatén), Tula was de- stroyed in the twelfth century a.p., after a series of invasions from the north (Sanders and Price 1968, p. 33). CAmong the174 ‘The Archaic Civiltzations later “Chichimec” invaders were the Aztec, who grew to dominate most of highland Mexico by the time of the Spanish conquest.) It is difficult to assess the historical accuracy of these legends of Chichimec invaders, but even if the times and places are inaccu- rate, it does scem likely that there were such invasions, since the Tegends were so widely known. It seems impossible otherwise to account for them, At any rate, they were less-developed border- land peoples who made use of the existing state structure. We shall see more of this phenomenon in subsequent chapters. Hf Sanders and Price are correct in their data and analysis, then all of the above features were involved in the origin of civi- lization at Teotihuacdn.* It remains now to discuss more briefly the Few other major civilizational centers in Mesoamerica. The Oaxaca Valley (ca. B.C./A.D.-900 A.D.) The archaeological record in the Oaxaca Valley shows a long span of development through the Formative and Classic pe- riods, lasting until the Spanish conquest. Although the Oaxaca Valley's development was fairly typical of highland Mexico, and although it shared the Teotthuacén calendar, hieroglyphs, and ‘many of the widespread art styles, the circumstances and form of adaptation differed from Teotihuacén in some important respects ‘The most important and most Fully excavated site in the Oaxaca Valley is Monte Albén, an elite ceremonial center. ‘The valley lies in the southern highlands of Mexico and is the site oF the present-day city of Onxaca. The average clevation of the valley floor is about five thousand fect, a semiarid climate with rainfall mostly confined to the summer season. ‘The valley floor is a rather flat alluvial plain, with little erosion. The farming system of the valley was intensive, with some small-scale water control by villages, but without an integrated canal system? Canal irrigation on a large scale is nowhere practical in the Valley of Oaxaca, where springs are small and surface flows are not sufficient 6. There has been no criticism of this thess to date 7. We are fortunate that an Intensive Interdiseiplinary Beld investiga tion, begun in Oaxaca in 1965, has yielded important data on irrigation systems, demography, and political growth. Most of the data in the follow- iin paaes are from Kent Flannery etal. (ig71). Blanten (agra) supplies additional new data on settlement patterns. Mesoamerica 175 for ictigating more than a small area, However, because of the un- usually high water table, shallow-well irrigation is widely practiced, land this technique, which requires relatively little effort and can be performed on an individual family basis, can be traced back to at least 700 nc. and probably earlier [Flannery et al. 1971, p. 169). ‘This “pot irrigation” involves digging a series of shallow wells in the fields and hand-dipping for water with large pots, which are then poured over the individual plants. It is, of course, labo- rious, but highly productive. Outside this area of intensive garden- ing, small-scale irrigation canals were formed in the upper areas of the piedmont, but this was a relatively small area. Other areas were dry-farmed, with periodic fallowing, Since the valley was surrounded by mountains, there were also zones of differential rainfall, Eventually most of the various physiographic niches were in production. The agricultural zones were probably “symbiotic,” and thus participated in a redistributional system, and the atten- dant specialization probably raised production considerably on an overall basis (Flannery and Coe 1986). Flannery et al. (1972, pp. 159, 176) feel that the organization that preceded the Classic period at Monte Albin was of the chief dom type. Such a feeling, of course, cannot be conclusive, but is based on the indications of rank differences Cespecially burials of theocratic chiefs), redistribution, trade, monuments, and special- ized artists and craftsmen By about 8.c./.p., as mentioned above, characteristics of the civilization of the central highlands had developed at Monte Alban. The Classic phase thus not only began at about the same time as that of Teotihuacén, but for unknown reasons the demise of the tsvo centers was elso nearly contemporaneous. Coe (2962, p. 127) says that ". .. by the end of Monte Albin IU1-B, about A.D. 00, all inhabitants had left Monte Albén, and this and other centres, of civilization in the Valley of Oaxaca fell gradually into ruin. Later peoples, like the Mixtecs, used the old Zapotec site as a kind of consecrated ground for their tombs, .. . perhaps in an attempt to establish their continuity with the native dynasties which had ruled here for over a thousand years.” I can find no other contem- porary instances of such disasters and no other suggestion of bar- Darian invasions. But since the struggles elsewhere with nomadic invaders were taking place within this same narrow time span176 The Archaic Civilizations (700-900 A.p.), it does seem probable that the abandonment of Monte Albén was related to warfare. However, there is no evidence of carlier invasions related to the origin of the civilization; and in fact we cannot even be sure that Monte Albin was the product of @ true empire similar to Teotihuacan.* Kaminaljuyu (ca. 600 A.D.-2) ‘The importance of this site on the outskirts of Guatemala City is its very long history. The area was occupied continuously from the beginning of the Formative period into the Late Classic. It is the only true urban Mayan site that has been excavated in the highlands, suggesting that a Mayan urban and hydraulic develop- ment could have preceded and influenced the lowland nonurban civie centers based on swidden horticulture. This does not mean that Kaminaljuyu was itself a primary center of empire, There is a strong indication of Teotihuacén in- fluence in the style of sculpture and painting and in the architec- tural style (Thompson 1954, p. 74). According to Sanders and Price (1968, p. 166), this latter point is of great significance: ‘The reasons for stressing the diffusion of architecture as evidence of expansion of states are obvious: a local group may well purchase portable foreign objects as exotic household furniture or even bury them with their dead but Cparticularly where the local society has a highly evolved religious system) such a group docs not voluntarily supply the manpower required for the construction of monumental civic buildings to serve foreign gods. The introductlon of large-scale ceremonial architecture of a Foreign ‘style in a local sequence, theze- fore, is evidence that the foreign power in some manner has secured control over the surplus labor of a local population. ‘These authors (pp. 168-69) argue that the site of Kaminal- juyu represents an actual colonization from the Central Plateau, including some military forces. ‘The Guatemalan site was an un- 8, Recent work on the city of Monte Albin by Richard Blanton (ag73) has revealed 2 defensive wall, a reservoir, and a nearby irrigation system, which he thinks indicate competition in the valley between major centers, and an attempt by the elty at defensive selt-suficiency jn terms of food and water. He also mentions a continuing study Cunpublished) of ccerved stone monuments by Joyce Marcus, who finds that the replacement ‘of local styles in Monte Albin IMI by one single overlay style Cas well 2s some scenes depicting conquest) suggests a probable Monte Albin empire. Mesoamerica 177 usually strategic location for controlling access to the lowlands of the Pacific Coast, so rich in the highly prized cacao. This pattern is well documented for the later Aztec’s domination of the cacao trade; the Aztec could have been simply following an older ar- rangement first begun by Teotihuacdn. At any rate, here is evi- dence of highland domination of at least some lowlands. As we discuss the lowlands below we must consider the possibility of low- land nonurban polities as being secondary Cor, indeed, perhaps tertiary), that is, due to outside creative influences. The Lowlands There is much disagreement as to whether the lowlands could have developed a civilization of the pristine or primary kind. True urban centers have not been found in the lowlands, nor the various forms of water control and terracing that were characteristic of the highlands, nor specialized agricultural zones leading to a high development of economic symbiosis. Sanders and Price believe that political organization, civilization, an urbanism in the New World in general were in their origin and development function- ally related to hydraulic agriculture in arid environments (4968, pp. 202-10 and elsewhere). Michael Coe disagrees. He asserts that the “basic” Mesoames- ican pattern, from the Formative period until conquest times, was of “elite centers,” clusters of architectural and monumental art and religious works, and residences of ruling and priestly hierar- chies, whereas the mass of the people, the swidden agriculturalists, lived in scattered villages and hamlets. This is of course the low- land pattern. Coe, moreover, believes that Mesoamerican civiliza- tion actually began in the lowlands and spread from there. Specif- ically, the earliest and primary source was the Olmec civilization of southern Vera Cruz and Tabasco on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico (1963, p. 83). Miguel Covarrubias also argued this in 1946 Cp. 80), and according to James A. Ford (1969, p. 15), “most investigators agree that Olmec culture is the principal ancestor of later high cultural developments.” The Olmee Culture (1500-800 .c.) #Many Olmee artifacts and art works are truly distinctive and of specialized craftsmanship, and178 The Archaic Civilizations an early radiocarbon date has been established for the principal sites (Ford 196g, p. 15). The most important Olmec site of La ‘Venta flourished between 1200 and 800 8.c. (Ford 1969, p. 188); thus, a major part of this culture is within the Middle Formative period. “There is not the slightest doubt that all Jater civilizations Jn Mesoamerica, whether Mexican or Maya, ultimately rest on an ‘Olmec base" (Coe 1962, p. 84). We may be having semantic troubles here, specifically as to shat is meant by the word civilization. Sanders and Price associate it with the development of the state, recognizing at the same time the difficulties of inferring reliably from archaeological evidence the fundamental political and social distinctions between chief- doms and states (1968, pp. 54-57). But many people, Meso- american archaeologists particularly, associate civilization with the appearance of only a few indicators, such as a refined art style, a specialized architecture, or writing and a calendar. All of these are, to be sure, found typically among developed archaic civiliza- tions throughout the world. But are they found only among true states or empires, ot can they, at least singly, anticipate the state? We know, ethnologically, that they can be found in prestate so- cieties—in chiefdoms, that is. The chiefdoms of the southeastern United States had various kinds of monuments; the carving art of the Northwest Coast Indians was highly specialized; the Pueblo Indians had a calendar; the Polynesians’ calendar and astronomy, carving, monuments, and so on, were all remarkable, All of these examples demonstrate the chiefdoms’ ability to subsidize specialists and control some amount of public labor. According to Sanders andl Price (1968), agreeing in principle with my own earlier definitions C1g62), the difference between a chiefilom and a full civilization is evidently a difference in degree Camount, size, excellence) in the above characteristics; the quali- tative difference is the Iegal-tepressive aspect of the sociopolitical structure, Sanders and Price see this aspect—indicative of the true state—as making possible greater size and density of popula tion, better and larger military force, and many more kinds of products of specialization. Later in this chapter we will examine evidence against the thesis that the state was necessary for these cultural developments ‘Mesoamerica 179 Ie seems that the Olmee culture may have been called a civi- lization because some investigators have identified a “sophisticated” or “masterful” art style with “civilization.” Coe says (2964, p. 84) that "the hallmark of Olmec civilization is the art styl.” That art style is basically represented in stone carvings, from colossal stone heads, stelae, and altars to tiny jade figurines and pendants. The Olmec style was highly distinctive, featuring the well-known “baby face” and jaguar motifs. One problem in assessing the power and priority of the Olmecs is how to account for the later wide distribution of some of the distinctive Olmec styles and motifs Was it due to the spread of an Olmec religious cult? Trade? Emu- lation? There is no answer to this except that we do know that all three are commonplace causes of a wide distribution of elements in an art style, Hence, the simple fact of this distribution cannot be considered good evidence that an Olmec “power” or “empire” ‘caused the spread of these elements.” As for the monumental civic Cor “elite”) centers, the largest is that of La Venta, with other smaller, more recently excavated, centers at Tres Zapotes and San Lorenzo. Excavations, surface col- lections, and test-samplings at these sites suggest that the Middle Formative period of Olmec populated a rather smallish district about 125 miles long and about so miles wide (Coe 1962, p. 86). The ritual centers, ot civic architecture, at these sites are clay con- structions of pyramids, plazas, tombs, and mounds. ‘The largest monument, the pyramid at La Venta, is ago by 4zo feet at the base and 110 feet high. It is the largest of its period, but much smaller than the Pyramid of the Sun at Teotihuacén (689 by 68g feet at the base and 210 feet in height). As Sanders and Price admit, though they do not class the Olmec culture as a state, “the size and ‘complexity of these three Olmec centers implies the presence of a well organized social system with some professional administrative and craft personnel” (1968, p. 28). But in their view Cand in rine, from ethnological evidence), specialized personnel are as indicative of chiefdoms as they are of states. In discussing the Olmec, particularly the distribution of so- called Olmec artifacts and motifs, Sanders and Price say in sum- 9. Kent Flannery (1968) argues cogently that this art style probebly accompanied symbiosis in important sconeralc trade.180 The Archaic Civilizations mary Cibid., p. 122): “What the archaeological evidence suggests is that the South Gulf Coast [Olmec] Chiefdoms were larger in population and constructed more imposing civie centers than else- where in Mesoamerica during Middle Formative times. Even this generalization is subject to argument, however; and there may have been equally imposing centers on the Chiapas-Guatemala Coast, or at Monte Albin and Kaminaljuyu during the Middle Formative phase, centers whose development may have been quite independent of happenings in the ‘tropical heartland.’ At any rate, during the Formative period development of the Olmee region may well have been faster and the swidden agricul- ture more productive than in the arid highlands, where the greater potentiality of hydraulic agriculture hadl not yet been achieved Ghid., p. 134), Robert Heizer (cited by Coe 1962, p. 88) has cal- culated that the largest center, La Venta, required a supporting population in the hinterlands of at least 18,000, since the main pyramid alone probably took about 800,000 man-days to construct. If'so, this was a very large chiefdom, But we should refrain now from adjudicating this question, for it could go either way. An important point is that the Olmec culture needn't be classified as a state just because its art was so developed, or because its monuments were so large. “800,000 man- days” could bespeak large numbers of days instead of large num- bers of men.*° And large-scale monuments are also, of course, related to the presence or absence of building materials, As Eras- mus says (2965, p. 279), “the Maya were living on a great natural exector set—their cocky limestone peninsula—and they chose to play with it.” It is possible that full civilizations occurred only in 2 few places in lowland Mesoamerica and then only in the Late Classic period, 600-goo A.v. (Sanders and Price 1968, p. 142). Possibly, also, the lowland societies should not be treated as examples of the independent origin of civilization, for they were undoubtedly strongly influenced by the highland empires. Nevertheless, they must be discussed, especially because of their characteristic non- urban organization and other demographic peculiarities, and be- 20. On inferences to be made from massive monuments, see Kaplan (agg) and Erasmus Cag) Mesoamerica 181 ‘cause their agricultural system was so different from that of the highland societies, Tajin and Tikal Cca. 600 v.c.~v.c./a.v.) ¢On the Central Gulf Coast of Mexico, Tajin was the major center for a large nuclear area. This was apparently one of the first centers comparable to Teotihuacdn or Monte Albin to arise in the lowland arcas. Tikal, in the Petén of Guatemala and the largest of the Mayan cities, was the other possible rival to Tajin, and so distant from Teoti- hhuacén that it deserves separate consideration. Tajin was located in the tropical rain forest in northern Vera- cruz. The monumental center, constructed around 600 4.D., had a reat pyramid, The center was abandoned and burned around 1200 ‘A.D., probably a consequence of the widespread Chichimec inva- sions. Stylistically, the monuments and the arts show strong influ- ence from Teotihuacéin, suggesting that Tajin originally may have been a colony of Teotihuacdn satellites (Coe 1962, pp. 119-23). Sanders and Price (1968, p. 142) point out, also, that its flores- cence seems to have taken place in Late Classic times, after Teo- tihuacdn had collapsed and left a power vacuum. A satellite power in origin, in other words, it was able when freed from domination to itself dominate a large lowland area—an area large enough, at any rate, to supply the labor to build a huge monumental center. Tikal, in the Petén region of northern (lowland) Guatemala, seems to have been the largest and one of the earliest of the re- gional ceremonial centers of the areas occupied by lowland Maya.” Its development occurred in the Late Formative period (600 .c. 3.c./a.p.), 0 it is roughly contemporaneous with Kaminaljuyu in highland Guatemala. The great court of Tikal—the ceremonial center—has two huge temple-crowned pyramids, at each side, together with a num- ber of smaller temple-pyramids on platforms. For the total complex includes adjacent platforms with dwelling Cor “caste"-like) com- pounds and still other pyramids and buildings (Thompson 1954, Pp. 3, 62-64) Bat Tikal lacked truly urban population concentrations. Build- 11, A smaller site nearby, Uaxactin, has the oldest dated monument bbut does not challenge for early status of urban statehood as much a6 Tikal182 ‘The Archaic Civilizations ings that had possible dwelling rooms were probably the residences of a sacerdotal-temple-crafismen class. According to Sanders and Price (1968, pp. 162-66), Tikal was in striking contrast to Teoti- ‘huacén in demographic and settlement patterns. Surface surveys showed that the population was nucleated in hamlets arranged mainly on level ridge-tops or natural terraces—with none of the overall planning that characterized Teotihuacdn.#® Haviland (1969) estimates the population of the core area of 85 square kilometers as 39,000, which Sanders reduces to 26,000 Checause the average figure of 5.7 persons per nuclear family is too high). Sanders (1972, p. 125) estimates the density of this core together with the surrounding populated area as an average of 200 per square kilometer—assurning that all of the Late Classic houses were simultaneously occupied—which is, as he says, 2 dubious assumption. This is far from “urban,” in either estimate. On the other hand, it is too densely settled for all the people to have subsisted by their own swidden agriculture. Either they must have been supported in part by tribute collection from a wider region Cas was, of course, labor for public buildings), or else the dwelling {groups were not nearly all contemporaneously occupied. But even if the elite residences of the civic center were completely occupied, they housed a poptlation of only about two or three thousand. Tikal was the largest and most mucleated site of swidden (low- land) agriculturalists in Mesoamerica, yet very far below the size, density, and complexity of Teotihuacin. Even the civic architec- ture reflects the difference in population scale. The civic compound at Teotihuacdn Ccalled the Giudadela) and market alone cover as much ground as all of the buildings at Tikal. Think of the differ- ences if the Teotihuacdn pyramids of the sum and moon and their associated complexes were added! If lowland Maya “city-states” were in fact states, they were clearly nonurban—as even the case of Tikal, the largest, attests. 22, Interestingly, Puleston and Calendar (1967) have discussed the ossbily that modest defensive earthworks may have’ surrounded the amalets. 1g. It should be observed, however parenthetially st this point, that the lack of urbanization was probably mot due to the inherent deficiencies of swidden agriculture based on root erops—for such gardening can be very productive (ef- Carneiro 1981; Bronson 1966). Mesoamerica 183 How, then, to account for Tikal? Evidently the intermediate position of Keminaljuya in highland Guatemala was the key. This city was probably a colonylike appendage of Teotihuacén, and in turn may have formed itself as a nuclear center over a set of sym- biotic regions that included Tikal and other lowland chiefdoms of the Petén, Sanders and Price believe —and this seems reasonable from ethnological experience —that groups of low-level, nonurban swidden agriculturalists can become altered structurally by becom- ing a functioning part of an imperial network, particularly as this, might intensify any tendency toward centralization and redistribu- tion already present. The new outside power would immeasurably strengthen the position of the local elite, and make that elite in ‘turn receptive to the use of techniques of government that origi- nated in a hydraulic highland civilization (Sanders and Price 1968, pp. 204~205).!* ty, State, and Civilization in Mesoamerica ‘The case for Teotihuacén as an important site of the develop- ment of 2 primary civilization in highland Mesoamerica seems well established. The more-or-less contemporary development at Monte Alban may have been also primary and independent, or it may not, but most likely it depended on Olmee influence, There are for- midable mountain obstacles between the two valleys, which also are about two hundred fifty miles apart, This problem of inde- pendence presents no major difficulty for the present, however, since the Oaxaca development does mot require any modification of ‘our generalizations about Teotihuacén. To be sure, there was one interesting ecological divergence with respect to water control, but this has no bearing on the matter of Monte Albin's possible inde- pendence: The functional-ecclogical significance of the form of water control is the same whether the state development was independent or not. 14, Tt may be remembered that after the collapse of Teothuacin « power vacuum occurred in Central Mexico until Tula finally succeeded Teotihuacin as a controlling center, Ic is of intrest that following the fall, of Teotihuacén there was a Bfy- to sixty-year cessation of building activity 4 Tikal (ibid, p. 406). This and much other evidence support Rathje Cagra) hvpuhsls of the pest spnifeance of longstance trade ia stm Sta wo the cent led ay184 ‘The Archaic Civilizations ‘The other highland site, Kaminaljayu in Mayan Guatemala, ‘was apparently a colony of the Teotihuacén empire. Its significance is that it demonstrates how truly extraordinary was the wide in- fluence of Teotihuacén, Also its presence seems to afford a plau- sible explanation for some of the developments in the lowland Maya region (the Petén). This should be viewed as a provisional judgment at this point, however, since we do not want such a problematical case to influence subsequent generalizations. ‘A major problem has to do with the relations of highlands and Jowlands and with the question of donor and receiver in the origin and spread of civilization. Archeologists who have worked with Olmec and Mayan materials have, in the past at least, tended to consider these—particularly the Olmec—as the source of “high culture.” The rich developments in Olmee art did in fact antedate others, and judging from the subsequent wide distribution of Olmec-like art motifs, calendar, writing, and architecture—all of which are indicative of a complex specialized redistributional gov- exament—Olmec influence must have been great and widespread, ‘The culture of the lowland Maya also had a wide influence, and its sheer excellence is agreed upon by all art historians and ar- chaeologists. Both the Olmec and the Maya qualify as true civ tions, except that of Childe’s ten criteria the urbanism is only modest and there is no evidence of a repressive secular state ap- paratus, The urbanism so characteristic of Teotihuacén, contrasting with the much smaller “elite,” or ceremonial, centers in the low- lands, must be due to special local factors that do not directly bear on the question of the development of civilization, Sanders and Price (1968, pp. 235-39) conclude their important book by ‘emphasizing that the problem of urbanism is distinct from that of state and civilization, a caution we will do well to heed ‘The question of the repressive state as an important indicator of civilization is obviously a much more difficult problem, Sanders and Price accept this criterion. The distinction is in terms of the presence of a qualitative demarker: statelike means of integration, mostly having to do with repressive force. But such things are not visible archaeologically, at least in these cases, and we should be careful that we speak of something real, something other than a verbal device or guess. Sometimes something looking like violence is Mesoamerica 185 depicted in iconographs, to be sure, but this violence seems to be related to sacrificial victims, war prisoners, military episodes, and the like, ‘The rise of states in the ethnohistorical record reviewed in carlier chapters taught us, most importantly, that the uses of force in internal repression were against “princes” or other aris- tocratic pretenders at time of crisis or succession, and in external relations, to cteate or maintain a foreign conquest. There was, in other words, no evidence of violence used by rulers against a class or stratum of the original society. Furthermore, the mani- fested violence can be taken normally as a sign of the failure of internal and external integrative and peacemaking devices to operate effectively, It would seem, judged only provisionally at this point, that the major differences between the important highland societies like Teotihuacé and Tula and lowland exemples like the Olmec and the Maya have to do with degrees in the amount of urbanism, amount and distance of trade, intensity of agriculture and overall population density. Local ecological factors, as Sanders and Price emphasize, can be used to account for these. In all of the char- acteristics of civilization other than urbanism and the repressive state controls, however, the Jowland cultures were at least the equal of the highland cultures (indeed in some ways superior). Tt would seem, then, that we can consider them both as eiviliza- tions. This would mean, of course, that neither urbanism nor state violence is a necessary factor in the development of civiliza- tion—as we have stated before.12 The Origins of Civilization in Mesopotamia ‘Tue creates ann most obvious difference in the geography of both Mesopotamia and Egypt when compared with Mesoamerica and Peru lies in the relatively greater diversity inj the latter areas, Both Mesopotamia and Egypt are basically great arid river valleys with little of the ecological variability of the New World regions. That variability, as we have seen, is due to great differences in mountain altitudes, creating cold, temperate, and tropical zones with great differences in rainfall and in kinds of native flora and fauna, But Mesoamerica and Peru had only small watersheds for their irrigation systems, contrasting greatly with the tremendous magnitude of the Nile and the Tigris-Eu- phrates drainage areas. V. Gordon Childe (1942, p. 106) has made a great point of the significance of these rivers not only for large-scale irrigation, but also as arteries of commerce and communication that must have stimulated urbanization. The availability of large domesticable animals for both food and labor in the Old World is another obviously significant dif- ference. The Mesoamericans had no draft animals, and the Peru-204 ‘The Archaic Civilizations vians hed only the Tama, of some use in transport in the high- lands and for wool. In contrast, Mesopotamia had the donkey and ox for labor (the horse was late and not much used), while cows and calves were obviously important for milk and meat, and goats, pigs, and sheep were plentiful (Kramer 2963, pp. 209~ 110). As for vegetable foods, the Old World had several storable cereals of great importance, but the New World had its maize, beans, and squash complex, also storable. Cultivation methods differed in the two regions, of course, but it is difficult to see any ‘reat significance in this, since both were highly intensive. ‘The Formative Era (ca, 5000-3500 B.C.) The Tigris-Euphrates lowlands (like the Nile Valley) did not have sufficient rainfall for nonirrigated agriculture, although a ‘crop planted in an area of annual flooding sometimes could come to maturity before the soil completely dried out Butzer 1971, p. 215). It is more likely, however, that plant and animal domes- ‘ication first occurred in upland areas of greater rainfall. “Neolithic” (early Formative) farming communities found their best environment for general overall development in the piedmont zone between the Mesopotamian lowlands and the ‘Zagros mountains of Kurdistan and Luristan, Most of this land is in Iraq, and is called the Assyrian steppe. This intermediate zone had sufficient rainfall in winter for dry farming and large rivers for irrigation in dry seasons or in areas of insufficient rain- fall, so that a transition toward irrigation, little by little, or par- tial, was possible. Adams (1962, p. 112) says that irrigation farm- ing probably originated there. tis thought that after about 2,000 years the early part farming communities of the Mesopotamian uplands finally developed theit economy to a mixed herding-farming basis by about Gooo 3.c. Hole et al. 1971, pp. 279-88). The basic products were emmer wheat, barley, sheep, and goats. The population was sparse and the communities small at first, but between 5500-000 5.c. stnall- scale irrigation was introduced in some areas, which enabled more of the lowlands to be utilized Cibid., p. 308). By 4000 3.c. the basic economy of the formative Mesopotamian-Khuzistan period twas evident, The probable population of “Susiana proper” Cthe Mesopotamia 205 heartland named from the famous type-site of Susa) at this time ‘was over 15,000 Cibid., p. 30). Although sedentary agricultural villages characteristically de~ veloped in the uplands and highlands, they took a further devel- ‘opment as people gradually moved into the alluvial lowlands of the Tigtis-Euphrates system. Apparently the lowlands were not swidely habitable by sedentary groups until irrigation became fully ‘employed and the villages were freed from a partial dependence on hunting and gathering wild food. Additionally, transport and some kind of exchange corridor had to be established in order to get raw materials like hardwoods (for boat-building) and stone from the distant highlands, But once the required developments in population size and in technology were achieved, the lowlands had enormous potential for further evolutionary growth into truly urban societies. The aforementioned dependence on itrigation made for an obviously more intensive agriculture, and the absence of stone greatly facilitated plowing. The river systems, naturally, provided fish, mollusks, and aquatic birds in abundance, and equally ob- viously, a potentially great transportation system. Easy and effi cient transportation has two aspects, it should be remembered; it not only facilitates the passage of goods and people, but also stimulates a wide diffusion of inventions, discoveries, and ideas in general, As William McNeill says (1963, P- 31): ‘The local peculiarities of desert river banks do much to explain the direction of social evolution among the pioneer agricultural com ‘munities that penetrated the lower reaches of the Tigres-Euphrates Valley after about 4000 8.c. The larger geographical setting of this habitat also stimulated human ingenuity by both inviting and neces: sitating long-distance transport and communication on a comparatively massive scale. This meant that the stimulus of contacts with strangers ‘was never long absent from the early settler’s horizon. Boats and rafts could move swith ease along the rivers, lagoons, and bayous of the region itself, and sail along the shores of the Persian Gulf Cand beyond) without encountering any but the natural difficulties of wind and waves. Overland, too, no geographical obstacles hindered pack tains on their way to the mountains that ringed the Mesopotamian plain to the north, east, and west, The fact that the alluvium of ower Mesopotamia lacked stone, timber, and metals supplied ample incentive for travels, In proportion as the valley dwellers required these commodities, they had either to organize expeditions to find,206 ‘The Archaic Civilizations prepare, and bring back what they needed, or else to persuade neigh= boring peoples to exchange local stone, timber, or metals for the surpluses of the plains. As specialization’ progressed within the social structure of the valley peoples, such trade between hill and plain assumed an increasing scale and importance; and the emergent cities along the rivers became centers of communication and stimulus for the whole surrounding region. An important difference between Mesopotamia and the Meso- american and Peruvian areas isthe great significance of pastoralism in the Old World region Cas well as the aforementioned use of oxen for plowing). The "mixed economies” of the Mesopotamian uplands used wild foods to supplement domesticated animals and dry farming. As further development went on and less-provident environments became utilized, pastoralism became increasingly a specialization in the grasslands where agriculture was difficult. ‘Thus, as time went on, two distinct kinds of cultures became in- excasingly divergent. The partly independent and partly com- plementary nature of these cultures’ association varied, sometimes characterized by trading, at other times by symbiotic relationships, and at others by raiding. Again, it is important to remember that there are two sides to a symbiosis of two such societies: Both sides are economically better off because of the specialization, and so they need each other; but pastoralism is a rather mobile way of life and leads to military superiority of a certain kind, an offensive, raiding, predatory kind of warfare—as we saw with the Ankole state Cchapter 6). That “the Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold” must have been a very significant factor in the lives of the victimized farming communities. ‘About 3500 .c. the alluvial plain of Sumer in the far south fostered a rapid development of culturc. ‘The Sumerians seem to have been the first to break through to urbanization. And by about 3000 B.c. they also had developed writing—which is, of course, of great significance to us, for at that point we merge archaeology (prehistory) with documentary history. ‘The late Formative type-site named Al Ubaid gives us some idea of the widespread kind of Sumerian culture immediately preceding the rise of the great cities. The farming people lived in recd-and-clay constructions, huddled together in villages that were Mesopotamia 207 relatively self-sufficient and politically autonomous. There were no evidences of defensive fortifications, and apparently peaceful contact and trade were widespread. The date palm and fish were important additions to the cereals and goat and sheep herds} ap- parently holdings of cattle were centralized as the property of the palace-temple (Adams 1955, pp. 9-10): ‘Technological advances in the Formative bespoke a great in- crease in craft specialization, As McNeill describe . The rapid pace of technical progress, the heavy requirements of time for production with existing techniques, the uniformly high ar- tistry, and the increasingly complex, exacting, and capitalized nature of the operations argues strongly that most of them were able to devote fulltime to their specialized pursuits” Cibid., p. 23). ‘As we have seen in the ethnological chapters, such specialization requires the kind of centralized redistributional system charac- teristic of chiefdoms and primitive states. ‘The chiefdom elsewhere is always theocratic, and this was clearly the case in Sumer (Adams, 1966, p. 222). Even at such an early stage as the Uboid Caround 3500 ».c.., the temple was the rost imposing structure Cor set of structures), and was not only “house of worship” but a sanctuary, a palace, and a storage place and redistributive center, “The construction and above all the fre- {quent re-construction of temples, which might be of very substan- tial size, go to show that the Ubaid people had already so to speak created the characteristic form of carly civilization in Mesopotamia, the sacred city whose economic, social and religious life was cen- tred on the temple and its priests” (Clark 1969, p. 103). The Florescent and Protoliterate Eras (3500-3000 B.C.) Following the spread of Neolithic irrigation farmers through- out the southern alluvium, a few special locations underwent rapid development in size and complexity. One of the most strik- ing, and today best-known archaeologically, is that of Warka (Sumerian Uruk, Semitic Erech). Warka has become the type-site for the early Florescent era (3500-go00 3.c.), as Ubaid serves for the late Formative.208 The Archaic Civilizations Its, of course, dificult Cor dangerous) to estimate population figures from the size of monuments, but certainly a really great growth in the size of monuments is suggestive. Adams (1966, P 126) estimates that the temple and mound at Warka alone was worth 7,500 man-years in the building. So much of the archaco- logical work in Mesopotamia has been concerned with these tem- piles that we may as well begin with a brief description, with ‘emphasis on Warka. A characteristic kind of temple is the stepped platform, or iggurat, on which a temple-tower was raised (the tower of Babel ‘was an example). The temple and the city and its land was the Property of one particular ruling patron-god CEanna [Anu] in the case of Warka). Nearby complexes of living quarters enclosed by a wall have been suggested as evidence of a progressive detach- ment of the temple's personnel from direct involvement in the life of the community (Adam 1966, p. 126). This is perhaps to be expected, for we have seen in earlier chapters that with the growth of a theocracy there is a tendency toward a “separation of powers,” with the priestly power increasing its social distance from the masses and from the more mundane military and eco- nomic matters, although retaining important or ultimate decision- ‘making powers. The artificial mound itself at Warka was forty feet high and covered an area of 420,000 square feet, dominating the flat plain for many miles, The building and walls, including the sides of the mound, were coated with a mud plaster covering the sundried brickwork, which in turn was covered with tens of thousands of firebaked clay cones stuck into it to form complex patterns of design. This complexity is noted because it is further evidence, beyond the sheer size of the monument, of a great deal of labor and planning. ‘The temple continued to be the focus and organizer of re- ligious, economic, and political life during the Florescent period. As the cities grew so too did the crafts, including pottery and car- entry, as well as metallurgy. The presence of wood and metals from great distances show the increasing ability of the adminis- trators oF the temple to collect and ration foodstuffs, to exchange with foreigners, to transport goods, and above all to store and to redistribute both finished goods and raw materials. This com- Mesopotamia 209 plex function of the theocratic chiefdom must have tremendous political significance, for it would have made both individuals and potential disruptive factions very conscious of the practical bene fits dispensed by the regime—and as “gifts” of the god that the regime stood for. Adams (1955, p. 12), evaluating the nature of the monumental structures as temples, concludes that “a stage in which the economic controls of this highly sophisticated Gf not quite urbanized) society were more important and more formal- ized than its political ones, and were primarily of @ theocratic nature, can thus be isolated with considerable assurance.” Most of the important technological and economic develop- ments had become well established by Protoliterate times Caround 3000 8.c.). Writing appeared in the form of simple pictographs that were rapidly becoming conventionalized among scribes. and record-keepers, thereby to undergo further development, as did the related numerical notation, The improved plow, wheeled carts, sailing rafts and boats, and the use of bronze for tools and weapons all were established early in the Protoliterate era, and remained basic to later Mesopotamian civilization, ‘There is a possibility that in the Protoliterate era there existed a short-lived political institution that departed somewhat from pure theocracy. Jacobsen argues C1943) from his study of early texts that the cities held meetings of an “assembly” of adult male citizens guided by a council of elders. The Protoliterate texts are difficult to interpret and too scanty for us to make very much of the above interpretation. In any event, the much more com- plete texts of the early Dynastic period do not reveal any important survival of the “assembly” or any such oligarchy (Frankfort n.d. p. 78). It is mentioned here with no attempt at evaluation ani with the reminder that Gearing has described from ethnohistorical data a similarsounding institution among the Cherokee (see chapter 8). ‘The Dynastic Era (ca. 2900-2500 B.C.) Authorities agree that sometime early in the third millenium 5.c. an increasing secular political trend grew into an established hereditary military kingdom in several of the lower Mesopotamian cities, hence their use of the label Dynastic era. It is also agreed210 ‘The Archaic Civilizations {hat thie political trend was accompanied by increased militarism and warfare. ‘The fifteen to twenty independent Sumerian cities grew in- cxeasingly “urban,” probably by concentrating defensively. Kish and Warka may have held as many as twenty to thirty thousand inhabitants CAdams 1955, p. 14). Adams feels that the origin of ingship was closely related to the demographic situation ibid.): “Since virtually the whole of the era is marked by some evidence ‘of warfare it may be suggested that population had expanded nearly to the limits that the land would afford by the end of the preceding cra, and that what followed was a chronically precari- ‘ous balance between population and food resources. Under these conditions, the rise of kingship may have been largely a self- generating process.” ‘Adams has here, as have many others in other contexts, as- cribed warfare to population pressure and competition among the independent cities, the implication being that the competition was over arable lands lying somewhere between. As an example, he cites the “. . . long history of internecine rivalry between Lafash and Umma over border territories . .. ; under such a chronic state of emergency there was neither time nor disposition for the wwar-leader to relinquish his powers” Cibid.). MeNeill agrees that as population grew and swamps and deserts were reclaimed the buffer zones between cities ceased to exist and their lands came to abut one another's, causing “perennial friction and chronic war” (1983, pp. 41-42). A standing army, and perpetuation of the military rule, is also felt to be related to the problems of the in- ccursions of raiding nomads. “In proportion as war became chronic, Kingship became necessary. Concentration of political authority in the hands of a single man seems to have become the rule in Sumerian cities by 3000 ».c.” (MeNeill 1965, p. 49). But the question remains, what means and circumstances transformed rule by a military chief into a political “kingship” with builtin guarantees of perpetuation beyond the rule of the ‘man himself? The idea that omnipresent military threats or needs 1 Adams C1995, . 295 and 1965, p.x49)1 Childe (1996, p. 1053s Sk arg 0 nt na 98) SNe Coty mune) se suthocies are either anthropology, or historians Prenken aod McNeil) who are anchropogialy sophisticated Mesopotamia 2 tend to perpetuate military bureaucracy and power scems sensible, Dut as we have seen in other chapters (especially the case of Shaka Zulu), the consolidation of a true legal state is still difficult to achieve. Such a thought carries the further suggestion that perhaps the frst dynastic cities were not yet fullledged states. At least this question is something for later consideration. Stratification and the State# As we saw above, Adams and others have presented the idea that chronic warfare led to a secular mili- tary rule, with the suggestion that this isthe cause of the Sumerian state. But Adams has another theory, presented years later, which we suppose has superseded, or at Jeast supplements the above (though he does not say so). This theory is an important modification of Childe’s modification of the Morgan-Marx-Engels Cand later, Leninist) theory of the origin of and nature of the state. Inasmuch as these latter were discussed in chapter 2, they will be mentioned only very suecinetly here. A ceucial element in Adams's theory is the increase in “stratifi- cation.” Whereas Morgan had cited the growth of private property as the cause of the state (which, according to Engels, then came about to protect the propertied class from the propertyless), Adams (4966, p. 80) emphasized "the system of stratified social relations, of which rights to property were only an expression.” Adams felt that “probably most would also tend to question Morgan’s im- plicit assumption that the substitution of territorically defined communities for ethnically defined ones was both a necessary and a sufficient cause for the growth of the institution of private prop- erty.” He did agree with Morgan about “the general shift [Morgan] posited from ascriptively defined groupings of persons to politically organized units based on residence.” But “class stratification,” ‘Adams feels, “was the mainspring and ‘foundation’ of political society.” ‘What is meant by stratification, and what are the evidences for it? Apparently stratification for Adams is a synonym for class. ‘This is not stated, but they are used rather interchangeably. Adams does not formally define stratification, but does define class (1966, P. 79); as describing “objectively differentiated degrees of accesso the means of production of the society without any necessary im- plications of sharply reduced mobility, class consciousness, oF overt212 The Archaic Civilizations interclass struggle. ...” And in this sense, he says, “the early states characteristically were class societies.” Adams believes that the common citizenry of the Mesopotami- an cities were organized as “conical clans,” citing indirect evidence for this (1966, p. 94). The argument is even more acceptable in our present context, since our comparative study of the ethno- logially known states and chiefdoms has shown the probable uni- versality and the functional utility of what we call ramages, forms of kinship that involve the institutionalization of inequality by heredity. But it may be well to point out that the ramage Cconical clan) is typically characterized by political, or bureaucratic, differ- entiation accompanied by symbols of high-low status, but with no significant or meaningful “objectively differentiated degrees of access to the means of production” among them. That is, it is typical of chiefdoms that priests or chiefs Cand their immediate families) do not produce foodstuffs, but accept or require “gifts,” or taxes, or tribute for partial redistribution—(a part is withheld). But this is not what Marx and Engels meant by differential rela- tions to the means of production, They were thinking of owners of land or machinery, versus nonowners (slaves, serfs, or wage- workers). The relation of a priest-chief-redistributor to the agri- cultural workers in a chicfdom is best seen as a political power relationship, not an economic relationship that grew out of the unequal acquisition of wealth in a market economy. At any rate, there is no need to posit a class relationship that necessarily must have been founded on economic ownership. It is the power rela- tionship itself that we are investigating, and so far it looks as if it began with an unequal power to make redistributive exchanges and unequal access to gods rather than goods). But let us see what evidence Adams (1966, pp. 95110) finds for the development of class stratification, In the late Ubaid period there was little distinction in the kind of grave goods that could be taken as signifying important status differentiation. In the ‘Warka and Protoliterate periods greater variations began (o appear, and in the late Protoliterate still further differentiation was evi. dent at the excavations at Ur, but none of these show a very com plete stratification, There is more complete evidence that burials in Early Dynastic times showed status differences based on wealth, Mesopotamia 213 ‘The written records of the Early Dynastic period confirm these archaeological suppositions. At the bottom of this society was a class of slaves, not numer- ous but usually working at important "semi-industrialized” tasks such as weaving cloth. These slaves seem to have been war cap- tives, sometimes referred to as “Foreigners.” The bulk of the popu- lation was of various kinds of peasantry with varying degrees of control over the land they worked. Some proportion of them were still organized as primitive kinship units. Professional artisans, of course, had varying degrees of skill, and worked at tasks of varying importance, so that it is probably not reasonable to attempt a classification of them on an economic basis—it may be best to treat them as a kind of residual category. At the top of the society were the ruler and the aristocratic, or princely, families. Adams thinks that they headed “menorial estates” of varying sizes. One cannot know if they were literally manorial, meaning privately owned and administrated for private profit, since a simple political jurisdic- tion over a unit of persons, however regionally defined, could give the same appearance without any implication of ownership in the ‘marketplace sense of the term. ‘We cannot disagree with the conclusion that some kind of social differentiation appeared in Dynastic times, if not earlier. But all the evidence relates to status differences, which probably were related to political or bureaucratic distinctions, not economic ones. I cannot find the “differential access to the means of production” definition a very meaningful one. Originally, I think, this defini tion was accepted by Marxists because of the assumption that classes “struggle” because of this economic inequity. (It should be noted that Adams does not seem firm, or even very explicit, about this—in the statement about Morgan quoted, he wanted to substitute “class stratification” for “property” as the “main- spring” and “foundation” of political society. But perhaps his first definition of class was not meant to imply that “differential access” had to do with property.) Childe had been a strong proponent of the class oppression theory of the rise of the state in Mesopotamia, especially in his widely read and influential Man Makes Himself C1936). Henri Frankfort disputes this directly Cn.d., pp. 69-70).214 ‘The Archaic Civilizations To speak of the “surplus” of food which must be produced in order fo maintain officials as well as merchants and craftsmen, and to imply that the officials must have been a parasite class which kept the farmers in subjection, Ieaves out of account several circumstances, of which the most important is the climate of the country, Wherever there is power there is, inevitably, abuse of power. But the rich soil ‘of Mesopotamia, if well watered, produces food in abundance without excessive or continuous toil, Labor in the fields was largely seasonal. ‘At seed time and harvest time every able-bodied person was no doubt ‘on the land, as was the case in medieval England. But the farmers ‘were not a separate class or caste. Every citizen, whether priest, mer- chant, or craftsman, was a practical farmer who worked his allotment to support himself and his dependents. Once the seed was sown and the harvest gathered, plenty of time remained in which special skills could be developed, taught, and exploited. It is hard to see how Frankfort knows that everyone worked in the fields, but his point is well taken that oppression, repres- sion, or exploitation for the production of the “surplus” simply do not follow from the evidence and from the nature of the agricul- tural production. It is also hard to understand how he knows that ctafts and home industry were not separated, But his argument hhas merit, judging from what we know ethnographically of simple agricultural societies. Since we do not really know, however, it is best to leave the question in abeyance—which means that we do nnot accept as a given, as Childe did, that agricultural “surplus” equals “exploitation” of one class by another, which in turn means that the state originates to repress one class in the interest of the other. Once founded, of course, a state takes on many new func- tions, especially self-protection, which is itself normally a main- tenance of the status quo, but also takes the form of military pro- tection against competing societies. Competition and Warfare «'There is ample testimony that the evo- lution of the Mesopotamian society from the time of the earliest sedentary villages to the great Babylonian empires was accom- panied by a commensurate rise in the amount and extent of war- fare. And, to repeat pethaps unnecessarily, the warfare was of two distinct kinds, between rival competitive neighbors and be- tween the sedentary cities and raiding nomads. These involve distinctly different strategies and organization. Mesopotamia 215 ‘Once southern Mesopotamia became more or less “filed up” in the Dynastic pericd in Sumer, rival cities waged both war and ppeace, and both of these are simply two aspects of an external political strategy. A city defeated by another may become its tribu- tary, but probably unwillingly and apparently for only a short time because the means of permanently consolidating or federating regions were still lacking, Probably, too, one city was not greatly superior militarily to all others until the time of Sargon. Peace was waged also in terms of alliances among neighbors against rival confederacies, but since these strategies were military only, rather than economically symbiotic, they tended to be ephemeral. It may be an important suggestion, in comparing the Meso- potamian Dynastic era with Peruvian North Coast valleys of the equivalent late Florescent era, that the relative lack of success in both areas in uniting into larger polities was because the cities and the coastal valleys were quite similar economically to their neigh- bors. The larger “empires” like Tiahuanaco and Akkad Cand, for that matter, Teotihuacén in Mexico) all involved geographically distinet zones so that the imperial bureaucracy could create an economic symbiosis having enough importance to confer political benefits through the planned exchanges of important goods. ‘The other kind of warfare, that of defense against raiding pastoralists, is of course difficult to wage because of the great mobility of the predators. It is also almost impossible to wage peace against them except for sometimes "buying them off,” a chancy and short-term solution usually. The difficulty the agriculturalists had with wandering preda- tors was persistent in Mesopotamia, This very persistence through- out millenia undoubtedly had a powerful effect, creating no-man's- lands and buffer zones in areas that might otherwise have been economically productive. The other side of this coin is particularly important: With increasing pressure from nomads on people in the intermediate zones, they had to choose either to become no- mads themselves or to join the larger sedentary polities, thus in- creasing the nomadic population as well as that of the cities. It may well be that the unprecedented rise of true urban agglomera- tions in southern Mesopotamia, which was also the first zone of fully sedentary occupation, was partly caused by the very impos- sibility of such a complete adaptation in the upland steppes.216 The Archaic Civilizations (These intermediate areas in the north were in fact late to develop.) It is important to emphasize again the simple fact that military ‘considerations influence not only the overall size of a population but its dislocation and relocation, ultimately toward a characteristic distribution. As Adams points out (1972, pp. 61-62), there was a sig- nificant increase in the sedentary population during the Ubaid period until the carly centuries of the fourth millennium. The distribution was of dense clusters of villages and towns near rivers and streams. It is not known whether this population increase was natural or due to immigration, In any case, the most extensive development of the urban institutions characteristic of Sumerian civilization came after this period of popu: [ation growth, in the last centuries of the fourth millennium... at least in a few centers like Uruk the process of growth not only was explosively rapid but was accompanied by profound structural changes, with massive fortifications, palaces, and political hierarchies shifting the emphasis away from temples and their associated priesthoods. But the important point is that this urbanization involved redis tion of the population rather than a further increase. It was accom- plished, in other words, only through widespread rural abandonment and the more or less forcible relocation of former villages and towns- nen in wholly unprecedented urban agglomerations. ‘The Imperial Era (ca. 2500-1500 B.C.) ‘The very geographical peculiarity of Mesopotamia that tempted nomads also led to internecine warfare and attempts at ‘conquest among the cities themselves. As Childe explains (1996, Pp. 125), they all depended on the two rivers, the Tigris and the Euphrates, for life itself, and for “the importation of ... exotic substanices from common sources.” And therefore, = disputes about Jands and water rights were liable to arise between the several autonomous cities, Just because all relied on the same for ‘eign trade to bring them the same necessities for industry, commercial rivalries were inevitable amongst sovereign states; the contradiction between an economic system that ought to be unitary and political separatism was made manifest in interminable dynastic wars, Our ‘earliest documents after the temple accounts, in fect, record wars between adjacent cities and treaties that temporarily ended them, The ambition of any city dynast was to obtain hegemony over his neighbors. Mesopotamia 217 The Akkadian Empire e Around 2500 n.c. the attempts at empire began to have some wide success, but they were not long-lived. Sargon of Akkad, about 2370 3.c., was apparently the first to found an imperial dynasty that lasted through several reigns Cabout a century). This dynasty ruled over all of Mesopotamia and apparently either subjected or overawed the upland barbarians. Sargon, according to tradition, began his political career as a cup-bearer to the king of Kish, a city on the northern borders of the Sumer. (Sumer was the southern part of Lower Mesopotamia. ) Eventually he became a successful military leader, who, after de- feat in several neighboring cities, founded his own city Akkad (Agade). From Akkad, he continued his campaigns ever south- ward until all of Sumer was tributary to him. Such a conquest ‘was not new to the Sumerians, but all previous incursions, like their own internecine wars, had been rather ephemeral in theit results. ‘Akkad was founded in & strategic military position in the transition zone between the barbarian steppes and the civilized south, [tis likely that it is for this very reason that Sargon was so successful; he was able “to unite barbarian prowess with civilized technique” forming a combination superior to either (McNeill 1963, p. 48.) Sumerian culture had influenced the middle and upper regions of Mesopotamia without conquering them, so the new city that Sargon built in Akkad had an important Sumerian foundation, but without the rigid priest-and-temple structure of the old Sumerian cities, Priests and temple communities existed in Akad, but since the city was created by the military, the secular and military parts of the society were ascendent and remained so. ‘Another possibly important feature of the rise of the Akkadian ‘empire lay in the differences in the original cultures of the north- ‘em Semites and the southern Sumerians. The Sumerians had been sedentary irrigation agriculturalists for many hundreds of years. Many of the Semiticspeaking peoples of the upper rivers and steppes had been nomadic herdsmen, and even after they adopted irrigation farming (around 2500 8.c.) they still had an important symbiotic connection with the neighboring herdsmen. Thus, united Mesopotamia held two subcultures, the older, aristocratic, sophisticated, theocratic cities of Sumer and the newer, powerful,218 ‘The Archaic Civilizations more secular fortresses of the northern frontier. McNeill feels that the pastoral heritage of the Semites was a powerful factor in caus. ing the transition to irrigation farming to take a new form (1963, pp. 48-47) No doubt the obvious rewards of irrigation induced this change; but it occurred within the framework of a social system which had devel: ‘oped t0 suit the needs of pastoralism. Above all, this meant 2 society Jed by tribal chieftains, whose function it was to direct the co-opera tive effort needed to safeguard the flocks and move them From pasture to pasture. As irrigated agriculture took root in Akkad, this sort of traditional authority was extended and transformed: chieftains began to mobilize and supervise the work gangs needed to build and maintain irrigation works. thas been noted how often an older set of cultural forms and institutions takes on new life when transplanted to a new locality and taken up by a new people, There seem to be two related rea sons for this: The borrowers are likely to choose only the obviously best of the range of variations in such things as irrigation tech- niques; and (2) the borrowed elements may find themselves, adapted to unfamiliar uses and means, which may Cor, of course, may not) give rise to new combinations of greater evolutionary potentiality, Both of these factors appear to account for the ascen- dency of Akad, particularly in that the adaptation of farming was related to secular rather than religious management. This. and the pastoral military heritage created not only a stronger city but also one more purely a secular state rather than an elaborate chief- dom or theocratic nearstate, McNeill summarizes this develop- ment as follows (2963, p. 50): “The successful transplantation of Sumerian high culture up-river among the Akkadians marked an important stage in the expansion of civilization, The sociological barrier which had hitherto restricted civilized life to communities organized and led by priesthoods was for the first time trans- cended.” ‘The Akkadian secular rule of the military, the economy, and the irrigation system was able to expand much more easily into the upriver hinterlands, And probably of great significance was a new role Sargon invented for himself: He made it possible for his name to be invoked along with the gods in the swearing of an ‘oath upon an agreement. At first glance, this looks like an attempt Mesopotamia 219 at self-deifiation, to reestablish an important theocratic featare— and perhaps this is so. But the practical significance was that if ‘an agreement sworn on such an oath were broken, or perjured, the ruler was committed to uphold the right of the injured party. This amounted to Sergon's constituting himself as a court of appeal for the whole land, independent of the cities. This was an important step in the development of a true code of law, law whose ‘origin was political, not religious (Frankfort n.d, p. 86), ‘The Sargonic empire lasted through four generations until it wwas successfully overthrown by an invasion of Gutians, who them- selves ruled a loose empire for about a century until overthrown by internal revolt. The Third Dynasty of Ur ruled Sumer and Akkad for another century, after which @ complex series of dis- corders and wars beset Mesopotamia until about 1700 3.c., when Hammurabi united the country from his own city of Babylon, still farther to the north than Akkad, But Hammurabi’s dynasty, like the others before him, hed a lifecycle of only about a century before it succumbed to new barbarian breakthroughs. So repetitive vwas this rise-and-fall that it helped precipitate the many cyclical theories of the state alluded to in chapter 2 The Structure of Empire But despite the disorder—and in some respects because of it—Mesopotamian civilization underwent cer- tain structural and institutional developments that were to provide the foundations of empires and cities throughout the Near- and Mideast Cand possibly beyond) long before the Christian epoch. Beginning in Akkadian times, first of all, the political trend was toward ever-larger territories that experienced, apparently Cor ‘even necessarily), a slow development of the political, bureau- cratic, and military means of control. Writing and mathematics continued to develop in connection with statecraft, while eco- nomics, lav, religion, and ideology were modified also in accord- ance with new political demands. Related to all of these was an increase in the scope of the economy, especially in the movement of goods and materials. For the trend toward larger polities to succeed, it had to in- volve a transfer of some political loyalties, at least of some bureau- ‘rats, from local cities to the larger polity. One obvious way to ‘encourage this was to supplant some of the local higher officials220 The Archaic Civilizations with foreigners loyal to the emperor. Naram Sin Cgrandson of Sargon) replaced local rulers and priests with his own relatives; and in time, as his royal offctaldom proliferated, it may be sup- posed that bureaucratic personnel beeame more and more profes- sionalized—increasingly loyal to their own organization and its purposes, which of course were also mainly the purposes of the empire The bureaucracy—secular, priestly, and military—must have been immensely aided by written communication and numerical notation. Simple pictographic writing and numerals had been used in Sumer to keep temple accounts and to record economic con- ‘tracts. With the growth of the empire came a greatly increased need for writing and arithmetic, and so their development ex- panded. Politically, the significance of the writing of law codes must have been of tremendous importance. Establishing a uniform system of royal justice throughout the realm brought the repre- sentatives of the imperial court into direct contact with the affairs ‘of local persons and groups, and in time made the bureaucracy, in its legal aspect, ever more useful and necessary. It could in this way undermine local leaders who formerly administered mere local customs, rather than the Taw of the land (cf. McNeill 1963, P. 54 and 1». 38). (We may suppose, with McNeill, that there ‘were royal law codes antedating the famous one of Hammurabi.) ‘The political significance of writing, as we have noted before, extended to ideology. Religious mythology when transmitted only orally was subject to unconscious, unintentional change, but when written it became codified and “official.” Changes could be made for political reasons—to lower the status of one local god or raise that of another (as in the famous Epic of Creation, which elevated the Babylonian god, Marduk, to supremacy). The increase in economic activity in the Imperial era poses a problem in interpretation, There are those who see any evidences cof movements of goods as “commerce,” from which it follows that private entrepreneurs had appeared to become a “merchant class.” ‘The famous economic historian Karl Polanyi Cin Polanyi et al 1957) tellingly disputes this simplistic, ethnocentric interpreta- tion. Carriers of goods, bureaucratic representatives of the empire, even ambassadors of a sort, all may be empowered to negotiate exchanges and determine equivalencies and quality, but no un- Mesopotamia 221 earned middle-man's increment remains in their coffers. An ap- pointed carrier-representative may operate on commission, or sal- ary, but in any case the “price” will be a politically determined, Dbureaucratically negotiated one, not the product of supply-and- demand fluctuations in a free market. It is only in this latter sense that a “merchant class,” by profiteering, could become wealthy and politically powerful and thus influence the nature of the political state in the Marxian sense. ‘This is not to say that there was no “market” in another sense of the word. A peasant village's “market” is preeminently a meet- ing place rather than a price-determining institution like the stock market. Such 2 place is useful for people to come together to exchange the surpluses of their own household economies. No city or village bureaucracy can easily regulate such a complex yet picayune affair, and probably few even bothered to try—though they probably did try to police it, tax it, setde disputes, and so on. But even if the prices are mostly determined by haggling, supply- and-demand, or irrational ideology—if prices that is, are unregu- lated by bureaucracy—this does not produce “merchants” powerful ‘enough to be politically significant as a “class.” It is undoubtedly the insignificance of these exchanges that allowed them to be so ‘unregulated. But neither the presence nor absence of a propertied merchant class by the time of Hammurabi can be proved. To me it seems very doubtful that such a class existed, but for our present pur- poses it is irrelevant: We are concerned with earlier times, the Dynastic era of Sumer and the early Akkadian period, in order to judge the significance of the “class” or “stratification” factor and to discover its nature, and clearly its origin in those times was not entrepreneurial. ‘Adams says (1966, p. 155) that for the Early Dynastic period of Sumer “much of the intercity trade was either subject to royal demand or under direct royal control.” The agents responsible for the exchanges were officals, not free entrepreneurs, and were organized in a hierarchy. This does not mean that those same persons could not have engaged in some private trade, but only ‘that their power, whatever it was, arose from their bureaucratic position, not from their private wealth gained through trade. In the Akkadian times of greater military endeavors, “. . . patterns oF222 The Archaic Civilizations trade probably were still closely interdigitated with exactions of ‘booty and tribute within the spreading realm of Akkadian control” ibid. p. 156). It seems evident that although a strong case can be made for the economic significance of the exchange of goods in relation to the bureaucracy, this very exchange did not create a class of entre- reneurs of any political significance. If anything, a case could be more easily argued that the development of government made possible an increase in the amount of distant exchanges of goods, rather than vice versa, and that the exchanges reeiprocally strength ened the bureaucracy engaged in them. But it should be emph sized that this claim is being made for the political significance of distant and important exchanges of goods, for it is these that must have been officially planned and managed—not the petty exchanges made for general houschold requirements by private individuals. But even if the whole population of a city on market- day act like “penny capitalists” (Sol Tax’s phrase for his Guate- malan Indian villagers), this should not create a class of rich entrepreneurs as the basis of a repressive state in ancient Mesopo- tamia, any more than it did in a modern Guatemalan village, ‘The First Urban Civilization Just as in Mesoamerica and Peru, Mesopotamia exhibits a long developmental period of theocratic rule leading toa “classic” period, followed by an increase in warfare and the successive rise and fall of military empires. And, as in the preceding cases, an in- crease in the size and numbers of cities accompanied this devel- opment—but without the “regional symbiosis” that seemed so fundamental in the New World regions. In the Mesopotamian lowlands the specialization was more technological than ecclogical. The size of the individual Mesopotamian cities poses the prob- Jem of cause-and-effect in the development of governance. Did they require controls because of their size, or did the presence of the military and the protection of the cities foster their growth? Certainly the two grew together, but it seems likely that the to distinet kinds of military problems, protection against nomads and against rival cities, must have been a prime factor in the growth Mesopotamia 223 of the cities. We must also recognize, of course, that intensive plant and animal domestication had to accompany the growth of urban centers Bat, a5 we have also noted in earlier chapters Cespecially with respect to Teotibuacén}, not only does military pressure tend to ake the city population grow, it discourages political dissidents from leaving. Thus the rather normal centrifugal tendencies in any large polity tend to be overcome by the centripetal force of the beneficial features of membership in the polity—especially the benefits ofits protection, ‘This is again a case whereby Carneiro's (1970) circumscri tion hypothesis needs amending. I believe that when geographic circumscription is present the political effect is as Carneiro says— but I would call it another instance among several of the factor of governance by benefit. This general factor is, so far as I can see now, a universal in the formation of all persevering power relationships. Redistribution and economic well-being in general, priestly intervention with the gods, protection, and so on are all helpful in politcal integration when it is apparent that they are superior benefits compared to the alternative of moving away (or, as in more modern politics, of overthrowing the government). Carneiro emphasizes only one of these factors, the geographic isolation of the ecologically well adapted, highly productive society But, we should add at this point, another sort of ecological factor is the military adapation of nomads and settled intensive agricul- turalists. Their competition creates @ polarizing tendency, with some of the societies becoming increasingly nomadic and aggres- sive, on the one hand, and others increasingly intensive farmers with a sedentary defensive strategy, on the other hand. This results in the appearance of geographical isolation, as in part it is; but it is caused mostly by military specialization, and relatively empty intermediate no-man’s-lands might therefore appear to be more unproductive than they really are. ‘The other form of warfare, between the cities themselves, resulted eventually in forms of statecraft (governance by force or threat of it) that were developed in external affairs, culminating {in Sargon's empire and the various successors. But Mesopotamian, civilization preceded these developments, just as the military em-224 The Archaic Civilizations pires of Mesoamerica and Peru were preceded by civilization there. And, it seems evident, successful conquest to be made permanent depended on not only military might, but on the prior development ‘of a governmental bureaucracy capable of undertaking new tasks.
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