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Agricultural Societies The evolution of Government and Religion From Egalitarianism to Kleptocracy. Text extracted from Guns Germs and Steel By Jared Diamond, 1997. http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/0393317552.03.LZZZZZZZ.jpg. Government and Religion.
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Agricultural SocietiesThe evolution of Government and Religion From Egalitarianism to Kleptocracy Text extracted from Guns Germs and Steel By Jared Diamond, 1997 http://images-eu.amazon.com/images/P/0393317552.03.LZZZZZZZ.jpg
Government and Religion • Descendents of those societies that earliest achieved • centralized government • organized religion • ended up dominating the modern world http://www.historyofjihad.org/crusades2.jpg
Government and Religion • 4 main forces of history: • Resulting in the broadest patterns • government & religion • germs • writing • technology Babylon http://web.njit.edu/~turoff/image/tower-of-babel.jpg
Government and Religion • How did government and religion arise? • How did they become combined? King Solomon http://www.flholocaustmuseum.org/history_wing/antisemitism/arts/visual_arts.cfm
Levels of Social Organization • Bands • Tribes • Chiefdoms • States China: early state society http://www.travel-centre.co.uk/site-media/images/sections/great_wall_1.JPG
Bands • Tiny Populations: typically 5-80 people • Most are close relatives by birth or marriage • All humans lived in bands until 40,000 years ago In recent history: • African Pygmies, Bushmen • Australian Aborigines • Eskimos Bushman http://www.south-africa-tours-and-travel.com/images/bushman-hunter-gathere-rsa-xauslodge.jpg
Bands • Usually nomadic: • live in areas where food is scarce • Land used by whole group • No specialization: • all able-bodied individuals forage for food • Economic system: • Reciprocal Exchange • No laws, police, or treaties to resolve conflicts: • But being closely related helps
Bands • No stratification into classes • Egalitarian leadership based on • personality • strength • intelligence • fighting skill Australian Aboriginal http://www.janesoceania.com/australia_aboriginal_history/Aboriginal%20Jimmy%20Walkabout_%20pitjantjara_tribe.jpg
Fayu in New Guinea • Four clans totaling 400 people • Normally live as single families scattered in swampy area • Come together once or twice a year to negotiate brides • Formerly numbered 2,000 • Population reduced by Fayu killing Fayu • Lacked political and social mechanisms to resolve disputes
Tribes • Society with hundreds of people, usually settled in many villages • Few left today • Shared language and culture • More than one clan (kinship group) • Land belongs to clans within a tribe • Everyone knows everyone else by name and relationship http://lamar.colostate.edu/~lctodd/image1.gif
Tribes • Conflicts still solved by being closely related • If two New Guinea Tribesmen were both away from their villages and happened upon one another • They would engage in a long discussion to determine possible family ties • Otherwise, no reason not to kill one another http://www.theage.com.au/ffximage/2006/09/17/18W_PNG_narrowweb__300x334,0.jpg
Tribes • Social System egalitarian • No upper or lower class • Each has debts and obligations to many others • No one can become more wealthy • Government still egalitarian • Decisions are made in a group • “Big Man” would have limited power • may look and live like everyone else Tribal chief, Brazil http://vervephoto.files.wordpress.com/2008/03/taitiana_brasil.jpg
Reciprocity • Reciprocity was the Basis of Early Economic Systems
Reciprocity • Gift giving creates an obligation to return similar gifts • Feasting improves relations, prevents hostility, is an excellent way to “store” food • Reciprocity leads to intermarriage • Villages are connected by multiple ties of kinship • Reciprocity results in food security, balances inequities • Political leadership is bestowed on those that give the most http://www.thorstenconsulting.com/Shaking%20hands.jpg
Kerekere in Moala • Moalans live in 1200 scattered villages in Fiji Pacific Islands • Kerekere is a formal request for a good or service • Can only kerekere a relative, but everyone are relatives • Are duty bound to honor a kerekere if you have what is asked for • This system evens out inequity • Prestige comes from giving more than taking http://www.gfmer.ch/Medical_search/Countries/images/Fiji_map.gif
Hunting and Gathering Societies Government Bands and Tribes Egalitarian Economy Ideology Hunting & Gathering Nature Religions Reciprocal Exchange God and Goddess Worship
Chiefdoms • Population: several thousand to tens of thousands • Arose about 7,500 years ago with rising populations • In 1492, widespread in • N. and S. America • Africa • Polynesia http://www.tngenweb.org/maps/eastribe.jpg
Chiefdoms • No chiefdoms left in 20th century • Prime land taken by larger state societies • Chiefdoms consolidated into states http://www.alohaislandtravel.com/maps/images/islands.gif
Chiefdoms • Usually have Public Architecture • Temples • Tombs Easter Islands http://www.mattnortham.com/blog/wp-content/images/2007/01/easter-island.jpg
Chiefdoms • Most people unrelated to others • People don’t know most others by name • For first time in history, • people had to learn how to encounter strangers regularly • without attempting to kill them http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d7/De_Bry_Chief_Virginia.jpg/761px-De_Bry_Chief_Virginia.jpg
Chief • Held monopoly on right to use force • Held recognizable, hereditary office • Wore distinguishing clothes: demanded respect http://www.indianahumanities.org/Wethepeople/203/Indian_Chief_with_Head_Dress.jpg
Chief • Was thought of as a god • or had a hotline to the gods • Centralized authority: • Monopoly on information • Levels of Bureaucrats work under Chief • Many specialized jobs that can be done by slaves
Redistributive Economy • Chief receives food from everyone, then • Throws feast to redistribute • Stores it for later redistribution • Keeps much of it himself (tribute) • Chief also claims labor for construction of public works: • Irrigation, • Lavish Tombs 20,000 workers built the Taj Mahal http://blog.lib.umn.edu/drube004/architecture/image/Taj%20Mahal.jpg
Redistribution • Chief receives foodstuffs, goods from many • because he has power • Chief has power because • he regularly directs a flow of goods to his followers • Early city-states operated on this principle http://www.planetware.com/i/photo/acropolis-parthenon-athens-gr003.jpg
Traders • Traders did not make a profit • were agents of the empire • Goods traded on a fixed-price basis • Did not buy low and sell high http://www.uncp.edu/home/rwb/camel_caravan.jpg
Luxury Goods • Food surpluses generated by common people feed • Chief • Bureaucrats & Priests • Craft Specialists • Luxury Goods reserved for Chiefs http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1316/1172894001_f8a4dc5f67.jpg?v=0
Contribution Enforced • In Mesopotamia, police ensured that farmers contributed • Impersonality of city life • ends feelings of obligation of Chief to people • or vice versa http://farm2.static.flickr.com/1073/577047551_3eae5c5653.jpg?v=0
Good Chiefdoms • Good chiefdoms used tribute to provide important services to entire society • Irrigation • Religion • Defense Roman Aqueduct http://farm1.static.flickr.com/30/44052812_a0e766a843.jpg
Kleptocracies • At worst, chiefdoms were kleptocracies • Transferred net wealth from commoners to upper class http://lh3.ggpht.com/_oZMEAvLIJ70/Rz6D4tvSEuI/AAAAAAAAAOo/upBtJBKnEIU/DSCN3213.JPG
Kleptocracies • How do kleptocracies keep from being overthrown? • Disarm the populace • arm the elite • Redistribute tribute in popular ways • Use monopoly of force to keep public order • Construct an ideology or religion • that justifies kleptocracy http://library.thinkquest.org/C0110901/imagesAll/emperor.jpg
State Religion • Provides bond between people • not based on kinship • keeps them from killing each other • Gives warriors a motive for sacrificing life in battle: • now much more effective in conquest http://attendingtheworld.files.wordpress.com/2007/08/crusades.jpg
States • Populations of 50,000 to 1 Billion • Usually literate elites • sometimes literate population • Arose 3,700 BC in Mesopotamia • Later in Mesoamerica, China, Southeast Asia, Andes, West Africa Babylon http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/e/e1/Brueghel-tower-of-babel.jpg/795px-Brueghel-tower-of-babel.jpg
Earliest States http://www.hyperhistory.com/online_n2/History_n2/a.html
States • True cities, characterized by • Monumental public works • Palaces of rulers • Accumulation of capital from tribute or taxes • Concentration of people other than food producers http://www.evcal.org/sitebuilder/images/Luxor094KarnakStatue-373x496.jpg
States • Early states: • hereditary leader equivalent to a king • Democracies today: • crucial knowledge still available to only a few • Central control, redistribution of tribute more far-reaching • Even farmers not self-sufficient http://www.woodlands-junior.kent.sch.uk/Homework/egypt/images/harvest.jpg
Mesopotamia • Food produced by 4 specialist groups • Cereal farmers • Herders • Fishermen • Orchard and Garden growers http://farm1.static.flickr.com/9/14160477_43e502cb7c.jpg
Mesopotamia • State took produce from each farming group • Redistributed necessary supplies • and the other foods not produced • Exchanged wool by long distance trade • for other essential raw materials • Paid food rations to laborers • who maintained irrigation systems for farmers http://www.edupic.net/Images/SocialStudies/mesopotamia_ashurnasirpal2.jpg
Slavery • Many states adopted slavery on much larger scale than chiefdoms because • More use for slave labor • More economic specialization • More mass production • More public works • Warfare on a larger scale • meant more captives available Mesopotamian slaves http://www.uned.es/geo-1-historia-antigua-universal/ACADIOS/slaves_stele.jpg
Bureaucracies • More complex bureaucracies • Formalized laws, judiciary, police • Laws often written (by literate elite) • Writing not developed until formation of state societies • Mesopotamia • Mesoamerica Code of Hammurabi, Mesopotamia http://www.allaboutarchaeology.org/images/code-of-hammurabi.jpg
Religion • Early: state religions • standardized temples • Many kings divine • Kings often head of state religion • Mesopotamian Temple was center of • Religion • Economic redistribution • Writing • Crafts technology Mesopotamian Temple http://i143.photobucket.com/albums/r127/andrewidodo/600ziggurat.jpg
Expansion of Agricultural Societies Expanded Conquest Conquest Land Agriculture Slaves Food Population Technology Small Group Etc.
Agricultural Societies Government Chiefdoms, States Kleptocracies, Elites Kings = Gods Economy Ideology Agriculture State Religions Redistribution, Tribute Central Temple Conquest, Slavery Male dominated
Agricultural Society Hierarchy Elite Conquest Wealth, Tribute Food, Resources Conquered & Exploited: Peasants, Slaves, Workers
Wealth and Poverty Wealth: Elite Own land, Well-fed Educated, Health care, Opportunities Poverty: Wealth, Tribute Food, Resources Landless, hungry, uneducated, unhealthy, no opportunities Conquered & Exploited: Peasants, Slaves, Workers
Organization of States • States organized on political and territorial lines: not kinship and tribe boundaries • States and empires often are multiethnic and multilingual • Bureaucrats selected more on ability than heredity • Modern states have non-hereditary leadership Roman Empire http://gbgm-umc.org/UMW/corinthians/maps/empire2a.gif
Why Do States Arise? • More complex societies usually conquer less complex ones • Advantage of weapons, technology, numbers • Centralized decision making more efficient in conquest • Official religions, patriotic fervor • make troops willing to fight suicidially: fanaticism Arab Muslim Empire http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~helfgott/img/map-arab-empire.png
How Do Chiefdoms Become States? • Aristotle: • States are the natural condition of human society. • Knew only Greek Societies of 400 BC • Rousseau: • States formed by a social contract • a rational decision of people based on self interest. • Never happened this way • Small groups do not give up their sovereignty willingly Aristotle http://www.empirecontact.com/magicstar/Aristotle.jpg
Irrigation Theory • Major civilizations had large-scale irrigation: • Mesopotamia, • Egypt • China • Mesoamerica • Large-scale irrigation requires centralized bureaucracy for • Construction • Maintenance • Management Irrigation, Egypt http://www.love-egypt.com/images/egypt-agriculture.jpg
Irrigation Theory Disputed • States formed to create irrigation systems? • But irrigation came after states formed • States did not always have centrally controlled irrigation Hanging Gardens, Babylon http://www.expandmywealth.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/hanging-gardens-of-babylon.jpg
Population Theory • Strong correlation between size of population • and complexity of society • Autocatalysis: • population growth leads to social complexity • Social complexity leads to intensified food production • and population growth Population density http://www.theglobaleducationproject.org/earth/images/final-images/g-gpw-population-map.gif