Department of Anthropology, Universidad de los Andes, Bogotá, Colombia.
Center for Comparative Archaeology, Department of Anthropology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2021 May 27;16(5):e0252532. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0252532. eCollection 2021.
Archaeological research has by now revealed a great deal of variation in the way early complex societies, or chiefdoms, developed. This variation is widely recognized, but our understanding of the forces that produced it remains relatively undeveloped. This paper takes aim at such understanding by exploring variation in the local economies of six early chiefdoms; it considers what implications this variation had for trajectories of chiefdom development, as well as the source of that variation. Economic exchange is a primary form of local interaction in all societies. Because of distance-interaction principles, closer household spacing within local communities facilitated more frequent interaction and thus encouraged productive differentiation, economic interdependence, and the development of well-integrated local economies. Well-integrated local economies, in turn, provided ready opportunities for aspiring leaders to accumulate wealth and fund political economies, and pursuit of these opportunities led to societies with leaders whose power had a direct economic base. Wider household spacing, on the other hand, impeded interaction and the development of well-integrated local economies. In such contexts, aspiring leaders were able to turn to ritual and religion as a base of social power. Even when well-integrated local economies offered opportunities for wealth accumulation and a ready source of funding for political economies, these opportunities were not always taken advantage of. That variation in the shapes of early chiefdoms can be traced back to patterns of household spacing highlights the importance of settlement and interaction in explaining not just chiefdom development, but societal change more generally.
考古研究已经揭示了早期复杂社会或酋长领地发展方式的巨大差异。这种差异得到了广泛的认可,但我们对产生这种差异的力量的理解仍然相对不发达。本文通过探索六个早期酋长领地的地方经济差异,旨在对此类理解进行探讨;它考虑了这种差异对酋长领地发展轨迹的影响,以及这种差异的来源。经济交流是所有社会中一种主要的地方互动形式。由于距离互动原则,当地社区内更近的家庭间隔会促进更频繁的互动,从而鼓励生产差异化、经济相互依存和完善的地方经济发展。反过来,完善的地方经济为有抱负的领导人提供了积累财富和资助政治经济的现成机会,而对这些机会的追求导致了拥有直接经济基础的领导人的社会。另一方面,更广泛的家庭间隔会阻碍互动和完善的地方经济发展。在这种情况下,有抱负的领导人能够将仪式和宗教作为社会权力的基础。即使完善的地方经济为财富积累和政治经济提供了现成的资金来源,这些机会也并不总是被利用。早期酋长领地形状的差异可以追溯到家庭间隔模式,这凸显了定居点和互动在解释不仅仅是酋长领地发展,而是更普遍的社会变革方面的重要性。