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Ancient Chiefdoms Of The Tombigbee
John H. Blitz

Ancient Chiefdoms Of The Tombigbee

The University Of Alabama Press (May 31, 1993)
9780817306724
| Paperback
232 pages | 155 x 236 mm | English
Dewey 976.12
LC Classification E99.M6815 .B55 1993

Genre

  • MS History

Subject

  • 976.1/2
  • Antiquities
  • Chiefdoms
  • Chiefdoms--Tombigbee River Valley (Miss. and Ala.)
  • E99.M6815 B55 1993
  • Mississippian culture
  • Mississippian culture--Tombigbee River Valley (Miss. and Ala.)

Plot

A Dan Josselyn Memorial Publication Focuses on both the small- and large-scale Mississippian societies in the Tombigbee-Black Warrior River region of Alabama and Mississippi Within the last 50 years archaeologists have discovered that around the 10th century AD, native southeastern peoples began a process of cultural change far more complex than anything that had occurred previously. These late prehistoric societies—known as Mississippian—have come to be regarded as chiefdoms. The chiefdoms are of great anthropological interest because in these kinds of societies social hierarchies or rank and status were first institutionalized. Ancient Chiefdoms of the Tombigbee focuses on both the small- and large-scale Mississippian societies in the Tombigbee-Black Warrior River region of Alabama and Mississippi. Exploring the relationships involving polity size, degree of social ranking, and resource control provides insights into cycles of chiefdom development and fragmentation. Blitz concludes that the sanctified, security maintenance roles of communal food storage management and war leadership were a sufficient basis for formal chiefly authority but insufficient for economically based social stratification.

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Modified Date Jul 06, 2019 20:47:00