Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1034989 Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 2012 37 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Early Yangshao period (5000–4000 BC) village of Jiangzhai is the most completely excavated and reported of any early agricultural community in the middle reaches of northern China’s Yellow River Valley. This comprehensive dataset can better our understanding of early agricultural village societies and complex society development, especially the emergence of economic inequality. Analyses of Jiangzhai’s architectural remains and their arrangement; estimates of household population, storage capacity, and animal consumption; and analyses of household artifact assemblages are used to reconstruct the social and economic organization of this important Neolithic settlement. Our analyses suggest that differences in economic organization at the household level are responsible for patterns of intra-settlement economic differentiation previously attributed to higher-order “corporate” institutions. Rather than a segmental society composed of redundant homologous units, Jiangzhai displays substantial variability among residential sectors and constituent households in terms of activity emphases and surplus accumulation. Substantial intrasite variation in socioeconomic organization has previously been thought characteristic only of more complex Late Neolithic societies in the middle Yellow River Valley region.

► The socioeconomic organization of Early Yangshao period Jiangzhai village is reconstructed. ► Archaeological features and household artifact assemblages are analyzed. ► Household population, storage capacity, and animal consumption are estimated. ► Jiangzhai exhibits variation in household activity emphases and surplus accumulation. ► This variation is characteristic of later more complex societies in northern China.

Keywords
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities History
Authors
, ,