Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1034994 Journal of Anthropological Archaeology 2012 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

The extraordinary record of prehistoric funeral activities in Russia’s Cis-Baikal region provides an opportunity to study changes in political strategies that boreal forest hunter–gatherers employed at these events in the Middle Holocene. I use published data on burial treatments (quantities of grave goods, presence of exotic materials, burial layouts) from 10 Late Neolithic (henceforth referred to as “LN,” 4000–3000 BC) and 11 Early Bronze Age (“EBA,” 3000–2000 BC) cemeteries to explore important and previously undetected shifts in the ways that funerals during these periods articulated with political life. LN groups used funerals to emphasize affiliation with corporate institutions, while EBA funeral participants employed political strategies focused on displaying wealth. Current evidence indicates that groups on the western peripheries of the Cis-Baikal started employing semi-nomadic pastoral subsistence practices at the time of the LN-EBA transition, and I suggest that these groups presented new opportunities for Cis-Baikal inhabitants. Interactions with mobile, food-producing groups may have indirectly stimulated indigenous populations to redefine funeral gatherings as venues appropriate for cultivating long-distance economic and political support through competitive displays of wealth.

► Diachronic comparison of hunter-gatherer burials from Mid-Holocene Siberia presented. ► Layout, artifacts, and demographics indicate new uses for burials ∼3000 BC. ► Wealth displays, differentiation replace emphasis on widespread corporate initiation. ► Political economic shift may relate to new inter-regional interaction opportunities.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Arts and Humanities History
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