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This ambitious and innovative book sets out to establish a new understanding of human aggression and conflict in the distant past. Examining the evidence of warfare in prehistoric times and in the early historical period, John Carman and Anthony Harding throw fresh light on the motives and methods of the combatants. This study marks a significant new step in this fascinating and neglected subject, and sets the agenda for many years to come. By integrating archaeological and documentary research, the contributors seek to explain why some sides gained and others lost in battle and examine the impact of warfare on the social and political developments of early chiefdoms and states. Their conclusions suggest a new interpretation of the evolution of warfare from the Stone Age and the Bronze Age, through the military practice of the Ancient Greeks and the Romans, to the conflicts of the Anglo-Saxons and of medieval Europe.
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2009
Ancient Warfare
Archaeological Perspectives
Edited by
John Carman and Anthony Harding
First published in 1999 by Sutton Publishing
The History Press The Mill, Brimscombe Port Stroud, Gloucestershire, GL5 2QGwww.thehistorypress.co.uk
This ebook edition first published in 2013
All rights reserved © Copyright © in the introduction and epilogue John Carman and Anthony Harding, 1999, 2013 Each chapter remains the copyright of the contributor, 2013
John Carman and Anthony Harding hereby assert the moral right to be identified as the editors of this work.
This ebook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights, and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
EPUB ISBN 978 0 7524 9521 7
Original typesetting by The History Press
CONTENTS
List of Contributors
1 Introduction
John Carman and Anthony Harding
2 The origins of war and ethnic violence
Jonathan Haas
3 Biosocial and bioarchaeological aspects of conflict and warfare
Don Brothwell
4 Beyond the Western way of war: ancient battlefields in comparative perspective
John Carman
5 Stone Age warfare
Slavomil Vencl
6 War and peace in prehistoric Eastern Europe
P.M. Dolukhanov
7 Neolithic enclosures in Greek Macedonia: violent and non-violent aspects of territorial demarcation
Dimitra Kokkinidou and Marianna Nikolaidou
8 The origins of warfare in the prehistory of Central and Eastern Europe
John Chapman
9 The origins of warfare in the British Isles
R.J. Mercer
10 Warfare: a defining characteristic of Bronze Age Europe?
Anthony Harding
11 The emergence of warrior aristocracies in later European prehistory and their long-term history
Kristian Kristiansen
12 Into the Iron Age: a discourse on war and society
Klavs Randsborg
13 Hoplite obliteration: the case of the town of Thespiae
Victor Davis Hanson
14 The elusive warrior maiden tradition – bearing weapons in Anglo-Saxon society
Deborah J. Shepherd
15 Epilogue: the future study of ancient warfare
John Carman and Anthony Harding
Bibliography
LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS
Don Brothwell is Professor of Human Palaeoecology in the University of York. He has had a lifetime interest in the nature of human conflict and the anthropology of warfare. Prior to his University studies, his ‘national service’ was in Lincoln Prison, and he has remained a committed pacifist, though not a naïve one.
John Carman gained his PhD in Archaeology from Cambridge University in 1993. He is an Affiliated Lecturer in the Department of Archaeology, University of Cambridge, and a Research Fellow at Clare Hall, Cambridge. His specialisations include archaeological heritage management and archaeological theory as well as archaeologies of violence and war. He published his first book Valuing Ancient Things: archaeology and law in 1996. He has edited Material Harm: archaeological studies of war and violence and is co-Director with Patricia Carman of the ‘Bloody Meadows’ Project on historic battlefields world-wide.
John Chapman is Reader in Archaeology at the University of Durham. He has specialised in the prehistoric archaeology of the Balkans, notably the Neolithic, and published his doctoral work on the Vina Culture in 1981. A major survey of prehistoric Dalmatia in the 1980s was published in 1996 as The Changing Face of Dalmatia (with R. Shiel and Š. Batovi). Since 1991 he has been working in north-east Hungary on the Upper Tisza Project, now nearing completion. He is also a writer on theoretical archaeology, and edits The European Journal of Archaeology.
Pavel M. Dolukhanov is Reader in East European Archaeology at the University of Newcastle upon Tyne. He is the author of Ecology and Economy in Neolithic Eastern Europe, Environment and Ethnicity in the Ancient Near East, and The Early Slavs, Eastern Europe from the initial settlement to the Kievan Rus. He is co-editor (with J.C. Chapman) and contributor to Cultural Transformations and Interactions in Eastern Europe and Landscapes in Flux, Central and Eastern Europe in antiquity. He has also written many articles on the environment and ethnicity of prehistoric Eastern Europe.
Jonathan Haas is the MacArthur curator of Anthropology at the Field Museum in Chicago and an External Professor with the Santa Fe Institute. He has researched and published widely on the development of complex cultural systems, the origins of warfare, and the rise of early states. Among his publications are The Evolution of the PrehistoricState and The Anthropology of War. He has conducted fieldwork in the eastern and south-western United States as well as in Peru.
Victor Davis Hanson is Professor of Greek and Classics at California State University, Fresno. He is the author of Warfare and Agriculture in Classical Greece, The Western Way of War, The Other Greeks, The Wars of the Ancient Greeks and The Soul of Battle in addition to other books and articles on ancient Greek military and agrarian history.
Anthony Harding is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Durham. A specialist on the Bronze Age archaeology of Europe, he has published a number of books on the subject including The Bronze Age in Europe (with J.M. Coles) and The Mycenaeans in Europe. He has conducted excavations in Britain, Poland and the Czech Republic on a variety of Bronze and Iron Age sites, and is currently working on the application of landscape archaeology techniques to eastern Europe.
Dimitra Kokkinidou gained her degree in archaeology and art history from the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece, and her M.Phil and PhD in prehistoric archaeology from Birmingham University, UK. Her publications concern the Greek Neolithic and Bronze Ages, gender interpretations of material culture and educational implications of cultural heritage. She has taught at secondary and tertiary level in Greece and is currently Teaching Associate at the School of European Languages and Cultures, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
Kristian Kristiansen is Professor of Archaeology at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden. His most recent books are Europe Before History and, with Michael Rowlands, Social Transformations in Archaeology: global and local perspectives. He has edited several books and the Journal of Danish Archaeology. He was the first President of the European Association of Archaeologists between 1994 and 1998. His research interests include archaeological history and heritage management as well as the Bronze Age.
Roger Mercer obtained an MA in Archaeology at the University of Edinburgh (1963–67). In 1969 he became an Inspector of Ancient Monuments for the Department of the Environment (now English Heritage) where his responsibilities included the whole of south-west England as well as excavations on a number of sites in state care. In 1974 he became lecturer in prehistory in the Department of Archaeology, University of Edinburgh, and Reader in 1982. His specialism was in Neolithic and Bronze Age prehistory in Britain and Europe. In 1990 he became Secretary (Chief Executive) of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland.
Marianna Nikolaidou graduated from the Department of History and Archaeology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece, and did her graduate studies in Thessaloniki and Cambridge, UK. Her PhD on Minoan religious symbolism was completed in 1994 and she is co-author of Archaeology and Gender, approaches to Aegean prehistory (published in Greek). Based at the Institute of Archaeology, University of California in Los Angeles, and the Getty Museum in Malibu, she specialises in the Neolithic and Bronze Age of the Aegean and her research interests include pottery studies, religion and symbolism, and gender issues.
Klavs Randsborg is Professor at the Archaeological Institute, University of Copenhagen. He has written several books and many articles on the European and Scandinavian Bronze and Iron Ages, Classical and Roman periods, and the Early Middle Ages in the fields of archaeological chronology, culture and social history, settlement, burial and archaeological interpretation. He has current fieldwork projects in Greece, Russia, Ukraine and West Africa.
Deborah Shepherd is Visiting Scholar in Interdisciplinary Archaeological Studies at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, USA. Her dissertation, Funerary Ritual and Symbolism: an inter-disciplinary interpretation of burial practices in Late Iron Age Finland, will be published in 1999 as a British Archaeological Report. She is currently involved in long-term field excavation of a Norse settlement area in northern England.
Slavomil Vencl is a researcher at the Archaeological Institute of the Czech Academy of Sciences in Prague. He also teaches Stone Age Archaeology at the Universities in Prague and Plze. He has written monographs which include Les instruments lithiques des premiers agriculteurs en Europe centrale and Hostim – Magdalenian in Bohemia, as well as numerous articles on the Palaeolithic and Mesolithic, and on the methodology of prehistoric archaeology.
ONE
INTRODUCTION
JOHN CARMAN AND ANTHONY HARDING
This book is about warfare in the ancient past. More specifically, it is about how archaeologists can address issues that are of contemporary interest and concern to students of mass violence as a part of human existence.
The book derives in part from a conference on the theme of ancient warfare held in Durham, England, in 1996, at which some of the contributions had their origins.1 Other contributors were specifically invited to address issues not otherwise covered. The contributions as a whole attempt to provide the most complete coverage of the archaeological study of ancient warfare (excluding other forms of human violence) currently available.
We are concerned with five principal themes, each of which can be expressed in the form of questions:
• What general lessons applicable to archaeology are to be learnt from a study of warfare in ethnographic and historical situations? Why do so many societies engage in warfare? What advantages does it bring, and what risks does it involve?
• In what ways can archaeological evidence be used to tell us about warfare in the past, before (or without) writing? Is artefactual material with warlike associations (weaponry, defensive structures) necessarily to be seen in itself as evidence for warfare? If not, what is?
• In what ways was warfare a structural part of the development of early Europe? How did it relate to social and political development – for instance, the emergence of chiefdoms or state-formation?
• Can general statements be made cross-culturally about ancient warfare in archaeological terms? Can the study of, for instance, Egyptian or Roman warfare contribute to the study of prehistoric or early Medieval warfare?
• What can archaeology contribute to studies of warfare? Is a distinctively archaeological contribution to the study of warfare a valid objective?
Anyone who has considered the nature and importance of ancient warfare will have come across a number of key texts. All students of war realise the pervasive importance of the great work of Carl von Clausewitz, On War (1976 [1832]), which sets out many of the fundamental concepts that underlie the modern study of the subject. Von Clausewitz’s concerns were partly with warfare as he knew it (see Keegan 1993, 12ff. for an account of von Clausewitz’s career in so far as it affected his thought) and partly with what he saw as the universals of warfare. At the time, neither archaeology nor anthropology existed as recognised disciplines with a body of theory and data of their own, and as a consequence von Clausewitz could not know much about forms of warfare outside his direct experience, or beyond available texts.
For writers of the present day, a couple of works are key – one might say required – reading. The first is H.H. Turney-High’s compellingly written Primitive War: Its Practice and Concepts (1949).2 Though much has changed since then, and current ethnographers would not today adopt (or even accept as valid) his cross-cultural approach, this remains one of the most far-reaching, and certainly the best-written, anthropological texts on the subject, reaching also into archaeology – at least into the archaeology that was being written before the Second World War. Especially for present-day students, the first couple of chapters are crucial, the first dealing with weapons, and the second with the general practices of war. It is salutary, on reading Chapter 1 of Primitive War, to find how many of the statements in this present volume are foreshadowed there.
The second work is more recent: John Keegan’s A History of Warfare (1993). Keegan is a military historian, and neither an anthropologist nor an archaeologist, but his panoramic knowledge of the theoretical as well as the historical literature means that he can range across these as well as his home disciplines. The book is not really a history of warfare at all, but a review of most aspects of the study of warfare, illustrated with historical examples.
More recently still, Lawrence H. Keeley has published his War Before Civilization (1996) which has a particular message to press home: that the past was not a peaceful place. According to Keeley, the past has been ‘pacified’: that is to say, scholars have allegedly not attributed to it the warlike qualities he believes it possessed. War in the ancient past was, in his view, frequent and deadly: even if particular periods do not appear to possess many weapons, fortifications or much evidence of slaughter, that does not mean they were not prone to constant wars. We have read Keeley’s work with interest and profit, which is not to say we agree with everything he says, as the contents of this book will make clear.3
Other recent authors who have dealt with war in the anthropological literature include Robert L. Carneiro, R. Brian Ferguson and Jonathan Haas. We are glad to acknowledge here their many insights. An archaeologist who has brought the study of warfare into many of his writings is Timothy Earle, well known for his studies of chiefdoms. His most recent book on this subject, How Chiefs Come to Power (1997), explicitly devotes a chapter to ‘Military Power: The Strategic Use of Naked Force’ in his consideration of the long-term development of ‘chiefdoms’ in Denmark, Hawaii and the Andes. Among the issues Earle raises are the ways warfare relates to the establishment and maintenance of political power, comparing approaches such as the cultural-ecological or political-ecological (e.g., the ‘circumscription’ theory of Carneiro) with those placing greater importance on economic or ideological factors. Earle concludes that ‘warfare was critical in all three cases’, though it differed greatly in its nature and effectiveness in each.
Several authors have pointed out – though until now, perhaps not clearly enough – that for an archaeologist, what is crucial is a conjunction between observed archaeological data (artefacts in the wide sense) and the material remains of known violent encounters in the historical or ethnographic record. Archaeologically, what survive are three potential categories of data (cf. Chapter 5): artefacts used with aggressive intent (‘weapons’), damage inflicted on other humans in the form of pathological marks on human skeletons (or rarely, soft tissue) and site evidence in the form of constructions for defence or, more rarely, offence.4 What do not survive are the motives, causes, courses and outcomes of the aggression, at least not in directly observable form. On the other hand, it is a reasonable presumption that at least some weapons – perhaps the majority – and at least some fortifications were the result of the causes and courses of ancient wars. Archaeologists seeking to understand the nature of the societies they are studying want to be able to specify how and why these evidences of conflict occurred, and how they affected the development of the societies in question. But in warfare as in so many other things, recent practice may be a poor guide to what happened in ancient times, so help is needed from other sources.
DEFINING ANCIENT WARFARE: ANTHROPOLOGICAL INFLUENCE
The theme of warfare has been much debated by anthropologists since Malinowski (1941) and before. In recent times, Fried et al. (1968), Ferguson (1984; 1990; Ferguson & Whitehead 1992), Haas (1990b) and Carneiro (1990) have made notable contributions, as have historians, sociologists, psychologists and (bringing up the rear) archaeologists (cf. other chapters in this volume; Escalon de Fonton 1964; Behrens 1978; Vencl 1983; 1984a; 1984b; 1984c; Goldberg & Findlow 1984).
Almost inevitably, archaeologists of warfare are bound to notions about war derived from the sister-disciplines of history and anthropology (especially Keeley 1996; Carman 1997a), while others (e.g., Haas 1990b; Goldberg & Findlow 1984) locate themselves within the anthropological discourse about war. From these associations come a confusing number of terms applied to periods and types of warfare. In general, the term ‘ancient warfare’ as used in this book, means warfare in the past, from the first (unrecorded) instance of war up to the first millennium ad. Some references which derive from anthropological sources may apply to the kind of warfare we generally expect to have been experienced over a thousand years ago, even though they were learned from societies contemporary with our own. Terms for this kind of low-technology, limited war fought by traditional societies may include ‘ritual war’ (Chaliand 1994, 7) or (although we very much prefer to avoid these terms’ pejorative overtones) ‘wars by primitive societies’ (Chaliand 1994, 7) and ‘primitive war’ (Turney-High 1949; Keegan 1993).
Conventional military history chooses to define warfare by a mixture of Western historical periods (‘Ancient’, ‘Medieval’, ‘Modern’), geographical region (‘Eastern’) and description of the style of war (‘Total’ or ‘Nuclear’) (Montgomery 1968). A newer breed of military historian (especially Keegan 1993) chooses to use terms applicable universally to define types of warfare: ‘primitive’ for occasional small-scale wars fought by traditional societies, ‘determined by subsistence and demography and … not very costly in lives’ (Chaliand 1994, 7); ‘Oriental’ for wars distinguished by ‘evasion, delay and indirectness’ (Keegan 1993, 387), often by the application of defensive strategies, and deemed to be the kind of wars fought by the complex cultures of Asia (Chaliand 1994, 21), and finally, ‘Western’ for the fierce wars of annihilation in battle we inflict upon ourselves (cf. Hanson 1989; Keegan 1993). The majority of the authors in this book are concerned with the earliest kind of war fought by anatomically modern humans – the kinds still fought by some societies which are dubbed by some writers as ‘primitive’. Others cross the ‘military horizon’ (Turney-High 1949; Keegan 1993) to consider the violence of more ‘civilised’ warfare.
Confusion of terminology can arise where a term is appropriated as part of a different scheme from our own. Thus, Gray (1997) locates ‘ancient’ warfare in a continuum with modern war and postmodern war, as part of a discourse whereby war became an activity subject to ‘rules, order, and form’ (Gray 1997, 107) akin to Turney-High’s non-‘primitive’ ‘true war’ (Turney-High 1949). This organised war is intended to be clearly distinguished from ‘primitive, heroic, unorganised, ritual war’ (Gray 1997, 106), which is a form of ongoing discourse between the human and ‘the other’ in which the conservation of the enemy is as important as, or even more so than their destruction (Gray 1997, 97). Gray’s ancient, modern and postmodern wars fall into Chaliand’s rationally ordered categories of ‘wars with limited objectives’, ‘conventional wars of conquest’ and ‘mass wars’ (Chaliand 1994, 7). Unorganised wars are designated by him as either ‘ritual wars’, defined as those which are ‘not to the death. Generally they are the mark of societies that are still archaic or traditional’ (Chaliand 1994, 7), or they may fall into the category of ‘wars without quarter’ – either wars of ideas (about religion or identity) or wars against those seen as radically different (Chaliand 1994, 7–8). In general, the kind of warfare indulged in by early societies has been held to be limited, having ‘recourse to all sorts of devices which spare [combatant and non-combatant alike] from the worst of what might be inflicted’ (Keegan 1993, 387). This is the view put forward by Turney-High: ‘Many of the slayers of consanguine society were [natural] … But there is certainly one which has been consistently neglected. This is the rise of the army with officers’ (Turney-High 1949, 253). This view has been taken up by his successors. For Ferguson & Whitehead and their contributors, it is the contact zone between civilisation and indigenous peoples which is the location of the most violent forms of warfare: ‘a tribal zone can be a very violent place. At its worst it can consume a population’ (Ferguson & Whitehead 1992, 27).
The work of those such as Turney-High (1949) and Ferguson & Whitehead (1992), and the results they have achieved, derive from efforts to understand how and why the kinds of traditional societies studied by anthropologists fight, putting the focus on the formal aspects of their warfare. Keeley (1996) challenges archaeologists and anthropologists to look again at their evidence and he is concerned to understand how what he considers to be the conventional view of a ‘pacified past’ came about. Like Carman (1997a), he locates this in a review of the history of anthropologies of war. Carman (1993; 1997a, 6–10) links the concerns of anthropologists in this area with events beyond academic anthropology, in an effort to explain how and why certain styles of approach were adopted in anthropology at particular times since the end of the Second World War. By contrast, Keeley – perhaps more fairly to anthropological students of warfare – considers anthropological developments independently from broader social and political ones (Keeley 1996, 5–17, 164–70).
Keeley’s work owes much to Turney-High (1949) and Keegan (1976), not least because he chooses to structure the book in terms of the kinds of evidence they each consider, and he shares with them a preparedness not to be squeamish. Where he differs from both is in the conclusion reached: ‘civilised’ warfare is not more terrible than other forms, for after ‘exploring war before civilisation in search of something less terrible than the wars we know, we merely arrive where we started with an all-too familiar catalog [sic] of deaths, rapes, pillage, destruction, and terror’ (Keeley 1996, 174):
Primitive war was not a puerile or deficient form of warfare, but war reduced to its essentials: killing enemies with a minimum of risk, denying them the means of life via vandalism and theft … terrorising them into either yielding territory or desisting from their encroachments and aggressions … It is civilised war that is stylised, ritualised and relatively less dangerous. When soldiers clash with warriors … it is precisely these ‘decorative’ civilised tactics and paraphernalia that must be abandoned. (Keeley 1996, 175)
Keeley draws very largely on surveys of the anthropological literature to provide quantified cross-cultural comparisons which support his contention that ‘The facts recovered … indicate unequivocally that primitive and prehistoric warfare was just as terrible and effective as the historic and civilised version’ (Keeley 1996, 174). Moreover, whereas ‘the modern nation-state goes to war once in a generation … [and after adjusting for the duration of such wars, being] at war only about one year in every five … 65 percent [of a sample of non-state societies were] at war continuously’ (Keeley 1996, 33). In addition, ‘by the measure of … mobilisation … war is no less important to tribes than to nations’ (Keeley 1996, 35–6). A valuable insight of Keeley’s is that there is more to warfare than the formal battle. In a battle between warriors and other warriors, formal limiting rules apply (cf. Chapters 4, 12 and 13, this volume), ‘but unrestricted warfare, without rules and aimed at annihilation, was practised against outsiders’ (Keeley 1996, 65). Here he turns the anthropological and archaeological focus away from mutually-agreed modes of combat towards rather less ‘honourable’ kinds: the raid, the ambush and particularly the massacre of non-combatants. Keeley finds all war – ‘civilised’, ‘tribal’, ‘primitive’ or ‘prehistoric’ – to be always total and unlimited war.
Keeley’s argument forces anthropologists and archaeologists to rethink their approach to warfare. In particular, it presents us with a challenge: either to continue to believe – despite the presence of arguments and evidence to the contrary – that the distant past was relatively peaceful and such warfare as took place was characterised by restraint and ritual controls on violence, or to face the possibility that the concept of ‘limited’ war (at least in the past) is an oxymoron. The idea that war is either ‘real’ and unlimited in its violence or ‘ritual’ and thus limited is rooted deep in our thinking: Turney-High (1949) drew the distinction between ‘primitive’ war and ‘true’ war, which his successors have followed. But even before anthropologists began to study the warfare of non-literate traditional societies, the great philosopher of war, von Clausewitz (1976 [1832]), had pointed out that war is inevitably a province of violence, and the limitation of that violence is only the product of other factors external to the combatants – what he terms ‘friction’ (von Clausewitz 1976 [1832], 119–21):
Kind hearted people might of course think there was some … way to disarm or defeat an enemy without too much bloodshed … [But] it is a fallacy that must be exposed … If one side uses force without compunction, undeterred by the bloodshed it involves, while the other side refrains … [t]hat [first] side will force the other to follow suit; each will drive its opponent toward extremes … This is how [war] must be seen. It would be futile – even wrong – to try and shut one’s eyes to what war really is from sheer distress at its brutality. (von Clausewitz 1976 [1832], 75–6)
Von Clausewitz’s words – although denying the possibility of ‘limited’ war – nevertheless open up the conceptual space for such an idea to develop. Drawing on the distinction thus opened up, Halsall (1989) was able to distinguish between small-scale ‘ritual’ and large-scale ‘non-ritual’ warfare in Anglo-Saxon England. Keeley is also inevitably beguiled by it: he rejects the notion of large-scale prehistoric palisades and ditches as purely ‘symbolic’ features, ‘the Neolithic equivalent of … elaborate symbols bearing the message Keep Out!’ (Keeley 1996, 18), and instead argues for a defensive function. The idea that such features may be primarily symbolic and also functionally defensive is not considered, just as Halsall (1989) does not consider the idea that ‘ritual’ war is as ‘real’ as ‘non-ritual’, the difference – if any – lying simply in scale. The idea of a distinction between ‘ritual’, ‘primitive’ warfare and ‘real’, ‘true’ war thus remains a powerful one in anthropology and archaeology, as it is for military historians. But ‘ritual’ behaviour is not the only means of limiting the violence in war, which depends also on technological and other capabilities. Perhaps Keeley’s (1996) alternative idea that all war is total does have some merit: if violence is restrained in formal battlefield encounters, then maybe it is not so restrained in other forms of related violence; where battlefield violence is unrestrained, then violence against non-combatants is limited. Such distinctions between the ‘battlefield’ and ‘non-combatant’ are as ‘ritual’ as any other ideological limitation placed upon war-making: in this sense, both ‘primitive’ and ‘modern’ warfare can be simultaneously limited and total.
MATERIAL REMAINS: THE ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONTRIBUTION
The terms and understandings archaeologists use for the study of warfare inevitably derive from other fields where such terms and understandings are already available: these are usually either history or ethnography. But archaeologists study the past – especially the most distant and prehistoric past – without access to the witness testimony available to the historian and the ethnographer. All we have is the mute material remains of that distant and inevitably different past which we must make speak.
For all his concern to convince us of the violence of the distant past, Keeley (1996) relies upon very few compelling archaeological examples (see Chapman, Chapter 8, this volume). There is, of course, nothing wrong with attempting to understand the violence of the past: it is the purpose of this book to contribute something to that understanding, and to do so, it is not unreasonable to seek out evidence and to suggest interpretations of that evidence. Archaeologists in general place a close reliance on skeletal evidence, ethnographic data, monuments and artefact analysis. This can be augmented with a close concern for contextual issues and the use of other sources of information – such as iconography or text – to support or challenge an interpretation of violent activity (Carman 1997a, 224). The evidence carried by human remains can tell us that violence existed in the past (cf. Wakely 1997; Filer 1997, as well as several chapters in this volume), but it offers little in the way of a firm indication of the prevalence of such violence. The interpretations offered of other evidence – ‘defensive’ structures, ‘buffer zones’, the suitability of axes for use as weapons – are predicated upon beliefs about past violence, and do not of themselves constitute evidence for it. More serious than this is Keeley’s failure to make any meaningful linkage between archaeological evidence and that from other disciplines. As archaeologists, we want to know if weapons, skeletal trauma and fortifications really do tell us about the nature and existence of prehistoric warfare. Keeley, having boxed himself into a corner on the issue of the warlike past, in effect assumes that they must, and do, whereas they may, or they may not.
Keeley (1996) and this volume’s editors and contributors are among a number of archaeologists, recent and not so recent, to have shown interest in warfare – that is to say, in the weapons of war, and the sites where remains indicative of supposedly warlike practices occur. Often, that interest has shown itself as part of a concern with a specific period or area (such as Classical Greece: Lawrence 1979; Snodgrass 1964; Hanson 1989, 1991), or as part of a particular theoretical approach to understanding the past, such as Marxism (Spriggs 1984) or ‘peer-polity interaction’ (Renfrew & Cherry 1986). One reason for its current popularity as a subject is simply the revived interest in war as a phenomenon shared with other disciplines: in particular, the works edited by Ferguson (1984), Haas (1990a) and Ferguson & Whitehead (1992) all testify to a revived interest among anthropologists of all areas and theoretical persuasion. Military history – spurred on by Keegan (1976, 1993), Weigley (1991) and others such as Nordstrom (1992, 1995) – has shown a new vitality, and the newly discovered threats of the post-Cold War world have helped to encourage students of politics and international relations to reconsider the possibilities of war in a new light (e.g., Gray 1997). In particular, traditional theories of strategy and war are of little help when faced with the complexities and apparent irrationality of ethnic or religious conflict, which would seem (at least on the surface) to share some of the attributes of war prior to the emergence of the nation-state, and certainly the modern superpower. Here, a deeper insight into the warfare of societies other than states may prove valuable, and the long time-depth that archaeology can offer may help.
The chapters in this book are mostly concerned with early warfare in Europe: the exceptions are Haas (Chapter 2), who draws upon his work in the prehistoric southwest of the United States, and Carman (Chapter 4), who goes beyond battles in Europe to those in north Africa and Asia. Chronologically, the book moves from the Upper Palaeolithic (Dolukhanov, Chapter 6), through the main periods of later European prehistory, into the Medieval. Vencl (Chapter 5), Kokkinidou & Nikolaidou (Chapter 7), Chapman (Chapter 8) and Mercer (Chapter 9) cover the emergence of warfare in different areas of Europe during the Neolithic period. Harding (Chapter 10), Kristiansen (Chapter 11) and Randsborg (Chapter 12) are concerned with the developed warfare of the Bronze and Iron Ages, and Hanson (Chapter 13) concentrates on the approximately contemporary – and indeed in some respects similar – warfare of the Greek polis. Shepherd (Chapter 14) stops just short of the Medieval, to focus on Anglo-Saxon warrior society. All apart from Carman avoid an engagement with the warfare of the civilisations of Egypt, Babylon, Assyria, Carthage and Rome. Like Keeley (1996), some contributors see warfare as endemic to the periods they study, or at least as a practice that occurred regularly within them. Some take a more ‘neutral’ stance (eg. Brothwell, Chapter 3).
To some extent, one’s stance on ancient warfare depends on one’s theoretical perspective and specific focus of study. Haas, for instance, is very much concerned with the role of warfare in the process of ‘tribalisation’ (Haas 1990a) and its connection with environmental stress, which is an approach shared with others, such as Zimmerman (1997). At the same time, it reflects a concern for a ‘social-evolutionary’ approach, shared by Keeley (1996), and in this book by Dolukhanov, Vencl and Kristiansen. At variance with these types of approach is a concern for the possibility of an innate aggression in the human species, reflected as an interest in socio-biological and bio-social understandings in the sources of human violence. A third approach is represented by a concern not for the causes of violence, but for understanding its manifestation and consequences, in this book especially reflected in the chapters by Carman, Hanson, and Kokkinidou & Nikolaidou: this ‘social’ understanding of warfare extends also to Harding, Randsborg and Shepherd, and their concern to delineate the social roles of specific categories of people in warfare (see also Treherne 1995). For Haas, Harding, Kokkinidou & Nikolaidou and Carman (1997a), warfare and violence are not ‘natural’ responses of human beings, but the product of particular social contexts: it therefore has to be proven to exist before it can be studied. In the cases of Hanson, Carman and Shepherd, well-established instances of warfare provide the starting place for study, not its end; for them, warfare is not an explanatory medium, but the object of study itself. For Harding and Kokkinidou & Nikolaidou, it is the material evidence for warfare itself that comes under scrutiny: the former tries to elucidate the nature of Bronze Age warfare on the basis of the artefactual finds and thus evaluate how widespread a phenomenon it was (see also Bridgford 1997), and the latter attempts to find alternative meanings for Neolithic ‘defensive’ structures in the Aegean (for Iberia, see also Oosterbeek 1997).
These differences in interpretation, style and approach – as well as chronological spread – form the basis around which this book has been structured. The opening chapters cover the three main strands of theory represented: the social-evolutionary and ecological, the bio-social and socio-biological, and ‘warfare as cultural expression’. The questions asked concern how we consider warfare, and how we as archaeologists can or should approach it meaningfully. After Chapter 4, the contributors focus very strongly on the interpretation of material remains: Vencl (Chapter 5), Dolukhanov (Chapter 6) and Mercer (Chapter 9) all find clear evidence for past warfare; Kokkinidou & Nikolaidou (Chapter 7) and Harding (Chapter 10) question the meaning of evidence which could be interpreted as indicating the presence of warfare. Chapter 11 and those that follow look at the role of warfare in society: Kristiansen (Chapter 11), Randsborg (Chapter 12) and Shepherd (Chapter 14) all outline the implications for understanding society which can be found in the available evidence for the organisation of warfare; Hanson (Chapter 13) – one of only two authors who have the benefit of historical texts as their main source – looks at warfare from the other end, examining the consequences of styles of warfare for the societies that make them. Overall, the authors reflect the range of current interests in the study of warfare in the distant – and not so distant – human past.
In the end, much boils down to personal preferences in the interpretation of ancient material remains, but this is not to say that archaeological perspectives on ancient warfare should be a matter of some nebulous relativism, espoused as some form of anti-scientific posturing. Unlike Ember & Ember (e.g., 1992), we would not go so far as to seek through statistical manipulation of ethnographic data in numerical form some kind of scientific basis for supposing that warfare is correlated with particular social, economic or ideological manifestations in human societies. However, we do believe that ancient warfare can be susceptible to rational and stimulating treatment of a kind that depends on the detailed study of material data and its correlation with what is known from other sources about humankind at various stages of the past.
NOTES
1. The conference was held under the auspices of the Centre for the Archaeology of Central and Eastern Europe, University of Durham. Of those who spoke at that conference, Haas, Carman, Dolukhanov, Chapman, Vencl, Kristiansen and Randsborg are represented here. Many other interesting papers presented at the conference could not be accommodated in the present volume, which has been adapted to present a balanced selection of material that deals with core issues of warfare rather than highly specific manifestations of warlike material.
2. Keeley (1996, 10ff.) gives an informative account of Turney-High’s career and major work.
3. Several of the authors in this volume quote Keeley with approval, Kristiansen regarding his book as ‘inspirational’ (see Chapter 11). As a counterbalance to this view, we would advise readers to consult R. Brian Ferguson’s review of the work (Ferguson 1997) while bearing in mind that Ferguson is one of those criticised by Keeley as promoting the ‘pacific’ view of pre-industrial war.
4. Such as earthworks believed to have been constructed by the Roman legions for siege warfare at sites such as Masada (Israel) or Woden Law (Scottish Borders).
TWO
THE ORIGINS OF WAR AND ETHNIC VIOLENCE
JONATHAN HAAS
From the perspective of those of us living at present, it might seem that war is an inevitable part of human existence. Warfare and ethnic violence presses around us at every turn. We see its tragic face today in Northern Ireland, Bosnia, Rwanda, the Middle East, and reflecting back from our near and distant pasts. In the minds of the general public, there is a pervasive belief that organised, mortal conflict is somehow inherent to the human species. This seemingly inescapable conclusion can be based on almost any perusal of recorded history, where we find a continuous stream of warfare and violence between nations, states, ethnic groups and religions. Indeed, much of human history is written using such markers as wars, battles, heroic warriors and peace treaties to delineate the major eras of a particular culture or world area. Even in simpler, non-western types of community-based society, anthropologists have found war to be relatively ubiquitous in the contemporary ethnographic record (Ember & Ember 1992; Carneiro 1994).
Since both history and ethnography point to the apparent inevitability of war, it is a relatively easy leap to assume that the causes of war are inherent or natural to humanity. The evidence here, however, is a little more ambiguous. For example, it has been argued that there are biological foundations for aggression in humans, particularly among males (Lorenz 1966). While such arguments are intriguing and perhaps intuitively compelling, they are all short on the substantive data needed to confirm them empirically. No one has yet discovered a warfare gene or complex of genes, nor have they been able to show that some mix of hormones leads inexorably to combat and organised violence. Where biological models may prove helpful in the study of warfare is in understanding the possible relationships between the participation of men in combat and the reproductive ‘fitness’ of those men (Chagnon 1990).
Another argument, developed inductively and again based largely on intuition, maintains that people who are culturally or ethnically different from one another have a fundamental fear and dislike of one another. It is pertinent (and perhaps risky) here to look to the devastating situation today in Bosnia. Many media accounts of the events maintain that the ethnic violence and hatred was there before the break-up of the state of Yugoslavia, but it was suppressed by the iron-fisted rule of communism. Released from the rule of communism, the inherent violence was allowed to flourish, growing into ethnic warfare. As the media then search for the causes of the conflict, it is depicted as a power struggle between ethnic groups who have always hated one another. Why they hate one another is either attributed to historic reasons (e.g. the relationship between the Croats and Serbs during the Second World War) or to the in-born boundary of distrust and conflict between ethnically different groups. The reasoning is that their religions, their values, their cultures are all so different that they cannot live side by side in peace. Ethnic diversity in this and many other cases around the world is seen as a reasonable explanation by itself for hostile and combative relationships between groups of people (see Horowitz 1985 for a discussion of ethnic diversity and conflict).
The problem with making inferences about the inevitability of war or the inherent quality of warfare in human existence on the basis of historic or even ethnographic records is that all those records date from very late in the sequence of human development. They also come from a time when all human society has been dominated by the presence of large state polities intimately involved in regional or global systems of economic competition. Even the simplest band societies of South Africa or the Amazonian rainforest have suffered significant impact from the aggressive dominance of western colonialism for at least three or four hundred years (Ferguson & Whitehead 1994). The pervasive warfare we see today throughout the world, whether in simple or in complex societies, all takes place within the context of the political, economic, environmental and demographic relationships characteristic of the modern world system. Any inferences we can draw from the historic and ethnographic record about the inevitability of warfare only pertain to the relatively recent circumstances brought about by the evolution and global spread of the nation state. Warfare may be ubiquitous in the modern and historic worlds, but humanity has been around a lot longer than the nation state. If we want to look at whether warfare and the hatred of enemies is an inherent characteristic of the human species, we must look back prior to the rise of the nation state.
The historical record around the world is only a few thousand years old. We have written records from Mesopotamia several thousand years before Christ, and within a thousand years or so these are followed by systems of writing in the classic civilizations of the Old World, namely Egypt, India and China. For the New World, the first writing system, that of the Maya, does not really develop until the first millennium ad. In all these cases, the development of writing went hand in hand with the evolution of highly complex state-level societies, with centralised government, organised religion, and, significantly, a standing army. In most cases, writing first developed primarily as a means of keeping records for the government and bureaucracy. But every early writing system quickly expanded to recount historical events, glorify the rulers and pronounce the outcomes of wars. So even from the very beginning of the historic era, war is an integral part of the political relationships between the earliest state-level societies (Haas 1982). However, what if we go back prior to the written record – back into the prehistoric past?
Five or six thousand years may seem like a long time to those of us living our lives in the present, but five or six thousand years is but a tiny slice in the very long sequence of human development. The first human-like creatures diverged from their primate relatives in Africa several million years ago. The first modern Homo sapiens in turn also emerged in Africa several hundred thousand years ago, and soon migrated across most of Africa, Europe and Asia. Looked at from the perspective of several hundred thousand years of humans wandering across the planet, the last five thousand years of complex nation states begins to lose its stature as a marker of what is natural or inherent in the human species. What has happened in the past five thousand years demonstrates the capacity of humans for certain kinds of behaviour, not the predisposition of humans towards certain kinds of behaviour.
The sequence of human prehistory prior to the development of writing then assumes enormous importance in any effort to understand the fundamental causes of warfare within the human species. Furthermore, the only scientific medium we have for looking back to the origins and evolution of patterns of warfare in the human species is archaeology. Within this context, archaeological research comes to assume a critical role in helping to understand the causes of warfare and ethnic conflict across cultures and across time. It is archaeology and the archaeological record that hold the most appropriate intellectual resources to answer broad, pressing questions about the inevitable or intrinsic qualities of human warfare.
When we do turn to the archaeological record prior to the beginnings of writing, it is immediately interesting to note that we find that warfare is not nearly so ubiquitous as we see today. With some exceptions, it appears that warfare tends to go hand in hand with increasing political complexity and rising levels of population density. There is also growing evidence that in virtually every part of the world where we have explicitly looked into the question, we can determine when and why warfare starts in a specific prehistoric sequence. Furthermore, archaeologists have found that as long as the circumstances that led to warfare persist, the warfare also persists. At the same time, there are bodies of archaeological evidence showing that when circumstances change over a long period, warfare can also dissipate, and eventually disappear. It should be noted here that Keeley, in his recent book, War Before Civilization (1996), makes the point that war is much more pervasive in the archaeological record than has previously been recognised. However, Keeley’s analysis, rather than leading to the conclusion that war was a universal in the past, forces us to examine the critical question of why warfare appears and disappears at different times and places (see Ferguson 1984; 1990; 1997).
Although this is the first in a series of chapters on patterns of warfare in Europe, it will nevertheless focus on the New World, to illustrate some of the kinds of insights that can be gained from looking at the archaeology of warfare. The examples cited relate to both the rise and fall of warfare, and give some perspective on the relationship between warfare and the existence of ethnically different people who might be labelled and attacked as ‘enemies.’
For a number of reasons, the North American continent provides an ideal laboratory for examining patterns of prehistoric war and the relationship between war and ethnicity. First, North America was not significantly affected by the advanced nation states of Latin America or the Old World until the arrival of Europeans in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Its evolutionary sequence is thus indigenous, and relatively ‘pristine’ (Fried 1967) in the sense of not being influenced by more complex outside societies. Second, the sequence is fairly short, given that humans did not enter North America much before 15,000 years ago (only archaeologists would think of 15,000 years as a ‘short’ time.) We therefore have a reasonably well-defined ‘experiment’ through which to examine the origins of warfare. Finally, there has been more than a century of research by literally thousands of archaeologists working on widely disparate ancient cultures in highly diverse environments. The result of this research is that for large areas of prehistoric North America, there are marvellously rich excavation and survey records, coupled with detailed chronological charts and palaeo-climatological reconstructions. My point here is not just Yankee bragging about the great American archaeological record, but to emphasise that a comprehensive prehistoric database provides a critical foundation for understanding the complexity and detail of evolving patterns of warfare.
Looking at North America as a laboratory for studying the origins and evolution of warfare in a prehistoric context, there are a number of insights to be gained when we look at different times and different places. If we start right at the beginning of human occupation on the continent, we find that warfare does not seem to be part of the cultural picture. Although the exact date of the first humans in the New World is the subject of much dispute, the first identifiable and abundant cultural assemblages are those of the big-game-hunting Palaeoindians of roughly 13,000 to 7,000 years ago (plus or minus a millennium). These first nomads would have crossed over the Bering Straits from Siberia and entered into a hunter’s paradise. North America was a land of abundant game, including mammoth, mastodon, horses, large bison and other Pleistocene animals. Never before had these animals seen human beings or been exposed to human predation.
From a modern perspective, this might seem to be an entrepreneur’s paradise – what a perfect opportunity to go in and stake out the best plots of land to be fully exploited and defended against all-comers. We might expect to see the rapid emergence of discrete, territorially based social units centred on optimal resource zones. This is not what happened, however. These first pioneering nomads, finding a land of plenty with ample resources for all, did not stake out territorial claims, but rather spread far and wide in very small, mobile, nomadic bands. The archaeological record gives no evidence of territorial behaviour on the part of any of these first hunters and gatherers. Rather, they seem to have developed a very open network of communication and interaction that spread across the continent.
Starting with the first recognisable Palaeoindian archaeological assemblage, the Clovis, we find what is truly a remarkable pattern: virtually identical artefacts – specifically, a very distinctive type of fluted spearpoint (Fig. 1) – are found distributed throughout the North American continent, from Maine to Mexico, and from the East Coast to the West, a total area of about 15,000,000 km2. Other types of Clovis artefacts, although made of locally available stone materials, are also very similar across the entire continental region. The widespread distribution of the Clovis stone tools across North America is indicative that there was free and open interaction between the small, nomadic bands of hunters and gatherers spread across the entire continent. There were no cultural boundaries separating one band or group of bands from any of the others, and there is no evidence of competition or ethnic differences of any kind setting one group apart from any of the others.
In the earliest stages of human occupation in North America, then, with low population densities and an abundance of resources for all, everyone looks basically alike. Most importantly for the focus of the present discussion, we find no sign anywhere in the archaeological record of even a hint of conflict or warfare. There are no skeletal remains with markers of violence such as parry fractures, broken heads or spearpoints embedded in the body, nor is there any indication that the Clovis people selected camp-sites that were in any way strategically or defensively located. This negative evidence is not in and of itself convincing proof of the absence of warfare, since relatively few Clovis sites and even fewer human remains have been excavated. However, the Clovis data does provide one empirical case that does not openly support the argument that warfare is a ubiquitous and ‘natural’ component of human affairs. In fact, it is difficult to see how or why the Clovis people could have been in conflict with one another, given both the abundance of resources and the marked similarities of their cultural assemblages.
As we move forward in time in North America, the environmental and demographic circumstances change, as do the patterns of interaction among the people. Across the continent, the time from approximately 11,000 years ago to the start of the first millennium ad is marked by gradual growth in the size and density of population, and by environmental changes that began to impinge on the abundant qualities of the New World paradise. The big-game animals of the late Pleistocene mostly became extinct, and environmentally, the continent came to look more and more like it does today. Archaeologically, we see that after the Palaeoindian period, the open, continent-wide network of communication and interaction begins to break into somewhat smaller regional cultures. These regional cultures, still mostly characterised by a nomadic hunting and gathering form of subsistence, are only loosely defined on the basis of types of spearpoints and other kinds of artefacts (Bettinger 1991). While the overall similarities of tool types within these regional cultures are indicative of close interaction and communication, there are no sharp lines clearly separating one region from its neighbours; instead, there tends to be an intermingling and blurring of artefacts and artefact types at the loose boundaries between the regions. Within these broad regional cultures, we find that there are distinct differences in the emergence and evolution of warfare. Rather than try to relate the full range of complexity across the continent, I will focus on the South-western United States, and compare it briefly to a very different pattern found in the Eastern US.
The south-west, an area of about 700,000 km2 occupying the present states of Arizona, New Mexico, Utah and Colorado, has been both the training ground and the proving ground for much of American archaeology for over a century. As a result, the archaeological record for the south-west is filled with detail on chronology, settlement, economics and social organisation. A combination of variables makes this an optimal area for studying prehistoric warfare. First, the chronometrics for the area are unparalleled for a prehistoric context. There is a highly refined tree-ring record for the area, stretching back thousands of years, and this record enables us to date the construction and abandonment of sites with considerable accuracy. In some areas, it is possible to determine within a decade, if not to a specific year, when a site was founded and when it was abandoned.
Researchers have also been able to correlate the dendrochronological record with palaeo-environmental data to develop detailed reconstructions of past patterns of annual precipitation, erosion/aggradation, fluctuating water table and changing botanical communities. Thus, it is not only possible to determine when a site was occupied, but also to measure the prevailing weather patterns, availability of fuel-wood, and the potential productivity of the surrounding soils and biological zones (Van West 1994; Gumerman 1988).
Complementing the chronometrics and palaeo-environmental records is a rich body of excavation and survey data from more than a century of concerted archaeological research. The environment of the south-west is dry and warm, and as a result, preservation of architecture and material culture is good. Archaeological sites, from lithic scatters to large villages, are visible on the surface, and much detail can be recorded, even without excavation. Furthermore, because of a relatively sparse modern population and limited farming, the destruction of sites has been substantially less than in many other areas.
Taken together, the chronological, palaeo-environmental and archaeological records from the south-west provide a level of detail that allows us to see both the presence and absence of prehistoric warfare, and to examine closely the causes, nature and evolution of warfare on local and regional levels.
Looking across the south-west in the time following the Clovis and the era of the big-game hunters, the region was occupied by generalised hunters and gatherers who pursued a relatively stable annual round. Population densities were relatively low, and there were no significant concentrations of people in specific locales. Across the region, there are few material manifestations of cultural differences within the resident population. Tool assemblages and styles of projectile points are similar, as are settlement and subsistence strategies. In looking for signs of conflict, violence or warfare in this nomadic population, we find that there is a period of more than 5,000 years when there continues to be not a single manifestation in the archaeological record. Here, the negative evidence begins to carry more weight, since the record for this long period is much richer than for the early Palaeoindian period. Again, there are no signs of violence in the skeletal population in terms of broken heads, scalp marks, parry fractures or projectile points embedded in bodies, nor do we find villages or camp-sites being located with an eye to defence or the guarding of territory.
Beginning in the first millennium bc, this long period of peaceful hunting and gathering started to change, and the rate of change accelerated for the next 2,000 years. Gradual population growth filled in most of the environmental niches, and we begin to see the first experiments with sedentism and intensification of production, either through specialised procurement or simple horticulture. The nomadic bands began to stay in one area more consistently as they either exploited specialised resources or tended occasional crops. With population on the rise, nomadic bands were also encountering more and more neighbours searching for the same food resources.
Looking then across the region in the first millennium bc, we begin to see the end of the pattern of undifferentiated hunters and gatherers. Across the region, people began to adopt corn-based agriculture and settle into permanent or semi-permanent communities. Although basic patterns of architecture and material culture are similar across the region, the different parts of the south-west quickly became distinct from each other in terms of the details of material culture, subsistence strategies and settlement. Specifically, archaeologists are able to distinguish the Hohokam culture area in the desert south, the Mogollon culture area in the mountainous region, and the Anasazi culture area in the plateau and canyon region to the north. Each of these groups had distinctive pottery designs, lithic artefacts, housing styles (Fig. 2), subsistence strategies, religious practices, and so on. These groups were clearly different from one another culturally and ethnically. We will focus here on the Anasazi, who were the ancestors of the modern Pueblo people widely known in the South-west today, to examine the origins of enmities and warfare.
Among the Anasazi, the transition from a nomadic hunting and gathering lifestyle to one of settled village agriculture was a gradual one, extending over more than a thousand years (Plog 1997; Cordell 1997). As in other parts of the world, the development of agriculture in the South-west resulted from a combination of growing population and climatic changes that affected the availability of the resources that could be obtained through hunting and gathering. Without enough wild food resources to feed a growing population, the Anasazi began to devote an increasing amount of time to growing their own food resources. The increased time spent on cultivating such crops as corn, beans and squash led in turn to an increasingly sedentary lifestyle, and to corresponding changes in material culture. They constructed permanent houses, adopted ceramics, and largely gave up the throwing-spear in favour of the bow and arrow. The sedentary life also brought with it profound changes in the nature of social relations within the Anasazi culture area. Instead of a relatively open network of nomadic bands interacting with each other off and on throughout the year, the bands settled down into communities, and the communities were faced with each other as permanent neighbours.
The presence of neighbours, even semi-permanent ones, requires the forging of new kinds of social and political ties. If for no other reason, neighbouring communities must have some political means of settling inter-group disagreements over land, water and the like, since the option of moving away to new encampments is no longer so simple. In addition to finding means to settle disagreements, it can be expected that most neighbouring communities will be linked by common language, kinship ties, exchange, religious activities and general socialising. Archaeologically, we begin to see the increased patterns of interaction among the Anasazi by ad 500. It can be seen in such things as communal religious facilities and localised, subregional variation in ceramic design styles, arrowhead types and some architectural features (Plog 1984).
