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Encyclopedia of society and culture in the ancient world ( PDFDrive ) 1107

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Hunter-gatherer and later agro-pastoral groups could have also been organized based on more generalized kinship rela-tions not necessarily rooted in blood relarela-tions.. All societies

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Lineages have oft en been the basis by which individuals

have access to resources and groups In traditional

hunter-gathering bands, lineage determines whether individuals

remain with their birth group or migrate to another group

When young men leave their parents’ group to fi nd their

mates, the culture is called matrilocal; when young women

leave their parents’ group to live with their mates’ band, the

culture is referred to as patrilocal Th is kind of social

organi-zation serves to diversify the gene pool and keep bands small

Bands also might have split in ancient Africa once a critical

threshold for population was reached, a threshold possibly

created by whether resources were available

Although lineage is a type of kinship system, not all

kinship systems are necessarily based on genetic descent

Hunter-gatherer and later agro-pastoral groups could have

also been organized based on more generalized kinship

rela-tions not necessarily rooted in blood relarela-tions In some

kin-ship systems, subgroups have diff erential degrees of infl uence

over the entire society All societies have underlying kinship

groups, but the degree to which they are the basis of

organiza-tion and structure varies considerably

Early hunter-gatherer groups oft en are referred to as

acephalous societies, meaning they had no centralized,

spe-cialized political leader, such as a chief or a king Informal

leaders might have emerged based on skill and

accomplish-ment, but these leaders are thought to have had little absolute

control and to have led more by group support than coercion,

force, or intimidation Decisions might have been made on a

consensus basis by all group members or with heads of

fami-lies having a stronger vote Consensus-based decision

mak-ing was possible because of the small size of the groups

EMERGENCE OF SEDENTARY SOCIETIES

At some point in the ancient period human groups began

to experiment with domestication of animals and plants in

northern Africa Th e exact dates for the origins of farming

and herding are not certain, since many of the early steps

to-ward domestication of animals and plants are not detected in

the archaeological record What is detectable in the record is

that increased reliance on agriculture led to more sedentary

lifestyles, since agriculture requires farmers to remain in one

location for at least one crop season Once humans started

manipulating the land, they realized the benefi ts of staying

in one spot and were able to improve their ability to grow the

food they needed where they needed it

One of the earliest examples of sedentary villages is the

site of Nabta Playa (western deserts of southern Egypt), some

62 miles west of the Nile River Nabta Playa is the site of a

vil-lage with permanent houses from as early as 8,000 years ago

that were formally organized around a “street.” Th is village

had wells and granaries to store food; although in the

begin-ning the majority of their diet still came from wild animals

and plants, evidence of domestic animals appears as early as

7,000 years ago, and agriculture may have been adopted as

early as 6,500 years ago Th ere are some who believe that

hu-man groups may have experimented with agro-pastoral ac-tivities in the Nile Valley prior to the Holocene

Although many (but not all) human groups would even-tually rely mostly or only on farming or herding, the transi-tion from hunting and gathering to farming and herding was gradual, and there were long periods during which human groups continued to rely on all of these activities simultane-ously Changes in climatic conditions were instrumental in the spread and eventual dominance of herding and farming activities Around 4,000 years ago the African continent be-gan to dry out, which forced human groups to migrate out

of the increasingly dry Sahara region into the Sahel and the oases around rivers and lakes When people moved out of the desert areas, more and more people were compressed into smaller and smaller areas, which further encouraged de-velopment of herding and farming activities as the climate change brought a decrease in wild animals and plants Adop-tion of herding and farming moved south and east, eventu-ally reaching southern Africa around 2,000 years ago with the mass migration of the Bantu farmers across the continent that started around 1000 b.c.e In general, in the densely for-ested areas of central Africa, hunting and gathering persisted much longer

Th is change in livelihood strategies had profound eff ects

on the population and organization of human groups When human groups became more sedentary and skilled in herding and farming, populations grew even more, and people had the opportunity to accumulate material objects and build perma-nent structures Th e increased importance of a specifi c area

of land led to ownership of property, which in turn led to the development of rules and laws to enforce ownership rights

Over time, increases in population densities and accumula-tion of material possessions led to labor specializaaccumula-tion and more and more complex social organization Competition for resources, wealth, and social status started to increase in im-portance and aff ect social organization through the dictation

of alliances based on a variety of relationships, not just fam-ily, lineage, and kinship

Anthropologists, using more modern human groups to draw conclusions about ancient cultures, oft en apply E E

Evans-Pritchard’s term segmentary societies (coined in 1940 for

his study of groups in southern Sudan) to ancient agricultural human groups Th is term is commonly used to describe societ-ies that are subdivided into groups based on kinship that are relatively equal in status Segmentary societies are oft en led by elders, and participation in the collective decisions and activi-ties is accomplished through relationships with these elders

Another ancient system of governance and stratifi cation was based on the power an individual was granted as a result

of the size of the group loyal to him or her (that is, patron-client relationships) Kinship-based societies might have had this type of organization, which brought more (but not neces-sarily absolute) power over decisions aff ecting the entire so-ciety to individuals who had larger families or more “clients”

that pledged loyalty to them

1012 social organization: Africa

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