Complexity in Sub-Saharan Africa: Archaeological and Ethnoarchaeological Approaches to Landscape, Craft, and Trade in the Past 3,000 Years
Part of: Society for American Archaeology 82nd Annual Meeting, Vancouver, BC (2017)
This session explores archaeological and ethnoarchaeological approaches to the study of the foundations and unfolding of social complexity in sub-Saharan Africa through the interconnections of landscape, craft and trade in the past 3,000 years. In this period, iron technology was established across the continent, agriculture spread, complex polities rose and fell, and African participation in global trading networks intensified. Landscape is used here broadly to contextualize these developments. Papers address the co-evolution of early farming landscapes in the early Iron Age; how social identities were produced in village, community and regional spaces over time; and monumental construction. Local, regional and global trading networks moved and connected people and products across vast distances. Global trade extended into Africa's interior impacting local economies and the structure, nature and scale of authority and power. Social inequities based in the production and consumption of prestigious and mundane craft products emerged and many contemporary artisans continue to work within social structures of inequity while contending with market globalization.
Other Keywords
Ethnoarchaeology •
complexity •
south africa •
Iron Age •
Architecture •
Pottery •
Technology •
Blacksmithing •
Islam •
Community
Geographic Keywords
Republic of Botswana (Country) •
Republic of Namibia (Country) •
Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan (Country) •
Republic of Iraq (Country) •
State of Israel (Country) •
Republic of South Africa (Country) •
Lebanese Republic (Country) •
Syrian Arab Republic (Country) •
West Bank (Country) •
Republic of Kenya (Country)
Resources Inside This Collection (Viewing 1-11 of 11)
- Documents (11)
- Building a Network: Territorialisation and Deterritorialisation in 13th Century northern South Africa (2017)
- Creating the ‘Imagined Community’ of Mapungubwe (2017)
- Deep Histories from Shallow Sites: Archaeological Investigations of Later Sites in Eastern Djibouti (2017)
- Evolution of Iron Age to Modern Landscapes in the Benoué River Valley, Cameroon (2017)
- From the Field to the Festival: Reading the Landscape of Cloth in Axum, Ethiopia (2017)
- Remodel, Rebuild, or Abandon?: Changing uses of space in an early West African Village (2017)
- The roots of global trade in the southern African Iron Age (2017)
- Sacred and Magnificent, Degraded Landscapes: Crater Rims as Sacred Places and Transformed Spaces in western Uganda (2017)
- The spread of iron metallurgy: the African continent (2017)
- Transferring Technological Styles: an Ethnoarchaeological Study of Marginalized Pottery Production in Tigray, Northern Highland Ethiopia. (2017)
- Using Ethnoarchaeology to Interpret Archaeological Blacksmithing Sites in Togo, West Africa (2017)