Agropastoralist Subsistence Strategies in a Mongol Empire (1206–1500 CE) Household

Author(s): Aspen Greaves

Year: 2025

Summary

This is an abstract from the "SAA 2025: Individual Abstracts" session, at the 90th annual meeting of the Society for American Archaeology.

As the second largest empire of all time, the Mongols had immense impact on the political, social, and material trajectories of most of the Eurasian continent, but little is known about the lives and choices of the original pastoralist subjects of the empire. Important research on Mongol-era subsistence has come from large urban or palatial sites like Karakorum, Avagra, or Khar Khul Khaany Balgas, as well as from historical records; less is known about the strategies employed by small-scale actors. Ongoing research at a Mongol habitation in Tsagaan Ereg, a multi-period occupation site in Tarvagatai Valley, north-central Mongolia, has included systematic sampling for floatation and archaeobotanical materials. In addition to the characterization of the abundant faunal remains, this represents one of the most comprehensive datasets on the subsistence choices of this previously overlooked category. Interestingly, this includes evidence for agropastoralism, adding to the current argument against a “pure pastoralist” view of historic Mongolian subsistence.

Cite this Record

Agropastoralist Subsistence Strategies in a Mongol Empire (1206–1500 CE) Household. Aspen Greaves. Presented at The 90th Annual Meeting of the Society for American Archaeology. 2025 ( tDAR id: 511100)

Record Identifiers

Abstract Id(s): 53496