Rural Communities in the Black Warrior Valley, Alabama: The Role of Commoners in the Creation of the Moundville I Landscape
- 1 April 2000
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in American Antiquity
- Vol. 65 (2) , 337-354
- https://doi.org/10.2307/2694062
Abstract
Mississippian sites are generally believed to fall into one of three categories: paramount political center, local political center, and farmstead. Elites lived at paramount and local centers while the rest of a polity’s population lived in scattered farmsteads. Archaeologists identify paramount and local centers by the presence of earthen mounds and usually classify all small sites without mounds as farmsteads. In this examination of rural settlement in the Moundville chiefdom, I argue that there was more variation in Mississippian landscapes than the traditional tripartite site classification scheme allows. The vessel assemblage from 1TU66, a small site in the Black Warrior Valley, does not reflect domestic activities, but rather suggests that this site was a place where neighbors gathered to share food as a community.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Daily Practice and Material Culture in Pluralistic Social Settings: An Archaeological Study of Culture Change and Persistence from Fort Ross, CaliforniaAmerican Antiquity, 1998
- Ideology, Power, and Urban Society in Pre-Hispanic OaxacaCurrent Anthropology, 1996
- Domestic Architecture in Apalachee Province: Apalachee and Spanish Residential Styles in the Late Prehistoric and Early Historic Period SoutheastAmerican Antiquity, 1995
- After social evolution: a new archaeological agenda?Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1993
- Distinguished Lecture in Archeology: Breaking and Entering the Ecosystem—Gender, Class, and Faction Steal the ShowAmerican Anthropologist, 1992
- Monitoring Mississippian Homestead Occupation Span and Economy Using Ceramic RefuseAmerican Antiquity, 1989
- Interregional Interaction in Prehistory: The Need for a New PerspectiveAmerican Antiquity, 1989
- The Institutional Organization of Mississippian ReligionAmerican Antiquity, 1986
- The Identification of Vessel Function: A Case Study from Northwest GeorgiaAmerican Antiquity, 1986
- Ceramic Vessels, Site Permanence, and Group Size: A Mississippian ExampleAmerican Antiquity, 1984