Mississippian Chiefdoms: How Complex?
- 1 October 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Annual Reviews in Annual Review of Anthropology
- Vol. 32 (1) , 63-84
- https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev.anthro.32.061002.093244
Abstract
▪ Abstract During the Mississippian period (a.d. 1000–1500) the southeastern United States witnessed a broadscale fluorescence of polities characterized by impressive earthwork construction, rich mortuary offerings, and intensified agriculture. Research on the nature of complexity in these so-called chiefdoms has been an enduring issue in North American archaeology, even as this research has undergone several paradigmatic shifts. This study focuses on the primary dimensions of the archaeological record used to describe and explain variation in Mississippian complexity—polity scale, settlement and landscape, the organization of labor, mortuary ritual and ideology, and tribute and feasting. Changing perspectives toward the organization of complexity and power have become increasingly pronounced in each of these categories.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Vacant Quarter Revisited: Late Mississippian Abandonment of the Lower Ohio ValleyAmerican Antiquity, 2002
- Mound Building and Prestige Goods Exchange: Changing Strategies in the Cahokia ChiefdomAmerican Antiquity, 2000
- Rural Communities in the Black Warrior Valley, Alabama: The Role of Commoners in the Creation of the Moundville I LandscapeAmerican Antiquity, 2000
- Pathways to complexity: an African perspectivePublished by Cambridge University Press (CUP) ,1999
- Mississippian Period Status Differentiation through Textile Analysis: A Caddoan ExampleAmerican Antiquity, 1993
- Mississippian Elites and Solar Alignments: A Reflection of Managerial Necessity, or Levers of Social Inequality?Archaeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association, 1992
- Coosa: A Chiefdom in the Sixteenth-Century Southeastern United StatesAmerican Antiquity, 1985
- Social and Temporal Implications of Variation among American Bottom Mississippian CemeteriesAmerican Antiquity, 1984
- Excavating in Museums: Notes on Mississippian Hoes and Middle Woodland Copper Gouges and CeltsAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1981
- A PREHISTORIC CEREMONIAL COMPLEX IN THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATESAmerican Anthropologist, 1945