Angela
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See: https://www.archaeology.org/news/6105-171116-agriculture-animal-wealth
"Agriculture, and the domestication of animals, led to increasing levels of inequality in human societies, according to an NPR report. Timothy Kohler of Washington State University and his colleagues speculate that wealthier individuals probably had bigger homes than their poorer neighbors. So they collected measurements of homes at 63 sites, including those belonging to nomadic groups, people who grew food on a small scale, and those who lived in early Roman cities, all dating between 9000 B.C. and A.D. 1500. The data suggest that the arrival of agriculture in Europe and Asia ushered in a greater disparity between rich and poor than that found in the New World. “This was a total surprise,” Kohler said. He thinks the presence of domesticated cows, oxen, horses, sheep, goats, and pigs in the Old World could have contributed to the difference. Animals like oxen and horses could have helped some farmers gain an edge because they could plow more fields, and thus produce more food, than farmers who did not own animals."
We've discussed this on this forum before. All the emphasis on the social stratification of the steppe people obscured the fact that social stratification by wealth occurred much further back in history.
In addition, of course, the stratification based on possession and control of metals was earliest where the use and possession of them was earliest, which was in non- Indo European areas.
It's still amazing to me that some people never moved beyond the "Indo-European movements for dummies stage", and still hold to it today.
I remember once LeBrok brought up how the people in these isolated Amazon hunter-gatherer tribes all looked alike. They were also alike in that none of them really possessed anything. Don't they share mates too at certain times of the year? It didn't stop them from skewering people who tried to move into their foraging and hunting areas, but still, there was less inter-group violence.
"Agriculture, and the domestication of animals, led to increasing levels of inequality in human societies, according to an NPR report. Timothy Kohler of Washington State University and his colleagues speculate that wealthier individuals probably had bigger homes than their poorer neighbors. So they collected measurements of homes at 63 sites, including those belonging to nomadic groups, people who grew food on a small scale, and those who lived in early Roman cities, all dating between 9000 B.C. and A.D. 1500. The data suggest that the arrival of agriculture in Europe and Asia ushered in a greater disparity between rich and poor than that found in the New World. “This was a total surprise,” Kohler said. He thinks the presence of domesticated cows, oxen, horses, sheep, goats, and pigs in the Old World could have contributed to the difference. Animals like oxen and horses could have helped some farmers gain an edge because they could plow more fields, and thus produce more food, than farmers who did not own animals."
We've discussed this on this forum before. All the emphasis on the social stratification of the steppe people obscured the fact that social stratification by wealth occurred much further back in history.
In addition, of course, the stratification based on possession and control of metals was earliest where the use and possession of them was earliest, which was in non- Indo European areas.
It's still amazing to me that some people never moved beyond the "Indo-European movements for dummies stage", and still hold to it today.
I remember once LeBrok brought up how the people in these isolated Amazon hunter-gatherer tribes all looked alike. They were also alike in that none of them really possessed anything. Don't they share mates too at certain times of the year? It didn't stop them from skewering people who tried to move into their foraging and hunting areas, but still, there was less inter-group violence.