The role of small villages in Northern Tsimshian territory from oral and archaeological records

Small villages have been central to progressive models of hunter-gatherer-fisher complexity on the Northwest Coast as a stage in the narrative of increasingly nonegalitarian social relations. We argue that Tsimshian settlement history is more complicated. We examine settlement and chronological data...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of social archaeology 2017-10, Vol.17 (3), p.285-325
Hauptverfasser: Martindale, Andrew, Marsden, Susan, Patton, Katherine, Ruggles, Angela, Letham, Bryn, Supernant, Kisha, Archer, David, McLaren, Duncan, Ames, Kenneth M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Small villages have been central to progressive models of hunter-gatherer-fisher complexity on the Northwest Coast as a stage in the narrative of increasingly nonegalitarian social relations. We argue that Tsimshian settlement history is more complicated. We examine settlement and chronological data for 66 village sites in the Tsimshian area, 22 of which we define as small. Small villages were present in the area as early as 6500 years ago, but they are also contemporary with larger settlements until after 1300 years ago. We suggest that small villages represent a traditional Tsimshian social entity known as the wilnat’aał, or lineage, knowledge of which is preserved in Tsimshian oral records. We argue that the persistence of this settlement and community form illustrates the foundational role of this social unit throughout Tsimshian history, a result that has implications for archaeological research in the context of Indigenous history.
ISSN:1469-6053
1741-2951
DOI:10.1177/1469605317730411