A Distinct Form of Socio-Political and Economic Organization in the Pazyryk Culture
Abstract
:1. Introduction: What Constitutes Pazyryk Culture?
2. Background
3. Climate and Topography
4. A Multi-Tiered Socio-Political Organization
5. A Multi-Occupational Society with Seasonal Leadership Demands
- Herding (seasonal: round up and winter foddering necessary);
- Craftworking (winter, seasonal);
- Trading (probably year-round);
- Hunting (year-round);
- Felting (spring);
- Food prep (daily year-round; summer—limited cultivation, including gathering);
- Food storage (summer—drying, smoking);
- Child care (year-round; daily varied according to availability of parents, older adults, or older children);
- Military (as needed).
6. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | We acknowledge the helpful comments made by three anonymous reviewers who asked provocative questions that aided us in the revision of our essay. One of them shared this reference. |
2 | Both Esther Jacobson (1993) and Petya Andreeva (2021) have addressed the ritualistic aspects of imagery. |
3 | See Frachetti (forthcoming) for an expansive look at this issue. Variation in mobile pastoral lifeways and their dependence on climate, ecology, and historical circumstances has been documented previously among living groups (Barfield 1993). |
4 | As of 2010, twelve large Pazyryk burials had been excavated, as well as what has been reported to be 800 medium to small burials in more than 100 cemeteries (Argent 2011, p. 39). |
5 | Tishkin and Dashkovskiy discuss the process of and argue for state formation among the “Pazyryks” of Gorny Altai as one of the early forms of that political entity among pastoral peoples (Tishkin and Dashkovskiy 2019). Particularly valuable is their listing of publications on this material published in journals not always available outside of Russia. The excavations in western, northwestern Mongolia and northwestern China are interesting and important to a discussion of the “afterlife” of the Pazyryk Culture but are not essential to the discussion of the Culture’s social order in the Chuya Valley. |
6 | The pattern of interconnections is not new in this period. It reflects portions of the Inner Asian Mountain Corridor (IAMC) as described by Michael Frachetti for the Bronze Age (2012). |
7 | Currently, Arzhan 0 (Tunnug 1) is being excavated by Gino Caspari et al. (2018) and Sadykov et al. (2020). |
8 | As a system of organization, participants are unranked, possess the potential to be ranked, and have the power of decision-making following the needs of the system. As opposed to the assignment of more power and privilege to members of society “high” in the hierarchy (Crumley 1995). The two structures are not mutually exclusive. |
9 | Rudenko (1970, pp. 211–27) argues that the social structure of the inhabitants of the high Altai consisted of a hierarchical, patriarchal order with hereditary passage of leadership—but says that there is no direct evidence of this at Pazyryk. However, he cites ancient Chinese and Greek authors and many ethnographic parallels, such as in Kazakh and Kirgiz, which suggest that the same was true at Pazyryk (Rudenko 1970, p. 217). |
10 | There were no human bones found in tomb 1, so it cannot be proven on the archaeological evidence that the deceased was male (Rudenko 1970, pp. 311–14). |
11 | Among the groups studied by Barfield (1993), he found that the tasks were divided between males herding and females carrying out most other tasks. Wright (Wright 2012) states that all tasks are networked within the campsites and are flexible, divided between males and females, with males herding and females carrying out most other tasks. |
12 | In an impressive and massive essay, Ursula Brosseder studied and analyzed trade all across Eurasia, especially in the periods following those of interest here, and documented multiple active networks of exchange (Brosseder 2015). |
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Rubinson, K.S.; Linduff, K.M. A Distinct Form of Socio-Political and Economic Organization in the Pazyryk Culture. Arts 2024, 13, 36. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13010036
Rubinson KS, Linduff KM. A Distinct Form of Socio-Political and Economic Organization in the Pazyryk Culture. Arts. 2024; 13(1):36. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13010036
Chicago/Turabian StyleRubinson, Karen S., and Katheryn M. Linduff. 2024. "A Distinct Form of Socio-Political and Economic Organization in the Pazyryk Culture" Arts 13, no. 1: 36. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13010036
APA StyleRubinson, K. S., & Linduff, K. M. (2024). A Distinct Form of Socio-Political and Economic Organization in the Pazyryk Culture. Arts, 13(1), 36. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts13010036