Stasis or stimulus? Exotic materials and social display in Southeast Asia: Response to Pfaffenberger

This paper assesses the relationship between metallurgy and social change in prehistoric Thailand. One model proposes that for about 15 centuries after circa 2000 BCE, peaceful village communities, being acquainted with copper-base metallurgy through contact with northern stimuli, cast small persona...

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Main Author: Charles Higham
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co. Ltd. 2022-06-01
Series:Advances in Archaeomaterials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667136022000024
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author Charles Higham
author_facet Charles Higham
author_sort Charles Higham
collection DOAJ
description This paper assesses the relationship between metallurgy and social change in prehistoric Thailand. One model proposes that for about 15 centuries after circa 2000 BCE, peaceful village communities, being acquainted with copper-base metallurgy through contact with northern stimuli, cast small personal ornaments with little if any innovations in casting technology or social change. The introduction of iron likewise had little social impact. A recent review of three volumes proposing this paradigm supports it while criticizing an alternative, which sees the advent of bronze technology as a direct stimulus to the rise of states. Based on hundreds of new radiocarbon determinations that reveal that the first copper-base axes and ornaments date to circa 1100–1000 BCE, this paper describes how the first copper-base implements and ornaments coincided with a rapid rise of socially elite aggrandizers living at the choke point of a natural exchange route. But this lasted for only six to eight generations, with no enduring social impact. Nor did iron per se engender social change. Rather, a nexus of interacting stimuli involving climate change and an agricultural revolution led to the rapid rise of early states.
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spelling doaj.art-919545ff51fc41b691a66e6fa2e11a832023-02-03T05:01:34ZengKeAi Communications Co. Ltd.Advances in Archaeomaterials2667-13602022-06-01313443Stasis or stimulus? Exotic materials and social display in Southeast Asia: Response to PfaffenbergerCharles Higham0University of Otago, New ZealandThis paper assesses the relationship between metallurgy and social change in prehistoric Thailand. One model proposes that for about 15 centuries after circa 2000 BCE, peaceful village communities, being acquainted with copper-base metallurgy through contact with northern stimuli, cast small personal ornaments with little if any innovations in casting technology or social change. The introduction of iron likewise had little social impact. A recent review of three volumes proposing this paradigm supports it while criticizing an alternative, which sees the advent of bronze technology as a direct stimulus to the rise of states. Based on hundreds of new radiocarbon determinations that reveal that the first copper-base axes and ornaments date to circa 1100–1000 BCE, this paper describes how the first copper-base implements and ornaments coincided with a rapid rise of socially elite aggrandizers living at the choke point of a natural exchange route. But this lasted for only six to eight generations, with no enduring social impact. Nor did iron per se engender social change. Rather, a nexus of interacting stimuli involving climate change and an agricultural revolution led to the rapid rise of early states.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667136022000024Southeast AsiaCopper-base technologyIronRadiocarbon datingSocial changeState formation
spellingShingle Charles Higham
Stasis or stimulus? Exotic materials and social display in Southeast Asia: Response to Pfaffenberger
Advances in Archaeomaterials
Southeast Asia
Copper-base technology
Iron
Radiocarbon dating
Social change
State formation
title Stasis or stimulus? Exotic materials and social display in Southeast Asia: Response to Pfaffenberger
title_full Stasis or stimulus? Exotic materials and social display in Southeast Asia: Response to Pfaffenberger
title_fullStr Stasis or stimulus? Exotic materials and social display in Southeast Asia: Response to Pfaffenberger
title_full_unstemmed Stasis or stimulus? Exotic materials and social display in Southeast Asia: Response to Pfaffenberger
title_short Stasis or stimulus? Exotic materials and social display in Southeast Asia: Response to Pfaffenberger
title_sort stasis or stimulus exotic materials and social display in southeast asia response to pfaffenberger
topic Southeast Asia
Copper-base technology
Iron
Radiocarbon dating
Social change
State formation
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667136022000024
work_keys_str_mv AT charleshigham stasisorstimulusexoticmaterialsandsocialdisplayinsoutheastasiaresponsetopfaffenberger