Publication | Closed Access
The Development of Social Stratification in Bronze Age Europe [and Comments and Reply]
228
Citations
25
References
1981
Year
Hereditary Elite ClassEducationArchaeologySocial IntegrationSocial StratificationSocial ChangeSocial SciencesBronze AgePrehistoryCultural HistoryHistorical ArchaeologySocial ClassEuropean StudiesPopulation HistoryIndustrial RevolutionBronze Age EuropeHistorical TransitionSociologyAnthropologySocial Anthropology
The emergence of a hereditary elite class in Bronze Age Europe is now widely interpreted in terms of the redistributive activities of a managerial ruling class. This fuctionalist account of elite origins goes against a uniformitarian understanding of what ruling classes do in complex societies. It also is poorly suited to the concrete evidence for Bronze Age cultures in Europe. The rise of hereditary, superordinate social strata in prehistoric Europe is better understood as a consequence of the development of capital-intensive subsistence techniques. Plow agriculture, Mediterranean polyculture, irrigation, and offshore fishing limited the possibility of group fission and thereby gave leaders the opportunity to exploit basic producers over the long term. The observations that capital-intensification preceded elite emergence and that areas with greater intensification exhibited greater social inequalities confirm this nonfuctionalist account of the development of stratification in later prehistoric Europe.
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