Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://openscholar.ump.ac.za/handle/20.500.12714/680
Title: Foragers during a period of social upheaval at Little Muck Shelter, Southern Africa.
Authors: Forssman, Tim.
Kuhlase, Siphesihle.
Barnard, Chanté.
Pentz, Justin.
School of Social Sciences
University of Pretoria
University of Pretoria
University of Pretoria
Keywords: Forager archaeology.;Interactions.;Stone tools.;Trade.;Middle Limpopo valley.;Southern Africa.
Issue Date: 2023
Publisher: Routledge
Abstract: By the turn of the second millennium AD, farmer societies in southern Africa’s middle Limpopo Valley were undergoing significant economic, political and social transformations that ultimately led to the development of state-level society at Mapungubwe. This included the appearance of social hierarchies, élite groups, trade wealth, craft specialisation and a royal leadership system. Whereas this farmer sequence has been relatively well-studied, forager histories, and their involvement in associated socio-economic systems, are scarcely acknowledged, despite their presence before, as well as during, the farmeroccupation period. Foragers are instead seen as passive or even inactive in local economies and thought to begin ‘disappearing’ after AD 1000. In opposition to these views are recent results from excavations carried out at Little Muck Shelter showing that a forager presence continued into the second millennium AD and that those living at the site were engaged in trade with farmers during the process of state formation. We show this by presenting the distribution of cultural material throughout the site’s occupation and a sample of stone tools and trade items dating from before 2000 BP to AD 1300. Specifically, diagnostic stone artefacts persist into the contact period and until Mapungubwe’s appearance that are morphologically consistent with those from before the BC/AD transition. The occurrence of traded glass beads, ceramics and ostrich eggshell beads also increases and peaks in the second millennium AD, showing continued engagement with the local market economy. Evidence from the shelter demonstrates the contributions that indigenous hunting and gathering communities made during the rise of the Mapungubwe state, when trade wealth came to mark social élite groups, a period that can be characterised as one of social upheaval.
URI: https://openscholar.ump.ac.za/handle/20.500.12714/680
DOI: 10.1080/0067270X.2023.2182572
Appears in Collections:Journal articles

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
Foragers-during-a-period-of-social-upheaval-at-Little-Muck-Shelter-Southern-Africa.pdf
  Until 2050-01-01
Published version5.2 MBAdobe PDFView/Open    Request a copy
Show full item record

Google ScholarTM

Check

Altmetric


Items in UMP Scholarship are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.