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portada Caborn-Welborn: Constructing a new Society After the Angel Chiefdom Collapse (in English)
Type
Physical Book
Year
2004
Language
English
Pages
234
Format
Paperback
ISBN
0817351264
ISBN13
9780817351267
Edition No.
1

Caborn-Welborn: Constructing a new Society After the Angel Chiefdom Collapse (in English)

David Pollack (Author) · The University Of Alabama Press · Paperback

Caborn-Welborn: Constructing a new Society After the Angel Chiefdom Collapse (in English) - David Pollack

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Synopsis "Caborn-Welborn: Constructing a new Society After the Angel Chiefdom Collapse (in English)"

Caborn-Welborn, a late Mississippian (A.D. 1400-1700) farming society centered at the confluence of the Ohio and Wabash Rivers (in what is now southwestern Indiana, southeastern Illinois, and northwestern Kentucky), developed following the collapse of the Angel chiefdom (A.D. 1000-1400). Using ceramic and settlement data, David Pollack examines the ways in which that new society reconstructed social, political, and economic relationships from the remnants of the Angel chiefdom. Unlike most instances of the demise of a complex society led by elites, the Caborn-Welborn population did not become more inward-looking, as indicated by an increase in extraregional interaction, nor did they disperse to smaller more widely scattered settlements, as evidenced by a continuation of a hierarchy that included large villages. This book makes available for the first time detailed, well-illustrated descriptions of Caborn-Welborn ceramics, identifies ceramic types and attributes that reflect Caborn-Welborn interaction with Oneonta tribal groups and central Mississippi valley Mississippian groups, and offers an internal regional chronology. Based on intraregional differences in ceramic decoration, the types of vessels interred with the dead, and cemetery location, Pollack suggests that in addition to the former Angel population, Caborn-Welborn society may have included households that relocated to the Ohio/Wabash confluence from nearby collapsing polities, and that Caborn-Welborn's sociopolitical organization could be better considered as a riverine confederacy.

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The book is written in English.
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