Eighteen authors from 10 countries offer an assessment of the role of ideology in the emergence and development of early states. In a comparative perspective the significance of ideology in the processes that led to formation of states in Europe, Africa, Meso-America and Polynesia is discussed by specialists in the fields of anthropology, history and archaeology. Special attention is given to subjects such as the concept of ideology, regional comparison, the reconstruction of ideologies on the basis of archaeological data, gender relationships, coercion, legitimacy, sacred kingship, and ideology and change (in an introductory chapter) and a concluding discussion.
The findings of this volume will not only be of interest to anthropologists, historians and archaeologists, but to all those interested in the complex interaction of ideological and political developments.
Contributions by: Donald V. Kurtz, J.C. Muller, R.R. Hagesteijn, Henri J. M. Claessen, Jarich G. Oosten, Thomas T. Allsen, M.A. Bakel, Thomas Bargatzky, Thomas Fillitz, Frederic Hicks, Natalia B. Kochakova, Elçin Kürsat-Ahlers, Sarah M. Nelson, Shereen Ratnagar, Patricia A. Shifferd, Peter Skalník, Akio Tanabe, Michal Tymowski