The dead and the living : burial mounds & cairns and the development of social classes in the Gulf of Georgia region

This thesis provides a model for understanding how social classes arose in the Gulf of Georgia area. This model distinguishes how social status in rank and a class societies are manifested and maintained in non-state, kin-based societies, drawing mainly from ethnographic descriptions. The relatio...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thom, Brian David
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3859
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-3859
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-38592014-03-14T15:39:03Z The dead and the living : burial mounds & cairns and the development of social classes in the Gulf of Georgia region Thom, Brian David Salish Indians -- Antiquities Indians of North America -- British Columbia -- Antiquities This thesis provides a model for understanding how social classes arose in the Gulf of Georgia area. This model distinguishes how social status in rank and a class societies are manifested and maintained in non-state, kin-based societies, drawing mainly from ethnographic descriptions. The relationship between the living and the dead for making status claims in both rank and class societies makes the archaeological study of mortuary ritual important for investigating these relationships. I propose that burial mounds and cairns, which were prominent in the region from 1500 to 1000 years ago, reflect a time when status differentiation was defined mainly through social rank. Following this period, when all forms of below-ground burials cease and above-ground graves become the dominant form of mortuary practice, I propose that the historically recorded pattern of social class emerged. Archaeological investigations of the burial mounds and cairns at the Scowlitz site have provided the first fully reported instances of mound and cairn burials in this region. Using less well reported data from over 150 additional burial mounds and cairns reported from other sites in the region, evidence for the nature of status differentiation sought out. Patterns in the burial record are investigated through discussing variation within classes of burials, demography and deposition, spatial patterning, grave goods, and temporal variation. These patterns and changes are then discussed within the context of the larger culture history of the region, suggesting that the late Marpole or Garrison sub-phase may be defined as ending around 1000 BP with the cessation of below-ground burial practices. The general patterns observed in mound and cairn burials and the changes in mortuary ritual subsequent to their being built generally support the idea of a shift from a rank to a class society. The thesis provides a basis for further investigation of questions of social status and inequality in the Gulf of Georgia region. 2009-01-24 2009-01-24 1995 2009-01-24 1995-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3859 eng UBC Retrospective Theses Digitization Project [http://www.library.ubc.ca/archives/retro_theses/]
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Salish Indians -- Antiquities
Indians of North America -- British Columbia -- Antiquities
spellingShingle Salish Indians -- Antiquities
Indians of North America -- British Columbia -- Antiquities
Thom, Brian David
The dead and the living : burial mounds & cairns and the development of social classes in the Gulf of Georgia region
description This thesis provides a model for understanding how social classes arose in the Gulf of Georgia area. This model distinguishes how social status in rank and a class societies are manifested and maintained in non-state, kin-based societies, drawing mainly from ethnographic descriptions. The relationship between the living and the dead for making status claims in both rank and class societies makes the archaeological study of mortuary ritual important for investigating these relationships. I propose that burial mounds and cairns, which were prominent in the region from 1500 to 1000 years ago, reflect a time when status differentiation was defined mainly through social rank. Following this period, when all forms of below-ground burials cease and above-ground graves become the dominant form of mortuary practice, I propose that the historically recorded pattern of social class emerged. Archaeological investigations of the burial mounds and cairns at the Scowlitz site have provided the first fully reported instances of mound and cairn burials in this region. Using less well reported data from over 150 additional burial mounds and cairns reported from other sites in the region, evidence for the nature of status differentiation sought out. Patterns in the burial record are investigated through discussing variation within classes of burials, demography and deposition, spatial patterning, grave goods, and temporal variation. These patterns and changes are then discussed within the context of the larger culture history of the region, suggesting that the late Marpole or Garrison sub-phase may be defined as ending around 1000 BP with the cessation of below-ground burial practices. The general patterns observed in mound and cairn burials and the changes in mortuary ritual subsequent to their being built generally support the idea of a shift from a rank to a class society. The thesis provides a basis for further investigation of questions of social status and inequality in the Gulf of Georgia region.
author Thom, Brian David
author_facet Thom, Brian David
author_sort Thom, Brian David
title The dead and the living : burial mounds & cairns and the development of social classes in the Gulf of Georgia region
title_short The dead and the living : burial mounds & cairns and the development of social classes in the Gulf of Georgia region
title_full The dead and the living : burial mounds & cairns and the development of social classes in the Gulf of Georgia region
title_fullStr The dead and the living : burial mounds & cairns and the development of social classes in the Gulf of Georgia region
title_full_unstemmed The dead and the living : burial mounds & cairns and the development of social classes in the Gulf of Georgia region
title_sort dead and the living : burial mounds & cairns and the development of social classes in the gulf of georgia region
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/3859
work_keys_str_mv AT thombriandavid thedeadandthelivingburialmoundscairnsandthedevelopmentofsocialclassesinthegulfofgeorgiaregion
AT thombriandavid deadandthelivingburialmoundscairnsandthedevelopmentofsocialclassesinthegulfofgeorgiaregion
_version_ 1716650199911235584