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From Primitive Agriculture to Oriental Empires

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Title: From Primitive Agriculture to Oriental Empires


1
From Primitive Agriculture to Oriental Empires
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  • First farming communities occurred where humans
    discovered that sowing seeds of wild grain
    produces an additional, regular and reliable
    source of food
  • A peasants life was probably less exciting and
    more boring but more secure
  • First farmer communities appeared at rain-watered
    wooden hillsides in the Fertile Crescent
  • The first forms of farming implied an extensive
    use of land such that large food surpluses could
    not be produced

4
From Rain-Watered Lands to Alluvial Deltas
  • Farming was conducted at the level of
    family-owned farms, grouped into villages
  • Farming in rain-watered lands was
    open-frontier growing populations simply
    spread to cover new lands (which limited
    population density)
  • Abundant land and low population density
    increased the economic (and ethical) value of the
    human factor
  • The pressure of a growing population caused
    settlers to move outward in all directions
    until they arrived in river valleys where they
    faced completely different farming conditions

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Mesopotamia
  • Soon after 4,000 B.C. agricultural settlements
    appear at the lower Tigris and Euphrates
  • Seed could easily sown on the soft muck left
    behind after the spring floods
  • But until a way was found bringing water
    artificially to their crops, the young shoots
    could not survive the heat of the summer

7
The Need for a Managerial Class
  • When farmers pushed their fields farther from the
    rivers, a more complicated system of canals and
    dikes became necessary this required engineering
    management
  • An indefinite reduplication of village
    communities living at a comfortable distance was
    not possible when the narrow niches gave rise to
    dense population this required conflict
    regulation and the enforcement of rules
  • Limited land and dense populations degraded the
    economic (and as a consequence also the ethical)
    value of the human factor

8
The Possibility of a Managerial Class
  • Fertile soil plus easiness of plow agriculture
    (soft muck, free of stones) produce a large food
    surplus
  • A food surplus is a conditio sine qua non for
    occupational specialization, because only
    redistributing food surpluses sets part of the
    population free from food production

9
What the Managerial Class Managed
  • Astronomical calculations for foreknowing the
    seasons this promoted the development of
    measurement, mathematics and scripture
  • Engineering knowledge how to build dams, dikes
    and canals
  • Masters of the supra-natural ceremonial
    specialists knowing how to satisfy the forces of
    nature (and the gods who guide them) through
    sacrifices

10
Temple Communities
  • Emergence of temple communities managed by
    priests
  • Priests organized collective irrigation work, the
    redistribution of surplus and the assignment of
    the work force to soil tracts
  • Peasants were not owners of a family-sized farm
    but were conscribed to collective work on a slot
    of land assigned to their team
  • Craft specialization and trade benefited the
    luxury needs of the priests rather than the
    peasants

11
Religious Reflection
  • In contrast to the animal kingdom, human
    societies need ideologies to legitimize
    hierarchies they develop moral codes that are
    anchored in peoples emotions (feelings of shame
    and guilt) through socialization, making people
    accept inequality and privilege
  • Humans were conceived as slaves to the gods, only
    created to free the gods from labour
  • Regular disasters, such as floods and droughts,
    encouraged a spirit of anxiety and deference
    (very much in contrast to HGS)
  • The insecurity of life helped to guarantee
    priestly power

12
Forces to Form Empires in Alluvial Deltas
  • Permanent threat of plunder and of destruction by
    nomad raids from the steppe
  • As temple communities grow to cities, inter-city
    conflicts on limited territory became endemic
  • The institution of kingship emerges temporary
    war leaders become permanent leaders as warfare
    becomes chronic
  • First imperial unity of the city states by about
    2,350 B.C. under Sargon of Akkad Akkadian Empire

13
Improving the Instruments of Governance
  • About 2,000 B.C., edition of the Sumerian king
    list, a document pretending that Mesopotamia was
    always united under one king
  • Bureaucracy and professional army by the time of
    Hammurabi (ca. 1,700 B.C.) there are royal
    judges, tax collectors and troops serving
    throughout the land
  • Writing and scripture, which improves accounting
    and recording as administrative techniques
  • Money and a commercial economy including
    specialized merchants and artisans

14
Ingredients of Civilizations
  • Economic surplus
  • Territorial state
  • Cities
  • Occupational specialization
  • Scripture
  • Money

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Division of Labour to Mutual Benefit
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Other Alluvial Empires
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Egypt from 3,100 B.C. on (Menes)
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India from 2,500 B.C. on (Mohenjo-Daro, Harappa)
19
China from 1,760 (Shang Dynasty)
20
Oriental Despotism as the Common Denominator
  • Although Oriental empires differed greatly in
    appearance and outlook, they shared fundamental
    similarities in how division of labor was
    organized
  • Division of labor was rigidly hierarchical and
    exploitative, with a thin hereditary privileged
    class of tax collectors and office holders headed
    by a despotic emperor, on one hand, and troops of
    subjugated, rightless peasant laborers, on the
    other hand
  • The middle classes (I.e., artisans and merchants)
    were thin and completely dependent on the demands
    of royal courts or priestly temples
  • Historians have therefore characterized Oriental
    empires as cleptocracies and plundering
    machines
  • Once these empires have reached the stage of
    civilization, they stagnated in a poverty
    equilibrium trap for millennia
  • Impressive achievements in monumental buildings
    cannot distract from the fact that these empires
    created poor human conditions for the masses
  • These empires came into existence by sheer
    necessity, not by the free choice of their
    constituents

21
Summarizing the Path
  • (1) civilization could not emerge from the origin
    of agriculture, rain-watered lands, as long as
    plow-agriculture was not elaborated enough to
    produce surpluses
  • (2) civilization emerged at first in alluvial
    deltas where exceptional soil productivity
    created large surpluses
  • (3) civilization spread in a leap-frog movement
    from one alluvial delta to the next
  • (4) with the use of the iron traction plow (ca.
    2,000 B.C.) civilization could spread to
    rain-watered lands, filling the gaps between the
    large river valleys

22
Civilization in Rain-Watered Lands
  • In rain-watered lands, civilization took root in
    Crete, the Pelopponesian peninsula, the wooden
    hills of Anatolia and the Iranian plateau and the
    foothills of the Himalaya in Northern India
  • Farming communities in rain-watered lands have
    been relatively egalitarian and peaceful
  • All of these farmer communities have been
    conquered by warlike nomadic tribes and have been
    transformed from free farmer societies into
    aristocratic states
  • Aristocracy could develop into tyranny or
    democracy but this bifurcation only existed in
    rain-watered agricultures, not in river valley
    civilization

23
A Pool of Civilizations
  • Eurasian belt of civilizations, from East to West
  • Including the Great Four Mediterranean Europe,
    Middle East, India, China
  • By 500 B.C., in the Axial Age, each of these
    civilizations came to its typical formulation
    under Aristotle, (Mohammed), Buddha, and
    Confucius
  • Complicated interaction between nomads of the
    steppe belt and the civilization belt until 1500
  • From 500 B.C. to 1500 A.D., there is a balance
    between these civilizations
  • From 1500 A.D. on, Europe begins to set off the
    millennial balance
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