../ggcms/src/templates/revoltlib/view/display_grandchildof_anarchism.php
In 2002, Gelderloos was arrested with several others for trespass in protest of the American military training facility School of the Americas, which trains Latin American military and police. He was sentenced to six months in prison. Gelderloos was a member of a copwatch program in Harrisonburg. In April 2007, Gelderloos was arrested in Spain and charged with disorderly conduct and illegal demonstration during a squatters' protest. He faced up to six years in prison. Gelderloos claimed that he was targeted for his political beliefs. He was acquitted in 2009. (From: Wikipedia.org.)
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“Passim” (literally “scattered”) indicates intermittent discussion of a topic over a cluster of pages.
A
abandonment and flight. See flight and abandonment
Abbasid Caliphate, 65
accumulation, 67, 81, 126, 132, 137–41 passim, 149–57 passim. See also power accumulation; status accumulation
Afghanistan, 66
Africa, 29, 56, 59–60, 140–41, 118, 201–2, 207, 227. See also Benin; Congo states; Egypt; Egypt, ancient; Mali, ancient
African Americans, 102, 103, 239
Against His-story, Against Leviathan (Perlman), 12–13
The Agricola and the Germania (Tacitus), 40n4, 46–49 passim, 97–98, 193
agriculture, 43, 49, 80, 139; Americas, 114, 141, 213, 215; ancient Greece, 131; Aryans, 177, 178; Central Europe, 153; Cretans, 149, 150; development of, 221–32 passim; Hawaiian Islands, 173; hierarchy and, 156; Indus Valley, 143; Java, 145; resistance to, 227; stateless peoples, 99, 100, 105–6; tribute systems, 57; West Africa, 117–21 passim; Zapotec, 188–92 passim. See also granaries
Amazonia, 186–87, 227, 235
American Civil War, 103
Americas, 82–83, 140, 141, 187–91, 218; agriculture, 114, 141, 213, 215; British colonialism, 31, 33–34, 115, 116. See also Amazonia; Andes; Native Americans; United States
Anabaptists and Anabaptism, 62, 71
anarchists in Spanish Civil War, 54
anarchist theory, 138, 154, 158
ancestor cults and ancestor worship, 120, 122, 164–66 passim, 178, 198, 201
ancient Egypt. See Egypt, ancient
ancient Greece. See Greece, ancient
ancient India. See Aryans
ancient Mali. See Mali, ancient
ancient Mexico. See Mexico, ancient
ancient Rome. See Roman Empire
Anderson, Benedict, 45
Andes, 82–83, 141, 196, 205, 208, 219, 220
Angles (people), 41
animal sacrifice, 180
Apache, 246
Arabian peninsula, 63, 64
Arabs, 61, 65–66, 144
Arab Spring, 127–28, 236, 237
architecture, 196, 208; social control, 104–5
Arrighi, Giovanni, 89; The Long 20th Century, 85–86, 94
Arthur (legendary figure), 41
artificial scarcity, 161
artisans, 104, 106, 142, 149–52 passim, 176, 181–82, 210, 212. See also high-prestige crafts
Aryans, 119, 144, 163–64, 176–82 passim, 187, 217, 224
Ashanti, 27
assassinations, 36, 38, 65, 224, 245–46
atheism, 193, 195
Athens, ancient, 58
atrocities, 10, 14, 243, 245, 246
authority, rotation of. See rotation of authority
B
Bakuba state, 56, 207
Bakunin, Mikhail, 4–5, 14
Baltic countries and people, 42, 97, 98
Baluba state, 56, 60, 140–41, 207
Balunda people, 56, 140, 201–2
band (word), 75
Banda islands, 22, 144
Banten Sultanate, 147
Bantu, 228
“barbarian invasions” of Europe, 117, 127, 130
Barcelona, 93, 105, 224
Barclay, Harold, 12
Basques, 200, 223
Bastarnae. See Peucini
Batavia, 45, 147, 148
Baum, Richard, 166–67, 170, 171, 209
Beliaev, Dmitri D., 166, 209
bellatores, 79, 81
Benin, 29, 118–24 passim, 177–78
Berbers, 71
Berent, Moshe, 125
Berezkin, Yuri, 140
Bible, 73
Bini people, 118–23 passim, 177–78, 204–5, 224
Bismarck, Otto van, 45
black Americans. See African Americans
boats, 216, 218
Boehm, Christopher, 6, 38n3
Boian culture, 222
Botswana, 22
bourgeoisie, 6, 86, 93, 106, 125, 133, 156, 196; ideology, 242
Bourne, Randolph, 185
Brahmans, 145–46, 178–79, 180, 181, 187
branding of subjects. See tattooing and branding of subjects
Britain. See Great Britain
British colonialism, 19, 22, 27, 34, 35, 99; Africa, 203; Ceylon, 24; Jamaica, 35; Java, 147, 148; North America, 31, 33–34, 115, 116
Bronze Age collapse, 127, 129, 130
bronze technology, 143
brotherhoods. See secret fraternities; warrior brotherhoods
Buddha, 205
Buddhism, 68, 69, 70, 146, 182, 218
building design. See architecture
building projects. See public works, monuments, etc.
Bulgaria, 129, 222
bull-centered rituals, 200
Burma, 19, 70, 182
Bushongo people, 56
Byzantines, 61, 116
C
calendars, 209
Caliban and the Witch (Federici), 86–89 passim
Canaanites, 73
capitalism, 6–7, 85, 139, 140, 154, 238, 241; class and, 162n9; globalization, 29, 148; justice and, 180–81; military and, 95; Romans, 61
capital punishment. See executioners and execution
Carneiro, Robert L., 185; The Early State, Its Alternatives and Analogs, 2–3n1
Carthaginians, 40, 42, 224
Castell, Pau, 87n5
Catalunya, 87n5, 93, 155. See also Barcelona
Cathars, 72
Catholic Church, 37, 61, 62, 71–72, 101, 135
Celts, 89, 223, 224
Ceylon, 23–24, 148
“chaotic decision-making,” 20–21
Cherokee, 30–32
Cherusci, 44–45, 99
chiefdoms, 111–24 passim, 163, 168; Amazonia, 235; Benin, 204–5; caste and, 82; Ceylon, 23; colonial creation of, 19; Egypt, 215–20 passim; Europe, 75, 77, 82, 153; Hawaiian Islands, 173–75 passim; instability, 38; Java, 145, 146; Romans and, 56
chiefdoms (word), 75
China, 9, 78–79, 101, 126, 146, 166–71; calendars, 209; Great Wall, 106; Han dynasty, 19, 116, 171, 228; Hsiung-nu, 116; Ming dynasty, 148; religion, 197–99, 207; Shang dynasty, 165–71 passim, 199, 209; trade, 144, 147, 148, 149; writing systems, 208; Zhou dynasty, 165, 167, 168, 171
Chin people, 22, 99
Chogha Golan, 226, 227–28, 229
Christianity, 37, 62, 68–73 passim, 78, 80, 81, 89, 92; Cherokee, 31–32; resistance to, 118; science and, 94; witch hunts and, 86–88 passim. See also Catholic Church
Cimbri, 223
cities: Andes, 213; architecture, 196–97; Benin, 122, 123; China, 169, 170; Cucuteni-Trypillian, 221; Egypt, 217, 219; Indus Valley, 142, 143, 144; Roman Empire, 223; walls, 106, 211; Zapotec, 187–91 passim. See also urban zones of evasion
citizen-inhabitant distinction, 156, 157
city-states, 65, 101, 150, 187; ancient Greece, 125–26, 131–35 passim, 168; Sumer, 197, 210–13 passim. See also Athens, ancient
civil war, 54, 65, 127, 128. See also American Civil War; Spanish Civil War
class and caste, 5, 47, 144–45, 162; China, 169; Cretans, 149; democracy and, 157; European Middle Ages, 79–82, 163; French Revolution, 156; Mesopotamia, 211; Roman Empire, 52–53; South Asia, 176–83 passim, 187; temples and 197. See also bourgeoisie; elites; peasant class; priest class; warrior class
Clastres, Pierre, 3, 5, 7–8, 76, 158n3, 160, 227, 235
clientage, 52, 57, 60. See also puppet rulers; reluctant client states
climate change, 241–42
Clovis, 41
Code of Hammurabi. See Hammurabi’s Code
collapse of empires. See empire collapse
collapse of states. See state collapse
collective property. See property: collective
colonization and colonialism, 10, 25–26, 69, 241, 245; agriculture and, 227; Ceylon, 23–25; Haiti, 34, 35–36; Jamaica, 35; North America, 26, 30–34, 102, 113–16 passim; rebel states, 36; Roman, 224; Suriname, 34–35; West Africa, 26–30. See also British colonialism; Dutch colonialism; French colonialism; Portuguese colonialism
colony states, 38, 43–44, 233
commons and commoners, 91–93, 104, 155–57 passim, 162, 240–41; Hawaiian Islands, 175; “spiritual commoning,” 215
community councils, 120, 123, 204–5
Congo states, 29, 56, 59–60, 140–41, 165, 166, 201–7 passim
conquest states, 43–44, 164, 185, 233
consensus, 134, 156, 190, 215. See also decision-making: consensual
consensus-based organization, 50
construction projects. See public works, monuments, etc.
constitutions, Cherokee, 32
Council of One Hundred (Barcelona), 93
courts, 57, 58, 124
corvée, 57
craftspeople. See artisans
Creek. See Muskogee Nation
Creek War, 32
Cretan civilization, 149–51, 200, 208
criminal justice, 58–59, 180–81. See also courts
crusades and crusaders, 37, 41, 65, 68, 71, 72, 82
Cucuteni-Trypillian culture, 221, 222
curiae, 51
D
Dahomey kingdom, 28
Dark Ages, 62, 101, 245
Dasa people, 177, 178, 217
death penalty. See executioners and execution
decision-making, 46; chaotic, 20–21; consensual, 111, 113–14
deforestation, 101, 102, 173, 174, 228, 241
democracy, 51, 91–93 passim, 134, 135, 157, 180, 236–37; Haudenosaunee, 114
Denmark, 41, 42
despotic rule, 36, 38, 46, 53, 86, 171, 212; proscription of, 133–34
determinism, environmental. See environmental determinism
dialectical materialism, 4n3, 5, 9
Diamond, Jared, 9, 10
dictators and dictatorship, 20, 21, 40, 134, 135, 236, 237, 243. See also despotic rule
disobedience, 244
domestication of plants and animals, 143, 226–31 passim
Dorians, 55
Dragging Canoe, 31, 32
dropout culture. See marginality, dropout culture, etc.
dumpster-diving, 104
Dunbar-Ortiz, Roxanne, 33, 112–13
Dutch colonialism, 20–27 passim, 34–35, 45, 144–49 passim
Dutch East India Company (VOC), 23–25, 144, 147–49
E
Earle, Timothy K., 173–75 passim
The Early State, Its Alternatives and Analogs (Grinin, Carneiro, and Korotayev), 2–3n1
Early State Project, 76, 125
economic accumulation. See accumulation
Edo people. See Bini people
education, 106–7. See also universities
Efa people, 119, 122
Egypt: Arab Spring, 236, 237
Egypt, ancient, 72, 130, 142, 206, 208, 215–20 passim
Ehrenreich, Barbara: Witches, Midwives, and Nurses, 88
elders, rule by: Aryans, 177, 179, 180; Banda islands, 144; Bini, 120–24 passim; China, 171; Haudenosaunee, 114; Uruk, 210
elected officials, 31, 177, 211
elites, 10, 16, 23–24, 39, 91–95 passim, 130–33 passim, 163–68 passim, 186; accumulation and, 138; Boian, 222; buildings, 196, 197, 211; Catholic Church and, 61, 72; Cherokee, 32; China, 170, 171, 209; Congo states, 29, 59; Egypt, 218, 237; Europe, 37, 38, 61, 71, 72, 77, 78, 92; Mayan, 209; Middle East, 66, 68; Monte Albán, 187–91 passim; Muscogee, 33; Mycenaean, 195–96; proto-elite, 53, 54; Polonie, 153; Rome, 53, 61, 72; South Asia, 180; Southeast Asia, 70, 146, 147; Sumer, 211, 213; Tiwanaku, 214, 215; Zapotec, 188. See also Brahmans
Emelianov, Vladimir V., 212
emerging states, 141, 154, 174, 213–17 passim, 235
empire collapse, 23; Rome, 40, 46, 78, 89, 91, 101
enfeoffment, 171
England, 41, 157
English, Deirdre: Witches, Midwives, and Nurses, 88
Enlightenment, 80n7, 89, 93–94
environmental determinism, 4n3, 9–10, 11, 98
epidemics and famine, 99, 100
equality, 132–33, 142, 180–81, 202n12. See also inequality
Erligong culture, 170
Erlitou culture, 169, 170
ethnicity, 45, 119
ethnogenesis, 131
Evans, Arthur, 54–55; Witchcraft and the Gay Counterculture, 55, 86
evil, 106–8 passim, 200, 235
executioners and execution, 58–59, 87–88, 142, 180
expatriate rulers, 203–4
extended family systems, 114, 118–20, 158, 160
F
famine and epidemics. See epidemics and famine
farming. See agriculture
Federici, Silvia, 94; Caliban and the Witch, 86–89 passim
feminine symbology, 201
Fenni, 97, 99
Fertile Crescent, 53, 210, 211, 225–30 passim. See also Mesopotamia
feudalism, 37, 57, 71, 72, 78–79, 90, 91; China, 171; Ceylon, 23
flight and abandonment, 34–35, 116, 174, 189, 215, 221, 235, 236
foragers. See hunter-gatherers
forest loss. See deforestation
forts, 151, 152, 153, 222
France, 40, 71, 72, 156, 157. See also French colonialism
France, Anatole, 181
Franks, 41, 65, 66, 78, 118
fraternities. See secret fraternities; warrior brotherhoods
French colonialism, 20, 27, 31, 34, 35–36, 203
Friesland, 41, 169n17
G
Gaelic people, 41
Gallic federations, 223
Gallo-Romans, 41
gambling, 179
“gender complementarity,” 202–3
gender relations, 47, 54, 89; division of labor, 49, 88, 97, 221
generosity, 156–57, 161
Genghis Khan, 118
genocide, 22, 30, 32, 34, 115, 144, 245
The Germania (Tacitus). See The Agricola and the Germania (Tacitus)
Germanic peoples, 22, 32, 37–51 passim, 55, 62, 78, 97, 168; gender relations, 89; Illyrians and, 223; slavery, 30
Germany, 32, 42, 45, 228
Geronimo, 246
gerontocracy. See elders, rule by
gift economy, 138–39, 214
gifts, obligatory. See tribute
gifts, ritual, 116, 120, 150, 207, 215, 218–19
Gimbutas, Marija, 221
gleaning, 104, 228
global warming. See climate change
Göbleki Tepe, 230
goddesses, 47, 180, 206, 217
Gorrion, Alex, 94
Goths, 40n4, 44–45
Graeber, David, 50
granaries, 106, 114, 218
Granny Nanny, 35
Great Britain, 41, 86; anti-terrorism wars, 186; Black Act, 104; Dutch relations, 144; Hadrian’s Wall, 106, 107. See also British colonialism; England
Great Dismal Swamp, 102
Greece, 40, 129, 238
Greece, ancient, 50, 55, 157, 196, 223–24. See also Athens, ancient; Spartans
Grinin, Leonid E.: The Early State, Its Alternatives and Analogs, 2–3n1
Guarani, 8n9, 235, 236
guerrilla warfare, 23, 24, 31, 32, 34, 35
H
Hadrian’s Wall, 106, 107
Haiti, 34, 35–36
Hammurabi’s Code, 180, 211
Hannibal, 40, 224
Haudenosaunee, 112–16 passim, 240
Hawaiian Islands, 173–76
herders and herding, 116, 131, 149, 221, 223, 224
heretics and heresy, 71, 72, 80, 81, 86–89 passim, 102. See also witch hunts
high-prestige crafts, 141, 149, 189
Hill, Gord, 113
Hindus and Hinduism, 67, 70, 145–47 passim, 180, 182
holy father states, 165, 167–68, 178, 185, 234
homosexuality, 55
human sacrifice, 215
Huns, 116
hunter-gatherers, 6–7, 11, 12, 195n, 223–30 passim; belief systems, 194, 195; Bini, 118; Indus Valley, 143; religion, 193–95 passim; San, 22; South Asia, 182
hunting, 78, 100; African American, 103; Cretans, 150; division of labor, 49, 221; Europe, 78, 222; Native American, 32, 112; South Asia, 182; tribute and, 57; by women, 97
I
Iberian Peninsula, 92, 101, 223. See also Spain
Ibers, 223–24
I Ching, 197–98
Illyrians, 223
Imhotep, 208
imitative states, 38, 55–56, 233
immixtio manuum ritual, 57
Inca state, 82–83, 141, 218
India, 148, 182, 200. See also Aryans
indigenous people, 227, 243–46 passim; paternal views of, 8n9; Pyrenees, 223; South Asia, 177. See also Native Americans
Indonesia, 20
Indus Valley civilization, 142, 143, 176, 180, 208
inequality, 92, 142, 143, 156, 157, 161, 162n9, 181. See also class
“inevitability” of agriculture, 226
“inevitability” of states, 39, 106–7, 111, 144
inheritance, 155
intermediaries, political, 19, 26, 27, 124
intermediaries, religious/spiritual, 120, 196, 198, 201
Iran, 225, 226, 239
Iraq, 66, 76, 128, 228, 239
Ireland, 32
Iroquois. See Haudenosaunee
Islam, 63–69 passim, 144. See also Muslim states; shari’ah
Israelites, 72, 73, 74
Italy, 41, 53, 126
J
Jackson, Andrew, 32
Jainism, 182
Jamaica, 34, 35
Japan, 78–79, 148
Jaume I, King of Aragon, 93
Java, 144–49
Jayakarta, 147
Jayawikarta, Prince, 147
Jerusalem, 73
Judah. See Kingdom of Judah
Judaism, 68
K
Kaczynski, Ted, 12
Kandy kingdom (Ceylon), 23, 24
Katsiaficas, George, 129
Khoikhoi, 227
king (word), 77n3
Kingdom of Israel, 73, 74
Kingdom of Judah, 73, 74
King Jaume I. See Jaume I, King of Aragon
King Narmer. See Narmer, King of Egypt
King Purnawarman. See Purnawarman
King Solomon. See Solomon, King of Israel
kinship and state, 155–83 passim
Knossos, 150–51, 200
Korotayev, Andrey V., 75; The Early State, Its Alternatives and Analogs, 2–3n1
Kotte kingdom (Ceylon), 23
Kroeber, Alfred, 45
Kropotkin, Pyotr, 62, 156
Kshatriyas, 178, 181, 182
Kuba state, 57–59 passim
Kurds, 239–40, 241
Kurgan culture. See Yamna culture
Kwa people, 118–19
L
labor, 81, 103, 152; aversion to, 227; division of, 49, 88, 97, 159, 221; obligatory, 57, 141. See also labor ethic; slavery; workers’ movement
laboratores, 79, 80
labor ethic, 79–80, 86
Lakota, 39, 227, 246
language, 42, 44; Bini, 118; written, 127, 130, 150, 207–8, 221
Latin League, 53
law, Aryan, 180
law, Islamic. See shari’ah
Le Goff, Jacques, 57, 75–76, 108; Time, Work, and Culture in the Middle Ages, 89–90
Lenin, Vladimir, 87n3, 241
Linebaugh, Peter: The Many-Headed Hydra, 86, 138
Lithuanians and Lithuania, 42, 97
Longobards, 78
Longshan culture, 169
The Long 20th Century (Arrighi), 85–86, 94
L’Ouverture, Toussaint, 36
Lua people, 161
Lunda state, 56, 57
Lusitanians, 223, 224
L’vova, Eleonora, 201–2
M
Maalouf, Amin, 65, 66
Magyar, 43
Malacca, 148
Mali, ancient, 67, 102
Maluku archipelago, 144
“Mandala states” (Scott), 77
The Many-Headed Hydra (Rediker and Linebaugh), 86, 138
Mapuche, 9, 39, 159–60, 239
marginality, dropout culture, etc., 103–4, 174
maroons, 34–35
marshes, draining of, 102, 103
Martin, George R.R.: Songs of Ice and Fire, 107–8
Marxists and Marxism, 5, 8, 8–9n9, 11. See also dialectical materialism
massacres, 22, 25, 243, 246
mathematics, 150, 207, 208
matriarchy, 46–47, 114, 149, 201–2, 219–20
matrifocality, 200, 221
matrilocality, 114, 158, 160
Mayan states, 141, 165, 166, 172, 209
Mbuti, 160, 194
McNamara, Robert, 95
McWhorter, John, 42
medicine men. See shamans, medicine men, etc.
megacommunities, 75, 112, 118–24
Mehrgarh, 143
Memphis (Egyptian city), 217, 219
Mencius, 167
men-women relations. See gender relations
Mesopotamia, 12–13, 142, 176, 185, 187, 211
metallurgy and metalwork, 143, 151, 153, 169, 176, 201; bronze, 127, 143, 169, 176, 223
Mexico, ancient, 141, 187–91
middle class. See bourgeoisie
militarism and militarization, 49–55 passim, 74, 86, 118, 246
military brotherhoods. See warrior brotherhoods
mining, removal mining. See mountaintop removal mining
Minoans. See Cretan civilization
Mohawk, 112, 113, 114
monarchy, 6, 73, 154; Aryans, 177–82 passim; Benin, 122–24; Ceylon, 23; China, 167, 171, 199; Dahomey, 28; Europe, 41, 91–93, 125, 152; Hawaiian Islands, 176; Java, 145–47 passim; Southeast Asia, 70; terminology, 77; Wielkopolska, 40
money, 45, 92, 104
Mongols, 116, 118
monotheism, 63, 72, 73, 74, 206
monuments. See public works, monuments, etc.
monsters, 108
Monte Albán, 187–91 passim
Moore, R.I., 86, 90
mountaintop removal mining, 102, 103
Musa I, Sultan of Mali, 67
Muskogee Nation, 32–33
Muslim states, 40, 64, 65, 92, 147
mutual aid, 1, 156, 246
Mycenaeans, 55, 127–33 passim, 149–51 passim, 195–96, 200
N
Naga tribe, 200
Nandas, 183
Nanny. See Granny Nanny
Napoleon I, Emperor of the French, 8, 35, 36
Narmer, King of Egypt, 216, 217
nation (word), 89
nationalism, 10, 39, 89–90, 238. See also patriotism
national liberation movements, 39, 238, 239
Native Americans, 7–8, 19, 30–34, 243, 246; Amazonia, 186–87, 227, 235; Andes, 213; California, 22; French relations, 22; defensive warfare, 39; extended family, 158; Great Dismal Swamp, 102; massacres, 22; trade post role, 26; “tribes,” 45. See also Haudenosaunee; Mapuche
necropolises, 195
Needham, Joseph, 197–98
Netherlands, 85, 89, 94–95, 104. See also Dutch colonialism
New Guinea, 174
Nile (river), 217–18
Nile state, 141, 215–20 passim
Nippur, 213
nomads, 7–8, 11, 116–18, 131, 168, 224–29 passim; Amazonia, 186–87; Aryans, 176; “Conquest Theory,” 43; Mbuti, 160; Scythians, 163; Turks, 65, 66, 116
Normans, 41, 44
Novgorod, 126
numerology, 199, 208–9
Nupe people, 28
O
obedience, 107, 172, 186, 207, 213; to authority, 61; to God’s will, 74; split, 78; to state, 171, 244. See also disobedience
offerings. See gifts, ritual
Old English language, 44
opium trade, 148, 149
oratores, 79, 81
original states, 13, 38, 98, 140–41
Others and Otherness, 11, 66, 108, 199
Oyo empire, 28–29
P
pagans and paganism, 37, 68, 70, 82, 89, 101, 201
Pala Empire, 146
Palestine, 65
patriarchy, 14, 47–55 passim, 60, 86–89 passim; ancestor cults, 201; ancient Greece, 132, 133; Aryans, 179–80; Congo states, 202, 203; Cretans, 151; Cucuteni-Trypillian, 221; Egypt, 219–20; in religion, 43, 89
patrilocality, 158, 160, 177
patriotism, 93, 188
peasant class, 79, 80, 91, 106, 178
peasant rebellions, 61, 71, 91
peasants, 92; Catholic Church and, 61, 80, 81, 101; Cretans, 150; Europe, 32, 61–62, 66, 79–82 passim, 91, 92, 101–2, 152, 156; forced relocation, 141; joke names, 169n17; labor-saving methods, 79–80; morality, 108; tribute, 57. See also peasant class; peasant rebellions
Pere III (Peter the Great), King of Aragon, 93
Perlman, Fredy: Against His-story, Against Leviathan, 12–13, 185
Peucini, 97
pharaohs, 72, 206, 208, 216–20 passim
Phoenicians, 42, 223
pilgrims and pilgrimages, 67, 210, 230, 231, 232, 235
Poland, 39–40, 82
Polanie state, 38, 151–54 passim
poleis. See city-states: ancient Greece
police, 104
political prisoners, 239
politigen (word), 37–38n2, 43
politigenesis (word), 13n12
Polynesia, 172–76
polytheism, 73, 74
population growth, 121, 170, 173, 189, 191; supposed cause of states, 1, 137, 215
Portugal: trade, 147, 148
Portuguese colonialism, 23, 24, 27, 148, 203
poverty, 62, 81, 116–17, 133, 194–95n3
power accumulation, 90, 94, 121, 125, 219, 231, 237, 242
Powhatan confederacy, 33, 115–16
“priestesses.” See women priests
priest class, 139, 197, 201, 205–7 passim, 213, 214; Andes, 83; Cherokee, 31; Israelite, 73, 74; Judah, 73; Sumer, 197. See also Brahmans
primary state formation, 43–44, 137, 163–64, 210, 219, 233
primitivism, 3n3, 10–11
prisons, 24, 70, 196, 236–39 passim
private property, 63, 132, 139, 155, 175, 181, 241; ancient Greece, 132; historiography, 86; Roman law, 94
progressive states, 40, 69, 233
projectual state, 75, 77, 82, 132, 233
property, 155, 179; collective, 63, 132, 161, 162, 179; slaves as, 211. See also private property
protection rackets. See tribute
Protestants, 62. See also Anabaptists and Anabaptism
Proussakov, Dmitri B., 216–17
public works, monuments, etc., 196, 197, 208, 212–13, 220, 230. See also pyramids; theft of monuments; ziggurats
puppet rulers, 22, 23, 25, 31
purification, religion. See religious purification
Purnawarman, 145–46
pyramids, 196–97, 208, 210, 219, 220
Pyrenees, 40, 72, 87n5, 223
Q
qadis and sayyids. See sayyids and qadis
R
racism, 8, 11, 103, 239
raider states, 186, 187, 234
raiding, 100n4, 116, 117, 130, 186–90 passim, 224; by Aryans, 177; by Ibers, 101, 223; punitive, 139, 190; by Sea Peoples, 130; West Africa, 27, 56, 122. See also raider states; slave-raiding
ranked societies, 162
rebellions, 91, 128–33 passim, 235–37 passim; cause of state collapse, 129, 131, 235; Cherokee, 31; Europe, 37, 91, 92; Haiti, 35–36; Java, 147; twenty-first century, 128–29, 236, 237. See also peasant rebellions; slave rebellions
rebel states, 36, 233
reciprocity, 7, 10, 25, 138–39, 159–62 passim, 168, 193, 194; ancient Egypt, 217; Haudenosaunee, 240
Reconstruction (United States), 103
Rediker, Marcus: The Many-Headed Hydra, 86, 138
Redmond, Elsa M., 187, 188
refugees, 52, 116, 145, 156, 174, 216, 217
religion, 42–43, 67–74 passim, 244; China, 197–99, 207; Hawaiian Islands, 174; symbolic power, 193–220 passim; syncretism, 44, 101–2; South Asia, 180, 182; West Africa, 119, 121, 124, 205. See also ancestor cults and ancestor worship; atheism; Hindus and Hinduism; intermediaries, religious/spiritual; salvation religions; state religions
religious hermits, 230–31
religious purification, 72
reluctant client states, 25–26, 233
rent, 47, 93, 104
resistance, 75, 85–89 passim, 102–4 passim, 112, 129, 182–88 passim, 227; Arab Spring, 236; Buddhist, 71; to Christianization, 118; to colonization, 102, 113; guerrilla/armed, 23–24, 32, 113; Haiti, 34–36 passim; Iberian, 40; Java, 147; maroon communities, 34–35; Native American, 31, 32, 102, 113, 159, 240, 246; South Asia, 182–83; spirituality and, 195, 231; to state authority/power, 3, 32, 100, 111, 160, 207; to state formation, 2, 16, 21–22, 32, 72, 98, 204; Zomia, 99, 100; zones of, 103–4, 130–31. See also flight and abandonment
revolution and revolutions, 236, 237; aftershocks, 91; models, 131
Rickahoken, 33–34
rights, 1, 11, 156, 157, 161, 175, 211; ancient Greece, 132; of commoners, 92; of dependent class, 30, 211; Rome, 53
ritual gifts. See gifts, ritual
Rojava, 237, 239, 240
Roman Catholic Church. See Catholic Church
Roman Empire, 22, 30, 38–72 passim, 82, 99, 116, 118, 224; architecture and, 196; Aryans compared, 178; Catholic Church and, 61; cities, 223; collapse, 40, 46, 78, 89, 91, 101; democracy and, 157; Hadrian’s Wall, 106, 107; Illyrians and, 223; law, 94; numerology, 199; patriarchy, 89; religion and spirituality, 199–200; slave trade, 52
Romania, 221, 222
royal court states, 163–64, 165, 185, 234
royalty, expatriate. See expatriate rulers
rotation of authority, 126
runaways, 35, 116, 131, 174. See also flight and abandonment
Rus people, 38, 44
S
sachems, 113–14, 115
sacred commerce states, 185, 210, 234
sacred sites, 206, 229, 230
sacrifice, 180, 199, 200, 207. See also human sacrifice
sagrera model, 101
Salakanagara, 145
salvation religions, 62, 67–70 passim. See also Christianity; Islam
Sami, 227
San, 22
Sarmatians, 97
Saxons, 41, 78
sayyids and qadis, 63, 64
scarcity, 218. See also artificial scarcity
science, 80, 94
Scots-Irish, 32
Scott, James C., 3, 19–20, 70, 77, 99–102 passim, 140, 160, 161; on tradition of murdering autocrats, 245–46; views of ethnicity, 42, 45
Scythians, 163
Sea Peoples, 130–31
secondary state formation, 13, 43, 98, 137, 185, 233
secret fraternities, 57, 58
self-defense, 39, 46, 54, 92, 116
Service, Elman, 111
Settlement of Westphalia, 85–86, 89
settlers, 22, 30–34 passim, 113, 173
settler states, 34, 233. See also United States
shamans, medicine men, etc., 194, 206, 231
Shanantoah, 33
shari’ah, 62, 63
Shawnee, 31
Shenandoah Valley, 33–34
Shudras, 178, 182, 183
siege techniques, 94
Sitawaka kingdom (Ceylon), 23
Sitones, 46–47
Six Nations confederacy. See Haudenosaunee
slave-raiding, 29, 130, 131, 160, 176, 185, 186
slave rebellions, 35, 103
slavery, 59–62 passim, 66, 102, 109, 139; ancient Greece, 126, 131; Banda islands, 144; Germanic tribes, 47–48; Jamaica, 35; Mesopotamia, 211; Native American, 32; Roman, 224; South Asia, 177
slave trade: Roman Empire, 52; West Africa, 26–30, 56
Slavs, 37–38, 44, 82, 89
snakes, 200
social control, 6, 90, 105, 138, 141, 148, 169n17, 178
social war, 85, 105, 138, 154
Solomon, King of Israel, 73
Songs of Ice and Fire (Martin), 107–8
Southeast Asia, 69, 140, 205, 218. See also Java; Vietnam; Zomia
Spain, 40, 104, 148, 238. See also Catalunya
Spanish Civil War, 54, 243
Spanish colonialism, 34, 35
Spartans, 51, 54–55
Spencer, Charles S., 187, 188
spice trade, 24–25, 144, 147, 148, 149
Spotswood, Alexander, 33–34
Sri Lanka, sixteenth-century. See Ceylon
Srivijaya Empire, 146, 147
state architecture. See architecture
state collapse, 77, 100, 127–29 passim, 146, 167–71 passim, 235, 236; Africa, 118; chiefdoms and, 111; China, 168–69, 171; Java, 144; Mycenaean, 127; United States, 103. See also Bronze Age collapse
state religions, 67, 71, 73, 180, 197, 198
status accumulation, 155, 158, 161, 193
stealing of monuments. See theft of monuments
stratification of society. See class and caste
subsistence, 100–103 passim, 116, 140, 150; Benin, 120, 124; commons and, 156; Cucuteni-Trypillian, 222; extended family and, 120; Hawaiian Islands, 175
Suebi (Schwaben) and Suebia, 44–45, 97
Sultanate of Demak, 147
Sumatra, 146
Sumer, 196–97, 205–13 passim, 219, 220, 228
Sunda kingdom, 147
Sun God, 205, 206, 210, 219
Suriname, 34–35
surnames, 169n17
surplus, 138, 175, 192; hoarding of, 149; religion/spirituality and, 5, 70, 81; theft of, 192; trade of, 142. See also accumulation
surveillance, 104–5, 150, 196
swiddening, 99, 105–6
symbolic power, 193–220 passim
Syria, 65, 239
T
Tacitus, 30, 44–49 passim, 108; The Agricola and the Germania, 40n4, 46–49 passim, 97–98, 193
Tarumanagara kingdom, 145–47
tattooing and branding of subjects, 102
Taurisci, 223
taxation, 64, 72, 92, 93, 103, 141, 169n17; of agriculture, 43; excessive, 167; refusal, 244; religious, 92; resistance, 104; South Asia, 182
technology: agricultural, 80; military, 94–95
temples, 70, 73, 170, 197, 200, 210–18 passim; Mexico, 187, 189, 190
territoriality, 77–78, 228
tertiary state formation, 233
Teutonic Order, 42
Teutons, 223
theft of monuments, 215
Thompson, E.P.: Whigs and Hunters, 86
thrones, 212
Time, Work, and Culture in the Middle Ages (Le Goff), 89–90
Tiwanaku state, 82–83, 206, 208–9, 213–15
trade, 24–28 passim, 40, 67, 90, 139–44 passim, 204; Amazonia, 187; Andes, 213, 214, 215; Bronze Age collapse, 127; Cretans, 151; Cucuteni-Trypillian, 221; pilgrimage conjoined, 210, 231; Zapotec, 189, 190. See also slave trade; spice trade
tribe (word), 45, 75
tribute, 22, 45, 64, 139, 141, 157, 162; ancient Mexico, 191; Ceylon, 23; Congo states, 56–57; Hawaiian Islands, 175; raiding and, 186; South Asia, 182
Tupi-Guarani, 8n9, 235, 236
Turkey, 129, 228, 230, 236, 239
Turks, 65, 116
Turnbull, Colin, 160
Tuscarora, 112, 113
Tymowski, Michal, 117
tyrants and tyranny. See despotic rule
U
Uighurs, 116
Umayyad Caliphate, 65
United Kingdom, 52. See also Great Britain
United States, 30–34 passim, 52, 86, 103, 157, 238; anti-terrorism wars, 186; Hawaiian Islands, 176
universities, 89–90
urban walls. See cities: walls
“urban zones of evasion,” 103–4
Uruk, 197, 210–13 passim
usury, 62, 80
V
Vandals, 44–45
Vascones, 223
Vashiyas, 178
Vedas, 177, 180
Venedi, 97
Vereenigde Ooostindische Compagnie. See Dutch East India Company (VOC)
Vietnam, 20, 148
Vietnam War, 34
Vikings, 41, 43, 44
Virginia (British colony), 31, 33, 34
Visigoths, 40
Vorobyov, Denis V., 115
voting, 50, 51, 238, 244
Vriji confederacy, 181–83 passim
W
Wa people, 39
Waha people, 78
walls, 106, 107–8, 169, 174, 189, 211
war, social. See social war
warlords, 65, 81
warrior brotherhoods, 37, 38, 49, 51, 55, 133, 185
warrior class, 30, 79, 81, 139, 163, 164, 186; Aryans, 176, 178
warriors, 43, 185; Benin, 121, 124; Germanic, 37, 48–51 passim; Haudenosaunee, 114; Hawaiian islands, 175; Monte Albán, 188, 190, 191; Rome, 48–52 passim; Rus, 38; warrior-kings, 78, 92, 210, 221; Yoruba, 122; Zapotec, 190, 191. See also warrior brotherhoods; warrior class
Washington, George, 31, 115
Weber, Max, 167
Wends, 37
West Africa. See Benin; Congo; Mali
West African slave trade. See slave trade: West Africa
Westphalia Settlement. See Settlement of Westphalia
wheat domestication, 231n7
Whigs and Hunters (Thompson), 86
Wielkopolska, 38, 39
Witchcraft and the Gay Counterculture (Evans), 55, 86
Witches, Midwives, and Nurses (Ehrenreich and English), 88
witch hunts, 72, 86–87
women gods. See goddesses
women-men relations. See gender relations
women priests, 149, 150
women’s hunting. See hunting: by women
women’s status, 54, 179. See also gender relations; matriarchy
work. See labor
workers’ movement, 14, 19, 242
written language. See language: written
Y
Yamna culture, 221, 222, 224
Yemen, 63–64, 75
Z
Zapotec state, 141, 187–91
ziggurats, 196, 197, 210, 211, 213, 220
Zinn, Howard, 13
Zomia, 39, 97–109
**Advance praise for Worshiping Power:
“Worshiping Power succeeds in making sense of one of the most baffling anthropological problems: that of origins of state and state-like institutions. This book is testament to Gelderloos’s innovation and engagement with anarchism, state-centered social science and anthropology—a work of ethnographic theory thats suggests stimulating new avenues of empirical research and theoretical inquiry. The book is also an excellent read!”
—Andrej Grubačić, author of Living at the Edges of Capitalism: Adventures in Exile and Mutual Aid
“By questioning the myths we have collectively inherited around the formation of the state, Gelderloos dares to do what most contemporary thinkers blindly refuse. For far too long we’ve been gripped by an unshakable faith in statist politics, where anything beyond this stifled and masochist imagination is dismissed as wishful thinking at best, or savagery at worst. Gelderloos cuts through the rhetoric that has us bend and bow to the predation, elitism, and parasiticism of the state, not as a politics of exploring terra incognita, but as a recognition of how alien these ideas were to the world we once knew. Worshiping Power is not just a reclamation of our history, it offers a glimpse into the reconvening of our humanity.”
—Simon Springer, author of The Anarchist Roots of Geography: Toward Spatial Emancipation
“Worshiping Power is an insightful, sweeping analysis of how and why states have arisen (or haven’t), delivered in sparklingly clear prose. It is everything that an anarchist history should be: heretical, tentative, and provocative, as well as deeply researched, persuasive, and above all, relevant.”
—Kenyon Zimmer, author of Immigrants against the State: Yiddish and Italian Anarchism in America
“Contemporary radical state theory owes much to an anarchistic ethos. Gelderloos important little book surveys and reinterprets this literature, and then gives it a coherent anarchist politics.”
—Alex Prichard, Department of Politics, University of Exeter
Worshiping Power: An Anarchist View of Early State Formation
© ٢٠١٦ Peter Gelderloos
This edition © 2016 AK Press (Chico, Oakland, Edinburgh, Baltimore)
ISBN: 978-1-84935-264-2
E-ISBN: 978-1-84935-265-9
Library of Congress Control Number: 2016941988
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From : TheAnarchistLibrary.org
In 2002, Gelderloos was arrested with several others for trespass in protest of the American military training facility School of the Americas, which trains Latin American military and police. He was sentenced to six months in prison. Gelderloos was a member of a copwatch program in Harrisonburg. In April 2007, Gelderloos was arrested in Spain and charged with disorderly conduct and illegal demonstration during a squatters' protest. He faced up to six years in prison. Gelderloos claimed that he was targeted for his political beliefs. He was acquitted in 2009. (From: Wikipedia.org.)
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