Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Pathways to complexity: an African perspective
- 2 The segmentary state and the ritual phase in political economy
- 3 Perceiving variability in time and space: the evolutionary mapping of African societies
- 4 Western representations of urbanism and invisible African towns
- 5 Modeling political organization in large-scale settlement clusters: a case study from the Inland Niger Delta
- 6 Sacred centers and urbanization in West Central Africa
- 7 Permutations in patrimonialism and populism: The Aghem chiefdoms of Western Cameroon
- 8 Wonderful society: the Burgess Shale creatures, Mandara polities, and the nature of prehistory
- 9 Material culture and the dialectics of identity in the Kalahari: AD 700–1700
- 10 Seeking and keeping power in Bunyoro-Kitara, Uganda
- 11 The (in)visible roots of Bunyoro-Kitara and Buganda in the Lakes region: AD 800–1300
- 12 The power of symbols and the symbols of power through time: probing the Luba past
- 13 Pathways of political development in equatorial Africa and neo-evolutionary theory
- Index
11 - The (in)visible roots of Bunyoro-Kitara and Buganda in the Lakes region: AD 800–1300
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 Pathways to complexity: an African perspective
- 2 The segmentary state and the ritual phase in political economy
- 3 Perceiving variability in time and space: the evolutionary mapping of African societies
- 4 Western representations of urbanism and invisible African towns
- 5 Modeling political organization in large-scale settlement clusters: a case study from the Inland Niger Delta
- 6 Sacred centers and urbanization in West Central Africa
- 7 Permutations in patrimonialism and populism: The Aghem chiefdoms of Western Cameroon
- 8 Wonderful society: the Burgess Shale creatures, Mandara polities, and the nature of prehistory
- 9 Material culture and the dialectics of identity in the Kalahari: AD 700–1700
- 10 Seeking and keeping power in Bunyoro-Kitara, Uganda
- 11 The (in)visible roots of Bunyoro-Kitara and Buganda in the Lakes region: AD 800–1300
- 12 The power of symbols and the symbols of power through time: probing the Luba past
- 13 Pathways of political development in equatorial Africa and neo-evolutionary theory
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Between 1600 and 1800, in eastern Africa's Great Lakes region, the states of Bunyoro-Kitara and Buganda formed and began to export their bureaucratic, militaristic, and religious hegemony to neighboring societies. They did so with little or no connection to intercontinental or maritime trading systems. They did so in wet, dry, highland, and lakeshore environments. They did so using metals, cattle, bananas, grains, fishing, and hunting, in varying combinations, as their technological and agricultural bases. But they also did so with less visible resources, with funds of meaning and concepts of power and with sometimes abstract units of social organization. This essay will argue that the history of these visible and invisible roots of these two states between the Great Lakes reveals that any sort of evolutionist model for state formation must take these factors into account.
Exploring these issues begins with the evidence from Great Lakes societies which diagnoses their own analytical categories for social life. If scholars choose to settle on chiefdoms as important units of study they must understand their importance to those who lived in them. Such a condition highlights the necessity of interdisciplinary scholarship. Archaeologists, comparative linguists, and comparative ethnographers generate information on the varieties of chiefdoms and, more importantly, these scholars may suggest what other sorts of social and material relations – family structure and gender – may be implicated in the development of chiefdoms. For historical linguists, such data emerge from the comparative study of retention and innovation in the vocabulary (material and lexical) of power, settlements, social relationships, and gendered identities (see Appendix). But only careful survey and excavation by archaeologists will confirm these sequences of innovation and reproduced continuity.
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- Information
- Beyond ChiefdomsPathways to Complexity in Africa, pp. 136 - 150Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999
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