Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-25T20:26:16.535Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Chiefly exchange between Kyushu and Okinawa, Japan, in the Yayoi period

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2015

Richard Pearson*
Affiliation:
Department of Anthropology/Sociology, University of British Columbia, 6303 N.W. Marine Drive, Vancouver V6T 2B2, Canada

Extract

Introduction

During the Yayoi Period of Japan (approximately 300 BC to 300 AD) tropical shell bracelets appear in elite burials in Kyushu (FIGURE 1) .In this paper I discuss recent investigations which indicate that these shells were produced in Okinawa, some 500 km. to the southwest of Kyushu, and were exchanged for Yayoi pottery vessels and possibly other artefacts. The context of this exchange system and the implications for Japanese prehistory are also considered.

Type
Special section
Copyright
Copyright © Antiquity Publications Ltd 1990

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aikens, M. & Higuchi, T.. 1982. Prehistory of Japan. New York (NY): Academic Press.Google Scholar
Akazawa, T. 1981. Maritime adaptation of prehistoric hunter-gatherers and their transition to agriculture in Japan, in Koyama, S. & Thomas, D. (ed.), Affluent foragers: 21358. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology. Senri Ethnological Studies 9.Google Scholar
Asahi, Gurafu. 1988. Kyushu kara Nihonkai Keiyu de Hokkaido e nanboku no chokko koryu shimesu kaiseihin, Asahi Gurafu 3438 (7/1/1988): 6,7. Tokyo.Google Scholar
Asahi, Gurafu. 1989. Yoshinogari iseki no subete: Yamataikoku ga mietekita, Asahi Gurafu 3487 (5/19/1989): 137. Tokyo.Google Scholar
Asato, Shijun, & Nakama, Takeo. 1979 Iejima Nagarabaru Nishi Kaizuka Kinkyu Hakkutsu Chosa Hokokusho. Ieson Bunkazai Chosa Hokoku sho Dai 8 shu. Ieson Kyoiku Iinkai. Ieson Okinawa.Google Scholar
Brunton, R. 1975. Why do the Trobriand have chiefs? Man n.s. 10(4): 54458.Google Scholar
Esaka, Teruya. 1983. Okinawa-ken Yomitan-son Toguchi Agaribaru iseki shutsudo no Sobata kei doki to sono kaso shutsudo no doki o megutte; Nihon hondo no Jomon doki bunka to kankoku no kushimemon kei doki bunka to no koryu mondai Nanto Koko 7: 14.Google Scholar
Feil, D.K. 1983. Ways of exchange. The Enga Tee of Papua New Guinea. St Lucia: University of Queensland Press.Google Scholar
Frankenstein, S. & Rowlands., M. 1978. The internal structure and regional context of early iron age society in south-western Germany, Bulletin of the Institute of Archaeology 15: 73112.Google Scholar
Fujita, Fujio. 1986. Nihon kai bunka to kokusai sei — nihon kai engan, in Mori, (ed.): 14174.Google Scholar
Fukuoka-ken, , Iizuka-shi, , Tateiwa Iseki Chosa Inkai, (ed.). 1977. Tateiwa Iseki. Tokyo: Kawade Shobo Shinsha.Google Scholar
Fukuoka Shiritsu Rekishi Shiryokan, . 1986. Sora Ohaka to sono Jidai. Fukuoka: Fukuoka Shiritsu Rekishi Shiryokan.Google Scholar
Higuchi, Takayasu. 1974. Tairiku Bunka to Seidoki (Kodai Shi Hakkutsu vol. 5). Tokyo: Kodansha.Google Scholar
Kipp, R. & Sghortman., E. 1989. The political impact of trade in chiefdoms, American Anthropologist 91(2): 37085.Google Scholar
Kishimoto, Yoshihiko. 1983. Okinawa shutsudo no Yayoi doki (I), Nanto Koko 8: 1941.Google Scholar
Kishimoto, Yoshihiko & Shima, Hiroshi. 1985. Okinawa ni okeru kai no shuseki iko; gohora, imogai no chushin ni, Okinawa Ken Kyoiku Iinkai Bunka Ka Kiyo 2: 4968. Naha: Okinawa Ken Kyoiku Iinkai.Google Scholar
Meillassoux, C. 1978. The ‘economy’ in agricultural self-sustaining societies; a preliminary analysis, in Seddon, D. (ed.) Relations of production: Marxist approaches to economic anthropology: 12757. London. Frank Cass.Google Scholar
Mishima, Itaru. 1977. Kai o Meguru Kokogaku: Nanto Kokogaku no Ichi Shiten. Tokyo: Gakuseisha.Google Scholar
Miyagi, Eisho & Hiroe, Takamiya (ed.). 1983. Okinawa Rekishi Chizu. Tokyo: Kashiwa Shobo.Google Scholar
Mori, Koichi (ed.). 1986. Retto no Chiiki Bunka (Nihon no Kodai vol. 2). Tokyo: Chuokoronsha.Google Scholar
Oda, Fujio. 1984. Okinawa ni okeru Kyushu kei Yayoi Zenki Doki: Maezato kaizuka ibutsu no kento, Nanto Koko 9: 119.Google Scholar
Okinawa Ken Kyoiku Iinkai, . 1980. Ohara — Kumejima Ohara Kaizuka Gun. Hakkutsu Chosa Hokokusho Dai 32 Shu. Naha: Okinawa Ken Kyoiku Iinkai.Google Scholar
Okinawa Kenritsu Hakubutsukan, . 1985 Tokubetsu Ten, Gusuku: Gusuku ga Kataru Kodai Ryukyu no Rekishi to Roman. Tomigusuku: Okinawa Kenritsu Hakubutsukan.Google Scholar
Patterson, T.C. 1989. Combined and uneven development; alternative routes to the formation of tributary states in Peru and the Far East.Google Scholar
Sakata, Kunihiko, Utsonomiya, Eiji et al. 1984. Udewa no Chakudatsu ni Tsuite, Shigaku flonso 15: 143.Google Scholar
Sahara, Makoto & Kanaseiki, Hiroshi (ed.). 1975. Inasaku no Hajimari (Kodai Shi Hakkutsu vol. 4). Tokyo: Kodansha.Google Scholar
Shimoto, Toshio. 1986. Omoge to Unarigami no sekai; nanbu Kyushu to Nanto, in Mori, (ed.): 34575.Google Scholar
Specht, J. & White., J.P. 1986. Trade and exchange in Oceania and Australia, Mankind 11(3)Google Scholar
Stark, K. 1989. Wealth and Power in Yayoi Period Northern Kyushu. M.A. Thesis, Department of Anthropology/Sociology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver.Google Scholar
Kiroaki, Takakura (ed.). 1981 Yayoi Jidai Shakai no Kenkyu. Tokyo: Neirakusha.Google Scholar